Jazz Chisholm Jr. isn’t just warming up in spring training for the Yankees. The New York Yankees star shared some impressive news on Monday from a golf course. The talented infielder seems to be enjoying his time before the 2026 MLB season begins, as Chisholm announced that he blasted an alleged par-4 ace using a range ball, a rare golf feat not seen on the PGA Tour since 2001, according to Outkick.
The New York Yankees’ infielder posted the footage to his Instagram, showing him standing in a tank top and winter hat — yes, during spring training — watching the ball find the bottom of the cup on a 329-yard hole. For argument’s sake, Chisholm said “328 off the tee,” and Golf.com notes the hole is 332 yards. Does it really matter, though?
Take a look at the video. The ball has “practice” labeled right on the side, as Outkick also noted. A range ball hole-in-one on a par 4 is the kind of thing that sounds made up, but the viral footage had fans and golf accounts losing it within hours of dropping.
New York Yankees Star Jazz Chisholm Hits Hole-in-One
This isn’t your average celebrity hole-in-one. According to Outkick, the only recorded par-4 ace in PGA Tour history belongs to Andrew Magee, who drove one in on the 332-yard 17th hole at TPC Scottsdale during the 2001 Phoenix Open. So Chisholm — a baseball player, in a tank top, with a range ball — just casually claimed to match a feat professional golfers almost never pull off.
Jazz Chisholm, who posted a 30-30 season, apparently doesn’t believe in offseasons. He’s always swinging. Golf.com and other sources shared the clip, and it blew up everywhere across social media.
Jazz Chisholm’s Extension Talks and 2026 Outlook
The golf heroics come amid a busy offseason for Chisholm off the diamond too. The Yankees infielder revealed his asking price ahead of the 2026 season, telling NJ.com’s Randy Miller he’s looking for something in the range of eight to 10 years at roughly $35 million per year. The Yankees have yet to open formal extension discussions with Chisholm’s camp, leaving his Bronx future murky as he heads into his walk year.
Trade chatter followed him all winter, but Chisholm told MLB.com he blocked out the speculation and let his representatives handle the business side. He and the Yankees settled on a $10.2 million salary for 2026, avoiding arbitration, but he can walk as a free agent after the season.
What This Means for the New York Yankees in 2026
Here’s the real story underneath the golf content. Jazz Chisholm is loose, confident, and having fun heading into what could be a monster year. He’s coming off a historic 30-30 campaign — 31 home runs and 31 stolen bases — producing just the fourth 30-30 season in Yankees franchise history, per CBS Sports. He put up those numbers despite an oblique strain that cost him over a month on the injured list.
Now he’s eyeing 50-50, telling reporters he wants to chase Shohei Ohtani’s milestone. Aaron Boone told MLB.com it’s “hard to put a ceiling on him” after what Chisholm produced while banged up last year.
A Yankees star who can go 30-30 while hurt, claims a par-4 hole-in-one with a range ball in a tank top, and enters his age-28 season with a contract to earn? That’s the kind of energy the Bronx feeds off heading into 2026. The golf swing is just proof the bat speed translates everywhere.
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