The Bad News Bears Are Ready to Roar: Why Jupiter Links’ Cinderella Run Changes Everything About TGL
Look, I’ve been around professional golf long enough to know that comebacks make for great stories but rarely translate into championships. Last year, when I watched Jupiter Links Golf Club stumble through the inaugural TGL season at 1-4, I thought we were witnessing an expansion-team disaster—the kind of “well, they’ll build it better next year” narrative that golf fans have heard a thousand times.
Then Tiger Woods called them the “Bad News Bears,” and honestly, the self-deprecation was almost painful to watch. A reigning Masters champion on a team that couldn’t get out of its own way. But here’s what I’ve learned in 35 years of covering this game: sometimes the worst teams teach you the most.
Jupiter Links didn’t just sneak into the SoFi Cup finals Monday night—they absolutely demolished the No. 1 seed Boston Common Golf Club 9-5, sending Rory McIlroy and company home in stunning fashion. What strikes me most isn’t the victory itself. It’s what it reveals about how quickly teams can evolve in a format this young and fluid.
The Three-Point Swing Nobody Saw Coming
In their regular-season matchup against LA Golf Club on January 20th, Jupiter Links lost 8-4. Fast forward two months, and they’re heading into a best-of-three championship series as legitimate contenders. That’s not luck. That’s learning.
Having caddied in the ’90s, I’ve seen plenty of players and teams make mid-season adjustments, but TGL operates on a different frequency. The format is so granular—singles matches, triples, match play dynamics with the ability to double points on any hole—that a team’s identity can shift dramatically with better shot selection and course management.
What’s particularly interesting about Jupiter Links’ path to Monday is their singles dominance. They won a league-high 16 points in singles matches this season, and that tells you something crucial: when the pressure is on and it’s just one-on-one, these guys close. Max Homa, Tom Kim, and Kevin Kisner aren’t flashy names compared to some of the marquee players in the league, but they’re steady. They’re clutch. And in match play, that’s everything.
“I think just shows the quality that we have as a team, the quality of golfers that we have on the team. And just the trust that over time the theory of large numbers will kind of play in your favor. I think that you have to think that way, and you have to trust the team and you have to trust the golf.”
Justin Rose said that after LA’s comeback win against Atlanta, and he might as well have been speaking for Jupiter Links too. This format rewards patience and collective confidence in a way traditional golf doesn’t.
LA’s Long Ball vs. Jupiter’s Clutch Putting
Here’s where this finals matchup gets genuinely fascinating. LA Golf Club has been the tour’s longest-ball team at 317.9 yards average off the tee. They’ve dominated triples matches with 18 holes won for 20 points. In a format where length matters—especially on the par-5s like Sterling (535 yards) and Caverns (569 yards)—that’s a legitimate advantage.
But Jupiter Links counters with something you can’t quantify on a stat sheet: they’re ice-cold in the clutch. Rose’s albatross on Sterling during their regular-season matchup was spectacular, sure. But the real headline from that match was Jupiter’s ability to claw back into it. They cut a 5-4 deficit to virtually nothing by the time they got to the business end.
And that 72.7% putting percentage inside 10 feet? That’s Tour-level precision. For context, most PGA Tour players hover around 64-67% on those makeable putts. Jupiter Links isn’t just competitive on the greens—they’re elite.
The Course Becomes a Character
In my experience, home-course advantage in team events gets overblown. But in TGL, every hole has a name, a personality, and a history. Let me point out a few matchups that’ll matter Monday night.
On the Rocks (Par 3, 108 yards): This is Kim’s playground. He’s hit this thing so well that Woods probably whispered it into existence as a tribute to his “coach” status. In the semifinals, Kim hit it to two feet, three inches to extend Jupiter’s lead to 7-3. Expect him to do something similar Monday.
Stinger (Par 4, 416 yards): Tommy Fleetwood will face Kim here, and Fleetwood has figured something out that most players haven’t. He’s recorded two of the three lowest-apex drives on this hole all season, including a 318-yard bullet that was just 9.1 feet off the ground. That’s not power golf—that’s precision. It’s the kind of shot that separates winners from also-rans.
Cenote (Par 3, 264 yards): Jupiter has gone 5-0-1 here. LA is 1-4-1. Kisner against Theegala. Jupiter owns this hole.
Cliffhanger (Par 3, 151 yards): This is where LA shows its teeth. They’re 3-0-1 here, hitting the green on all nine attempts. This is their fortress.
What This Means for TGL’s Future
In my three decades covering professional golf, I’ve watched formats live and die based on whether they reward merit or accident. TGL’s first championship could’ve been decided by star power and pedigree. Instead, it’s being contested by a team that couldn’t win three matches in 2025.
That’s not a bug. That’s the feature.
Jupiter Links’ journey from punch line to finals contender proves that TGL’s format genuinely allows teams to evolve. The singles specialists can carry dead weight for a stretch. The distance merchants can lose ground. Everything stays in play until the final match.
“Look what we did last year. Okay, we skulled a bunker shot, almost killed some lady in the stands. Hit the flag. We had a shot-clock violation by me over a 4-footer. We just had some weird stuff.”
Tiger’s honesty about Jupiter’s inaugural disaster might be the most important thing said about TGL all year. Bad things happen. Weird things happen. But in match play, with a best-of-three format, recovery is always possible. The Bad News Bears aren’t just in the finals—they’re legitimate threats to win it.
That changes how we should think about every team heading into 2027. Nobody’s out. Everybody’s dangerous. That’s how you build a league that matters.

