Harry Higgs

  • United States
  • Birthdate 12/4/1991 (32)
  • Birthplace Camden, New Jersey
  • College SMU
  • Swing Right
  • Turned Pro 2014

Quick Links

Puerto rico open - mar 7-10, grand reserve country club, racing positions.

  • Mark Schlabach
  • Paolo Uggetti

Recent 2024 PGA TOUR Tournaments

Recent 2024 korn ferry tournaments, big names primed to top leaderboards this pga tour, liv and lpga week, inside will zalatoris' return to health and contention on the pga tour, liv golf league ends bid for world golf ranking accreditation, austin eckroat gets 1st pga tour victory at cognizant classic, austin eckroat wins first pga tour with victory at cognizant classic, austin eckroat leads by 1 at rain-delayed cognizant classic.

  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Your US State Privacy Rights
  • Children's Online Privacy Policy
  • Interest-Based Ads
  • About Nielsen Measurement
  • Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information
  • Disney Ad Sales Site
  • Work for ESPN
  • Corrections
  • CBSSports.com
  • Fanatics Sportsbook
  • CBS Sports Home
  • Champions League
  • Motor Sports
  • High School
  • Horse Racing 

bracket-games.jpg

Bracket Games

fantasybaseball-180x100.png

Fantasy Baseball

Fantasy football, football pick'em, college pick'em, fantasy basketball, fantasy hockey, franchise games, 24/7 sports news network.

cbs-sports-hq-watch-dropdown.jpg

  • CBS Sports Golazo Network
  • PGA Tour on CBS
  • College Basketball on CBS
  • UEFA Champions League
  • UEFA Europa League
  • Italian Serie A
  • Watch CBS Sports Network
  • TV Shows & Listings

The Early Edge

201120-early-edge-logo-square.jpg

A Daily SportsLine Betting Podcast

With the First Pick

wtfp-logo-01.png

NFL Draft is coming up!

  • Podcasts Home
  • Eye On College Basketball
  • The First Cut Golf
  • NFL Pick Six
  • Cover 3 College Football
  • Fantasy Football Today
  • Morning Kombat
  • My Teams Organize / See All Teams Help Account Settings Log Out

2022 RSM Classic leaderboard: Harry Higgs, Andrew Putnam, Cole Hammer share 36-hole lead at Sea Island

One of the most popular figures in the game could cap off 2022 in a big way if higgs can hold through the weekend.

The RSM Classic - Round Two

It's been three years since Harry Higgs has possessed a 36-hole lead on the PGA Tour. Entering the weekend sharing the top spot on the leaderboard with Andrew Putnam and Cole Hammer at 12 under, the lovable Higgs will be up against it after enduring a 2021-22 season that saw him lose full-time status on the PGA Tour.

Finishing in the 125-150 category in the FedEx Cup standings, Higgs was forced to participate in the Korn Ferry Tour Playoffs where he missed three consecutive cuts. He began this season in a similar fashion before firing a 9-under 62 in the second round at the World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba. At Sea Island on Friday, Higgs mounted another valiant second-round effort, and this time signed for a 7-under 63 on the Seaside Course which players will take to for the final 36 holes.

Meandering his way up the top of leaderboard by day's end, Higgs was flawless, carding seven birdies and zero bogeys. More of the same will be needed over the course of the weekend as a congested leaderboard features not only his co-leaders but also Joel Dahmen, Beau Hossler and Sahith Theegala one stroke back at 11 under.

The leaders

T1. Andrew Putnam, Cole Hammer, Harry Higgs (-12)

Putnam is a player of particular interest based on the consistency he has been playing with throughout the fall. Collecting a paycheck in each start, the 33-year-old has now made 12 straight cuts dating back to last season. During this span, he has experienced a couple close calls with a T5 result at the St. Jude Championship and runner-up result at this season's Zozo Championship as he looks to contend come the final nine once again this weekend.

"My driving accuracy's been probably the best in my career this last year, so that's really helped," said Putnam. "The putting's back to pretty good like it normally is, and my irons this week have been pretty sharp. Pretty much every part of my game has been pretty good right now, so it's a fun time to play golf."

Other contenders

T4. Beau Hossler, Joel Dahmen, Sahith Theegala (-11)

T7. Kevin Streelman, Seung-Yul Noh, David Lingmerth, Callum Tarren (-10)

T11. Alex Smalley, Ben Martin, Will Gordon, Chris Gotterup (-9)

T15. Seamus Power, Justin Suh, Patrick Rodgers, Dean Burmester (-8)

It has been a splendid fall swing for Dahmen, and in particular these last four starts. In contention heading into the latter stages of the RSM Classic, the 35-year-old arrived at Sea Island off three straight top-20 finishes including a T3 effort at the World Wide Technology Championship. He spoke after his second round on his motivation this season as it marks his first campaign without a winner's exemption since his victory at the 2021 Corales Championship.

"You're always anxious. Golf's hard. Golf is very hard, and it can go sour quickly. To play with freedom for a year and a half, two and a half years really, never had that in my career," said Dahmen. "So yeah, like teeing up in Napa was like OK, we're back at square one. If you don't play well, you don't have a job. I was very aware of that, for sure. And maybe, yeah, I don't think about it necessarily when I'm out there, but there's been a couple extra days of practice for sure. I mean, I've always kind of played better when my back's against the wall a little bit, and it's hard to say your back's against the wall when you're starting out a year, but for the first time in a couple years it was different for me, for sure."

2022 RSM Classic updated odds and picks

Odds via Caesars Sportsbook

  • Andrew Putnam: 5-1
  • Sahith Theegala: 7-1
  • Joel Dahmen: 7-1
  • Beau Hossler: 12-1
  • Harry Higgs: 12-1
  • Cole Hammer: 14-1
  • Will Gordon: 20-1
  • Callum Tarren: 22-1
  • Alex Smalley: 25-1
  • Seamus Power: 25-1
  • Kevin Streelman: 25-1
  • David Lingmerth: 30-1

Putnam was my selection at the onset of the week, and it's comforting to see him atop the odds board for the second straight day. There is still confidence in him moving forward, but if looking for another pick with a bit more juice, Power may be the man for the job at 25-1. The Irishman has been terrific this fall with a win and another podium finish to his credit. He factored over the weekend at this tournament a year ago, and there is nothing to suggest he won't again over the next 36 holes.

Our Latest Golf Stories

rory-mcilroy-genesis-invitational-2020.png

2024 Masters best bets, props, expert picks

Cbs sports staff • 3 min read.

arnold-palmer-statue-g.jpg

2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational purse, prize money

Patrick mcdonald • 1 min read.

arnold-palmer-invitational-signage-g.jpg

How to watch 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational

Patrick mcdonald • 2 min read.

The Genesis Invitational - Final Round

PGA Tour needs stars to build momentum with wins

Kyle porter • 3 min read.

The Genesis Invitational - Previews

Woods joins PGA Tour Enterprises as vice chairman

Kyle porter • 1 min read.

koepka-file-friday.jpg

2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational odds, picks, bets

Cbs sports staff • 4 min read.

harry higgs pga tour results

Hammer, Higgs, Putnam share 36-hole lead at Sea Island

harry higgs pga tour results

PGA Tour needs stars to win, build momentum

harry higgs pga tour results

Arnold Palmer Invitational expert picks

harry higgs pga tour results

LIV Golf Hong Kong preview

harry higgs pga tour results

PGA Tour Enterprises names Tiger its vice chairman

harry higgs pga tour results

LIV Golf ends bid for players to earn world ranking points

harry higgs pga tour results

Report: LeBron James, Drake invest in PGA Tour

harry higgs pga tour results

Can Scottie Scheffler win without putting well?

harry higgs pga tour results

Masters picks: Key stat from seven of last nine winners

harry higgs pga tour results

Rahm says he has not heard from Tiger since move to LIV

PGA TOUR

PGA TOUR PGA TOUR

  • More Courses PGA Tour Champions Web.com Tour Monday Qualifier

Higgs, Harry

Harry Higgs

BlueGolf

Tournaments

  • Player of the Year
  • All seasons All seasons 2020-2021 2019-2020

2020-2021 Player of the Year

  •  Messenger  Messenger
  •  Gmail
  •  Twitter
  •  WhatsApp
  •  Facebook
  •  Email
  •  Print

Harry Higgs - Tournament Results

Tap a list to save

Create New List

Arnold Palmer Invitational

Arnold Palmer's Bay Hill Club & Lodge

Players Championship

Players 2021: Harry Higgs, in rare form as always, perfectly summed up why he's become a fan favorite

1272169510

Sean M. Haffey

PONTE VEDRA BEACH — It’s Wednesday morning at the Players Championship, annually a morning reserved for the event’s first-timers. There are 17 of them in 2021, and they’re all made available to the media in 30-minute increments. Not surprisingly, Will Zalatoris, the PGA Tour’s clear rising star, received the bulk of the attention.

RELATED: Rory McIlroy says Tiger Woods is hopeful to return home in near future

The star of the show, however, was Harry Higgs, who rolled in with his three-buttons down, just-happy-to-be-here look. This was evident in the way he held court, first answering a number of pop-quiz questions for a GOLFTV segment, then happily fielding questions from media members. Not once did he look to a tour official looking to pull the plug, as if he was prepared to kick back and hang all day. All that was missing was the standup mic.

This comedy routine of sorts is precisely the reason Higgs has become such a huge fan favorite. This, despite the fact he has never truly contended in an event with a lot of eyeballs on it. He does have a pair of runner-up finishes on tour in the last year, but one came in an opposite-field event (the 2020 Bermuda Championship) and the other came in this past fall’s Safeway Open, which didn’t break any television ratings records going up against the NFL and college football.

Still, Higgs has become the apple of Golf Twitter’s eye, not only because of his obvious, laid-back vibe, but because of how hard he leans into it. The people dig Higgs, and Higgs digs the people, mostly because they are one in the same, as he puts it.

“It ’ s partly because I look more like them [the fans],” said Higgs on why he ’ s become a fan favorite. “I don’t feel like I act much different than any other PGA Tour player. But I do, I guess, struggle in a way to say no to media, or just going and meeting people. I’ve always been good at that. So, I guess for a confluence of reasons, but I’d say mainly because I look like them and I look different than others.”

RELATED: How to pick your favorite PGA Tour player

Higgs, a teammate of Bryson DeChambeau’s at SMU, is right. He could not look any less like the world’s best, DeChambeau included. He doesn’t act like them either, and he doesn’t apologize for it. In a video that no longer lives on the Internet, Higgs teaches a class on how to make his signature drink: Tito ’ s and water (it ’ s a very easy class). The screenshots still exist, and the one of Higgs guzzling out of his styrofoam cup and saying “ it ’ s good ” is one of the many reasons he ’ s so beloved.

The 29-year-old Texan has starred in a number of other viral videos, too, most notably the “Dreams Challenge,” which featured Higgs lip-syncing Fleetwood Mac’s “Dreams” while swigging from a bottle of Ocean Spray cranberry juice. It was viewed more than 820,000 times. To put that in perspective, that’s nearly 200,000 more views than DeChambeau’s winning putt at Bay Hill received on Twitter last Sunday.

As for on-course highlights, Higgs has those too. During the second round of the Safeway Open in September, Higgs holed out for an albatross on his final hole of the day, the par-5 ninth, punctuating a career-low 10-under 62. Somehow, his “Gladiator”-inspired reaction was even better than the shot itself.

Higgs’ goal is to make those moments the norm, and to make them happen on a much bigger stage. Outside of the majors, there is no bigger stage than the Players Championship. It’s not out of the realm of possibility that Higgs goes “mainstream” this week, something he’d welcome with open arms.

RELATED: Even Dustin Johnson is sick of Tiger ’ s 'better than most' putt

“You hear that with first-time major winners, or even first-time tour winners. And the push and the pull, this interview, that interview,” said Higgs. “I admire the top players in the world. ... All I had to do this week was this on Wednesday, right? My Monday and Tuesday were clear. This is in the morning, and I can go out and do all my work Wednesday. They have something to do every day that’s about an hour of their time and they plan around that. I’m a horrible planner, so I’m guessing when I win a big event it is going to be a little bit more difficult and I struggle to say no, just because I like to talk and I like to make fun of myself.

“You want to get to the point where you have to manage your time a little better and you have to still prepare while taking care of your obligations. I want to get to that point. ... I mean, if I win this week and people want to talk to me at the Honda next week? Sure, that’s fine, because if I win this week I probably won’t show up until the Pro-Am on Wednesday anyway.”

The fans, who are already out in full force this week, would love to see Higgs get to that point, too. As good as the George Costanza impressions and the TikTok challenge are, the true way into the golf fan ’ s heart would be to put on a show on the weekend at TPC Sawgrass. It ’ s been a while since a player has had the “ People's golfer ” nickname bestowed upon them. For Higgs, that title is there for the taking.

RELATED: A few players struggled with Jimmy Fallon ’ s annual Players Championship bit

More from Golf Digest

Trending now.

nav logo

Harry Higgs’ ‘teeter-totter’ life: He is exactly who you think he is, except when he isn’t

Here is Harry Higgs rolling from the 6th green to the 7th tee box at another golf course on another week on the PGA Tour . The man is molten hot. Boiling right over the brim. His play in the first round of this tournament has thus far been, in his words, “total dog shit,” and a missed 5-foot birdie putt on No. 6 did not help matters. He’s at a smolder, and when Harry Higgs is at a smolder, he shuts down, goes silent, swallows all the heat. This is Higgs in real life, not a viral video.

There’s a fan waiting for Higgs beside the green. He is, let’s say, a Certified Bro, complete with a Bass Pro Shop hat, a high-end polo shirt, and 7-inch inseam shorts. His look is tied together with a Michelob Ultra tallboy. As Higgs passes, this young man decides now is a good time to ask for an autograph and offer him a beer. Higgs hears him, but doesn’t flinch, unless you count the veins pulsing in his temples. Standing behind the ball on the ensuing tee shot into the par-3 7th, Higgs pictures the shot in his mind’s eye amid total silence from a small gallery. The fan, of course, decides to yell, “Harry, you’re looking good, big fella!”

Advertisement

Higgs’ tee shot is terrible. Way out to the right. He appears ready to impale his club into someone or something.

The fan? He throws out a thumbs up. “Love you, Harry!”

Higgs walks past.

The admirer drops his shoulders. A twitch of disappointment. This was not the Harry Higgs he expected. This was not the Harry Higgs he’s been sold.

Higgs has this way of talking. You’re friends within minutes. You both laugh like bastards. He swears recklessly, wonderfully. All the time. Every sentence. He says, “I don’t even think I’m that fucking funny,” and is lying. He does think he’s that funny. He tells stories like a drunk uncle.

Here’s one. A few years ago in Córdoba, Argentina, back when he was toiling away on the PGA Tour Latinoamérica, Higgs stopped at a convenience store for some beer. He grabbed a six-pack and got in line at the counter. That’s when he heard two voices and two laughs. He looked back at a couple of guys, maybe 20 or so, pointing at him. “Clearly talking shit,” he remembers. Higgs decided to fight back. He walked over, grabbed the beer they were holding, put it on the counter with his six-pack, and bought everything.

“Then I gave it to them and said, ‘What do ya think of that!’ ” he goes on. “They were just totally confused, had no idea how to come back at me. It was great!”

Everything Higgs does, every story he tells — it’s a journey. When you’re with him, you’re with him. He speaks like a guy who went from being made fun of as a kid, to being a cocky asshole in high school and college, to getting knocked down many pegs later, to making the natural maturation to a functioning adult with abundant self-awareness. He looks across the table, really looks at you, and, as if this is at all relatable, says: “It’s a positive for me, the way in which I’ve been portrayed. And I will lean into that. But I still have a hard time with it sometimes. Like, when people yell my name and I’m supposed to look up and wave? It’s weird. They’re not supposed to be there watching me, at least not yet, you know?”

No, not really.

He goes on.

“The people out there, their idea of me is probably a little different than it truly is. I’ve kind of accepted that that’s something I’ll always battle. Sometimes I do wish that if I had the ability to actually be who they want me to be …”

Thing is, Higgs is that guy. But he’s not. At least not all the time. It’s as if he’s, you know, an actual person — moody, sometimes self-confident and engaging, other times self-aware and uneasy. He sees himself, first and foremost, as a PGA Tour player, one who took the long road. He was a tour rookie in 2019-20 at 27 years old. In the two years since, he’s posted 11 top-25 finishes in 49 events, including two runner-up finishes. Not bad. He’s brought down $2.8 million in tournament earnings in that span. He’s both wildly confident and wildly inconsistent. This summer, at 29, he played in his first major and finished tied for fourth in the PGA Championship. He’s also missed more cuts (14) than he’s made (10). Last week he planned to win the John Deere and land a spot in this week’s British Open. Instead, he finished outside the cutline and will watch from his home in Dallas, opting to skip the alternate field Barbasol Championship.

All these details of his career, that’s not what the people come for, though. That’s not why Higgs is hugely popular and counts Scott Van Pelt among his fans, despite never being ranked higher than 91st in the world. Instead, Higgs is most known for viral content and freewheeling, no-shits-given podcast interviews and press conferences. In a sport of over-laundered personalities, he’s the guy who recreated the Fleetwood Mac “Dreams” Challenge, touts his love of Tito’s vodka, and who walked down a fairway earlier this year with his arms extended — Are you not entertained!? — after an albatross from 230 yards in the second round of the Safeway Open. At a time when every tour pro looks like a marketable carbon copy, Higgs is an action hero for every dad bod with a 15-handicap.

Part of it is the look. Be clear: Higgs most definitely has a look. He is a large man, listed on the PGA Tour’s website at 6-foot-2 and 235 pounds. Perhaps that’s accurate. Who knows? He fastens, at most, one button on his golf shirt, sometimes none, unleashing his chest hair upon the world. His mane flows. His stomach spills over his belt. He’s knock-kneed. He perpetually wears shades. He’s thick and pasty and unwaveringly OK with it. That look — he is that look. Very few people are so blessed as to have a name so fittingly accurate as Harry Higgs.

Add it all up and a persona is born, one that’s easily aggregated at a time when social media shapes distorted realities. The result is a caricature. Higgs has morphed into some sort of clown prince of the PGA Tour, resulting in fans knowing Harry Higgs, and fans liking Harry Higgs, and fans offering beer to Harry Higgs in the middle of professional rounds of golf.

It’s also resulted in plenty of onlookers perhaps believing he doesn’t take this seriously. That he doesn’t take himself seriously.

You believed that, too, until you saw Harry Higgs at Muirfield Village early on a Wednesday evening in June. The rain was coming down sideways and the daylight has clocked out. Two figures were out on the driving range. Higgs and his brother-slash-caddie, Alex. They had been on their way to dinner before Harry pulled the car over near the course exit. Something just wasn’t right and Harry wasn’t going to be able to sleep on it. He needed to get more swings in. So the two were out there in the twilight, on a soaked range that emptied out hours earlier.

This, you thought, does not fit the caricature.

Among tour players, Higgs is, he says, “The one who doesn’t say no,” so he agrees to be followed for a week in Detroit. Originally, he’s supposed to meet on Tuesday, but Tuesday comes and goes. No Harry Higgs. Turns out, he overslept for a morning flight. “I’m sure everyone would assume I got wasted on Tito’s the night before, but no, I’m just a dumbass and slept through my alarm,” he will later explain. He arrives instead on Wednesday. He practices in the morning then heads out for a nine-hole pro-am. To watch Higgs in a pro-am is to watch a ringleader in his element. He carries a deep bag of golf quips and can bullshit with the best of em.

“Alright, let’s see what you got, 9-to-5,” he says to his playing partner who exists in the world of working professionals. Everyone laughs. Everyone loves him.

Afterward, on the Detroit Golf Club patio, Higgs settles into a seat. He exhales.

“That was about as hammy as it gets,” he says. “I mean, it’s all real. I’m just lucky to have always been good with people. I’ve always been able to talk and schmooze and play the game.”

Real is a big word. What’s real? The caricature Higgs has evolved into is also his brand. “It’s still so fucking weird to hear that,” he says, but it’s true, and that brand, when it comes to endorsements and PIP scores and all sorts of other revenue streams in this sport, is extremely valuable.

“There’s like a teeter-totter for me,” he says. “The way I’m portrayed, I’m OK with it. And I know that if I lean into that, I will do well, and I will perform well. But at the same time, I want to succeed, so, yes, I will go hit fucking balls in the rain, in the dark, whenever, wherever. I’ll turn over every stone that makes me better. People don’t really see that.”

Sure sounds like something one might resent, doesn’t it?

Higgs goes wide-eyed, lets out an, “Ughhhh, well…

“I mean, of course, man,” he says. “There’s a fine line between what people expect and how I view myself. I view myself as a professional athlete. Like, I have gone and done things in places that most people have never visited so that I can be here. It’s not like, once you’re here you get to say, ‘Hey, have fun!’ No, that’s not how this goes.”

There’s a laugh, but no joke.

“You know, people want me to yuck it up with them in the middle of a round because that’s what they see on social media, but that’s not the time. Like, no, I’m not going to do that. Off the course, yeah, I’m usually that guy who will fuck around. But there are times, especially Thursday to Sunday, where that’s just not the guy I am.

“In reality, I’m really serious. And to be honest, I can be totally miserable.”

The conversation moves around, entwining his game. Higgs says he’s trying to get back to a 2018-19 swing. A shorter swing. He says the trend on tour nowadays is for guys to lay the club down and shallow out the swing.

“Like everything else,” he says, “I do it too much. And I fucking hate the way it feels. It feels like the club gets behind me and I have no chance. If I hit a good shot, it’s an accident. So I’m trying to do the exact opposite. Get the club to come down just a tad bit steeper.”

Higgs says he’s almost got it right. He’s starting to get the feel. It’s right there.

He says he thinks he can win this golf tournament.

harry higgs pga tour results

It’s 24 hours later and Harry Higgs is on the Detroit Golf Club driving range. It’s not going well. He’s wrung out.

“These fucking hands,” he says, staring at his palms, fingers spread. “Did they get bigger?”

This event, the Rocket Mortgage Classic, is considered a birdie-fest on the PGA Tour. Higgs opened with a 1-over 73. He birdied two holes. He was categorically bad, hitting only 10 greens in regulation.

Now he’s on the far end of a nearly empty driving range with two bags of balls. He’s spraying. Left miss. Right miss. One-arm finishes. He says it feels as if the grip is moving in his hands. He’s trying to explain. “I literally feel like the club is swinging me.”

Alex Higgs tells Harry the best option is to keep working on the swing change until it feels natural.

“We’re going to have to be comfortable being uncomfortable,” Alex says.

Harry looks back. “Yeah, I’m usually pretty good at that.”

Alex dials Corey Lundberg, Higgs’ swing coach. He flips the call to FaceTime so Lundberg can attempt a diagnosis.

“Let’s maybe try getting the hands forward?” Lundberg says.

“I’ll try anything,” Higgs says. “I’ll fucking swing left-handed.”

Two hours go by. Higgs cannot hit the ball, at least not with any discernible control. He’s deep in the struggles. No miss is the same. After pounding away, he finally connects on back-to-back good ones. With that, he hurls his iron into the middle of the range. That’s him calling it a day. Alex agrees — probably a good place to leave things. If anyone knows Harry, it’s him.

“Well, tomorrow should be interesting,” Alex says.

The Higgs boys were raised in Philadelphia’s Main Line suburbs, sons of a mother, Denise, born and raised in Southwest Philly and a father, Mike, from the more affluent city outskirts. The family moved to Overland Park, Kansas, when Harry was 10 and Alex was 7. As both a blessing and a curse, they retained some of their Philadelphia roots. Being an Eagles fan is a special kind of self-sacrifice. Thankfully the liver is a regenerative organ.

As a kid, Harry was a particularly good baseball player, but he began to focus on golf once the family landed just outside of Kansas City. His parents had the means to offer every opportunity, and Harry was good enough to win a junior qualifier for a local Korn Ferry Tour event at age 17. It was the first week of his senior year of high school. He went to school that Monday, but skipped out three minutes into biology class. He asked to go to the bathroom and instead went straight to the golf course, telling his parents that this was what he wanted to do with his life. When the tournament began later that week, Higgs fired an opening 69 and was in 13th place after the first round. That was all he needed to know. “I think I shot an 84 or something the next day and missed the cut, but it didn’t matter,” he says. “I knew I could do this.”

Higgs had committed that prior summer to SMU, picking the Mustangs over Auburn and Washington. He arrived on campus under the impression he was the best player on the team. His teammates immediately hated him.

“I was a motherfucker, showing up, thinking I’m the hottest shit,” he says. “Like, I’m gonna beat all you guys. And for two weeks, I did. I was playing really well.”

That didn’t last too long. SMU’s roster included the likes of Bryson DeChambeau and Kelly Kraft. Higgs was not the hottest shit. He did not win a tournament in his four years at SMU.

But he did learn about himself. Eventually, at least. Realizing no one liked him as a cocky jerk, Higgs evolved into the more likable version. That came at a cost, though. He had to sacrifice the arrogant edge that made him such a great high school player. Upon setting out to pursue a pro career (he “always knew I was going to make it to the tour,” despite not winning in college), Higgs eventually understood he needed to strike a balance of himself.

“Much of it was the necessary delusion,” he says of turning pro out of school in 2014. “I always just thought of myself as a winner, even though I didn’t actually win shit, and didn’t even really come close. But I just told myself, when I get in that position, I’ll win. Eventually, my skills caught up with my confidence. But I didn’t change who I was and, next thing I knew, I just started fucking winning.”

Higgs raised money from private backers, needing about $1,500-$2,000 per event to compete each week in the 2015 PGA Tour Latinoamérica season. He made six cuts in 12 events. He spent 2016 bouncing from starts on PGA Tour Latinoamérica, the Mackenzie Tour and the Korn Ferry Tour. More of the same in 2017.

Heading into 2018, Higgs couldn’t even claim season status on the Latinoamérica tour. He needed to raise money and to qualify. “Basically asking people to gamble with their money,” he says. Higgs could only raise about $14,000 to get him through the season. He figured he could get through the first four or five events in the spring. If they went well, maybe he could earn some checks or raise some more dough. He ended up finishing third in the second event he played, pulling in $10,000. Then, a couple events later, he finished second and added $18,000.

“If I had missed the four cuts early that year, I probably would’ve been out of money,” he says. “I’m sure I would’ve gone back and asked around for more, but I don’t know if anyone would’ve gone for it again. I was nearing the end of the road. I don’t know where I’d be if I hadn’t gotten off to a good start that year, both financially and mentally.”

Instead, Higgs got rolling. He made it through the summer, piling up strong results, and finished with four consecutive top-four finishes, including a win in Peru. He won the Latinoamérica money list, which amounted to little-if-any actual profit. What he got, more importantly, was full status on the Korn Ferry Tour for the next year, a door he’d been searching for. In 2018-19, he made 18 cuts in 22 starts on the Korn Ferry Tour, won something called the Price Cutter Charity Championship, and earned his PGA Tour card for 2019-20.

harry higgs pga tour results

Those years, that was when the current version of Harry Higgs was born. “It was like, fuck, right, I can be liked, and be funny, and still be the super-confident guy who believes in himself without being an asshole.” That’s quite a realization.

Alex was three years behind Harry at SMU. A good player in his own right, he wanted to take a run at the mini-tours. But that entailed asking all the same people his older brother had already tapped for money.

“I don’t really know if he got a fair shake to be able to come at it himself,” Harry said. “Maybe that’s in the back of my mind, why I asked him to be my caddie. I hired him (in February 2020) because I knew he’d be a world-class caddie in about six months, and he’s done that. But I also hired him selfishly, as a motivator, because I know that the better I do, the better he does.”

Now they’re here.

Late on a hot Detroit afternoon, Alex trots out to the range to retrieve Harry’s discarded club. Another glamorous day on the PGA Tour has come to an end.

It’s Friday morning. The second round is underway. “Hey! There’s Harry Higgs!” yells a fan along the first fairway. “We have the same workout program!”

Higgs doesn’t hear it, but he’s heard it before. He’s heard it all before. He was a big kid. He was a big teenager. “I remember little bits and pieces of hearing, ‘You’re fat. You’re huge.’”

Now he’s a big adult and the topic of his weight is one you don’t need to tip-toe into. He understands what you see. He understands that part of the brand is that he’s different. There’s no need to be passive with Harry Higgs, because god knows Harry Higgs isn’t going to be passive with you. There are no pretenses.

So Harry keeps talking. “I was really fortunate as a kid, in that, for whatever reason, my thought in response to hearing stuff like that was, ‘Man, I bet you’re really struggling.’ I think a teacher mentioned that idea to me at some point and I just latched onto it. I figured out early that a bully only says those things because they’re insecure or struggling with something. I realize now that it was extremely fortunate that that’s how I received it.”

And how about when those comments come at age 29?

“Oh, when people want to judge me? That doubt and pessimism? That’s fine. I fucking love that shit. I’ve got tweets and comments from people saying this and that about me saved on my phone. I use it. I’ve always been motivated by shit like that.”

He’s working on himself, nonetheless. Higgs is on a diet consisting of some intermittent fasting and limiting himself to healthy fats. He’s cutting out some habits, trying his damndest to avoid fried chicken.

There is, though, an unavoidable concern.

“It helps, but there’s a fine line,” he says. “There are a few horror stories of guys who lost weight and were never able to really play again.”

For Higgs, a diet is more about being healthier and generating more energy to stay focused.

That, he says, is a far bigger issue than a few pounds here and there. Higgs has been playing angry of late. He doesn’t know why. All he knows is he hasn’t been having fun on the golf course since his T4 finish at the PGA Championship. He doesn’t say so, but that performance might’ve changed the view in the mirror. After all those years not being taken seriously, Higgs shot 72-71-73-71 on a Kiawah Island course that took its toll on most of the best players in the world. Higgs nearly stole fire from the sky that weekend. He leans in close to say, “Man, I was really close to winning a fucking major.”

It’s true. He was. But this week, he’s kicking the ball around Detroit Golf Club on his way to a second-round 69. Once again, he’s stomping around, all hot and bothered. Despite plenty of fans coming by to see Hilarious Harry Higgs, all they got was a pissed-off tour pro who can’t find his swing. There was not a single perceivable moment of comedy or hi-jinx or enjoyment from these 36 holes. He missed the cut by a stroke.

At a Saturday brunch the following morning, Higgs pushes around some bits of an omelet, maybe looking for an answer in there somewhere.

“Really, it’s a huge issue,” he says. “I don’t know what’s snapping me into the no-fun zone. Part of it, obviously, is results. But that shouldn’t matter that much. I know I play better when I have more fun. It’s probably not to the extent people think, but I do have fun.

“It’s just, to golf like this is no fun. I just get super fucking angry and frustrated with anything and everything and I’ll bitch about anything and everything. I haven’t normally been like that. I don’t know why it’s happening now.”

They don’t make viral videos about this.

Harry gives a big laugh and a shrug. “I need to figure this out, but I know I’m really fucking close. I’ll probably win next week.”

His collar is wide open and his sunglasses are on. He is, in this moment, all his versions. As vulnerable as he is viral. As human as he is hilarious.

(Illustration: Wes McCabe / The Athletic ; Photos: Michael Cohen, Stacy Revere, Rob Carr / Getty Images; Ben Jared / PGA TOUR)

Get all-access to exclusive stories.

Subscribe to The Athletic for in-depth coverage of your favorite players, teams, leagues and clubs. Try a week on us.

Brendan Quinn

Brendan Quinn covers college basketball and golf for The Athletic. He came to The Athletic from MLive Media Group, where he covered Michigan and Michigan State basketball. Prior to that, he covered Tennessee basketball for the Knoxville News Sentinel. Follow Brendan on Twitter @ BFQuinn

  • Calendar - results
  • DP World Tour
  • All Competitions
  • Football Home
  • Fixtures - Results
  • Premier League
  • Champions League
  • Europa League
  • All leagues
  • Snooker Home
  • World Championship
  • UK Championship
  • Major events
  • Tennis Home
  • Calendar - Results
  • Australian Open
  • Roland-Garros
  • Mountain Bike Home
  • UCI Track CL Home
  • Men's standings
  • Women's standings
  • Cycling Home
  • Race calendar
  • Tour de France
  • Vuelta a España
  • Giro d'Italia
  • Dare to Dream
  • Alpine Skiing Home
  • Athletics Home
  • Diamond League
  • World Championships
  • World Athletics Indoor Championships
  • Biathlon Home
  • Cross-Country Skiing Home
  • Cycling - Track
  • Equestrian Home
  • Figure Skating Home
  • Formula E Home
  • MotoGP Home
  • Motorsports Home
  • Speedway GP
  • Clips and Highlights
  • Olympics Home
  • Olympic Channel
  • Rugby World Cup predictor
  • Premiership
  • Champions Cup
  • Challenge Cup
  • All Leagues
  • Ski Jumping Home
  • Speedway GP Home
  • Superbikes Home
  • The Ocean Race Home
  • Triathlon Home
  • Hours of Le Mans
  • Winter Sports Home

‘It’s so cool!’ - Harry Higgs recalls viral celebration at last year’s WM Phoenix Open and hints at more to come

Graham Jenkins

Published 08/02/2023 at 12:38 GMT

Harry Higgs produced a headline-grabbing celebration at the 2022 WM Phoenix Open, over-shadowing eventual winner Scottie Scheffler. On the eve of this year’s tournament, the 31-year-old has lifted the lid on the events that led up to his unforgettable post-putt celebration. Higgs has previously revealed that his crowd-pleasing turn earned him a word of warning from PGA Tour officials.

'Complete and utter madness!' - Higgs discusses his viral shirtless celebration after putt

Tiger's brief return, Spieth succumbs to 'dumbest' rule - What we learned from Genesis Invitational

19/02/2024 at 20:05

  • Rose ends four-year title drought with AT&T Pebble Beach Pro Am win
  • Berger reflects on his last-hole heroics at the 2021 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro Am

'He just didn't look right' - Woodland on Woods' withdrawal from Genesis Invitational

Woods withdraws with illness mid-round during pga tour comeback.

17/02/2024 at 10:23

Woods: PGA Tour no longer needs Saudi-backed PIF to succeed

15/02/2024 at 17:28

Advertisement

Puerto rico open tv coverage: how to stream or watch harry higgs | march 7-10, share this article.

Harry Higgs will join the field at Grand Reserve Country Club in Río Grande, Puerto Rico, the venue for the 2024 Puerto Rico Open from March 7-10.

Higgs has a best finish of 12th, and an average finish of 46th, in his 19 tournaments during the past year (including no top fives).

Keep reading for all the information you need to know about Higgs before the the 2024 Puerto Rico Open, including how to catch the action live on TV or via live stream .

Puerto Rico Open TV channel and live stream info

  • Date: March 7-10, 2024
  • Thursday Coverage: Golf Channel
  • Friday Coverage: Golf Channel
  • Saturday Coverage: Golf Channel
  • Location: Río Grande, Puerto Rico
  • Course: Grand Reserve Country Club
  • Live Stream on Fubo: Start your free trial today!

Puerto Rico Open coverage on Fubo and ESPN+

Want to watch the PGA Tour all season long, including featured groups of the biggest names in golf, live feeds of the most famous holes on Tour, plus tons of awesome golf films from the history of the sport? Sign up for ESPN+ to access PGA Tour Live! You can also sign up for a free trial of Fubo and catch all the nationally televised Tour action, plus plenty of other live sports, shows and news from your favorite cable channels.

Harry Higgs stats and recent trends

  • In his last five events, Higgs has an average finish of 68th.
  • He’s made the cut in two of his last five appearances.
  • Higgs has not finished within five strokes of the winner or posted a better-than-average score in any of his last five tournaments.
  • In his last five appearances, his average score has been -5.

Harry Higgs at the Puerto Rico Open

  • Grand Reserve Country Club measures 7,506 yards for this tournament, 530 yards more than the average course on the Tour over the past year (6,976).
  • Grand Reserve Country Club has seen an average tournament score of -7 recently, which is lower than the Tour scoring average of -5 across all courses over the past year.
  • Courses Higgs has played over the past year have measured an average of 7,313 yards, 193 yards shorter than the 7,506-yard Grand Reserve Country Club for this week’s event.
  • The tournaments he’s played over the past year have seen an average score of -9. That’s lower than this course’s recent scoring average of -7.
  • Higgs finished seventh here in his last appearance at the tournament (2023).
  • He finished with the best score in the field in one round his last time here.

Want to make sure you don’t miss Higgs in action at the 2024 Puerto Rico Open? Sign up for Fubo and get live sports and shows , without cable!

We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

Most Popular

Best golf gloves for 2024, full swing season 2 review: ranking all 8 episodes of the netflix golf show, umbrella logo, throwback t's, the coolest head covers: arnold palmer invitational still in a class by itself for best pga tour merchandise, paul azinger doesn't hold back about his breakup with nbc (and suggests who should replace him), best golf wedges you can buy in 2024, 10 of the best players at the arnold palmer invitational over the last 5 seasons, sleeper picks for the arnold palmer invitational 2024.

Advertisement

How to watch harry higgs at the puerto rico open: live stream, tv channel, odds, share this article.

Before he tees off in Río Grande, Puerto Rico, let’s break down his recent form to help you make your best bets on Higgs in this event.

How to watch Harry Higgs at the Puerto Rico Open

  • Date: March 7-10, 2024
  • TV: Golf Channel
  • Location: Río Grande, Puerto Rico
  • Course: Grand Reserve Country Club
  • Live Stream on Fubo:   Watch for free!

ESPN+ is the new home of PGA TOUR LIVE. Sign up now to access 4,300+ hours of live coverage from 35 PGA TOUR tournaments this year.

Harry Higgs’ last five tournaments

Recent stats for higgs.

  • Over his last 10 rounds, Higgs has finished under par three times, while also registering two bogey-free rounds and two rounds with a better-than-average score.
  • He has not finished any of his last 10 rounds with one of the 10 best scores of the day.
  • Higgs has recorded a score within three shots of the day’s best in one of his last 10 rounds, while finishing within five strokes of the top score of the day two times.

Harry Higgs odds to win

Golf odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook . Odds updated Tuesday at 1:24 PM ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub .

We recommend interesting sports viewing/streaming and betting opportunities. If you sign up for a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

Most Popular

2024 nfl mock draft, post-super bowl edition: the bears dilemma ends with a new qb, the 12 biggest nfl cuts, from xavien howard to shaquil barrett, as teams prepare for 2024 free agency, predicting where the nfl's top 25 free agents, from kirk cousins to calvin ridley, will sign in 2024, taylor swift fans loved how travis kelce wore friendship bracelets to jason kelce's retirement announcement, travis kelce is on his way to singapore for taylor swift's next set of eras tour shows, per report, eagles trainer reveals the beautiful story behind jason kelce asking him to tape his ankles before his retirement speech, 11 best fits for nfl veterans who were cut before 2024 free agency.

Please enter an email address.

Thanks for signing up.

Please check your email for a confirmation.

Something went wrong.

Harry Higgs Betting Profile: Puerto Rico Open

Betting Profile

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - OCTOBER 17: Harry Higgs of the United States plays a tee shot on the 14th hole during the final round of THE CJ CUP @ SUMMIT at The Summit Club on October 17, 2021 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - OCTOBER 17: Harry Higgs of the United States plays a tee shot on the 14th hole during the final round of THE CJ CUP @ SUMMIT at The Summit Club on October 17, 2021 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

Change Text Size

In his most recent tournament at The RSM Classic in Saint Simons Island, Georgia, Harry Higgs finished the weekend at -7, good for a 68th-place finish. He competes in the 2024 Puerto Rico Open March 7-10 trying for a better finish.

The Puerto Rico Open Tournament & Course Info

  • Date: March 7-10, 2024
  • Location: Río Grande, Puerto Rico
  • Course: Grand Reserve Country Club
  • Par: 72 / 7,506 yards
  • Previous Winner: Nico Echavarria

At the Puerto Rico Open

  • Higgs finished seventh (with a score of -13) in his only appearance at the Puerto Rico Open in recent years (in 2023).
  • With a driving average of 316.4 yards (seventh in the field), a 42.86% driving accuracy (56th), and 27.75 putts per round (seventh), Nico Echavarria brought home the title in this tournament in 2023.

Higgs' Recent Performances

  • Over his last five tournaments, Higgs has finished in the top 20 twice.
  • In the last five times he's played a tournament, he has made the cut three times.
  • Over his last five appearances, Higgs has carded a score that's better than average in one of those outings.
  • He has finished with an average score of -6 those three times he's made the cut.
  • In terms of driving distance, Harry Higgs has averaged 288.0 yards in his past five starts.
  • Higgs has an average of -2.506 Strokes Gained: Putting in his past five tournaments.
  • In his past five starts, Higgs is averaging -5.698 Strokes Gained: Total.

Higgs' Advanced Stats and Rankings

Higgs' best finishes.

  • Higgs last season took part in 30 tournaments, collecting one finish in the top 10.
  • In those 30 events, he made the cut 14 times (46.7%).
  • Last season Higgs' best performance came at the RBC Canadian Open. He shot -11 and finished 12th in that event.
  • With 274 points last season, Higgs ranked 136th in the FedExCup standings.

Higgs' Strokes Gained Rankings

Higgs' past results.

All stats in this article are accurate for Higgs as of the start of the Puerto Rico Open.

Note: The PGA TOUR has created this story via a machine-learning model using data from ShotLink , powered by CDW, in addition to player performance data. While we strive for accuracy and quality, please note that the information provided may not be entirely error-free.

IMAGES

  1. Harry Higgs PGA TOUR Profile

    harry higgs pga tour results

  2. Harry Higgs' walk-off albatross sets up title push at Safeway Open

    harry higgs pga tour results

  3. Harry Higgs shares lead at The RSM Classic

    harry higgs pga tour results

  4. Harry Higgs PGA TOUR Profile

    harry higgs pga tour results

  5. Harry Higgs PGA TOUR Profile

    harry higgs pga tour results

  6. Has Harry Higgs ever won on PGA TOUR? Exploring the American golfer’s

    harry higgs pga tour results

COMMENTS

  1. Harry Higgs PGA TOUR Player Profile, Stats, Bio, Career

    The Official PGA TOUR Profile of Harry Higgs. PGA TOUR Stats, bio, video, photos, results, and career highlights

  2. Harry Higgs PGA TOUR Profile

    The official PGA TOUR profile of Harry Higgs. PGA TOUR stats, video, photos, results, and career highlights.

  3. Harry Higgs 2024 Golf Tournaments Played

    View the 2024 golf tournament results for Harry Higgs on ESPN. Includes tournaments played, final position and earnings. ... Harry Higgs. United States; Follow. Birthdate. 12/4/1991 (32)

  4. Harry Higgs (United States) Golf Profile

    Austin Eckroat, 25, earned his first PGA Tour victory Monday, shooting 17-under-267 to win the Cognizant Classic, earning $1.62 million, tour status for two years and a trip to the Masters for the ...

  5. Harry Higgs PGA TOUR Player Profile, Stats, Bio, Career

    The Official PGA TOUR Profile of Harry Higgs. PGA TOUR Stats, bio, video, photos, results, and career highlights. Leaderboard Watch News FedExCup Schedule Players Stats Golfbet More PGA TOUR PGA TOUR Champions Korn Ferry Tour PGA TOUR Canada PGA TOUR Latinoamérica LPGA TOUR DP World Tour PGA TOUR University.

  6. RSM Classic: 5 takeaways from second round in St. Simons Island

    Harry Higgs 'spiraling up,' Joel Dahmen playing with fear among 5 takeaways from 2nd round of RSM Classic. ... Higgs gained more than three strokes to the field on the greens at Sea Island Resort's Seaside Course on Friday, the second best performance in the field and it propelled him into a share of the 36-hole lead with Cole Hammer and ...

  7. 2022 RSM Classic leaderboard: Harry Higgs, Andrew Putnam, Cole Hammer

    It's been three years since Harry Higgs has possessed a 36-hole lead on the PGA Tour. Entering the weekend sharing the top spot on the leaderboard with Andrew Putnam and Cole Hammer at 12 under ...

  8. Harry Higgs

    View a Profile of each PGA TOUR Player with photos and tournament histories including scorecards. View the player highlights for every event they played. ... Profile; Standings; About; More. Courses PGA Tour Champions Web.com Tour Monday Qualifier. Harry Higgs. Personal; Tournaments; ... Results; Stats; Analysis; All seasons. All seasons 2020 ...

  9. Harry Higgs wants to be happy. He's trying

    Higgs followed up a strong rookie year with a solid sophomore campaign during the tour's superseason, highlighted by a runner-up at the 2020 Safeway Open and T-4 at the 2021 PGA Championship.

  10. Players 2021: Harry Higgs, in rare form as always, perfectly summed up

    RELATED: How to pick your favorite PGA Tour player Higgs, a teammate of Bryson DeChambeau's at SMU, is right. He could not look any less like the world's best, DeChambeau included.

  11. This Story About Harry Higgs's Win at the Peru Open is Pure Gold

    Apr 27, 2023. This is Harry Higgs' fourth year on the PGA Tour. At the Mexico Open this week, he'll make his 99th start since graduating from the Korn Ferry Tour. Before that, Higgs spent ...

  12. Harry Higgs

    Early life. Higgs was born in Camden, New Jersey on December 4, 1991. He grew up in Overland Park, Kansas.His parents are Mike and Denise Higgs. [citation needed]Amateur career. He played his high school golf at Blue Valley North High School in Overland Park, Kansas and his college golf for the SMU Mustangs.. Professional career. Higgs played on PGA Tour Latinoamérica in 2015 and 2018.

  13. Harry Higgs is exactly what you think he is, except when he isn't

    Here is Harry Higgs rolling from the 6th green to the 7th tee box at another golf course on another week on the PGA Tour.The man is molten hot. Boiling right over the brim.

  14. Has Harry Higgs ever won on PGA TOUR? Exploring the ...

    American Harry Higgs has never won a tournament on the PGA Tour, where he obtained official membership in 2020. ... Other top results for Higgs on the PGA Tour have been finishing T4 at the 2021 ...

  15. 2023 PGA Tour Q-School final results: Prize money payouts, leaderboard

    2023 PGA Tour Q-School final results: Prize money payouts and leaderboard. See who took home the first-place prize money and who got PGA Tour cards, Korn Ferry Tour status ... Harry Higgs: E: 69 ...

  16. After 'miserable' golf stretch, Harry Higgs is making some changes

    Harry Higgs has struggled on the PGA Tour for the last 18 months, but he's forcing himself to change his approach.

  17. 10 surprising players who lost their PGA Tour cards on Sunday

    Shirtless PGA Tour pros?! Harry Higgs, Joel Dahmen go wild at 16 By: Dylan Dethier Zach Johnson (140th) — The next U.S. Ryder Cup captain, Masters champ and Open Championship winner can use an ...

  18. 'It's so cool!'

    PGA Tour star Harry Higgs might not have won the 2022 WM Phoenix Open but he was the name on everyone's lips - and social media feeds - after a headline-grabbing celebration alongside playing ...

  19. Harry Higgs shares lead at The RSM Classic

    Harry Higgs' Round 2 highlights from The RSM Classic. ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. -- Harry Higgs lost his full PGA TOUR card toward the end of last season and took a step Friday at Sea Island toward ...

  20. Harry Higgs Odds to Win The 2024 Puerto Rico Open

    Harry Higgs Puerto Rico Open History & Stats. Higgs finished seventh in his most recent appearance at this tournament (2023). He finished with the round's top score once when he last played here. Course Stats. Courses on the Tour have played at an average length of 6,982 yards in the past year.

  21. Puerto Rico Open TV coverage: How to stream or watch Harry Higgs

    Harry Higgs at the Puerto Rico Open Grand Reserve Country Club measures 7,506 yards for this tournament, 524 yards more than the average course on the Tour over the past year (6,982). Grand Reserve Country Club has seen an average tournament score of -7 recently, which is lower than the Tour scoring average of -5 across all courses over the ...

  22. PGA Tour's 2024 Puerto Rico Open: Full field and top ...

    The 2024 Puerto Rico Open is set to tee off at the Grand Reserve Golf Club in Rio Grande, Puerto Rico on Thursday, March 7. The four-day event, the 11th tournament of the 2024 PGA Tour schedule ...

  23. Harry Higgs' mental resurgence vaults him into contention at Sanderson

    Harry Higgs spent the two weeks off after the Fortinet Championship doing nothing all that fun, he said - except getting to work. He's excited to see the hard work pay off immediately. Higgs ...

  24. Harry Higgs at the Puerto Rico Open: Live Stream, TV Channel, Odds

    ESPN+ is the new home of PGA TOUR LIVE. Sign up now to access 4,300+ hours of live coverage from 35 PGA TOUR tournaments this year. Harry Higgs' last five tournaments

  25. Harry Higgs Betting Profile: Puerto Rico Open

    Higgs finished seventh (with a score of -13) in his only appearance at the Puerto Rico Open in recent years (in 2023). With a driving average of 316.4 yards (seventh in the field), a 42.86% ...