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Viktor Hovland. Viktor Hovland (born 18 September 1997) is a Norwegian professional golfer who plays on the PGA Tour and European Tour. He won the 2018 U.S. Amateur and reached number one in the World Amateur Golf Ranking in 2019. Hovland became the first Norwegian to win on the PGA Tour (at the 2020 Puerto Rico Open) and on the European Tour ...
Viktor Hovland surges to win BMW Championship Early in the week, it seemed as if Max Homa was going to run away with the second FedExCup Playoffs event. Homa flew ahead of the field after a ...
Hovland delivered the best round of his career at just the right time Sunday, turning a two-man race into a one-man show by breaking the course record with a 9-under 61 to surge past Scottie ...
All due respect to Rory McIlroy, Brooks Koepka, Scottie Scheffler, Jon Rahm and all the other Ryder Cup players (in Koepka's case, potential players), but nobody's hotter than Hovland right now ...
The PIF ATP rankings [1] are the Association of Tennis Professionals' (ATP) merit-based system for determining the rankings in men's tennis. The top-ranked player is the player who, over the previous 52 weeks, has garnered the most ranking points on the ATP Tour. Points are awarded based on how far a player advances in tournaments and the ...
This is a list of top international male singles tennis players, both past and present. It includes players who have met one or more of the following criteria in singles: Officially ranked among the top 25 players by the Association of Tennis Professionals (since 1973) Ranked among the top 10 by an expert (e.g. A. Wallis Myers) before 1973.
Jørn Goldstein (born 1953), goalie, player at the 1984 Winter Olympics; Espen "Shampoo" Knutsen (born 1972), retired centre, now manager; Patrick Thoresen, winger, player at the 2010 and 2014 Winter Olympics; Ole-Kristian Tollefsen, defenceman, player at the 2010 Winter Olympics; Tore Vikingstad, retired centre
The counties in Norway are called fylke (singular) and fylker (plural). This name comes from the Old Norse word fylki which means "district" or "county", but it is similar to the same root as "folk".