
In a dramatic finish to the TGL regular season, Tom Kim delivered what many called an “unreal” hole-in-one to propel his Jupiter Links Golf Club team into the playoffs.
Facing a must-win scenario against The Bay Golf Club, Kim aced the 138-yard par-3 14th hole at SoFi Center, flipping a 6-5 deficit into a 7-6 lead and ultimately securing a 9-6 victory.
The shot, only the second ace in TGL history, had teammate Tiger Woods fist-pumping in celebration and the crowd erupting.
Every reaction is funnier than the previous one you watched.pic.twitter.com/5vCpP5MxHV
— Kyle Porter (@KylePorterNS) March 4, 2026
But while the highlight reel moment lit up PGA Tour-adjacent sports media, a vocal contingent of golf fans on X wasn’t buying it.
They argue the simulator-based league, where shots are tracked digitally and projected on massive screens, is ripe for manipulation.
“Too convenient,” skeptics say, pointing to the high-stakes timing as evidence of scripting or programming to boost ratings and ensure Woods’ team advanced.
TGL-friendly Golf.com blared the convenient headline: Tom Kim’s outrageous hole-in-one delivers dream TGL finish
The controversy ignited under a viral post from parody account @PGATUOR, which shared the clip with the caption: “Tom Kim needed to make a hole-in-one to keep his team’s season alive… Unreal.”
Tom Kim needed to make a hole-in-one to keep his team’s season alive…
Unreal 🔥
— Tour Golf (not PGA Tour) (@PGATUOR) March 4, 2026
Contrarian replies poured in, many laced with snark and doubt: User Cling Daddy quipped, “Ya, totally real golf. Feels like how our elections are conducted.”
Zoltomar added, “Somehow it happened, just amazing. It’s almost like….nahhhhhh.” And WindRiv26461749 blasted, “who watches this fake BS? Grown ass men playing a fake ass video game & acting like 13-year old girls.”
Even beyond that thread, the skepticism spread. The Shank Golfer posted a gif with: “TOTALLY believable, not fake or manipulated by a computer for ratings or anything.”
Tommy Clocks joked about producers intervening: ““Views are sinking, this one has to go in”.”
“Views are sinking, this one has to go in” pic.twitter.com/IWiXddtWKZ
— Tommy Clocks (@Tom_Clocks) March 4, 2026
Chris M added: “Good for TV. Made to order by a software programmer.”
Good for TV. Made to order by a software programmer 🧑💻.
— Chris Munley 🇺🇸🏴☠️🇺🇸🏴☠️ (@95ECUPIR8) March 4, 2026
And Steve O mocked the gullible fans: “Indeed it was unreal! Where’s Toto when you need him? Y’all just swallowed a whole-ass yellow brick road of bullshit.”
Indeed it was unreal! Where’s Toto when you need him? Y’all just swallowed a whole-ass yellow brick road of bullshit. pic.twitter.com/l92OBbR3j8
— Steve O (@surfdaddy) March 4, 2026
Evan Palsson compared it to rigged game shows: “This is actual script writing. This is Who Wants to be a Millionaire paired with the McDonald’s Monopoly game scandal.”
Other users echoed the sentiment across X. Kevin Mann kept it blunt: “Went down just like the script said it would”
Critics argue the tech-driven format, complete with virtual courses and real-time data, makes “miracles” like this suspiciously easy to engineer. As one fan put it, “I mean… isn’t this as manipulatable to make entertaining as it gets?????”
While TGL officials and players insist the tech is fair and the shot was pure skill, the online buzz suggests not everyone’s convinced this ace was anything but programmed perfection.