Wednesday, June 17, 2026

“Tin Cup” is the best golf movie ever made, and I will brook no argument

The eve of the 2026 United States Open, is, I think, a good time to talk about a movie that I consider to be the best golf movie ever made: the 1996 film Tin Cup. Directed by Ron Shelton, starring Kevin Costner and Rene Russo, co-starring Cheech Marin and Don Johnson, with a host of delightful supporting actors, and featuring cameo appearances by pro golfers as well as broadcasters and journalists of the era.

Having been somewhat absent from the game for a while now – I haven’t played or written about it since late March – I wanted to get into the mood for golf as I prepare to immerse myself in the coverage of my favorite golf championship, the U.S. Open. With that goal in mind, I went to the “Golf” section of my movie collection and pulled out my blu-ray copy of Tin Cup.

Tin Cup is an obvious choice for this exercise, of course, because its hero’s journey storyline involves the title character’s pursuit of a spot in the field at the U.S. Open, coming to a climax during the final round of a fictional U.S. Open – but it earns the #1 spot in my list all-time favorite golf movies for a variety of reasons:

1)   Writing – Tin Cup has snappy dialog, and an underdog storyline that hits all the right notes without descending into cliché: Former college golf star Roy “Tin Cup” McAvoy (Kevin Costner) languishes at a run-down driving range on the outskirts of the small West Texas town of Salome, while his rival from college golf days, David Simms (Don Johnson) lives the high life playing the PGA tour. When Simms’s girlfriend, psychologist Dr. Molly Griswold (Rene Russo), signs up for lessons at the driving range, McAvoy is smitten with her.

The undercurrent of envy at his former rival’s success, both in life and in love, is softened by Roy’s determination to become a better man, a successful man, in order to be worthy of the woman he has fallen in love with, and his road to redemption is the pursuit of the highest goal in American golf – the U.S. Open Championship.

2)   Cast – Kevin Costner, Rene Russo, Cheech Marin, and Don Johnson are the big names in this production, but the supporting cast features actors whom most people will recognize, if perhaps not be able to put names to. Rex Linn, Dennis Burkley, Lou Myers, Linda Hart, Richard Lineback and Mickey Jones – among other – are veteran character actors who flesh out the roster in this film as more than just background faces, and their talents are invaluable contributions to the film’s success.

3)   Performances – Kevin Costner shines in the role of Roy McAvoy, a man who has lingered for years in the shadow of his more successful rival, David Simms. McAvoy’s skill on the golf course is underlaid by a deep-seated lack of self-confidence, which he hides behind a bravado public front. He has a high standard when it comes to doing a difficult thing well, which is a key point in the storyline, in contrast to his rival David Simms’s shallow success that has been achieved by doing well enough, but never taking the bold stroke that would raise him to higher heights[1].

Don Johnson is suitable smarmy as David Simms, the flashy, successful, high-living counterpoint to Roy McAvoy’s down-at-heels driving-range pro. Johnson does a great job portraying Simms’s ruthless guile, in contrast to the naiveté that sometimes peeks through with McAvoy (see the scene featuring the 7-iron bet after the U.S. Open Sectional Qualifying tournament), as well as his safely cautious approach to golf, which though successful in terms of fame and fortune, displays a certain lack of guts.

Rene Russo, as Dr. Molly Griswold, is delightful as Roy McAvoy’s (at first unattainable) love interest, and muse. Taken on by McAvoy as a guide and counselor to help him overcome the “inner demons” that have prevented him from realizing his potential as a golfer, Russo guides the character through her own journey as she comes to see David Simms for the shallow and unlikable man that he is, and cleaves to the imperfect but striving and growing Roy McAvoy.

Cheech Marin is Romeo Posar, a character who is something of a Sancho Panza to McAvoy’s underachieving Don Quixote. The comedian and veteran actor is a mainstay in the film as the long-suffering business partner, supporter, and caddy of the capricious “Tin Cup” McAvoy. The qualities that Marin brings to the role are as important to the story as any performance in the film.

In the supporting cast, Linda Hart plays Roy’s ex-girlfriend Doreen, a former stripper who owns a strip club in town. She is an earthy (and down-to-earth) counterpoint to Rene Russo’s somewhat flighty Dr. Molly Griswold. The scenes during the U.S. Open when these two very different women bond over their connection with Roy McAvoy are pure gold.

Roy’s backup crew of malingering golf bums are well played by veteran character actors Rex Linn, Dennis Burkley, Lou Myers, Richard Lineback, and Mickey Jones, among others. They are a motley crew, characters of the sort that any longtime muni golfer will recognize from weekends and summer evenings at the course.

4)   Setting – A large part of the appeal of this movie for me is the setting. Though I have visited Texas only briefly, I have a family connection to the state, and more to the point, the beginning of my involvment with the game of golf was spurred by reading the classic Dan Jenkins golf novel Dead Solid Perfect. The storyline of Tin Cup is reminiscent of Jenkins’s golf novels, and the motley bunch that hang out at Roy McAvoy’s driving range in the movie would be right at home in Dan’s story The Glory Game, in the collection The Dogged Victims of Inexorable Fate.

With the many champions and famous names in the world of golf that have hailed from Texas; names such as Ben Hogan, Byron Nelson, Harvey Penick, Ben Crenshaw, and Tom Kite; the state seems like a natural setting for a story that explores the highs and lows, and deep and shallow aspects of the game.

5)   Extras – By “extras” I don’t mean just the nameless folks who inhabit the background in various scenes in a movie. A large part of the fun of this film, at least for golfers of a certain age (the movie is 30 years old, after all) is spotting the bevy of pro golfers, golf journalists and broadcasters, and even TV production folks who show up onscreen.

•  Craig “The Walrus” Stadler is David Simms’s playing partner in the charity tournament early in the film, and a very young Phil Mickleson is also in the foursome. Peter Jacobsen, Corey Pavin, Lee Janzen, Steve Elkington, Johnny Miller, and Fred Couples – among others – appear in the scenes depicting the U.S. Open.

•  Jim Nantz and Ken Venturi play themselves as the 18th-tower announcers calling the U.S. Open; Ben Wright and Brian Hammond appear as color commentators at the U.S. Open and Simms’s charity event, respectively.

•  Peter Kostis is the on-course commentator at the charity tournament, and Gary McCord is doing the dame in the U.S. Open segment.

•   Well-known sports commentator Jimmy Roberts shows up as a reporter querying Roy McAvoy in the press center after the first round of the U.S. Open, and real-life (then-)CBS producer Frank Chirkinian and director Lance Barrow appear in the production trailer as disbelieving witnesses to McAvoy’s 18th-hole meltdown.

The Lowdown

I have heard golfers complain about various golf movies for years, usually nitpicking the swings of the actors portraying the golfers, or sometimes the equipment being used by the actors[2]. I am no swing analyst myself; to my eye Costner and Johnson did alright in their portrayals of pro golfers – and an exactingly correct golf swing can only carry a movie so far. The 2015 movie The Squeeze was lauded by some notable names at the time for the purity and correctness of the golf swing of the lead actor, Jeremy Sumpter – who was indeed a talented low-handicap golfer. The fact that those names, which included Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson, and Phil Mickelson, were all financial backers of the film, did not escape me at the time; the fact that the movie suffered from a hackneyed storyline and terrible performances didescape them. I haven’t found any information on budget and takings for this schlock-fest, but I do know that it failed miserably at the box office.

Look, I love Caddyshack, and I have enjoyed many other very well-made golf movies such as The Greatest Game Ever Played, Tommy’s Honour, and The Legend of Bagger Vance. Caddyshack is a class-comedy that is played out in a golf setting; The Legend of Bagger Vance is a metaphorical fantasy centered on golf as a restorative for a soul injured by the horrors of war. In contrast, The Greatest Game Ever Played and Tommy’s Honour are historical dramas about important people and events in golf’s past – as such they are more about golf than the previous two (especially Caddyshack).

But Tin Cup, is a more human, more relatable story about the love of the game, the fun and frustrations of the game, and the striving for, if not perfection, at least the improvement that we seek in playing the game of golf. The movies mentioned above, and others, all have something to offer[3], but none of them can touch Tin Cup for story, humor, setting, nuance (real PGA Tour golfers!) – and especially appropriateness as we await the opening shots of the 126th U.S. Open.



[1] (This aspect of the story has echoes in the real world of professional golf, where more than one player on the PGA Tour has become a multi-millionaire without a win on Tour to their credit. Case in point: Bud Cauley, whose recent win at the RBC Canadian Open bumped him off of the list of players who have won $10 million or more without ever having won a tournament.)

[2] (Years ago I saw a post on social media by a person who said that The Greatest Game Ever Played was ruined for him because the clubs that they were shown using were of a style that was a decade too new for the time (1913) in which the events occurred. That is what I call picking the flyshit out of the pepper.)

[3] (Except for The Squeeze  – it’s awful..)

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