The post Grass League Names Its Latest Champions appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. CADIZ, SPAIN – JUNE 8: Ryan Ruffels of Australia plays his tee shot on the 11th hole on Day One of the Andalucia Challenge de Cadiz at Iberostar Real Golf Novo Sancti Petri on June 8, 2023 in Cadiz, Andalucia, Spain. (Photo by Octavio Passos/Getty Images) Getty Images While Tomorrow’s Golf League (TGL), the Internet Invitational, LIV Golf, and an influx of money into the PGA Tour look to disrupt golf’s status quo, a smaller par-three–based league — The Grass League — crowned a champion over the weekend. The Grass League is a franchise-based team competition featuring a mixture of professional players from the PGA and LPGA Tours, mini-tour players, former players, YouTubers, and elite amateurs. Siblings and professional golfers Gabriela Ruffels and Ryan Ruffels teamed up to win the event at the Grass Clippings Rolling Hills par-3 course, competing under The Los Angeles Roses franchise. Ryan Ruffels came close to delivering one of the event’s most dramatic moments on the 17th hole, flying his shot directly into the cup before it bounced out and finished roughly 20 feet from the hole. “Over 80 percent of all golf shots you watch on a full PGA Tour event broadcast are from 150 yards and in and around the greens. If you think about the 16th at The Masters or 17 at Sawgrass, all of the iconic moments are on par threes,” Grass Clippings founder Jake Hoselton said (“Jake Hoselton – Grass Clippings”). The league features 10 franchises across the United States and hosts four aggregate tournaments throughout the year: the season opener at Grass Clippings, a second event at Goat Hill Park, and the season finale under the lights back at Grass Clippings. The season begins with a play-in competition where players can be drafted onto their respective franchises. Teams range… The post Grass League Names Its Latest Champions appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. CADIZ, SPAIN – JUNE 8: Ryan Ruffels of Australia plays his tee shot on the 11th hole on Day One of the Andalucia Challenge de Cadiz at Iberostar Real Golf Novo Sancti Petri on June 8, 2023 in Cadiz, Andalucia, Spain. (Photo by Octavio Passos/Getty Images) Getty Images While Tomorrow’s Golf League (TGL), the Internet Invitational, LIV Golf, and an influx of money into the PGA Tour look to disrupt golf’s status quo, a smaller par-three–based league — The Grass League — crowned a champion over the weekend. The Grass League is a franchise-based team competition featuring a mixture of professional players from the PGA and LPGA Tours, mini-tour players, former players, YouTubers, and elite amateurs. Siblings and professional golfers Gabriela Ruffels and Ryan Ruffels teamed up to win the event at the Grass Clippings Rolling Hills par-3 course, competing under The Los Angeles Roses franchise. Ryan Ruffels came close to delivering one of the event’s most dramatic moments on the 17th hole, flying his shot directly into the cup before it bounced out and finished roughly 20 feet from the hole. “Over 80 percent of all golf shots you watch on a full PGA Tour event broadcast are from 150 yards and in and around the greens. If you think about the 16th at The Masters or 17 at Sawgrass, all of the iconic moments are on par threes,” Grass Clippings founder Jake Hoselton said (“Jake Hoselton – Grass Clippings”). The league features 10 franchises across the United States and hosts four aggregate tournaments throughout the year: the season opener at Grass Clippings, a second event at Goat Hill Park, and the season finale under the lights back at Grass Clippings. The season begins with a play-in competition where players can be drafted onto their respective franchises. Teams range…

Grass League Names Its Latest Champions

2025/12/09 17:33

CADIZ, SPAIN – JUNE 8: Ryan Ruffels of Australia plays his tee shot on the 11th hole on Day One of the Andalucia Challenge de Cadiz at Iberostar Real Golf Novo Sancti Petri on June 8, 2023 in Cadiz, Andalucia, Spain. (Photo by Octavio Passos/Getty Images)

Getty Images

While Tomorrow’s Golf League (TGL), the Internet Invitational, LIV Golf, and an influx of money into the PGA Tour look to disrupt golf’s status quo, a smaller par-three–based league — The Grass League — crowned a champion over the weekend.

The Grass League is a franchise-based team competition featuring a mixture of professional players from the PGA and LPGA Tours, mini-tour players, former players, YouTubers, and elite amateurs.

Siblings and professional golfers Gabriela Ruffels and Ryan Ruffels teamed up to win the event at the Grass Clippings Rolling Hills par-3 course, competing under The Los Angeles Roses franchise.

Ryan Ruffels came close to delivering one of the event’s most dramatic moments on the 17th hole, flying his shot directly into the cup before it bounced out and finished roughly 20 feet from the hole.

“Over 80 percent of all golf shots you watch on a full PGA Tour event broadcast are from 150 yards and in and around the greens. If you think about the 16th at The Masters or 17 at Sawgrass, all of the iconic moments are on par threes,” Grass Clippings founder Jake Hoselton said (“Jake Hoselton – Grass Clippings”).

The league features 10 franchises across the United States and hosts four aggregate tournaments throughout the year: the season opener at Grass Clippings, a second event at Goat Hill Park, and the season finale under the lights back at Grass Clippings.

The season begins with a play-in competition where players can be drafted onto their respective franchises. Teams range geographically from the New York Blue Birds to the Minnesota Muskies to Wyndham Clark’s San Diego Munis(“Franchises”).

ORLANDO, FLORIDA – MARCH 10: Wyndham Clark of the United States and his caddie John Ellis celebrate after Clark made a birdie on the 18th hole during the final round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard at Arnold Palmer Bay Hill Golf Course on March 10, 2024 in Orlando, Florida. (Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

Getty Images

Notable names competing in the 2025 season include former Stanford standout Andrew Yun, John Ellis (Wyndham Clark’s caddie), YouTuber Joe Hooks, GoodGood member Garret Clark, and announcer Colt Knost.

Looking ahead, the league plans to expand by adding more franchises, players, and courses as it builds multiple revenue streams through merchandise, ticket sales, TV contracts, courses, and real estate ventures.

“Franchises.” The Grass League, https://grassleague.com/franchises/.

“Jake Hoselton – Grass Clippings.” Profluence, https://profluence.com/podcast/jake-hoselton-grass-clippings/.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/break80/2025/12/09/par-3-powerhouse-grass-league-names-its-latest-champions/

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Solana News: SOL Faces Liquidity Crunch as $500M in Longs Sit on the Brink

Solana News: SOL Faces Liquidity Crunch as $500M in Longs Sit on the Brink

The post Solana News: SOL Faces Liquidity Crunch as $500M in Longs Sit on the Brink appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Key Insights On-chain insights suggest Solana liquidity has thinned to levels typically seen in a bear market. Institutional capital continues to pour into spot Solana ETFs, which have seen $17.72 million in net inflows this week, almost matching last week’s $20.30 million. Roughly $500 million in long positions could be exposed if the price slips just 5.5%. On-chain insights suggest Solana’s liquidity has thinned to levels typically seen in a bear market. According to a top analyst,  roughly $500 million in long positions could be exposed if the price slips just 5.5%. Meanwhile, Bitcoin’s mid-week buying burst lifted most major altcoins. Even so, Solana isn’t sharing in that confidence. Its liquidity continues to pull back, and the overall market remains uneasy, leaving the token on fragile footing despite the recent lift across the sector. Solana Realized Losses Outpace Profits as Liquidity Shrinks Solana’s 30-day average realized profit-to-loss ratio has remained below one since mid-November, according to a Wednesday tweet from on-chain analytics platform Glassnode. A ratio under one shows that realized losses are outpacing profits. This suggests liquidity has contracted to levels typically seen in a bear market. Solana realized profit/loss ratio data by Glassnode A tweet by Altcoin Vector pointed out that Solana is undergoing a full liquidity reset. This signal has marked the start of new liquidity cycles in the past and often leads to bottoming phases. If the current pattern mirrors April’s setup, a market reignition could take about four more weeks, potentially lining up with early January. The reset is being driven by several factors. Realized losses are prompting sell-offs, futures open interest is declining, market-makers are pulling back, and liquidity is fragmenting across trading pools. The mid- to long-term outlook for the market remains slightly bullish, particularly if macroeconomic pressures ease. In the near term,…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/12/11 14:11