LAS VEGAS — Jeffrey Lannen plays a golf arcade game for a living. On Sunday, that living got a healthy boost.
With a dramatic eagle on the 18th hole of Gunnison Gap, a wind-whipped, water-laden virtual course, Lannen won the 2026 Golden Tee World Championship, edging his friend and fellow finalist Andy Fox in a taut closing match before a lively crowd at the Palms Casino Resort just off the Strip. The victory came with a $30,000 first-place check — and a promise from Lannen to treat Fox to dinner and drinks.
“We both would have been happy no matter who won,” a smiling Lannen said, standing next to Fox, his head and shoulders dusted with red and blue confetti that rained down after his clinching shot. “But I’m definitely buying tonight.”
A 42-year-old from Ladd, Illinois — a village of just over 1,000 people about 100 miles southwest of Chicago, with no stoplights and a Golden Tee machine at Rip’s Tavern two blocks from his front door — Lannen hardly counted as a Cinderella story. He has five wins on the Golden Tee national tour and he entered the event among the sportsbook favorites. But this was his first world title in a game he has turned into a full-time career.
“There were some jitters very early on,” he said. “But from then on, I felt fine. I was just playing a game.”
And a popular one at that.
With apologies to Ms. Pac-Man, Golden Tee makes a strong claim to being the most successful arcade game in history, measured by both longevity and usage. Released in 1989, it also helped pioneer the computerization of traditional golf in barrooms and restaurants across the country. Though it was not the first golf game to populate those spaces — Birdie King debuted in 1982 — Golden Tee quickly outpaced its competition through inventive course design, evolving graphics and a trackball that allows players to execute a full swing with surprising fidelity, regardless of how surreal their avatars might look.
An estimated 200 million players have taken a turn over the years. Today, some 25,000 machines remain in commercial and home circulation, including at Rip’s Tavern, where Lannen used to work while moonlighting as a UPS driver before he realized he could make a better living playing Golden Tee, with greater flexibility.
While national tournaments offer five-figure purses, much of the money at the top of the game comes through prize-play competitions, in which players contribute to a pool and the top finishers split the payout.
Of Golden Tee’s legions of adherents, skill sets diverge wildly. The top performers play a game with which the average bar goer is unfamiliar, routinely driving par 4s, reaching par 5s in two and trading aces on par 3s. Scores in the 30-under range across 18 holes are not uncommon.
The 2026 World Championship drew the crème de la crème to Las Vegas, most of them prequalified through regional results or year-long standings into the 112-player field, though a handful of spots were available through Friday qualifying. Saturday was reserved for seeding rounds, with 32 players advancing to Sunday’s championship bracket.
Among those who progressed was Andy Haas, Golden Tee’s enduring standard-bearer. A two-time world champion and the most decorated player in the game’s history, Haas entered Sunday as the top seed, though his last world title came a decade ago, in 2016, a Rory McIlroy major-championship dry spell. Haas acknowledged the impact of that drought. “I put a lot of pressure on myself in this event,” he said.
It showed, and it didn’t. Heading into his opening match against Justin Seeley of Texas, Haas looked intent but loose, nodding along to the Tool pulsing through his earbuds. The Ohio native plays to a single-digit handicap at Firestone Country Club on real grass but is something closer to a plus-30 on the screen. He opened with a hole-out eagle from well off the green and appeared in perfect rhythm until an uncharacteristic error left his ball in the water and Haas barking at the machine in disbelief.
“How does that not bite?” he said. “No way that should happen.”
After his upset loss to Seeley, Haas survived two more rounds before Burak Temel ended his run. The wait continues for another year.
Sunday’s bracket play began shortly after 11 a.m. and stretched nearly 12 hours across 18 machines arranged around a ballroom at the Palms, two of them elevated on a stage for marquee matchups. Players competed in multiple divisions, including silver and bronze brackets with smaller purses and looser stakes. The scene reflected the game’s democratic reach. Some competitors paced nervously between shots. Others laughed through matches with beers in hand.
The farther one advanced in the tournament, the lower the blood-alcohol levela seemed to drop. Near the top of the leaderboard, water bottles replaced cocktails as players studied digital wind readings and yardages with near-ritual intensity.
The championship itself was contested in a double-elimination format. Lannen blazed through his matches undefeated, while Fox, already with one loss, needed to beat his friend twice to claim the title.
He managed the first match, forcing a winner-take-all finale.
In the deciding round, the Fox and Lannen reeled off eagles as casually as Tour pros make pars. They reached the 18th hole tied at 27-under par, facing a devilish par 4 with water guarding the green. Both players found the rough off the tee.
Hitting first, Lannen played a shapely 90-mph thumb shot with a 7-iron that landed just above the flagstick, spun back, and trickled into the cup on its final roll.
The ballroom erupted. When Fox’s approach found the green but not the cup, the championship was settled. Confetti burst from an air cannon beside the stage.
Moments later, Lannen, holding a trophy and an oversized check, spoke modestly of his win in a manner that would have made a PGA Tour media coach proud. “I just tried to play my game, take it one shot at a time,” he said. Sounding tired but happy, he laid out his celebratory plans: dinner with Fox; a flight home to his wife and kids in Ladd, and then, he allowed, “Maybe I’ll take a few days off.”
Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: golf.com




