AI
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AI
The intersection of professional sports and cloud computing has enabled leagues and organizations to accelerate innovation. However, the partnership between the PGA Tour and Amazon Web Services Inc. is currently entering a new phase: the hyper-personalized era.
This week the golf world descended upon TPC Sawgrass for THE PLAYERS Championship, to watch Cam Young take the title. AWS and the PGA Tour are using the event to debut a suite of technologies that doesn’t just track the ball but interprets the game.
At THE PLAYERS, the PGA Tour introduced TOURCAST Range and tested agentic production, an AI-driven service to enable broadcasters to solve the “unsolvable” problem of golf: how to cover 123 players spread across 200 acres simultaneously.
For decades, the practice range was a black box where players disappeared for hours with fans having little understanding into who is hitting well at the range and who isn’t. At THE PLAYERS, that box is being pried open with the launch of TOURCAST Range.
Utilizing AWS’ and the Tour’s proprietary ShotLink powered by CDW platform, TOURCAST Range is a 3D interactive experience that brings the practice session to the fan’s screen. For the first time, fans aren’t just watching a video of a swing; They are seeing a digital twin of the range session. The system visualizes every shot with 3D traces and full scatterplots, providing granular metrics including:
By incorporating year-to-date ShotLink stats into the range view, AWS enables fans to see if players’ morning sessions matches their seasonal form. This isn’t just data for data’s sake; it’s a narrative tool that allows fans to see a player struggling with a fade on the range before they ever step onto the first tee.
Perhaps the most significant technical leap being tested at THE PLAYERS is the limited debut of Agentic Production on par-3 holes. In traditional broadcasting, selecting the right camera angle is a manual, labor-intensive process. A director sits in a truck, looking at dozens of monitors, and makes a split-second decision. Because of the cost and staffing required for this, roughly 70% of shots during a typical tournament never make it to air.
The Tour is using AWS AI, specifically Amazon Nova, to change the cost and speed equation. By evaluating camera data in real time, the AI ranks feeds based on framing, visibility and shot context. It essentially acts as an “AI Director,” identifying the most compelling angle and pairing it with real-time stats from ShotLink.
This is a “small-scale test” with big implications. The long-term goal is “Every Shot Live” across the entire season, not just at flagship events. By automating the selection process, the Tour can scale its content production exponentially without a linear increase in costs.
Though the new tools at THE PLAYERS focus on the “now,” the foundation for this season was laid earlier this year with the Favorite Players Hub. Golf fans are notoriously loyal to specific players, particularly in Europe where there may be only a single golfer from that country, but tracking a “niche” favorite through a standard leaderboard is difficult, especially if that player isn’t near the top.
The AWS-powered hub uses generative AI to curate personalized “storylines” for a fan’s chosen golfers. Instead of a generic highlights reel, users receive a feed of real-time stats, AI-generated summaries of their player’s round, and specific highlights — all updated automatically. This moves the PGA Tour app from a “pull” experience (where fans search for info) to a “push” experience (where the info finds the fan).
The shift we are seeing is the transition from simple data collection to agentic AI. As highlighted in recent AWS technical insights, the Tour is moving toward systems that can take independent action — such as an AI “agent” that knows a player is approaching a milestone and automatically triggers a highlight package or a specialized data visualization for the broadcast.
The expanded partnership announced earlier this year cements AWS as the Tour’s Global Official Cloud Provider. It’s a move that transcends infrastructure; AWS is the architect of the Tour’s digital future, enhancing the World Feed and integrating artificial intelligence, machine learning and deep learning across the entire content lifecycle.
The current innovations at THE PLAYERS are the latest chapters in a partnership that began in 2021. To understand where they are going, it’s worth looking at what they’ve already built:
The collaboration between AWS and the PGA Tour is an excellent example of how an organization can avoid “digital rot” by embracing the edge of the possible. By turning the practice range into a 3D data environment and testing AI-driven directing, they are ensuring that golf — a game played at a deliberate pace — is delivered at the speed of modern digital consumption.
Every information technology and business leader out there should use this as example of continually asking “what’s possible.” The PGA Tour, like many businesses has a loyal following and one might think change isn’t necessary, but fans, customers, students and others will go where their experience is best. AI is changing experiences faster than any time in history and constantly rethinking the status quo is critical for long-term leadership.
Zeus Kerravala is a principal analyst at ZK Research, a division of Kerravala Consulting. He wrote this article for SiliconANGLE.
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