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A year ago, Viktor Hovland left the U.S. Open at Oakmont after a third-place finish with a pledge. The Norwegian star had been grinding hard, as he does, to find it. His swing had felt wrong and he hadn’t been able to fix it, despite a win at the Valspar earlier in the season.

Hovland’s pledge? Go easy on himself. Play golf and trust everything will fall into place.

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“I’ve been tearing myself down a little too much,” Hovland said that evening in western Pennsylvania. “Even though I do know I need to work on some stuff and get back to where I used to be in a way mechanically, but in the interim, I can still perform at a really high level, and there’s a lot of good stuff. Just got to take that with me and be a little bit kinder to myself.”

Hovland’s search continued throughout the remainder of the season, where he had just one top-10 finish in his final six starts of the season. There was a “Band-Aid fix” that helped him finish T7 at the BMW Championship and a swing ephihany he thought he found at the Ryder Cup before he was scratched from Sunday singles due to a neck injury. Hovland has spent 2026 still trying to capture and recreate a swing that he’s comfortable with. He split with coach Grant Waite and reunited with T.J. Yeaton ahead of this year’s Arnold Palmer Invitational. The changes, the tweaks, the poking and prodding continued.

“It’s a complicated puzzle and sometimes it’s just a matter of a different perspective, just looking at it from a couple of different ways or just saying things a little bit differently,” Hovland said of his process ahead of the API.

The results haven’t come. The 2023 FedEx Cup champion entered this week at the Travelers Championship with just two top 10s on the season. A third-place finish at the Canadian Open had him feeling like he was trending in the right direction, but then the pendulum swung the other way, and he missed the cut at the U.S. Open. But despite that MC at Shinnecock, Viktor Hovland left Long Island feeling good about his swing progression. The result wasn’t there, but he remained encouraged about where he was in his never-ending quest.

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“I’ve obviously been working a lot on my swing to try to get back technically to where I can, you know, not think about the swing as much and just step over the ball and expect to see a certain shot shape. I feel like I’ve gotten a lot closer to that in even recent weeks,” Hovland said on Friday at the Travelers Championship. “I thought in Canada it was a lot of promise, and even U.S. Open I drove it a lot better. I just had one OB ball at the worst time possible. I hit one bad shot in the left-to-right wind, and it was gone to the right.

“It’s just been I’m seeing the good shots are really good. It’s just the bad ones have been punishing me a lot. I feel like what my feel was in my swing and what I’ve been working on is starting to kind of get the shot dispersion a little bit tighter.”

Viktor Hovland has been fighting to be Viktor Hovland again, seemingly ever since he won the 2023 FedEx Cup.

On Friday at TPC River Highlands, Viktor Hovland won another round in his duel with himself and his golf swing, firing a second-round 61 to put himself into Saturday’s final group alongside World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, who shot a 60 on Friday.

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“It was awesome stuff today. Obviously, been kind of battling some stuff,” Hovland said on Friday. “You know, my golf swing had not felt all that comfortable. But, you know, I felt like things stabilized a lot more today, and I was able to put the ball in the fairway, hit some great iron shots, and putter finally cooperated a little bit more today.”

The next step for Hovland was to back it up with another good round, while battling the best player on the planet. Would his swing, which is still being technically rebuilt, hold up under the kind of pressure he hasn’t faced much this season?

The answer on Saturday was a resounding yes. Hovland hit 11 of 14 fairways, 14 of 18 greens and picked up over a stroke on the greens on Saturday. Even as Scheffler went on a back-nine birdie run, Hovland didn’t flinch, didn’t press. He just answered good shot with good shot, and then, on 18, when Scheffler made a sloppy bogey, Hovland rolled in a six-footer for birdie to go from one shot down to one shot ahead heading into Sunday.

“It was really fun. Just had a great time,” Hovland said on Saturday after shooting a six-under 64 to head into Sunday at 20 under. “You know, it’s been a while since I’ve been in this position. You know, to go head-to-head against the best player in the world and pull off some great shots, it was just a lot of fun.”

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Viktor Hovland has been in a long battle with himself. On Sunday in Cromwell, Connecticut, Hovland will have to battle both his rebuilt swing and the No. 1 player in the world to leave as a victor. That’s the natural endpoint for such a search. If you want to test your work, your process, your belief, it has to hold up against golf’s measuring stick.

But as Viktor Hovland told us one year ago at Oakmont, the trophy isn’t what he most hunts, it’s just the byproduct of what he’s chasing.

“We would all like to win, that’s why we practice so hard,” Hovland said at Oakmont. “But there’s also like a deep passion in me that I want to hit the shots. Like I want to stand up on the tee and hit the shots that I’m envisioning. When the ball’s not doing that, it bothers me.”

On Saturday, as he exited the course after being serenaded by a throng of Norwegians over for the World Cup, Viktor Hovland echoed what he hopes Sunday brings — not a title but further proof that he has found what only he can discover.

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“The score is nice to shoot a good score, but I’m very process-driven,” Hovland said. “As soon as I find a certain feel that I can trust and it produces a pretty reliable shot shape, I know that I’m going to be able to score pretty well from there. So if I happen to shoot two-under or six-under or nine-under, it’s like that’s not the most important thing, in a way. It’s like as soon as I see the shots that I’m trying to hit and execute, that’s what gives me the confidence.”

Viktor Hovland is a wanderer by nature. He’s a forever tinkerer who will continue to mold his swing until he finds the feeling he wants. Then, he’ll go in search of something different.

All of that — varying swing thoughts, coach changes, an unlikely Valspar win, a major near-miss, a journey into the wilderness and back — has brought Viktor Hovland to Sunday, to a duel with the best player in the world. One where no matter the result, he can leave with what he has been searching for.

Believing Viktor Hovland has finally found Viktor Hovland again.

The post Viktor Hovland will face Scottie Scheffler on Sunday. That won’t be his main opponent appeared first on Golf.

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