Golf fans love that first tee shot of the year, the Hawaiian sun baking lush fairways as winners-only fields chase $20 million purses. The Sentry at Kapalua’s Plantation Course delivered that ritual for decades, a postcard kickoff blending elite play with island vibes.
But for 2026, PGA Tour chiefs pulled the plug just weeks ago, citing crisis-level drought on Maui. Players and punters woke to headlines of a no-go, shifting eyes to Honolulu’s Waialae for the new start line.
Maui’s Water Crisis Hits Hard
Kapalua Resort’s Plantation Course, longtime Sentry home, faced unlivable turf from Maui’s endless dry spell. Officials flagged severe water restrictions, blaming years of low rain plus post-fire recovery strains from the 2023 Lahaina blazes.
PGA Tour brass confirmed on September 16 a no-go at the iconic track, with grass too beaten to host January 8-11 play. Agronomic teams reported compromised conditions across bunkers, greens, and rough, unfit for pro-level demands.
Local mandates prioritized drinking supply over golf irrigation, a tough call amid Hawaii’s eco-push. Commentator Mark Rolfing warned months back on podcasts that 2026 looked doomed, with no wiggle room for signature events needing pristine setups.
The tour explored fixes like reduced watering, but hit regulatory walls fast. This marked the first full PGA scratch due to nature’s punch, spotlighting climate knocks on outdoor sports.
Sentry Insurance, the title backer since 2018 through 2035, stood firm despite the hit. Chief marketing officer Stephanie Smith called it a “jewel” worth salvaging, but reality bit. Fans recalled past Maui wild cards like wind-whipped wins, yet this drought proved no fan-service mulligan.
Scramble Fails, Logistics Bite
Tour reps jetted to scout Hawaii alternates and mainland options, chasing spots for the elite opener. They needed full infrastructure: temp stands, corporate tents, and broadcast towers, all shipped ocean freight with razor deadlines.
Vendor networks balked at an 85-day crunch from announcement to tee-off, citing port jams and crew shortages. Tyler Dennis, PGA’s competitions head, praised Sentry collab but admitted roadblocks sealed the skip.

The Sentry Golf (Credit: CNN)
Calendar congestion killed relos, too. FedEx Cup top-50-plus-prior-winners format demanded prime slot, no gaps for last-minute swaps. Rolfing nailed it: too late for magic.
Sony Open slides up January 15-18, absorbing some Sentry shine but losing that winners-only exclusivity buzz. Players got memos days before public word, grumbling privately over prep shifts.
Australian Golf Digest pegged it as classic dominoes: eco mandates spark venue hunt, then supply chains snap. Sponsors ate purse costs, a multimillion-dollar testing of loyalty in the era of LIV threats. No rain dances or tech fixes like fake turf panned out under pro scrutiny.
Tour Pivots, Future Stays Murky
Sony Open steps up as the 2026 curtain-raiser, with Waialae’s tight layout promising birdie fests sans Kapalua drama. The Sentry deal runs long-term, so expect 2027 tweaks, maybe Kapalua upgrades, or a new Hawaii hub.
PGA eyes sustainable shifts, like drought-proof courses, amid green pressure from fans and fields. Sky Sports noted the tour’s quick pivot kept the calendar intact, averting bigger chaos.
Players adapt fast; Scottie Scheffler or Xander Schauffele reroute training sans complaint. Golf Monthly framed it as a rare weather washout, rarer still for a full bin.
BBC Sport highlighted failed venue hunts, underscoring Hawaii’s logistical quirks for mainland ops. Eco-groups quietly cheered water wins, though purists mourn the lost Plantation roars.
Sentry backers sound bullish, committed to signature status. Golf Sustainable tied it to Maui’s broader woes, urging the industry to rethink paradise plays. Fans stream old highlights, toasting past Sentry sparks from Jon Rahm birdie blitzes to Jordan Spieth heroics.
PGA dodged a bullet by canning early, but whispers linger: Will droughts rewrite tour maps forever? For now, Waialae waits, clubs ready to swing year one sans Sentry shadow.
Lizzo rode high for years with hits preaching self-love and thick confidence. Then 2023 hit like a truck. A lawsuit from three former backup dancers flipped her world upside down, sparking endless online debates about accountability and fame’s dark underbelly.
Tour Horror Stories Break Wide Open
It all started in August 2023. Dancers Arianna Davis, Crystal Williams, and Noelle Rodriguez sued Lizzo, her production company, and dance captain Shirlene Quigley.
They claimed sexual harassment, weight shaming, religious bullying, and a toxic workplace on her special tour. Stories poured out about forced trips to an Amsterdam strip club, where they say Lizzo pressured them to touch nude performers. One dancer got fired right after for calling out the pressure.
Rehearsals sounded brutal, too. Plaintiffs described 12-hour sessions, leaving them exhausted, with one soiling herself from the grind. Lizzo’s team allegedly mocked body sizes and pushed disability discrimination.
A month later, stylist Asha Daniels added her suit, alleging racial and sexual harassment. Lizzo fired back hard, calling the claims “unbelievable” and “outrageous” from “disgruntled employees” looking for cash.
The fallout spread quickly. Her headlining spot at Jay-Z’s Made in America festival got axed days later, blamed on “severe circumstances” but timed perfectly with the mess.
Filmmaker Sophia Nahli Allison bailed on a doc project, citing disrespect. Social media exploded. Fans who loved “Juice” and “Truth Hurts” now questioned the gap between her lyrics and real life.
Body Love Icon Faces Brutal Irony
Lizzo built her brand on embracing curves and flipping off haters. Remember her 2017 Weight Watchers ad with Oprah? It drew hate for smelling like diet culture despite her owning it.
Fast forward, and the lawsuits made that old beef look tame. How could the queen of “I love my body” oversee shaming? Online, the hypocrisy angle dominated.

Lizzo (Credit: BBC)
Her streams and tour sales tanked. Depression kicked in, too. By 2025, she admitted to a year-and-a-half stage hiatus, blaming world chaos and personal hits from the backlash.
Reddit threads lit up with takes: some cried racism against Black women stars, others demanded straight answers. Partial wins came her way, like a court tossing some stylist claims in late 2024. Still, the “cancelled” label stuck, memes everywhere.
Perspectives split fans. Defenders pointed to messy tour dynamics common in pop, not unique evil. Critics stuck to eyewitness tales and videos. Her empowering vibe cracked, leaving a void.
She Owns the Mess, Keeps Going
Lizzo didn’t vanish quietly. In 2025, in Substack rants and interviews, she said everyone needs a cancellation once for growth. Raised Pentecostal strict, she compared old guilt trips to social media mobs. “Only God can cancel me now,” she told E! News, setting public boundaries.
By December 2025, she hit stages again, smaller crowds, but real talk on mental health. Sites like Missing Perspectives called her case a cancel culture reality check, too black-and-white for fame’s gray zones. Shows sell okay now; new music brews.
The saga shows pop stardom’s razor edge: love one day, lawsuits the next. Her story lingers as a cautionary tale, raw and unresolved.