December 30 – 31, 2025
Champions Gate Junior Open
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The Champions Gate Junior Open wasn’t just another tournament on the winter calendar — it was a statement event, as the Hurricane Junior Golf Tour brought elite junior competition to one of the most demanding venues in the country, ChampionsGate Golf Resort.
From the moment players stepped onto the International Course, the tone was unmistakable. This was championship golf. Long sightlines. Minimal forgiveness. A layout that doesn’t bend to age, rankings, or reputation. ChampionsGate asked the same question of every competitor: Can you manage your game when nothing comes easy?
Across all divisions, the course served as the great equalizer. Birdies were rare. Pars were earned. And momentum swung quickly for those who strayed from discipline. Players were forced to think their way around the golf course — choosing smart lines off the tee, accepting conservative targets, and learning how to grind when scoring chances disappeared.
That’s exactly why this event fits the DNA of the HJGT.
The Champions Gate Junior Open reflected what the tour consistently delivers: a professional tournament environment designed to prepare players for what comes next. From younger divisions experiencing their first true championship setup to older players sharpening the mental toughness required for collegiate golf, the week at ChampionsGate was about development under pressure.
What separated contenders from the rest wasn’t raw talent — it was composure. Players who stayed patient, avoided compounding mistakes, and trusted their process rose up the leaderboard. Those who chased shots learned quickly that ChampionsGate doesn’t negotiate.
By the time the final putts dropped, the message was clear. This event wasn’t built for comfort. It was built for growth.
That’s the standard the HJGT continues to raise. Championship venues. National fields. Real tests. And an environment that mirrors the demands of golf at the next level.
At ChampionsGate, players didn’t just compete — they were measured.
And for many, the lessons learned on the International Course will matter long after the scorecards are signed.
Division
Leader
Total
Boys 16-18 Division
Kayden Jae
+9 Total
Boys 14-15 Division
Jack Grinton
+5 Total
Boys 12-13 Division
Jeremy Zhang
+11 Total
Boys 10-11 Division
Licheng Hou
-2 Total
Girls 14-18 Division
Audrey Bai
+13 Total
Girls 13&U Division
MacKenzie Malcolm
+29 Total
December 27 – 28, 2025
Southwest Season Opener at Talking Stick
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SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Talking Stick Golf Club once again proved to be an ideal stage for championship junior golf as it hosted the Southwest Season Opener for the Hurricane Junior Golf Tour, welcoming players from across the country and around the world to one of the Southwest’s purest tests of fundamentals.
Set against the open desert landscape, Talking Stick presents a challenge that is as honest as it is demanding. With minimal visual framing, firm fairways, and fast, subtly contoured greens, the course places the responsibility squarely on execution. There is little to hide behind here — alignment, distance control, and disciplined decision-making are exposed on every hole.
Throughout the event, the course rewarded players who embraced patience and respected the design. Tee shots required precise alignment rather than power, while approach shots demanded exact yardages to account for firm surfaces that could easily send the ball racing past targets. Missed greens often turned routine holes into tests of touch and creativity, making pars a valuable commodity across all divisions.
As host venue, Talking Stick Golf Club delivered exactly what the HJGT seeks in a championship setting: a fair but exacting examination that challenges players mentally as much as physically. The openness of the layout amplified pressure, especially late in rounds, where momentum was difficult to maintain and every decision carried weight.
The presence of the Hurricane Junior Golf Tour elevated the event atmosphere, bringing together a competitive, diverse field that reflected the tour’s national and international reach. Players adapted to the desert conditions with maturity, adjusting ball flight, choosing conservative targets, and learning to accept what the course allowed rather than forcing outcomes.
By the end of the Southwest Season Opener, Talking Stick had once again affirmed its reputation as a premier venue for elite junior competition. Hosting the HJGT provided not just a tournament, but a true measuring stick — a venue that teaches discipline, rewards smart golf, and prepares players for the realities of higher-level competition long after the final putt drops.
Division
Leader
Total
Boys 16-18 Division
Aj Sposato
+1 Total
Boys 14-15 Division
Bode Truman
+14 Total
Boys 12-13 Division
James Tang
+6 Total
Girls 14-18 Division
Reese Barry
+8 Total
December 27 – 28, 2025
Eagle Creek Holiday Open
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ORLANDO, Fla. — The Eagle Creek Holiday Open delivered a true championship test as Hurricane Junior Golf Tour competitors closed out the year at Eagle Creek Golf Club, a venue that demanded discipline, patience, and intelligent course management from the opening tee shot to the final putt.
Eagle Creek’s design set the tone early. Water hazards framed key landing areas, forcing players to commit to conservative lines off the tee, while exposed approaches placed a premium on precise yardages and controlled ball flight. The greens, firm and subtly contoured, punished indecision and rewarded confident putting, making momentum difficult to sustain across all divisions. On this layout, pars were earned, and mistakes were rarely isolated.
Throughout the weekend, the field reflected the depth and diversity of the HJGT, with players traveling from across the United States and internationally to compete on a course that offers little margin for error. Across age groups, the same pattern emerged: those who respected the course and embraced patience steadily climbed the leaderboard, while aggressive decisions often led to costly numbers.
What stood out most was the composure displayed by the competitors. Rather than forcing birdies, HJGT juniors adjusted strategy, accepted conservative targets, and trusted their preparation. The ability to reset after setbacks became just as important as technical execution, particularly on a layout where water and wind can quickly shift the complexion of a round.
By the time the championship concluded, Eagle Creek had once again proven why it is a respected stop on the HJGT schedule. The venue delivered a championship-caliber experience that tested every facet of the game — physical, strategic, and mental — while providing players with a meaningful benchmark as they continue their development.
The Eagle Creek Holiday Open was more than a seasonal event; it was a reminder of what competitive junior golf demands. On a course that rewards discipline and punishes impatience, HJGT competitors rose to the challenge, finishing the year with a test that mirrored the realities of elite tournament golf and reinforced the standards required to succeed at the next level.
Division
Leader
Total
Boys 16-18 Division
Edwin Fenton
-2 Total
Boys 14-15 Division
Aiden Tong Lu
+12 Total
Boys 12-13 Division
Kentaro Inoue
+9 Total
Boys 10-11 Division
Seunghun (Ben) Hahn
+5 Total
Girls 14-18 Division
Briel Royce
-3 Total
Girls 13&U Division
Rytta Qi
+52 Total
December 27 – 28, 2025
PGA National Junior Open presented by GEICO
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PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. — The Fazio Course at PGA National Resort – Fazio Course is a venue that reveals its difficulty slowly, asking players to solve a strategic puzzle rather than overpower it. Throughout the week, the course challenged the field with a blend of visual deception, precise landing zones, and greens that demanded absolute commitment — a test that required patience as much as talent.
From the tee, the course placed immediate pressure on decision-making. Wide visuals often masked narrow effective landing areas, forcing players to choose conservative lines and trust their swing rather than chase distance. Well-positioned bunkers and water hazards punished even slight misses, turning aggressive choices into costly mistakes. For many, the challenge was learning when not to attack.
Approach shots proved equally exacting. The Fazio greens, firm and subtly contoured, rewarded precise distance control while rejecting shots that lacked conviction. Players quickly learned that being on the wrong tier or short-sided around the greens could turn routine pars into demanding recoveries. Momentum was fragile, and careless shots were magnified by the course’s design.
Yet across the championship, the Hurricane Junior Golf Tour field rose to the challenge. HJGT competitors demonstrated maturity well beyond their years, adapting their strategies as conditions evolved and learning to accept pars as victories. Players who committed to disciplined course management — favoring position, smart targets, and controlled ball flight — steadily separated themselves.
What stood out most was the composure displayed under pressure. Rather than forcing birdies, HJGT juniors trusted process, navigated difficult stretches with resilience, and capitalized when opportunities presented themselves. The course demanded emotional control as much as technical skill, and the field responded with poise, patience, and focus.
In the end, the Fazio Course did exactly what a championship venue should: it tested fundamentals, exposed weaknesses, and rewarded those willing to think their way through the round. The performance of the Hurricane Junior Golf Tour juniors showed that they didn’t just survive the challenge — they learned from it, adapted to it, and ultimately conquered it through discipline, maturity, and respect for the game.
Division
Leader
Total
Boys 16-18 Division
Anderson Lang
E Total
Boys 14-15 Division
Colin Thoroman
+3 Total
Boys 12-13 Division
Victor Kornienko
-9 Total
Boys 10-11 Division
Blake Shurman
+2 Total
Girls 14-18 Division
Anais Nicolas
+2 Total
Girls 13&U Division
Meiyi Li
+5 Total
