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. Match Play Is Coming Back to the PGA Tour. Your Questions on What That Actually Means.

    58m ago

    Match Play Is Coming Back to the PGA Tour. Your Questions on What That Actually Means.

    Match Play Is Coming Back to the PGA Tour. Your Questions on What That Actually Means. The fan questions this week are dominated by one thing — the Brian Rolapp press conference and everything that came out of it. Trey and Justin Ray answer seven of your best questions, and the energy in this segment matches the energy in that press conference room. Because when you mention match play returning to the PGA Tour and the possibility of Pine Valley, Cypress Point, and Seminole hosting championship events — golf fans have a lot to say. What Are You Most Excited About From the Rolapp Announcement Trey's answer is immediate and clear — the meritocracy. No sponsors exemptions. Mandatory cuts. Full fields. The entire structure of the new PGA Tour is built around one question: are you good enough? Can you play well enough to earn your spot? That is the thing that resonates most beyond all the structural details and format changes. Justin's answer is twofold. First — the Friday cut is back. The cut sweat is back. 120-man fields with a mandatory cut heading into the weekend is what professional golf should look like every single week. And then he read that the playoffs might go to Seminole and Pine Valley and everything else became secondary. Those two names on the same page as PGA Tour championship events is a different level of excitement entirely. Match Play Is Coming Back — What Does That Actually Mean This is the question the thumbnail is built around and for good reason. Match play is the purest form of golf. Head to head. One player against one player. Every hole matters. The format creates moments that stroke play cannot — a journeyman can beat the world number one if the putts fall at the right moment. That unpredictability is appointment viewing. Trey uses the Nick O'Hearn example — a left-handed Australian player who somehow beat Tiger Woods twice in the World Match Play Championship. Some things just happen in match play that cannot happen anywhere else. That is the beauty of it and that is exactly why the PGA Tour is bringing it back for the playoff format. Justin's caveat — as a television product, match play has its challenges. Fewer golfers means fewer shots to show. The broadcast has to work harder to keep viewers engaged when the story is two players rather than a full leaderboard. But the format is the purest expression of the game and both Trey and Justin are fully for it coming back at the highest level. Pine Valley. Cypress Point. Seminole. What Other Courses Could Be Next This is the question that generated the most excitement in the segment. Trey's immediate answer — Chicago Golf Club. One of the most underrated courses in the entire country, a place that does not get the same reverence as National or Shinnecock or Friars Head despite being every bit as historic and demanding. Trey has had the opportunity to play it and makes clear it deserves a PGA Tour event. Justin's answer — the Pacific Northwest. Chambers Bay, which has matured significantly since hosting the 2015 US Open, and Sahali, which hosted the Women's PGA Championship a few years ago. The Pacific Northwest is a beautiful part of the country with exceptional golf courses that the PGA Tour has not visited in years. Getting back out there would be a genuine gift for golf fans in that region. Both of them also mention Bandon Dunes — the US Amateur held there a few years ago was incredible theater, picture-perfect weather and a setting unlike anything else in American golf. Gamble Sands is another name that comes up. The Pacific Northwest has options and the PGA Tour would be smart to explore them. What Did Rolapp Say That You Are Still Waiting on an Answer For Five of the fifteen Championship Tour signature events have not yet been announced. The medical exemption structure is still being worked out — how does a player like Justin Thomas, coming back from back surgery, navigate the new system? The Korn Ferry Tour's future role has not been defined. The FedEx Cup sponsorship situation beyond next season is unresolved. And the specific cities and venues for the match play playoff rotation have not been confirmed beyond the hallowed-ground names dropped at the press conference. Rolapp's answer to all of this — 2027 is a runway year. More details at the Tour Championship. Drip drip drip of information, as Rory McIlroy described it earlier in the season. Trey notes this is entirely intentional — keep people interested, keep the conversation going, give them enough to be excited without giving everything away at once. Very much the NFL model that Rolapp rode to success before arriving at the PGA Tour. Gino Titicaka's Game Heading Into the KPMG Justin's assessment — one of the most intriguing athletes in professional sports right now. She compares to Xander Schauffele on the men's side — a player whose game fits perfectly for major championship conditions who has not yet broken through with the big win. She was the 36-hole leader at last year's KPMG and could not make a putt on the weekend. She has won twice this season. She is only 22 years old. The major breakthrough feels inevitable. Could be this week at Hazeltine. The Boorish Fan Behavior at Shinnecock Trey and Justin both address it directly and both land in the same place — it went too far. Eamon Lynch of the Golf Channel made the point that this specific behavior pattern tends to be a Long Island phenomenon rather than a New York phenomenon broadly. Beth Page Black at the Ryder Cup. Now Shinnecock. There is a pattern and it is not a good one. Justin adds an interesting theory — the access to trains meant more people could drink freely without worrying about driving, which may have contributed to things getting out of hand. But the core message is simple. You can root for whoever you want. You can dislike a player. You can cheer for your guy. But screaming at someone to miss and hoping out loud that shots go in bunkers — that is not golf fan behavior, that is something else. And the people who got kicked out deserved to get kicked out. The silver lining — Wyndham Clark handled it perfectly. Joking with his caddy every time one person clapped. Winning anyway. And in doing so he made more fans than he lost. Did the USGA Mismanage the Shinnecock Setup Both Trey and Justin push back on the mismanagement narrative. The USGA set up the course based on weather forecasts that predicted 45 to 50 mile per hour gusts Thursday afternoon. Those gusts never fully materialized. They protected the course accordingly, and when they realized over the weekend that the weather had changed, they tightened the screws — and by Saturday afternoon there were no greens at Shinnecock. There were browns. Justin's closing stat — how many players finished the US Open at Shinnecock under par? Three. That is the test. That is the US Open. You can debate the Thursday and Friday setup all you want, but when only three players finish under par at a major championship, the golf course won. And that is exactly what a US Open at Shinnecock is supposed to do. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    14 min
  2. Wyndham Clark on What It Actually Felt Like to Win With the Crowd Against Him

    1d ago

    Wyndham Clark on What It Actually Felt Like to Win With the Crowd Against Him

    Wyndham Clark — I Loved Silencing the Crowd. The Full Post-Win Interview. Get up to $200 off Square hardware when you sign up at square.com/go/WINGO #squarepod #sponsored Head to cozyearth.com and use code WINGO for an exclusive 20% off. Two days after winning his second US Open at Shinnecock Hills, Wyndham Clark sat down with Trey Wingo for a full in-person conversation. No press conference setting. No rushed post-round questions. Just an honest, wide-ranging interview with a two-time US Open champion who has a lot to say about what the last week — and the last year — actually looked like from the inside. The Second One Justifies the First When Wyndham won his first US Open at LACC in 2023, people celebrated it. And then he played poorly in 2025 and the narrative shifted. It was a fluke. He got lucky. Maybe the first one does not really count. He heard all of it. And he carried it to Shinnecock. Trey references the Max Homa line — the second one justifies the first. Wyndham agrees without hesitation. Now winning twice, with Scotty Scheffler in his group chasing the career grand slam and Sam Burns charging from behind on Sunday — nobody can call it a fluke anymore. The second US Open does not just validate the first. It reframes everything. The Crowd Wyndham was genuinely surprised by the level of it. He expected Oakmont questions. He gets those every week and they have become white noise — almost funny at this point. But the actual behavior at Shinnecock was something different. Cheering when his ball went in the bunker. Cheering when he missed a putt. Not clapping when he did something good. Wanting his ball to roll off the green. He says he has never experienced anything like that outside of a Ryder Cup. The American part surprised him most. The week before at the RBC Canadian Open he wore a Jack Hughes USA jersey and chirped the Canadians about winning the gold medal in hockey. He figured New Yorkers who love their country would look at that and think — this guy is one of us. Instead the hostility was real and it was sustained. And then comes the line that defines the entire weekend. I loved silencing the crowd. Not tolerated it. Not survived it. Loved it. He played other sports growing up. He knows what it feels like to be at the free throw line with everyone booing against you and drain both free throws anyway. That is who he is competitively. And at Shinnecock on Sunday, that competitive wiring was the difference between fumbling a six-stroke lead and closing it out. He also notes — after the tournament, doing media runs at the New York Stock Exchange, so many people came up to apologize. Manhattan people, he says, are not Long Island people. He is a West Coast guy. He is pleading the fifth on the full Long Island situation. But the apologies were real. Holding the Lead for 72 Hours Wyndham took the outright lead at approximately 7 PM Friday evening and never gave it back. Trey asks what the most impressive thing he did across those four days was — and Wyndham's answer is not about the golf shots. It is about the mental game. He says if he was not as seasoned a player, if he did not have the confidence he has built recently, he thinks he might have fumbled it. Having the fans against him on Sunday while not playing his best ball and carrying a six-stroke lead — that is a pressure cocktail that breaks a lot of players. He had blinders on. He kept his head. And he credits the mental work he has done over the last year for making that possible. Sam Burns Pulling Within One Wyndham did not love seeing it. He knew someone was going to get close — he was a couple over on the front nine and made what he calls a dumb bogey on eight. His caddy told him on 12 that they still had a three-shot lead. And then from 12 onward he became fully leaderboard aware — do we need to be aggressive, do we need to be conservative, what does this hole demand? When it got to one shot on 16, he made a decision. He could have chipped out and played for bogey. That still would have left him with 240 to 250 yards in on a hard hole where bogey is easily possible. He decided to go for it. Not because he thought he would make birdie. Because laying up still left a dangerous shot. And then the wind caught the putt on 16 and it just kept going and going until it dropped. The Putter Wyndham traces the hot stretch back specifically to the RBC Heritage at Hilton Head — where he switched to a longer and heavier putter. He could feel it on the putting green immediately. The eight footers for birdie and the ten footers for par that he had been missing all year started falling. It peaked at the CJ Byron Nelson where he shot 11-under 60 on Sunday. And it never came back down. His description of the 16th hole birdie putt at Shinnecock is perfect — he was not trying to make it. It was downhill, significantly, with wind helping it toward the hole. He thought he left it short. It just kept going. He says the hole has been big for about two months. And for two months, that has been enough. Mental Health and Therapy This is the most revealing exchange in the entire conversation. Trey asks directly — how much did going through therapy and working on his mental health help him deal with the pressure of Sunday at Shinnecock? Wyndham's answer is striking and honest. Dealing with the aftermath of the Oakmont locker room incident — the embarrassment, the shame, the very public fallout — was significantly harder than dealing with a hostile gallery at the US Open. The crowd on Sunday was fun. It was a competitive challenge he could rise to. The shame of a public mistake and having to sit with it, work through it in therapy, and come out the other side — that was the real test. And once he got through it, he felt like he could handle almost anything golf was going to throw at him. The Oakmont Incident He has said it multiple times. He made a mistake. He is hoping people have some forgiveness. And then he says the line that frames the entire interview — that was definitely my worst moment. I just came off one of my best moments. He hopes people look at both and decide that one bad moment does not define who someone is. Trey's take — winning is the ultimate deodorant. As long as you keep winning, the narrative changes. And with two US Opens now on the resume, the locker room moment is becoming a footnote to a career that is still being written. Consistency Going Forward His major championship record outside the two wins has been uneven — wins, cuts, a T26, a T4. Wyndham is honest about why. His ball striking got off in 2025. He has done significant work with his new coach Pat to fix it. The first two rounds at Shinnecock showed what that work looks like when it clicks. The weekend was managed with the putter and the short game. But the ball striking foundation is what he believes is going to make him consistently dangerous at major championships going forward. The Custom Leaderboard Trey shows Wyndham a custom Masters leaderboard the Wingo Network built — same leaderboard, names replaced by descriptors. Rory was "Grand Slammer going for the Masters repeat." Scotty was "Should have gotten relief at Oakmont." And Wyndham was "US Open Champ, dislikes lockers." Wyndham's reaction — at least they put US Open Champ first. And then, hearing his new Shinnecock descriptor, he says simply: I love that. Hates lockers. He can laugh about it now. That is the clearest sign of all that the work is done. What Comes Next Not yet 30 years old. Two US Opens. Five PGA Tour wins since 2023. A putter that has been the hottest in professional golf for two months. A mental foundation built through real therapy work. And a competitive fire that genuinely enjoyed winning with a hostile crowd rooting against him. Wyndham Clark is not done. This conversation makes that very clear. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    19 min
  3. Nelly Korda Is Going for Three Straight Majors at the KPMG. Here Is What That Would Mean.

    1d ago

    Nelly Korda Is Going for Three Straight Majors at the KPMG. Here Is What That Would Mean.

    Nelly Korda Goes for Three Straight Majors at the KPMG Women's PGA Championship Get up to $200 off Square hardware when you sign up at square.com/go/WINGO #squarepod #sponsored Head to cozyearth.com and use code WINGO for an exclusive 20% off. While the PGA Tour was making headlines at the Travelers Championship, Justin Ray was at Hazeltine National in Minnesota for the KPMG Women's PGA Championship — and the story there starts and ends with one player. Nelly Korda is going for her third consecutive major championship of the season. She won the Chevron Championship. She won the US Women's Open at Riviera. Now she arrives at Hazeltine as the overwhelming favorite to do something only four women in history have ever done — win three majors in the same season. And based on everything Justin Ray has seen on the ground this week, the conditions at Hazeltine and the state of Nelly's game, she is going to be very difficult to beat. The Numbers Are Almost Impossible to Comprehend Nelly Korda has played eight stroke play events this season. She has been beaten by a combined ten players across all eight of those events. That is not a typo. Ten players total, across eight tournaments, have finished ahead of her. She is gaining nearly four strokes per round on the field — a number Justin describes as peak Tiger territory in terms of dominance over your peers. The comparison is not hyperbole. At his most dominant, Tiger Woods was gaining roughly four strokes per round on the field. Nelly Korda is doing that right now on the LPGA Tour. She has four wins, three runner-up finishes, and a tied for eighth as her only result outside the top two all season. The one week where something went slightly sideways — and she was still inside the top ten. What Three Straight Majors Would Mean If Nelly Korda wins at Hazeltine she joins an extraordinarily small group. Only four women in LPGA history have won three majors in the same season. The names on that list are some of the greatest players the sport has ever produced. Adding her name to it would be one of the defining achievements of her career — and she still has two more majors left on the schedule after this one. The conversation about a calendar slam — all five LPGA majors in one season — is premature, but it is no longer absurd. Justin is not ready to put her on full slam watch yet, noting that the Evian Championship has its own unpredictable character and the Women's Open Championship adds a different set of variables. But three in a row is entirely within reach, and the way she has played this season, she deserves to be the heavy favorite every time she tees it up. The $13 Million Purse This week's KPMG Women's PGA Championship carries a purse of $13 million — the largest in the history of women's golf. The last time the KPMG was held at Hazeltine in 2019, the purse was just under $4 million. KPMG has more than tripled their investment in this championship over seven years, and Justin makes sure to note that credit is due — this kind of financial commitment is what grows the sport and attracts the best players in the world to compete at the highest level. The shot-by-shot data presence at this championship is also the strongest it has ever been, with KPMG introducing new statistical infrastructure through the broadcast. For someone like Justin Ray, who lives and breathes golf analytics, this is a significant development for how the women's game gets covered and understood. Who Can Beat Her Justin names three players worth watching if you are looking beyond Nelly. Gino Titicaka — one of the most intriguing athletes in professional sports right now according to Justin. She has been world number one, she has five or six top-five major finishes, she is only 22 years old, and she still has not broken through with a major championship victory. She was the 36-hole leader at last year's KPMG and could not make a putt on the weekend. She is the Xander Schauffele of the LPGA — a player whose game is perfectly suited for major championship conditions, and it feels inevitable that it happens eventually. Could be this week. Charlie Hull — five major runner-up finishes and no wins, but nobody who watches her play gets the feeling of heartbreak. The sense of inevitability around Hull is real. She would be probably the most popular winner at Hazeltine behind Nelly herself, and after what she did at Riviera — shooting 65-67 on the weekend and still losing — she has proven she can play at this level under maximum pressure. Hannah Green — the defending KPMG champion from when it was last held at Hazeltine in 2019 knows this course. She has four worldwide wins this season and is playing arguably the best golf of her career. She is the name Justin circles as a genuine threat to Nelly this week. Minjee Lee — the defending champion from last year's KPMG in Frisco. One of the most consistent and exceptional ball strikers on the LPGA Tour, particularly when the tests get toughest. Worth keeping an eye on. Mio Yamashida — the reigning AIG Women's Open champion just beat Lottie Wode in a playoff last week and is in excellent form. Justin's one question mark is whether her length is sufficient at Hazeltine, noting she is exceptionally skilled from tee to green and around the greens but may face a distance disadvantage on a course this demanding. Better suited for softer links-style conditions than a big demanding American layout. The State of the LPGA Trey and Justin both agree — LPGA commissioner Craig Kessler has to be thrilled with where the tour is right now. The US Women's Open at Riviera was one of the best major championships Justin has covered — Nelly holding off Charlie Hull and Gabby Lopez in primetime on a world-class golf course. The KPMG purse at $13 million signals sponsor commitment. The rivalries are building. The storylines are compelling. And Nelly Korda going for three straight majors at one of the game's great venues on a weekend that already has the Travelers Championship and the World Cup competing for sports attention — women's golf is holding its own. The Bottom Line Nelly Korda arrives at Hazeltine as the most dominant player in golf right now — men's or women's. The numbers say so. The results say so. And if she wins her third consecutive major championship this weekend, the conversation about where she fits in the history of the sport is going to get very interesting very quickly. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    8 min
  4. Wyndham Clark Won the US Open. Here Is What the Numbers Actually Say About How He Did It.

    2d ago

    Wyndham Clark Won the US Open. Here Is What the Numbers Actually Say About How He Did It.

    Wyndham Clark Won the US Open. Here Is What the Numbers Actually Say About How He Did It. Get up to $200 off Square hardware when you sign up at square.com/go/WINGO #squarepod #sponsored Head to cozyearth.com and use code WINGO for an exclusive 20% off. Wyndham Clark is a two-time US Open champion. Wire to wire at Shinnecock Hills. Six-stroke lead heading into Sunday. The entire gallery rooting against him. Scottie Scheffler in his group chasing the career grand slam on his 30th birthday. And Wyndham Clark won anyway. But the how matters as much as the what. Justin Ray, the Tiger Woods of golf researchers, breaks down the full statistical picture of what Wyndham Clark actually did at Shinnecock — and what it tells us about who he is as a player going forward. The Lead That Never Moved Wyndham Clark took the outright lead at approximately 7 PM Friday evening. He held it for essentially 72 hours without ever being caught. Nobody tied him. Nobody passed him. The closest anyone got was Sam Burns pulling within one with a birdie on 16 Sunday before missing looks at birdie on 17 and 18. In terms of historical company, players to hold a multi-stroke lead after rounds one, two, and three of a US Open — Willie Anderson 1903, Jim Barnes 1921, Tony Jacklin 1970, Rory McIlroy 2011, Martin Kaymer 2014. Every single one of them won. Now add Wyndham Clark 2026. The Putting Numbers This win was built almost entirely on the putter. Since the Masters ended in April, no player on the PGA Tour has a better strokes gained putting average than Wyndham Clark. He entered Shinnecock on the hottest putting streak in professional golf and never cooled off. On the weekend specifically — only 20 of 36 greens in regulation over rounds three and four. That is the fewest greens hit by a US Open winner over the final two rounds since Martin Kaymer at Pinehurst in 2014. He was not hitting it close. He was not attacking flags. He was managing the golf course, missing in the right spots, and making every par putt that needed to fall. Nine par putts on the weekend between four and fourteen feet — and he made them all when it mattered. The signature moment — the approach on 16 from 274 yards. The field average from that distance at Shinnecock was approximately 62 feet of proximity to the hole. Clark hit it inside three feet and made the eagle putt. That one shot, Justin says, encapsulates everything about who Wyndham Clark is at his best. When the moment is biggest, the execution is sharpest. The Bi-Coastal Club One of Justin Ray's signature deep-dive stats from the week — Wyndham Clark is now one of only three men to win US Opens on both the East Coast and the West Coast. Billy Casper won at Olympic Club and Winged Foot. Tiger Woods won at Pebble Beach, Bethpage Black, and Torrey Pines. Wyndham Clark won at LACC in 2023 and Shinnecock in 2026. That is the company he is in. Not as a talking point. As a fact. How We Look at Wyndham Clark Now Since Clark won his first PGA Tour event, only Scotty Scheffler and Rory McIlroy have more PGA Tour wins than he does in that span — and Wyndham now has five. He is the only player in PGA Tour history to win twice with a final round score of 60 or better. He beat the field average on Thursday at Shinnecock by more than nine strokes — something you see maybe once a season in major championship golf across the entire men's game. Justin's honest assessment — high ceiling, lower floor than a Scheffler or a McIlroy. He does not consistently contend in majors. He either wins or disappears. But the ceiling is genuinely elite, he is not yet 30 years old, and the Andy North comparison does not hold up. Andy North won two US Opens and faded. Wyndham Clark's trajectory looks nothing like that. He is going to win more Ryder Cups. He is going to be on more major leaderboards. And the next time he gets hot with that putter at a US Open setup — the field should be worried. Sam Burns and the Chasers Sam Burns shot the best round of the final day — a 67 that got him within one at one point before missing birdie looks on 17 and 18. For the second straight year he has put himself in position to win a US Open and come just short. Justin believes he gets in the winner's circle before the end of this season. The scar tissue from these near-misses makes great players better, and Sam Burns is a great player. Xander Schauffele finished tied for 11th — his tenth consecutive top-15 finish at a US Open. Jack Nicklaus is the only player with a longer such streak. Xander has won a PGA Championship and an Open Championship. The US Open feels like a matter of time. And Scotty Scheffler — the grand slam bid will have to wait, but statistically his game is almost identical to where it was a year ago when he won two majors. A fraction off in the moments that count. He will be back. The Bottom Line The numbers tell a story that the scoreboard alone does not fully capture. Wyndham Clark did not dominate Shinnecock with his ball striking. He managed it. He grinded. He made every putt that needed to fall. And he held his composure for 72 hours while the crowd rooted against him and the world number one chased him down. That is not luck. That is a two-time US Open champion doing exactly what two-time US Open champions do. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    17 min
  5. Brian Rolapp Just Revealed the Future of the PGA Tour. Here Is the Full Breakdown.

    2d ago

    Brian Rolapp Just Revealed the Future of the PGA Tour. Here Is the Full Breakdown.

    Brian Rolapp Just Revealed the Future of the PGA Tour. Here Is the Full Breakdown. Get up to $200 off Square hardware when you sign up at square.com/go/WINGO #squarepod #sponsored Head to cozyearth.com and use code WINGO for an exclusive 20% off. Go to https://kachava.com and use code WINGO for 15% off your first order. This is the moment golf fans have been waiting for. Brian Rolapp, the PGA Tour CEO and soon-to-be commissioner, held his long-anticipated press conference at the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands today and laid out what professional golf is going to look like beginning in 2028. Trey Wingo was in the room. This is the full reaction and breakdown. The Two-Tour Structure Starting in 2028 the PGA Tour splits into two distinct tiers. The Championship Tour is the top level — the best players in the world competing against each other in 120-man fields with mandatory cuts every week and minimum purses of $20 million per event. No sponsors exemptions. Full stop. If you want to be on the Championship Tour you earn it. Nobody is handing you a spot because a title sponsor asked nicely. The Challenger Tour is the developmental level — legitimate, well-funded, and meaningfully different from what the Korn Ferry Tour has been. Minimum purses of $4 million per event. And the pathway up is clearly defined — win twice on the Challenger Tour and you automatically move up to the Championship Tour. No waiting. No politics. Two wins and you are promoted. The meritocracy angle is the thing that resonates most with Trey. Brian Rolapp made it explicit — the PGA Tour will decide who the best players are. Nobody else. When asked about pushback on eliminating sponsors exemptions, Rolapp's answer was simple. Do sponsors decide who plays in the NFL playoffs? Do they decide who makes the NBA Finals? No. The best players earn their way in. That is how it is going to work here too. The Regular Season Champion One of the more creative structural changes — the PGA Tour will now crown a regular season champion at the end of the February through August stretch, separate from and before the playoff format begins. This mirrors how every other major professional sport works. The NFL MVP is a regular season award. The NBA MVP is a regular season award. Baseball does the same. The best player over the course of the full season gets recognized for it, and then the postseason is its own separate competition with its own separate drama. This also solves a long-standing problem with the FedEx Cup — a points system so complicated that even people who work inside it need a computer to figure out where players stand. Brian Rolapp acknowledged this directly and said they are going to make the regular season standings simple and clear, so every fan knows exactly where their favorite player is and what they need to do to win. Match Play Playoffs After the regular season champion is crowned, the playoffs begin — and they will be played in match play format. This is the detail that got the loudest reaction in the room and on this show. Match play is the purest form of the game. Head to head. One player against one player. Every hole matters. The format creates moments that stroke play simply cannot — a journeyman player can beat the world number one on any given day if the putts fall at the right time. That unpredictability is exactly what makes it appointment viewing, and the PGA Tour is betting on it. The playoffs will rotate through some of the most hallowed courses in the country — and here is where the press conference went from interesting to genuinely electric. Rolapp mentioned Pine Valley. Cypress Point. Seminole. Courses that the PGA Tour has not visited in years, or ever. Courses that golf fans know by name and reputation but rarely get to see on television. Trey describes the moment he read those names in the press release as an immediate stop-everything moment. Justin Ray says if they actually get to Pine Valley and Seminole, it is a different level of excitement entirely. The Last Chance Series and International Events The season does not fully stop in August. After the regular season and playoffs conclude, the fall features two distinct additions. The Last Chance Series — a handful of events in the September through January window where players fight to keep their spot on the Championship Tour. This is built-in drama of the best kind. Players competing for their professional livelihood to stay at the highest level of the sport. Great for television. Great for engagement. Great for the sport. And international events — working with the DP World Tour to bring the strongest possible fields to national opens around the world. The Australian Open, potentially a Spanish Open at Valderrama, an Italian Open in Rome. Trey makes a point that is impossible to ignore — you cannot hear a PGA Tour CEO talk about international national opens without connecting it directly to what Scott O'Neill has been pitching to LIV Golf investors as their primary selling point. The PGA Tour just said we are going there too. That was not accidental. What We Still Don't Know Brian Rolapp was clear that not everything is settled yet. Five of the fifteen Championship Tour signature events have not yet been announced. The medical exemption structure has not been fully worked out — how does a player like Justin Thomas, coming back from back surgery, fit into this new system? The Korn Ferry Tour's future role has not been defined. The FedEx Cup sponsorship runs through the end of next season, and what replaces it or how it evolves is still an open question. And the specific cities and venues beyond the announced hallowed-ground courses have not been confirmed. Rolapp's framing of all of this — we want to be rigid on the vision and flexible on the details. And 2027 is a runway year to prepare for everything that changes in 2028. He will address more specifics at the Tour Championship later this season. Again, not accidental. Why This Matters The Rory McIlroy "glorified Korn Ferry tour" comment has been the loudest criticism of the two-track model since it was first floated. Rolapp addressed it directly — a minimum $4 million purse on the Challenger Tour is four times what the Korn Ferry Tour currently offers. The field strength will be significantly stronger. This is not a development league in the traditional sense. It is a legitimate second tier with a clear and meritocratic path to the top. The EPL parallel is real and Trey makes it explicitly — promotion and relegation, a regular season champion, a separate playoff format, the best clubs playing each other most of the time. The PGA Tour is taking the best of football's scarcity model and the best of soccer's structural clarity and building something new. Whether it works depends on the details still to come. But the vision, as Brian Rolapp laid it out today at the Travelers Championship, is the most compelling thing professional golf has put forward in years. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    25 min
  6. Brendan Sorsby Tried to Use the NFL as an Escape Hatch. Roger Goodell Said No.

    3d ago

    Brendan Sorsby Tried to Use the NFL as an Escape Hatch. Roger Goodell Said No.

    Brendan Sorsby Tried to Use the NFL as an Escape Hatch. Roger Goodell Said No. Get up to $200 off Square hardware when you sign up at square.com/go/WINGO #squarepod #sponsored Head to cozyearth.com and use code WINGO for an exclusive 20% off. Go to https://kachava.com and use code WINGO for 15% off your first order. This is the latest chapter in the Brendan Sorsby saga — and it may be the most important one yet. For those catching up — Brendan Sorsby is a college quarterback who started at Indiana, transferred to Cincinnati, and then had his entire world unravel when the full scope of his gambling problem became public. We are not talking about a few casual bets. We are talking about thousands of bets placed on his own team, on teammates, on other sports, using intermediaries to avoid detection, potentially violating state criminal law. A sustained, systematic pattern of behavior that broke every rule in place to protect the integrity of athletic competition. The NCAA banned him. A judge in Lubbock, Texas — home of Texas Tech — granted him an injunction to play anyway. The NCAA appealed. The injunction was overturned. Sorsby then tried a different escape route — the NFL supplemental draft. Enter the league, get drafted, collect a paycheck, and sidestep the consequences of everything that happened in college. Roger Goodell and the NFL just said no. The league announced it will not hold a supplemental draft this summer. A letter was sent to Sorsby and all 32 teams. Brendan Sorsby's only path to the NFL is now the 2027 Annual Draft — and even that is far from guaranteed given everything the league knows about what he did. Why the NFL Was Right The NFL's position on gambling is about as clear as anything in professional sports. The rules have been explicit since the league became formally intertwined with legal sports betting after the Supreme Court opened that door. Bet on any NFL game — minimum one year suspension. Bet on your own team — minimum two years. Share inside information — minimum one year. Use someone else to place a bet — minimum one year. Fix a game — lifetime ban. Now look at what Sorsby did. Thousands of bets. On his own team. Using intermediaries to place them. At three different universities. The NFL looked at that record and made a simple determination — this is not someone who gets to use our league as an escape hatch from the consequences of his actions. The line between the NFL's business relationships with sports books and casinos and its players actually gambling is not a gray area. It is one of the clearest lines in professional sports. And the NFL has been consistent about enforcing it. The league's association with legal sports gambling actually makes it smarter about detecting unusual betting patterns — that is one of the arguments for having it, as Trey explains. When a match gets fixed or something irregular happens, the betting data shows it. The NFL is not going to let someone with Sorsby's record walk through the front door and compromise that integrity infrastructure. Jeffrey Kessler Is Wrong on Both Counts Sorsby's attorney Jeffrey Kessler went to ESPN immediately after the announcement and declared that the NFL's decision is — quote — a violation of the CBA and the law. He is wrong on both counts. Let Trey explain why. First — Brendan Sorsby is not an NFL player. He is not a member of the NFL Players Association. The CBA governs the relationship between the NFL and its players. Sorsby has no standing under the CBA because he has no relationship with the league as a player. You cannot invoke a collective bargaining agreement that does not apply to you. Second — the CBA gives the NFL complete and total autonomy over whether to hold a supplemental draft in any given year. It is entirely the league's discretion. It is not mandatory. It is not guaranteed. The league has not held a supplemental draft since 2019. They were not planning to hold one this year before Sorsby filed his petition three business days before the deadline, without supporting documentation, and only after abandoning his litigation against the NCAA. The NFL's letter makes all of this explicit. So Jeffrey Kessler's argument is that the NFL violated a CBA that does not apply to his client by exercising a discretion that the CBA explicitly grants them. That is not a legal argument. That is a press release. And then comes the part that makes this argument even more confusing — if your goal is to get your client drafted by the NFL, threatening to sue the NFL is a spectacularly counterproductive opening move. Even if Kessler somehow found legal footing — which he will not — all the NFL has to do is not draft him. Proving that amounts to collusion would be nearly impossible. The NFL does not need to give anyone a reason for not selecting them in a draft. The Deflate Gate Precedent Trey makes the legal argument with the clearest possible parallel — Deflate Gate. Whether or not Tom Brady and the Patriots actually deflated those footballs — and Trey believes they did, given that the equipment manager's nickname was literally The Deflator — does not matter for the legal question. The Patriots and Brady mounted a legitimate scientific argument about PSI changes due to weather conditions. It was a real argument. And it did not matter. The reason Brady served his four-game suspension had nothing to do with whether balls were actually deflated. It had everything to do with a single clause in the CBA — the one that grants Roger Goodell the authority to adjudicate matters of competitive integrity. Brady and the NFLPA had agreed to that clause. The court upheld it. The suspension stood. The Sorsby situation is legally identical. The CBA grants the NFL complete discretion over the supplemental draft. There is no appeal. There is no workaround. There is no legal theory that overrides it. Commissioner Bigfoot put his foot down and the law is on his side. What Comes Next Sorsby now needs to find somewhere to play football to keep his skills sharp and his professional prospects alive. The CFL is a possibility. There may be other options. But the NFL in 2026 is not one of them. The 2027 NFL Draft is theoretically available to him — but the league will be watching everything between now and then. His gambling history, his pattern of attempting to avoid consequences through litigation rather than accountability, and his attorney's opening move of threatening to sue the league he wants to play in — none of that is going to make the conversation any easier when 2027 arrives. Trey makes something clear that is worth repeating. He is not rooting against Brendan Sorsby as a person. He genuinely hopes Sorsby gets the help he needs and addresses the gambling problem that has derailed his career. If he does the work, demonstrates real accountability, and earns his way into the NFL through the proper process — fine. But the idea that he can circumvent consequences by jumping from one venue to the next, finding the most favorable judge available, and threatening to sue anyone who tries to enforce a rule — that approach was always going to hit a wall eventually. Roger Goodell is that wall. Commissioner Bigfoot has spoken. And those are straight facts, homie. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    18 min
  7. The New PGA Tour Is Coming. Wyndham Clark Won the US Open. And Nelly Korda Is Going for Three Straight Majors.

    3d ago

    The New PGA Tour Is Coming. Wyndham Clark Won the US Open. And Nelly Korda Is Going for Three Straight Majors.

    Everything That Just Happened in Golf — Live From the Travelers Championship Get up to $200 off Square hardware when you sign up at square.com/go/WINGO #squarepod #sponsored Head to cozyearth.com and use code WINGO for an exclusive 20% off. Go to https://kachava.com and use code WINGO for 15% off your first order. This is Golf Live coming to you live from TPC River Highlands at the Travelers Championship — one of the best weeks on the PGA Tour calendar, and this year it happened to fall in the middle of the biggest week in professional golf in years. Trey Wingo is on-site at the Travelers. Justin Ray, the Tiger Woods of golf researchers, is at Hazeltine National for the KPMG Women's PGA Championship. Between the two of them, every major story in golf this week is covered. Here is everything that happened. The PGA Tour Revealed Its Future Brian Rolapp, the PGA Tour CEO and soon-to-be commissioner as Jay Monahan officially retires, held his much-anticipated press conference at the Travelers Championship this morning. The broad outlines of what the PGA Tour will look like beginning in 2028 are now public, and the reaction from Trey and Justin is genuinely positive. Here is the structure. There will be a Championship Tour — the best players in the world competing in 120-man fields with mandatory cuts, no sponsors exemptions, and minimum purses of $20 million per event. And there will be a Challenger Tour — a legitimate developmental circuit with minimum purses of $4 million per event and a clear pathway to the Championship Tour with two wins. The season runs February through August, with a regular season champion crowned at the end of that stretch — mirroring the MVP model in the NFL, NBA, and MLB. Then a separate playoff format, played in match play at some of the most hallowed courses in the country. The two things that generated the most excitement in the press conference room and on this show — no sponsors exemptions, period. And the possibility of championship events at Pine Valley, Cypress Point, and Seminole. When Rolapp mentioned those names, Trey says, every person in that room leaned forward at the same time. Trey had a chance to speak with Rolapp briefly after the press conference and asked directly about the pushback on sponsors exemptions. Rolapp's response — do sponsors decide who plays in the NFL playoffs or the NBA Finals? No. The PGA Tour will decide who the best players are. Nobody else. Trey describes it as one of the clearest and most compelling answers he has heard from tour leadership in years. There is also a Last Chance Series coming in the fall — a handful of events between September and January where players fight to keep their spot on the Championship Tour. Built-in drama. Built-in stakes. Built-in television. And in the fall, a series of international events working in partnership with the DP World Tour — national opens, marquee global venues, the strongest fields those events have ever seen. Trey notes that this announcement was clearly pointed at LIV Golf, which has been pitching international opens to investors as its primary selling point. The PGA Tour just said — we are going there too. Brian's closing line from the press conference may be the best summary of how he has approached this entire process: we want to be rigid on the vision and flexible on the details. And 2027 is essentially a runway year to get ready for 2028 when everything really changes. Jim Furyk, the US Ryder Cup captain, also stopped by the Golf Live set at the Travelers — a reminder of why being on-site matters. Some moments you cannot plan. Wyndham Clark Wins the US Open — The Data Breakdown Wyndham Clark is a two-time US Open champion. Wire to wire at Shinnecock Hills, holding a lead for essentially 72 hours, holding off Scottie Scheffler on his 30th birthday with the entire gallery rooting against him. Justin Ray puts the performance in full statistical context. Since Wyndham Clark won at LACC in 2023, only Scotty Scheffler and Rory McIlroy have more PGA Tour wins than Wyndham Clark. He is the only player in PGA Tour history to win twice with a final round score of 60 or better. He beat the field average on Thursday by more than nine strokes — something you see maybe once a season in major championship golf. And he did all of this while hitting only 20 of 36 greens in regulation over the weekend, leaning almost entirely on his short game and his putter, making nine par putts between four and fourteen feet when they absolutely had to fall. Justin's honest assessment of Wyndham going forward — high ceiling, lower floor than a Scotty Scheffler or a Rory McIlroy. He does not consistently contend. He either wins or disappears. But the ceiling is real, he is not yet 30 years old, and Justin would not be surprised to see him on more Ryder Cup teams and more major leaderboards before his career is over. The Andy North comparison does not hold up. Wyndham Clark's ceiling is significantly higher than a two-time US Open champion who wins and then fades. On the crowd behavior — both Trey and Justin address it directly. It was ugly. It was over the line. And the fact that Wyndham Clark responded the way he did — joking with his caddy about it, saying things like "hey, someone likes us" every time a single person clapped — made both of them bigger fans of him as a person and as a competitor. You add 72 hours of leading plus a hostile gallery plus Scotty Scheffler in your group chasing history, and Wyndham Clark handled all of it. That tells you something real about who this guy is. On Sam Burns — two straight years of being right there at the US Open and coming up just short. Justin believes he gets in the winner's circle before the end of this season. He is built for major championships and the scar tissue of these near-misses is going to make him better. Nelly Korda Goes for Three in a Row at the KPMG Justin Ray is on the ground at Hazeltine National for the KPMG Women's PGA Championship — and the story starts and ends with Nelly Korda going for her third consecutive major championship of the season. If she wins, she would become just the fifth woman in history to win three majors in the same season. She has already been beaten by a combined ten players across eight stroke play events this year. She is gaining nearly four strokes per round on the field, which Justin describes as peak Tiger territory in terms of dominance over your peers. The purse this week is $13 million — the largest in the history of women's golf, up from just under $4 million the last time the KPMG was held at Hazeltine in 2019. Credit to KPMG for that investment. Players to watch beyond Nelly — Gino Titicaka, who Justin compares to Xander Schauffele on the men's side, is one of the most intriguing athletes in professional sports right now. She has achieved almost everything without breaking through in a major. Charlie Hull feels inevitable. Hannah Green has already won at Hazeltine and has four worldwide wins this season. And Minjee Lee is the defending champion. The Travelers Championship Preview TPC River Highlands is a different animal from Shinnecock Hills. This is a birdie fest. A party. A week where the load lightens after the brutality of the US Open and players remember what it feels like to make a putt that actually goes in. Jim Furyk shot a 58 here — one of only two sub-60 rounds in PGA Tour history. Patrick Cantlay has averaged more than five birdies per round here over the last five years, the most of any player. Putting tends to be the separator here in recent years. Trey also notes something he genuinely appreciates about the Travelers — this event has leaned into its identity as the week after the US Open rather than fighting it. It's a party. The crowds are great. Something wild always seems to happen on Sunday at TPC River Highlands. And the Travelers has also become the place where big-name amateurs tend to make their professional debuts, which gives the week its own kind of energy and relevance. Your Questions Seven questions from the Golf Live community — covering what Trey and Justin are most excited about from the Rolapp announcement, which courses they would love to see the tour visit beyond Pine Valley and Cypress Point, the return of match play in the playoffs, what questions still do not have answers from today's press conference, Gino Titicaka's game heading into the KPMG, how Wyndham Clark was treated at Shinnecock and how he handled it, and the USGA's course setup debate at Shinnecock — did they get it right or did they mismanage it? Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    1h 3m
  8. The World Cup Is Bringing Out the Best in America

    4d ago

    The World Cup Is Bringing Out the Best in America

    The World Cup Is Bringing Out the Best in America Get up to $200 off Square hardware when you sign up at square.com/go/WINGO #squarepod #sponsored Head to cozyearth.com and use code WINGO for an exclusive 20% off. Go to https://kachava.com and use code WINGO for 15% off your first order. For two weeks, the World Cup has done something nothing else in America has managed to do lately. It has brought the entire world to our doorstep, and the entire world is falling in love with what they found. Trey is joined by Mark Donaldson — a native Scotsman, longtime ESPN broadcaster, and now an American citizen who has been living this World Cup from every angle imaginable. Native Scot. American by choice. And right now, the best person on earth to explain what is actually happening in cities across this country. The Tartan Army Takeover Scotland beat Haiti 1-0 in their opening match — their first World Cup win since 1990, only the fifth in their entire history. And the Scottish fans who made the trip did not just show up. They took over. Ten thousand of them descended on Boston and Providence, bagpipes and all. They packed Fenway Park for a Red Sox game mid-tournament and sang for nine straight innings without stopping. They drained bars dry across the city. They quadrupled the entire region's average St. Patrick's Day beer consumption — in the most Irish city in America, on a random Tuesday in June. And in the middle of all that chaos — zero arrests. Compare that to Scotland's trip to Germany for the Euros two years ago, where 200,000 fans traveled across three cities and also produced zero arrests. This isn't luck. It's who they are. Mark even points to something most people would never notice — city workers in Boston commenting on how thoroughly the Scots cleaned up after themselves. Tidy as they came. A Fresh Look at America Here's the part that hits hardest. Mark has lived in America since 2010. He remembers a time when this country was universally seen, by outsiders, as the best place in the world to be. That perception has shifted in recent years. But for two weeks this summer, something has changed. Fans from forty-eight different nations have arrived, and they are falling in love with this country in real time — the food, the energy, the openness, the sheer scale of everything. Quesadillas the size of your head. Biscuits and gravy. Chipotle treated like a religious experience. Mark's message is simple and it's the whole point of this conversation — don't let this be a two-week moment we look back on fondly. Let it be a wake-up call to keep building on what we clearly still have. The US Team Is Real Mark watched the United States' opening match at a neighbor's watch party, fully expecting to be polite about it. Instead, he says it might be the best first half of soccer he has ever seen — better than what he saw out of Germany. The U.S. is favorably positioned heading into the knockout rounds, and Mark believes a quarterfinal run is realistic if the team can replicate that level of play. The World Cup at Large Trey and Mark also get into the bigger tournament picture — Messi, still magic even though he no longer moves like he used to. Mbappé as the most dangerous player in the field right now, followed by Harry Kane and Erling Haaland. France as the favorite to win it all, given their strength and depth heading into the brutal heat and humidity that will define the knockout stage. A breakout teenager on Morocco's midfield. And one incredible story out of Cape Verde, where a player with Irish roots was scouted and recruited entirely through LinkedIn messages — and is now keeping clean sheets against Spain on the world's biggest stage. Why This Matters Strip away the trophy, the brackets, and the predictions, and what's left is the simplest part of the whole story. People from forty-eight countries showed up in America this summer with flags, instruments, and an unstoppable amount of joy — and for a little while, that joy was contagious. Sports does that. It always has. The World Cup is just proving it all over again, right here, right now. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    42 min
5
out of 5
31 Ratings

About

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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