Wrong.
Golf vs Other Sports (How We Refer to Players)
Golf (first-name heavy)
How fans talk:
- “Tiger is dialed”
- “Rory’s going low today”
Why:
- Individual sport → you follow the person
- Smaller field → less confusion
- Country club culture → casual, familiar tone
- Broadcast style reinforces first names
Football (last-name dominant)
How fans talk:
- “Mahomes is unreal”
- “Brady picked them apart”
Why:
- Team-first identity (logo > individual)
- Large rosters → last names are clearer
- Commentary is more formal and fast-paced
Basketball (mostly last name, some first-name stars)
How fans talk:
- “LeBron” (exception)
- “Curry” / “Durant” (more common)
Why:
- Star-driven like golf, BUT still team-based
- Some icons cross into first-name (or nickname) territory:
- LeBron James → “LeBron”
- Stephen Curry → often “Steph”

Hybrid culture:
mix of personal + team identity
Baseball (almost all last names)
How fans talk:
- “Trout is hitting .320”
- “Judge crushed that”
Why:
- Deep statistical tradition (box scores use last names)
- Huge rosters + history → last names standard
- Broadcast tone is traditional and formal
Soccer (last names globally)
How fans talk:
Why:
- International sport → last names translate universally
- Commentary tradition across languages
- Jerseys reinforce last names
The Big Differences (Simple)
| Factor | Golf | Other Sports |
|---|
| Identity | Individual | Team-first |
| Culture | Casual / personal | Formal / structured |
| Rosters | Small | Large |
| Broadcast tone | Conversational | Professional/rapid |
| Fan proximity | Close, walking with players | Distant (stadium separation) |
The simplest way to think about it
- Golf: “I’m watching Tiger play”
- Football: “I’m watching the Chiefs, and Mahomes is the QB”
That one shift—
person vs team—drives almost everything.
If you want, I can show you the
exceptions (like why some golfers still get called by last name or why some NFL players get first-name treatment).