GOLF

Golf steps out of the shadows in 2025

DT

Philippine golf didn’t just have a good year in 2025. It finally felt like the sport pushed its way into the bigger conversation. You didn’t have to hunt for golf stories — they kept popping up on timelines and group chats. Wins, close calls, junior breakthroughs, and bigger events all lined up behind one idea: This isn’t a small game anymore, and it’s done acting like one.

Tabuena win changed the mood

Every “breakthrough year” usually has one moment you keep going back to. For Philippine golf, it was Miguel Tabuena closing with a bogey-free 65 at Sta. Elena to win the $2 million International Series Philippines. He didn’t just hang on. He scored a hole-in-one and pulled away — three shots clear of what many insiders called the strongest Asian Tour field ever to tee it up here.

MIGUEL Tabuena

On paper, it was his fourth Asian Tour win and the one that pushed his career earnings past $3 million, nudging him past Angelo Que as the top Filipino earner on that circuit. But that’s not what people were talking about in Viber groups or on Facebook.

ANGELO Que

What stuck was the sight of a Filipino standing on a big-money stage, surrounded by world-class players, and actually finishing the job. For a lot of fans, it felt like proof of something they’d long believed but didn’t always see confirmed on Sundays: our players belong at that level.

The whole week felt different.

With LIV and Asian Tour names like major champions Dustin Johnson, Patrick Reed, Louis Oosthuizen, and Charl Schwartzel in the field, Sta. Elena didn’t have the vibe of a “one-off” event. It felt big — crowds along the ropes, more cameras, international media actually paying attention. By the time Tabuena raised the trophy, it wasn’t just his profile that got bigger. The Philippines, as a place that can host serious golf, did too.

A year of grind for Filipina golfers

For some Filipina golfers, 2025 wasn’t about trophy photos or victory speeches. It was about grinding through tough stretches, managing expectations, and proving they still belonged — whether on the amateur stage or the pro circuit.

For Rianne Malixi, the year was more character-building than celebratory. Battling back issues and a demanding schedule, the reigning US Women’s Amateur champion still showed flashes of elite form. She tied for medalist honors at the same championship she won a year earlier and opened with a flawless 4-under 68 at Bandon Dunes despite limited preparation.

RIANNE Malixi

Her transition into US college golf at Duke brought a different kind of test. The results were steadier than spectacular, but the season revealed a young star learning how to balance health, travel, and expectations — while staying firmly on the radar as one of the world’s top amateur talents.

On the professional side, Bianca Pagdanganan and Dottie Ardina endured similarly streaky campaigns defined by persistence rather than podiums.

BIANCA Pagdanganan

Pagdanganan’s LPGA season featured her familiar mix of explosive scoring and costly inconsistencies. Missed cuts were offset by solid finishes — a T26 in Mexico, T35 at the Portland Classic, T29 at the Kroger Queen City Championship, and a made cut at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship. The power was there. The challenge remained turning flashes into sustained contention.

DOTTIE Ardina

Ardina, carrying the Philippine flag mostly on the Epson Tour, saw her year swing between promise and frustration. She made seven cuts in 13 starts, posted one top-10, and finished around 45th in the Race for the Card with roughly $31,400 in earnings — respectable, but short of an automatic LPGA return.

By December, both Pagdanganan and Ardina found themselves at LPGA Q-Series, where survival replaced spotlight. Every round mattered, echoing what their entire year had become: a test of resilience, patience, and belief.

On paper, 2025 may not stand out for medals or trophies. But for Malixi, Pagdanganan and Ardina, it told a deeper story — of Filipina golfers grinding through uneven seasons, adapting to new chapters, and refusing to let one difficult year define what comes next.

The PGT’s quiet leap forward

While Sta. Elena soaked up the spotlight, the real grind was still on the Philippine Golf Tour. Under the “Pilipinas Golf” banner, organizers kept sending the same message all year: This tour is trying to level up, not just get by.

The changes weren’t always flashy, but they were noticeable. Fields were deeper. Leaderboards tighter. More players looked capable of shooting something low on any given week. Courses — from Luzon down to Visayas and Mindanao — were better prepared, and the scoring reflected that.

Angelo Que stayed in his familiar role: traveling, competing and quietly setting the standard for what a Filipino pro should look like. But 2025 also felt like the year younger guys stopped waiting their turn. Keanu Jahns, in particular, kept cropping up in PGT results, winning key ICTSI-backed events and climbing the Order of Merit. He became shorthand for the new wave — players who grew up seeing Filipinos win abroad and now feel like they’re supposed to chase that level.

KEANU Jahns

Even the season-ending awards night at Apo Golf & Country Club said something about where the tour wants to go. On its own, an awards night isn’t a headline. But it shows the tour is paying attention to recognition, presentation, and how the product looks in front of fans and sponsors. Those details help when you’re trying to convince a company to sign on — or a 16-year-old to keep grinding.

The Philippine Opena reality check

Over at Manila Southwoods, the 2025 Philippine Open did what it always seems to do: Remind everyone why this title still hits differently. This time, the trophy went to Julien Sale of France, the first Frenchman to win the event.

For local fans, it was a mixed feeling. Pride, because the championship was tough and the winner had to earn it. Frustration, because once again the trophy left the country. For Filipino contenders, it was another lesson in how hard it is to close out a big event at home, where expectations are loud and familiar faces are everywhere.

Put side by side with Tabuena’s International Series win, the picture feels honest. The Philippines can produce winners, and it can also stage tournaments strong enough to test anyone who shows up. Both truths matter if the sport is going to keep growing and be taken seriously beyond our borders.

Juniors, schools and a wider base

If the pros gave people something to cheer for now, the Junior Golf Foundation of the Philippines (JGFP) gave everyone a reason to think about what’s next. In 2025, the JGFP didn’t just run tournaments; it tried to put real structure in place.

Its Inter-School Golf Tournament drew around 400 players from nearly 60 schools, spread across Grade School, Junior High, Senior High and College divisions. Usual suspects like Immaculate Conception Academy and De La Salle Zobel were still there, but they weren’t alone anymore. New schools came in. That showed up in the photos — more different uniforms, more parents lining fairways, more kids who clearly felt they weren’t just “guests” in the sport.

The JGFP also started paying attention to how junior golf looks from the outside. Better medal designs, cleaner graphics, sharper social posts — details that might sound minor to adults but mean everything to a 12-year-old who dreams of one day playing on TV. By year’s end, some of these kids were being called “masters in the making” in write-ups and posts. This time, it didn’t sound like empty hype. It sounded like people genuinely believed that the next Tabuena or Que might already be in that pool.

Amateurs, the Putra Cup,and playing for the flag

In the amateur ranks, one result cut through all the noise: the Philippines reclaiming the Putra Cup, Southeast Asia’s premier amateur team event.

The victory was a statement of control and composure on home soil.

Anchored by the quartet of Rolando Bregente, Chris Remata, Shinichi Suzuki and Perry Bucay, the hosts finished at 4-under overall to edge Thailand by two shots and complete a rare back-to-back championship in the Southeast Asian Amateur Golf Team Championship. A fiery opening round at Luisita Golf and Country Club gave the Filipinos the cushion they needed, and they never fully relinquished command, turning a week of local support and course familiarity into a landmark team triumph that underlines the depth of the country’s emerging amateur core.

The reaction in local golf groups was instant — screenshots of scoreboards, congratulatory messages and proud posts bouncing around timelines.

It was more than just one win. It felt like proof that the different layers of the system — school golf, JGFP events, national-team setups — are starting to connect.

For young players watching from the outside, the message is straightforward: there is a real path from playing for your school to playing for the country, and if you put in the work, that path leads somewhere.

Courses, tourism, and everything around the game

Beyond who shot what, 2025 was also a year when people talked more openly about golf as part of tourism and local economies. Tournaments have brought corporate groups and foreign guests to courses like Mimosa Plus, Subic layouts and Pradera Verde, and those events weren’t just sold as competitions — they were sold as experiences.

Combine that with the International Series stop at Sta. Elena, and a pattern starts to form. The pitch is clear: the Philippines can offer top-level competition and a resort-style golf trip in one package. Regional award mentions and destination lists quietly backed that up. For clubs, LGUs, and sponsors, the math is easy enough to see: golf isn’t just about trophies, it’s also about visitors, hotel nights, and long-term branding.

The job in 2026 is no mystery: keep the momentum, protect the gains, and give this growing community — pros, kids, parents, fans — enough chances and enough stages to find out just how far Philippine golf can really go.