News

If it feels like Megha Ganne has been around for a long time, she kind of has. Four years ago, the then-17-year-old played in ...
Brooke Biermann said: "Being able to compete and do well is just amazing. I can gain so many good things from this week." ...
The U.S. Women’s Amateur this week is shining a spotlight on many of the best young players in golf, and it's also ...
Megha Ganne won her biggest event yet last week at Bandon Dunes, and she chatted with SI about her win, her gear and her approach on the course.
The Transfusion, a fizzy, fruit-forward highball, is golf’s unofficial signature cocktail — and it’s time it went mainstream.
As the showcase women's amateur event is contested at the Oregon jewel, the resort is looking ahead to better accommodate tournaments and travelers.
BANDON — It was an unreasonable request: Party of 16, reserving an early dinner on a weekend night at McKee's Pub, the go-to hangout for comfort food at the Bandon Dunes Golf Resort.
Playing Bandon Dunes is not cheap, but it's not exactly expensive, either, depending on how you play. During the summer months, playing 18 holes on the full-scale courses costs a princely $325.
The Lodge, Bandon’s social epicenter, has 17 single guestrooms to go along with a few four-bedroom suites, where you’ll get views of Bandon Dunes Golf Course, the dunes, or the woods.
For just the second time in nine USGA events at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort, the champion did not have a caddie from the resort.
As the U.S. Women's Amateur heads into the weekend, Bandon Dunes caddies have found a player they can cheer for.
Bandon Dunes owner Mike Keiser knows Rod Whitman and Dave Axland well—they built Cabot Links in 2011, the first course at Cabot Cape Breton that Keiser developed with partner Ben Cowan-Dewar ...