William Mouw wins ISCO Championship in Louisville
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A pair of lightning delays Saturday led numerous afternoon pairings to tee off more than an hour and a half later than their originally scheduled start times. They played until darkness brought the day to a close.
The longest active streak of breakthrough winners on the PGA TOUR just got longer. And not only that, the latest came from way, way outside to join the parade.
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Golf Digest on MSNHere’s the prize money payout for each golfer at the 2025 ISCO ChampionshipThe event, which also allowed 50 DP World Tour players into the field, was playing for a $4 million purse with the winner taking home $720,000.
The tour hasn’t held an event in Louisville in 66 years, when the Kentucky Derby Open ended a three-year run at Seneca Golf Course. Gary Player and Billy Casper, both eventual members of the World Golf Hall of Fame, left Louisville with a win. But it ended in 1959, and the tour hasn’t returned to town since.
Louisville's Seneca Youth Golf Course is getting a $1.1 million investment from the PGA of America, the First Tee and a local philanthropist.
Given the sweltering weather on Thursday at the Hurstbourne Country Club, there was a name that had many spectators at the ISCO Championship admiring: Daniel Iceman III. Stephen P. Schmidt has the story.
Chan Kim delivered both. For the second straight round at the ISCO Championship, Kim jarred a shot from off the green on Hurstbourne’s short par-4 fourth. The first was from 123 yards. The second was a low missile from 36 yards that slammed into the flagstick and dropped in Friday’s second round.