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Opinion & Analysis

Ryder Cup 2025: Crossing to Bethpage – NY state park golf, part 4

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The two teams that will clash in the 2025 Ryder Cup at Bethpage State Park’s Black course still await roster selection. We might even have a player-captain, for the first time since the 1960s. For me, my two-year journey across New York State came to a fitting and enjoyable close the third week of June. As a life-long New York resident (with a few collegiate stints in Ohio, Vermont, and North Carolina), I was justifiably proud of our state park system, especially its golf courses. Friends in other states boast of two or three state-run facilities in their commonwealths; New York boasts over twenty courses. As an adult, living near the flattest of all the state park courses, I knew that other terrains and topographies existed around the state, and I took great delight in visiting them.

In addition to our hometown course, Beaver Island, I had played the five courses at Bethpage, the one at Green Lakes near Syracuse, and the James Baird course near Poughkeepsie. I was able to visit four courses in central New York in 2024, and another four on Long Island this June. A planned trip to the north country, to visit courses along Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence Seaway, was scuttled last fall by cold weather’s early arrival. Fortunately for me, I was able to collaborate with the superintendents and managers at a number of courses. They provided me with images and intel required to fill that gap in my travels.

On a cheery Sunday morning, we drove south and east toward Binghamton, New York. As we approached the region, a powerful storm blew through, leaving standing water across parts of the course. We were able to play Chenango Valley that day, and we continued on to the Moses Pitch and Putt, Sunken Meadow, Montauk Downs, and Sag Harbor, all on Long Island. When we holed our final putts on the ninth green at Sag Harbor, I took a long breath and thought those bittersweet thoughts of achievement and completion. Achieving the goal was the target, but the completion meant that another task had come to a close. Don’t let me be a downer. Let’s have a nice look at the final four courses in our Crossing to Bethpage series. At the end, I’ll link the other three installments, in case you haven’t yet read them.

Moses Pitch and Putt

Out on Fire Island (a large island if ever there was one) sit the 18 wee holes that make up the Robert Moses Pitch and Putt golf course. The holes extend from around 60 yards to nearly 115 yards. Brilliantly, there is one blind hole, around 13 or 14, that plays around a dogleg if you let it. The heroic play is to go over the trees and at the green. Send a scouting party ahead, to the corner, to ensure that the green is clear.

The Moses utilizes turf mats for its teeing grounds. This is quite logical. Great players are not at the Moses to prep for US Open qualifying, nor to diminish their handicap. If you left the Moses to grass teeing grounds, you’d have basepaths all around, minus the white powder lining. Situated in the dunes of Fire Island, the Moses plays as unlike a links course as you’ll find. Greens receive shots with a hug, not with a kick in the rear as the ball bounds over the green. You can play run-up shots to the flag, but it will take a few holes to acclimate yourself to the amount of bounce.

I’m not 100% certain how large a footprint the Moses takes up, but I am convinced that dozens of communities around New York state would benefit from just such a course. State Park golf is all about the public player, the municipal smacker, and the game grows when the youth have a place like the Moses to play.

Sunken Meadow

Sunken Meadow is due north of Bethpage, on the sound side of Long Island. It compares favorably with the Blue course at the big park. Sunken Meadow is filled with turbulence on its Red and Blue nines. Rises and falls of terrain make the walk a hike. If it’s during the famous heat wave of 2025, as our round was, it’s a bear of a hike. Like the Blue course at Bethpage, Sunken Meadow places sizable emphasis on accurate driving. If you have a case of the lateral slides, you will be in for a long day of pitching sideways and praying for par and bogey saves.

Knowing that we had a 27-hole day ahead, we opted to take our walk at Sunken Meadow. As suggested above, hot days are better for riding, unless you remove half the club in your bag to lighten the load. It wasn’t as taxing as the day we spent at Chambers Bay, but it was reminiscent of the fabled summits at the municipal SeaTac course.

Alfred Tull, architect of the Bethpage Yellow course, put his signature on each of the nines at Sunken Meadow. Tull also made updates to the Blue layout, which explains the similarity of styles between those courses and Sunken Meadow. Tull apparently felt the need to test the golfer with tee balls into upslopes, and well-bunkered greens. Length of holes means nothing on a Tull tract. Tull did provide opportunities for players to learn a course. At Sunken Meadow, for example, tee balls up the left on the 1st holes of Blue and Red nines, find a speed slot that adds 30-40 yards to the drive. Flare your ball to the right, and you’ll approach with 3 more clubs.

Sunken Meadow is as solid a training ground for golfers as one might find. It demands accuracy and length, an ability to recover around the greens, and a keen eye for reading basic, not turbulent, spines and splines across the putting surfaces.

Montauk Downs

The Downs sit soooo far out on Long Island that the layout holds a mythical place in state golf lore. When I was a youth, in the 1980s, the course featured regularly in the early listings of America’s top 100 public golf courses. The Downs holds a place in NYS park golf lore that is matched by one other park: Bethpage. When you play the Downs and Bethpage, you cannot help but not that there is an extra level of staffing, an extra level of course care, that the other park courses must envy. It’s a tricky point to make, so let’s leave it at this: it’s ok to have crown jewels among a collection. The reason for this elevation of Montauk Downs merits investigation.

Robert Trent Jones, senior, is recognized as one of the most prolific golf course architects of the 20th century. He hung a shingle for business and worked in 45 states and 35 countries. 500 layouts are attributed to him and his staff. Incredibly, he was not the original designer of the golf course. The original tract of land was developed by a 1920s investor, who opened the course as a private club. The bones of the Downs lie in prestige and exclusivity. When the investor lost his fortune in the 1929 stock market crash, his hopes to turn Montauk into something else simply vanished. The club remained private into the 1960s, when it retained Trent Jones to redesign the layout.

In 1978, the private club was sold to New York State, which gladly added the Downs to its stable of state park courses. The Parks and Rec department recognized the value of the downs, and reserved for it the amount of attention and upkeep that it merits. The Downs immediately took a place among America’s finest, public-access layouts. As late as 2009, it was ranked second (behind Bethpage Black) in a Golf World Readers’ Choice ballot.

The Downs features many of RTJsr’s favorite touches. The majority of fairways, whether straight or bent, feature drive-zone bunkers on each side. The greens are often pushed up, guarded by sand left and right, and demand an aerial approach shot. At some early point in his architectural career, Trent Jones abandoned the traditional golf links principle of the run-up golf shot as an option, and compelled golfers to hoist their approach shots toward the clouds. The Downs also features twisting, nearly-unreachable par five holes, and greens located at the end of a 270-degree turn around a pond.

With no traffic, Montauk Downs is 48 minutes beyond Southampton. That is, it’s 60-90 minute drive from Shinnecock Hills, depending on the time of day. We paired an early-morning tee time with lunch in Montauk; you could do worse than the Shagwong Tavern, and nine holes at Sag Harbor. After a loop around the Downs, you’ll be glad that you made the trek, but a bit saddened that it’s not the five-course park that is Bethpage. The land is inspiring, confrontational, and ever-changing. It’s no wonder that folks used to emulate the Bethpage sleep-in-your-car method of securing a tee time.

Sag Harbor

It was appropriate that we finished our 700-day pilgrimage over nine holes described by the manager as a People’s course. Sag Harbor sits in a well-to-do section of eastern Long Island; it is anything but a posh retreat. Its architectural history remains a mystery, but it’s clear that the person who laid out the course knew something about strategic golf. No two consecutive holes run in the same direction. For every hole that moves left to right, a counterpart moves right to left. As a result, Sag Harbor offers a solid test of your game while not stressing you out too much.

Sag Harbor is a hand-watered layout. It was kept up by a dedicated group of local volunteers and boasted sand greens for a fair number of years. The property was purchased by the state in the late 1980s, and the Parks and Recreation department officially took over operations a decade later. As a hand-watered layout, Sag Harbor is as fast and firm as nature allows. On the day we played, I eschewed aerial assaults for the ground game. It’s way more fun to play bouncers and rollers, to determine just how accurate my sixth sense is.

You won’t come away from Sag Harbor with photos for the ages, or tales of the most daunting, 2700-yard course around, but you will enjoy every moment that you spend on its fairways. This is a course made for walking, so do your best to duck the cart fee and sling your bag. You’ll go back a century or two, and be the better golfer for it.

That’s a wrap

There’s no better place to finish a series than a locals-mainly place like Sag Harbor. It’s a joint of which the regulars are equal parts proud and possessive. They are glad that you came, but don’t want too many people to know. No sense in overcrowding, after all.

As a lifelong muni-golf kid, I have still had the great fortune to play some of the world’s top ten courses. I appreciated my time there, but my heart always hearkens back to my days at Grover Cleveland and Audubon, near Buffalo, NY. The clacking of metal spikes across parking lots and walkways from my youth still resounds in my auditory memory. I changed my shoes in those same lots and put my golf ball in the sleeve to reserve a spot. Municipal golf is different from club golf, and I appreciate the differences.

There certainly are many muni golfers who could avail themselves of a private club. They prefer the diversity and the unpredictability of a public-access course. I know that I did. As a young man, I walked into untold twosomes and threesomes, happy to fill out the merry band of sojourners who would spend a few hours together, chasing the white ball and the perfect shot. To those lasses and lads, any of the aforementioned state park courses is THEIR country club. It is their home for golf, and it is their safe space.

I wish to thank Kevin Cassidy for assisting in securing tee times. Unlike many other stories and series that I’ve written, that was the extent of the beneficence of New York State. Parks and Rec bows to no one, and everyone pays their way. As a state resident, I’m honored to have this many accessible municipal courses from Niagara to Malone, from Montak to Elmira. In September, the finest of them all will host the Ryder Cup, and I’ll be there to report, one last time.

Crossing to Bethpage Part One: Green Lakes, Beaver Island, James Baird, the Bethpage Five

Crossing to Bethpage Part Two: Soaring Eagles, Chenango Valley, Indian Hills, Bonavista

Crossing to Bethpage Part Three: Battle Island, Dinsmore, Rockland Lake, Saratoga Spa, Springbrook Greens, St. Lawrence, Wellesley Island

Crossing to Bethpage Part Four: You just read it!

Ronald Montesano writes for GolfWRX.com from western New York. He dabbles in coaching golf and teaching Spanish, in addition to scribbling columns on all aspects of golf, from apparel to architecture, from equipment to travel. Follow Ronald on Twitter at @buffalogolfer.

1 Comment

1 Comment

  1. Sistem Informasi

    Jul 22, 2025 at 10:25 pm

    Why do some golfers prefer public-access courses over private clubs, seeing them as their own “country club” and a space for connection and community?

    Regard Sistem Informasi

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Club Junkie

Tour Edge Exotics mini driver review + TaylorMade Spider ZT Max first look – Club Junkie

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On this episode of Club Junkie, I put the new Tour Edge Exotics Mini Driver to the test and break down the performance, forgiveness, distance, and where it fits compared to a traditional driver or strong fairway wood. If you have been curious about adding a mini driver to the bag, this one is worth a look.

I also dive into the new TaylorMade Spider ZT Max putter that was recently spotted and discuss the growing zero torque putter trend. Plus, there is a closer look at the new Project X Titan Yellow shaft showing up on the PGA Tour and what makes it different from other profiles currently out there.

 

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Opinion & Analysis

AVL: We’re talking about practice! My best tips for taking your game to the course

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With the beginning of June on the horizon and courses rounding into peak condition for the season, it’s time to hone the finer skills that often get rusty over the winter. More sunlight also means more time to get out on the course and work on your game.

Whether it’s the practice green or the driving range, there’s always something to improve—whether you’re enjoying the fresh air or preparing for a weekend game or tournament. You can work on drills or freestyle around the green, and friendly competition is a great way to sharpen your skills.

While there are endless ways to get better at golf, I’m going to focus on practicing around the green. Let’s take a look at a few things to keep in mind as we head into the summer months.

Drills

From the driving range to the practice green, it’s important to incorporate drills into your routine. Years ago, I spent a weekend working on my short game with James Sieckmann. He recommended doing drill work for 5–10 minutes, then returning to your main practice.

This way, you create a balance between structured drills and real-world scenarios, so you’re not confined to “perfect” situations. For example, hitting the same three-foot putt over and over is good for repetition, but after a while, it becomes less interactive for your brain.

My approach is to use a putting trainer with a narrow gate for the ball to pass through, or simply place tees just outside the width of the ball. I’ll hit a series of four putts through the gate for three sets. Then, from a similar distance, I’ll hit four putts without the training aid and repeat that sequence three times.

Next, I’ll hit a number of 15–25 foot putts in a random fashion, then circle back to repeat the short putt drills with and without the training aid.

This breaks up the rhythm of hitting short putts with the training aid. When you hit the same short putts over and over, it’s easy to get into a groove—which is great for the drill, but not reflective of actual course play. While finding a rhythm is fundamental for drills, I like to introduce variation with longer putts to keep things realistic.

Game Mode

Once you’ve established a foundation with drills, it’s time to simulate on-course scenarios. This is where a few practice games come in handy.

One that I’ve been enjoying lately involves putting 10- to 15-footers with two balls. If I make the putt, great! If I miss, I pull the missed ball back a putter length. Suddenly, that little tap-in becomes a nerve-wracking three-footer—at least at first. As you get better at this game, those three- and five-footers become much more comfortable and routine.

It may sound cliché, but each shot is just what it is—it’s how we react that makes the difference. I like this game because it blends the pressure of on-course putting with the consequence of leaving yourself a much longer putt than usual.

Another game I like is one I recently learned from Brad Faxon. Place three tees in a line at four different locations around the hole: one at 3 feet, one at 6 feet, and one at 8 feet. The 3- and 6-foot putts count as par, and the 8-footer is for birdie.

This game keeps you focused on scoring and helps you get into a competitive mindset. You can even think about this putting game while you’re on the course. I just started playing it, and last week I couldn’t get better than two under par.

Competition

Competition during practice is when drills and games come to life, and you start to see results. For me, nothing beats a putting contest with a friend or two. In the right setting, these contests can become talking points for the whole season.

Match play, a game of 21, or simply seeing who can make the most one-putts (with a small prize on the line) are all great ways to simulate real on-course pressure. Recently, I played in a putting contest where one competitor made back-to-back 30- and 50-foot putts. As they say, expect your opponent to make every putt—and he nearly did. That’s impressive, and it’s something you see on the course, too: you have to stay committed to your game plan, no matter what.

When it comes to practice, it’s important to blend feedback from recent rounds with the fundamentals you want to reinforce. Drills, games, and competition—from the driving range to the putting green—form the backbone of skills you’ll rely on during actual rounds.

Finding the right balance is something we’re all working on, one practice session at a time. With the beginning of June on the horizon and courses rounding into peak condition for the season, it’s time to hone the finer skills that often get rusty over the winter. More sunlight also means more time to get out on the course and work on your game. Whether it’s the practice green or the driving range, there’s always something to improve—whether you’re enjoying the fresh air or preparing for a weekend game or tournament. You can work on drills or freestyle around the green, and friendly competition is a great way to sharpen your skills. While there are endless ways to get better at golf, I’m going to focus on practicing around the green. Let’s take a look at a few things to keep in mind as we head into the summer months.

Drills

From the driving range to the practice green, it’s important to incorporate drills into your routine. Years ago, I spent a weekend working on my short game with James Sieckmann. He recommended doing drill work for 5–10 minutes, then returning to your main practice. This way, you create a balance between structured drills and real-world scenarios, so you’re not confined to “perfect” situations. For example, hitting the same three-foot putt over and over is good for repetition, but after a while, it becomes less interactive for your brain.

My approach is to use a putting trainer with a narrow gate for the ball to pass through, or simply place tees just outside the width of the ball. I’ll hit a series of four putts through the gate for three sets. Then, from a similar distance, I’ll hit four putts without the training aid and repeat that sequence three times. Next, I’ll hit a number of 15–25 foot putts in a random fashion, then circle back to repeat the short putt drills with and without the training aid.

This breaks up the rhythm of hitting short putts with the training aid. When you hit the same short putts over and over, it’s easy to get into a groove—which is great for the drill, but not reflective of actual course play. While finding a rhythm is fundamental for drills, I like to introduce variation with longer putts to keep things realistic.

Game Mode

Once you’ve established a foundation with drills, it’s time to simulate on-course scenarios. This is where a few practice games come in handy. One that I’ve been enjoying lately involves putting 10- to 15-footers with two balls. If I make the putt, great! If I miss, I pull the missed ball back a putter length.

Suddenly, that little tap-in becomes a nerve-wracking three-footer—at least at first. As you get better at this game, those three- and five-footers become much more comfortable and routine. It may sound cliché, but each shot is just what it is—it’s how we react that makes the difference. I like this game because it blends the pressure of on-course putting with the consequence of leaving yourself a much longer putt than usual.

Another game I like is one I recently learned from Brad Faxon. Place three tees in a line at four different locations around the hole: one at 3 feet, one at 6 feet, and one at 8 feet. The 3- and 6-foot putts count as par, and the 8-footer is for birdie.

This game keeps you focused on scoring and helps you get into a competitive mindset. You can even think about this putting game while you’re on the course. I just started playing it, and last week I couldn’t get better than two under par.

Competition

Competition during practice is when drills and games come to life, and you start to see results. For me, nothing beats a putting contest with a friend or two. In the right setting, these contests can become talking points for the whole season. Match play, a game of 21, or simply seeing who can make the most one-putts (with a small prize on the line) are all great ways to simulate real on-course pressure. Recently, I played in a putting contest where one competitor made back-to-back 30- and 50-foot putts. As they say, expect your opponent to make every putt—and he nearly did. That’s impressive, and it’s something you see on the course, too: you have to stay committed to your game plan, no matter what.

When it comes to practice, it’s important to blend feedback from recent rounds with the fundamentals you want to reinforce. Drills, games, and competition—from the driving range to the putting green—form the backbone of skills you’ll rely on during actual rounds. Finding the right balance is something we’re all working on, one practice session at a time.

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Equipment

Seoul Sensibilities: Is Korean golf fashion starting to shape the world?

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For Korean golfers, we always look forward to the last of the kkot-saem-chu-I for the true start of a new golf season. The term refers to a cold snap, but literally translates as “winter being jealous of the flowers beginning to bloom, thus lashing out one final time before surrendering to spring”.

A rather poetic mouthful packed into a short expression.

Koreans can be like that. Understated, yet oddly expressive at the same time. And nowhere is this more true on the golf course and in our golf bags. In fact, I suspect many Korean golfers look forward to new apparel and accessory drops more than they do actual equipment launches each year.

At this point, Korean golf fashion may exist on its own timeline. (courtesy of @seonbi_golfer)

There is ample evidence to support that suspicion. Korea is the world’s third-largest golf market behind the United States and Japan, yet its appetite for golf apparel exceeds that of both countries combined. Recent estimates suggest that Korea accounts for nearly 40 percent of the global golf apparel market, placing it among the world’s most influential golf fashion markets and punching well above its size.

Simply, we care deeply about how new golf clubs look and feel, but enjoy looking good while swinging them even more.

Golfers in the West may laugh and say that golf is played on a course, not a fashion runway. Perhaps. But what’s the harm in trying to look and feel good, if the added self-confidence can help actual performance? It certainly seems to have worked for Jason Day, who may have unlocked a new stats category: dormant strokes gained. Coincidence?

During the COVID-era, estimates placed the market near $9 billion, an astonishing figure for a single country.

As a proud member of Gen X, I’ve witnessed the highs and lows of golf fashion firsthand. The pleated trousers and wing-tipped shoes of Jack Nicklaus, the stylish plus-fours and knickers of Payne Stewart, the baggy black trousers and fitted mock-necks of Tiger Woods, and the thigh-hugging athletic tailoring of Rory McIlroy. Golf fashion, like the golf swing itself, has rarely stood still.

But nowhere have those trends shifted, evolved, and been scrutinized quite as relentlessly as in Korea. Here, golf fashion moves faster than fairway gossip, and consumers dissect brands with a level of discernment that can be both impressive and mildly terrifying. New brands are studied, judged, embraced, or dismissed with startling efficiency.

The result is a consumer base with one of the sharpest eyes for quality and authenticity anywhere in the world. It is difficult to quantify, but easy to recognize. Clean lines without trying too hard. Luxury mixed with utility. Trend awareness balanced by restraint and purpose.

It’s golf fashion shaped by one of the world’s most style-literate cities, something I like to call Seoul Sensibilities, referring to the taste level forged by a uniquely competitive environment.

And increasingly, global brands have noticed.

Many golf brands in Korea have their own flagship shops dedicated to apparel only

Titleist understood this years ago, when its apparel business in Korea took on a life of its own under new ownership and local direction. What had once been a straightforward extension of an iconic equipment giant became something sharper and more premium. By going all in on the serious Tour-player look (I couldn’t even fit into their XL sizes), Titleist struck the right chord with Korean consumers and helped its fledgling apparel business break into the mainstream. Titleist became a household name even for non-golfers who wore its caps, shirts, and windbreakers in daily life. In many ways, it proved that even heritage golf brands could carry real fashion credibility when viewed through a Korean lens.

Several years later, PXG took a page out of Titleist’s playbook and followed suit. Korean consumers helped transform the brand from one known largely for irons and loud commercials into something broader and more stylish. PXG apparel’s growth in Korea was explosive, where it found an early audience and turned the category into something more than mere logo merchandise. It is still hard to walk anywhere in Seoul without seeing its palindrome logo.

Malbon’s meteoric rise in the United States was genuine, but its ascent into a global golf lifestyle brand owes much to Korea, where it was elevated by a market already fluent in modern golf style. Korea did not simply embrace Malbon. It pressure-tested the concept, refined its appeal, and helped push it into the global spotlight.

As such, new brands may arrive from abroad, but more often than not, their sharpest evolution happens here. If a brand can earn credibility in Seoul, it’s deemed to have passed one of the toughest style audits in the game.

That is why the next meaningful chapter may not come from outside, but from a Korean brand moving in the opposite direction, carrying those Seoul Sensibilities outward as K-pop once did.

Play young Stay dope.

From Seoul, With Intent

Khalhon is a label that feels less like a trend-chasing newcomer and more like the product of a market that has already seen everything. Golfers here have long been surrounded by luxury logos, technical fabrics, and tour uniforms disguised as lifestyle wear and vice-versa. In other words, novelty alone rarely lasts here, and the Koreans seems to understand that instinctively.

Its style language leans into clean silhouettes, relaxed but tailored proportions, muted palettes, and premium materials that speak quietly but confidently. There is a modern city aesthetic running through it all, with strong layering pieces, thoughtful textures, and subtle branding that suggests sophistication rather than demanding attention.

“Built for the course. Designed beyond it.”

Most importantly, the garments seem designed to blur the line between golfwear and everyday style. Shirts, trousers, knitwear, and outer layers move comfortably between a game of screen golf, a lunch reservation, an airport gate, or an afternoon coffee in Gangnam with friends.

It raises the question of whether this is golfwear that happens to look good off the course, or everyday clothing that performs beautifully on the fairways.

Personally, I have long appreciated Nike Golf for its clean, athletic modernization of golf attire. It also has the useful side effect of making me look like a more serious golfer than I probably am. But off the course, there are times when being instantly identified as the golf guy in a crowd of non-golfers can feel a touch self-conscious.

“Built for the course. Designed beyond it.”

That is part of what drew me to Khalhon, which seemed to blend golf and everyday wear naturally. While some of the outfits may be slightly beyond my personal confidence level, the brand also offers tasteful options for older guys like me who still want to express a little personality without regretting the decision later.

These are not simply flashy outfits worn on the course and then banished to the closet until the next tee time. They work surprisingly well off the course too, and I suspect many of the pieces will still look right a couple of years from now, which would certainly be kinder to my wallet than most golf fashion trends tend to be.

And perhaps that broader lifestyle positioning also helps explain why someone like Sean Wotherspoon would find Khalhon creatively interesting in the first place.

“Built for the course. Designed beyond it.”

“Korea is not only one of the most fashion-forward golf markets in the world, but one of the most fashion-forward markets globally. Korea is ahead, and I love to watch and try to catch up.” – Sean Wotherspoon, Creative Director at Khalhon

Seoul and Beyond

If Khalhon’s rise says something about where Korean golf fashion is today, its relationship with Sean Wotherspoon says even more about where it is heading.

For readers less familiar with Sean Wotherspoon, his arrival at Khalhon is not some routine celebrity endorsement or influencer collaboration. In design and streetwear circles, Wotherspoon is regarded as one of the more influential creative voices of his generation, particularly when it comes to blending nostalgia, storytelling, and contemporary culture into products that people can connect with.

He first gained widespread attention through his now-famous Nike sneaker collaborations, where his vintage-inspired designs and instinct for color helped turn him into one of the defining artists of the late-2010s sneaker era. His work gradually expanded beyond footwear into apparel, automotive collaborations, collectibles, and broader lifestyle design.

Modern golf style now extends well beyond the fairways, where performance and functionality are largely expected by default. And while plenty of brands already make technically competent golfwear, Khalhon seems more focused on designing clothes people would genuinely want to wear even after the round ends.

And when guys at Wotherspoon’s level show genuine interest in working with a Korean golf brand as its new Creative Director, fashion circles tend to sit up and pay attention. There’s already a huge buzz among the fashion-conscious here about upcoming collabs with iconic sports stars and brands.

“My creative direction for Khalhon is disruptive, colorful, nostalgic, and modern. My goal is to blend these avenues seamlessly within each collection.” – Sean Wotherspoon

In chatting with Sean, what stood out most to me was how genuinely energized he sounded about the project itself. Despite having already worked across and countless other creative spaces, he described golf as a completely fresh category for him, saying that Khalhon “will be an amazing vehicle for my design work.”

At the same time, his enthusiasm seemed tied just as much to Korea itself. He spoke openly about admiring Korea’s fashion culture while repeatedly insisting he is still a terrible golfer.

There was something oddly refreshing about that humility. Rather than sounding like a celebrity parachuting into golf simply because the category suddenly became fashionable, Sean sounded genuinely curious about what Korea might do with the category next.

And perhaps that is what makes Khalhon feel interesting right now. The brand feels less like a trend-chaser and more like the natural result of a market now confident enough to export its own point of view.

For years, global brands came to Korea to sharpen their image against one of the most discerning audiences anywhere. Now, a Korean label appears ready to send those Seoul Sensibilities outward instead.

Which brings us back to kkot-saem-chu-i.

That final cold snap before spring always arrives with a reminder that seasons are changing, whether we notice it immediately or not. Golf fashion feels a little like that right now as well, as the old boundaries between sport, streetwear, luxury, and everyday style continue to soften.

And somewhere in Seoul, a Korean golf label already seems prepared for whatever season comes next. I just hope they have everything in my size.

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