What Happened To Max Homa?
News

What Happened To Max Homa?

Support our Mission. We independently test each product we recommend. When you buy through our links, we may earn a commission.

What Happened To Max Homa?

There are few golfers I enjoy watching more than Max Homa.

One of the reasons is that Homa’s golf swing is a first-class ticket to Tempo Town. It feels like he swings a driver with the control of a flighted wedge. It’s such a professional move at the ball.

The second (and more important) reason is that Homa is a seemingly awesome dude with an interesting story.

He was a top amateur on a historically good Cal Golden Bears college team but went on to struggle mightily with professional golf, falling into the depths of the Korn Ferry Tour underbelly. Then he somehow emerged from that darkness with some outstanding golf the past handful of years, firmly establishing himself as one of the best players in the game.

Homa won once in 2019, twice in 2021, twice in 2022 and again in 2023. You don’t run into six Tour victories on accident. That is Rickie Fowler’s entire career.

By January 2024, Homa ranked No. 8 in the Data Golf standings. A few months prior, Homa had made the 2023 U.S. Ryder Cup team and went 3-1-1 in Rome, making him the top American performer.

In April of 2024, Homa finished third in the Masters. That answered the question of whether Homa could truly compete in a major.

But following that run of great play, Homa slowly faded.

His ranking fell with each passing week. By the time I looked it up this week, I was stunned.

The 34-year-old Homa is now No. 149 in Data Golf and No. 117 in the Official World Golf Ranking. That’s behind Branden Grace, someone who was relegated on LIV. That’s behind fellow funnyman Joel Dahmen, who has one top-10 finish since the beginning of 2024 (it was a T10 at the Canadian Open).

His play has been so abysmal that Homa did not even qualify for the U.S. Open and Open Championship. Since May 2024, Homa has one top-10 finish. It came at the John Deere Classic, a lower-tier event with no stars.

You, the recreational golfer, know how brutal golf can be. This is a hard game, man. It’s so fickle.

Sometimes, great golfers wake up one day and just don’t have it anymore. It happens. And Homa would know that getting out of golf’s abyss is among the most arduous tasks any athlete can complete.

It just saddens me to see Homa struggle to this level. He was a very good Tour player, bordering on the game’s elite. And I love hearing him talk about the game (or just about anything). He is high on the “golfer you want to get a beer with” ranking.

Seeing him in this state is tough.

I get that it’s only been about 15 months of bad golf (relative to his standards), so Homa could turn this all around soon.

And I get that there is a lot more to life than golf. He is a human being. Homa and his wife just had their second child a few weeks ago. When there is a lot happening in a golfer’s personal life, sometimes maintaining a certain level of golf is hard.

When you’ve got this little guy rooting for you, birdies and bogeys don’t matter too much.

You may have noticed that Homa, once considered “Mr. Golf Twitter” based on his prolific social media activity, hasn’t tweeted since Feb. 3. Last month, he called Twitter an “awful, awful place” that is a “safe haven for assholes.”

He’s been trying to get out of the spotlight in general, but that’s a tough challenge given his profile.

“I thought about skipping a bunch of events in the beginning of the summer but I just don’t think I have that in me. I’m looking forward to whenever I’m done this year and just trying to get away from it,” Homa said. “Someone asked me the other day the difference between this and when I played poorly in 2017. One is the golf is a lot closer than it was then. The lack of anonymity is a bit hard. Everywhere I go someone is talking to me about golf.”

And here we are talking about him. I’m sorry, Max.

Having said that, Homa is a professional golfer. A part of that is being open to criticism about performance. And he’s been very open about his struggles.

So what exactly happened here? Is it just life changes or something else?

Is the move to COBRA to blame?

At the beginning of this year, Homa announced he was parting ways with Titleist in favor of a deal with COBRA (he also signed a deal with Lululemon for apparel).

Homa was one of Titleist’s biggest assets so this was a big get for COBRA. The brand was lacking star players since Bryson DeChambeau left in 2022.

And this was reportedly a nice payday for Homa. Big gear moves are rare these days but it made sense for COBRA to find a premier player.

Aside from his Scotty Cameron T5.5 Prototype putter, Homa’s whole bag is COBRA.

  • Driver: COBRA DS-ADAPT LS driver (9.4°) with a Fujikura Ventus VeloCore+ Blue 7 X shaft
  • 3-Wood: COBRA DS-Adapt LS (14.5°) with a Fujikura Ventus Blue VeloCore+ 8 X shaft
  • 4-Iron: COBRA LIMIT3D with a KBS C-Taper 130 X HT Black shaft
  • 5-Iron: COBRA King CB with a KBS C-Taper 130 X HT Black shaft
  • 6-PW: COBRA King MB irons (6-PW) with KBS C-Taper 130 X HT Black shafts
  • Wedges: COBRA Snakebite wedges (50°, 56°) with KBS Hi-Rev 2.0 135 X shafts and a COBRA King 60° 7T wedge with KBS Hi-Rev 2.0 125 S shaft

It should be noted that Homa was not playing well prior to the switch. He was struggling in the summer of 2024 while playing Titleist clubs.

Still, he dropped even further after the switch. Look at Homa’s Strokes Gained rankings in 2025 compared to 2024. Aside from his driving, Homa’s game deteriorated.

20242025
SG Off-The-Tee164th 100th
SG Tee-To-Green111st152th
SG Approach 86th155th
SG Around The Greens39th139th
SG Putting106th105th

For reference, Homa’s 2023 season included being 15th in tee-to-green, 41st in off-the-tee, 26th in approach, 33rd around the green and sixth in putting.

Then look what happened. A few areas got significantly worse, so it’s hard to place blame on any one element.

The massive drops in approach play and scrambling are worrisome.

Homa’s putting also went from among the game’s best to below Tour average. He’s still using the same putter so equipment isn’t that much of a factor there.

Is this just a case of someone losing their game? Or is the gear a big factor? Both?

It’s expected for players to have an adjustment period after such wholesale changes. It’s entirely possible that Homa will get used to his clubs over time.

But, for the following reasons, I think Homa’s problems are deeper than an equipment change.

Swing and caddie changes play a role

It’s hard to put all of the blame on his switch to COBRA because Homa has admitted he is in the trenches with a swing adjustment that pre-dates the gear move.

In October 2024, Homa split with his coach Mark Blackburn and started working with John Scott. Homa said he was “throwing mud at the wall” and nothing would stick, so that prompted the change.

He has since been trying to get back to a prior swing feel. This breakdown shows Homa has perhaps made progress technically but doesn’t have the confidence yet.

Back in February at the Phoenix Open, Homa said he was swinging it the best he ever has in his career. He missed the cut by five shots that week but liked how it felt.

It’s been a battle throughout the year to recapture his feel. Homa is ultra-transparent with the moribund state of his game.

“You probably have some kind of like panic meter of trying to get better,” Homa said about the urgency to regain his form. “I guess the balance is trying to recognize progress even if it’s not as fast as you would want it to be. So [you’re] kind of trying to look at little wins here and there, whether it’s a good driving week, good driving day, good round, something like that, and looking at that as progress, instead of being so anal that you get to get back to winning and top 10-ing every week that you used to.

“It’s a tough balance. I don’t think anybody out here is struggling and thinking ‘it’s a fickle game, I’ll have it soon.’ It seems to go a lot faster than it comes back.”

Homa also split with his longtime caddie, Joe Greiner, back in April (Greiner then went to caddie for Collin Morikawa, although that relationship ended after just five events).

Homa and Greiner had been together professionally for more than a decade.

“It was not my choice, so it sucked,” Homa said at the Masters. “But we always had a deal that we were friends first and friendship mattered more than the work thing.”

After hiring veteran caddie Bill Harke as a replacement, those two parted ways after only a couple of months. That led to Homa hiring Lance Bennett, a former looper for Tiger Woods.

Where Homa stands in terms of having a long-term caddie is still uncertain.

In the end, it’s hard to give one reason for Homa’s struggles.

Everyone will want to point to the COBRA switch, but it’s clear Homa has been wandering for longer than that.

No matter what, I am rooting hard for him to get back.

Screw the haters, including me (not a hater but I’ll happily serve as motivation for him if it works).

Do you think Homa will regain his form? What’s the biggest reason for his downturn?

Let me know below in the comments.

Top Photo Caption: Max Homa has been struggling the past two seasons. (GETTY IMAGES/Jared C. Tilton)

For You

For You

News
Jun 16, 2026
adidas Celebrates World Cup With Messi Signature Golf Shoe
First Look
Jun 16, 2026
Is One Of The New Scotty Cameron Phantom Models Just Your Size?
News
Jun 16, 2026
Meet The Latest Legend: Todd Snyder x FootJoy Premiere Series
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 10 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife, Anja, and dog, Hogan.

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

 
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm





    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

      John Domutz

      10 months ago

      It sounds as if he’s burnt out on professional golf. No idea if he’s getting it back. Time to move on and enjoy life?

      Reply

      Ben W

      10 months ago

      Why is a 10 handicap giving is this analysis?

      Reply

      Benji M

      10 months ago

      Handicap shouldn’t be used to qualify an opinion…the article is less about the technicalities of what has actually contributed to the deterioration and more about looking at possible explanations, of which there are many. A good article and content. Thanks

      Reply

      John Pierce

      10 months ago

      Short game.

      Reply

      Kyle

      10 months ago

      He’ll be back. Zero concern.

      Reply

      EARL DOUGOVITO

      10 months ago

      Yeah, great talent, always have enjoyed watching him. Seems to have a good disposition, an often overlooked but important aspect toward optimum play. Not to say the other side the spectrum isn’t capable, it is, but disposition should fit the player and not the other way around.

      Mr. Homa seems to me to be of a high intellect. This, together with shepherding a youngster and the state of the world, presently, it’s a wonder that some of these top athletes, these thoroughbreds of golf, can get their driver teed up. The world is horseshit right now, this group of men sense that and their reaction is evident prolonged blahhh. Not all are affected, but a youngish father… most susceptible. So, what’s the answer(s)?

      If I had Max Homa’s ear, I’d propose changing things up, but not in the way they appear to have been i.e. club change, caddie change, sponser. I don’t want to say that these don’t matter, but they don’t matter much! And, certainly not enough for any one of them to stop the trajectory of ranking. Here’s the stuff I’d recommend, beginning with: *Limit (greatly) the time each day watching news. Nothing but crap, depressing views of the world; *Put the finances in Trust, no business dealings, and no new business adventures. Delegate. I wouldn’t prescribe going to the extreme of holy monk, begging for alms, but I would prescribe a determined effort in that direction. The objective being to get back to the state of mind when golf was FUN, a job that he’d be happy to do for NOTHING! *On the golf course, well, NO PLAY, just practice. Beginning with putting, dedicate the most effort/time, back through the bag, and finish each 3hr – 4hr session with 5 to 10 drivers. That’s it. Golf 9 late afternoon, or, sometimes, alone or with fello good players once a week, early in the morning, before the 1st group of regular play; *keep a journal. Write feelings, sensations; * When playing alone, play 3 balls down, every shot potentially relying on the 3rd shot for the next. Through the putt. That should result in sub-60 rounds, every time. Keep good records on each hole, expect to shoot low scores, VERY LOW! After a solid month of practice, be ready to play an event, but not continuously week after week until a solid finish in consecutive outings. There. Back on Track!

      Reply

      OpMan

      10 months ago

      Funny

      Reply

      Shawn.T

      10 months ago

      It has nothing to do with Cobra, must be the Lululemon.

      Reply

      James S

      10 months ago

      Homa seems to frequently loose any momentum by leaking drives into the right rough. That puts pressure on rest of the game. Gotta get control of that tee ball first.

      Reply

      Robin

      10 months ago

      I know a professional golfer who owns two very good wins on the tour.
      He was the same age of Max when he started to lose form.
      It’s real sad.
      I was a professional boxer who just signed a pro contract,
      The next week I got hurt at the marine reserves.
      Ending my career without a fight.

      Reply

      Ken Bended

      10 months ago

      Max, you’re the best. If you’re reading this and still need someone on the bag. I’ll caddy for you.

      Reply

      pantleggs

      10 months ago

      For the record, Joel Dahmen had three top-10 finishes this season, in kind a T-2 in an event he should have won.

      On topic, Homa will get his groove back. I’m of the belief that pros often do themselves a disservice when obligated to play their sponsors’ latest and greatest clubs. Stick with what works; hence the Qi10 driver still being favored over the Qi35 release.

      Reply

      Ted

      10 months ago

      Max’s par 5 scoring has been abysmal for the past few years. I get it – golf is hard, but most guys are getting birdies on par 5 holes while Max is grinding for pars. That really puts you behind at the pro level.

      Reply

      OpMan

      10 months ago

      Combination of all of those things, as usual. Many changes.
      Biggest factor is the HIDING from the limelight bit, I think, more than anything. If you don’t want to be seen, don’t want to be talked about – you’re not going to perform in front of the public.

      Reply

      KJC

      10 months ago

      I am happily a Max fan. And it can’t be all bad if they name an entire line of drivers for you :)

      Reply

    Leave A Reply

    required
    required
    required (your email address will not be published)

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    News
    Jun 16, 2026
    adidas Celebrates World Cup With Messi Signature Golf Shoe
    First Look
    Jun 16, 2026
    Is One Of The New Scotty Cameron Phantom Models Just Your Size?
    News
    Jun 16, 2026
    Meet The Latest Legend: Todd Snyder x FootJoy Premiere Series