The REAL Reason Grant Horvat Left ‘Good Good Golf’

There has been tons of speculation around the topic of Grant Horvat and the reasoning behind his decision to leave Good Good Golf. With rumors and speculation swirling around, we’ve decided to dig a little bit deeper to uncover the real reason that Grant Horvat decided to leave.

Grant Horvat is well known for his status as a celebrity golfer. His status with Good Good’s Golf Theme YouTube recently changed when news spread that Horvat would be leaving. This was followed quickly with tons of rumors and speculation about why it may be happening.

Micah Morris was the first celebrity golfer to leave Good Good Golf. It wasn’t too long before Horvat decided to make the same decision. People that are subscribed to the content that Good Good Golf produces naturally started to wonder if there were reasons why some of the brand’s most famous golfers were suddenly leaving without much of an explanation.

Observers immediately started to speculate that celebrity golfers like Grant Horvat may have grown tired of his position. It seemed like a fair question in regards to the non-stop speculation about Horvat’s departure. Could Grant Horvat want to use his fame and success in a selfish way, perhaps to reap some of his own rewards by focusing on his own channel or personal life?

Luckily, there’s a way to find out. Horvat spoke personally about his departure on a recent podcast, hoping to shut down all of the speculation and provide an answer to curious fans and supporters of his. While answering some of the hot questions related to his departure, Horvat seemed to enjoy slamming down some of the wild conspiracy theories, almost in such a humorous way.

One of the questions that was raised to Horvat was whether a financial deal may have incentivized him to leave Good Good Golf. While he admitted that no outside deal was in place before leaving, he agreed that the brand and himself were motivated to move in different directions. Grant Horvat also expressed the fact that new deals have presented themselves to him after leaving, which has raised new questions and even sparked controversy on the topic.

Interestingly, Horvat seemed to admit that he was treated completely differently than everyone else within Good Good Golf, specifically because he was one of the last celebrity golfers to join the brand. It’s hard to decrypt exactly what that means, but it sounds like perhaps his partnership and contractual agreement with Good Good Golf was not as valuable as he had hoped.

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20 Comments

  1. The main thing that fuels the speculation for me is the fact that there was never an official announcement from him while he was still a part of Good Good. You would think that if he was leaving on good terms to pursue his personal career, he would have said it publicly before he left the group. This would have driven more of the fans to his personal social media pages, and people who still wanted to see his content would know what to expect moving forward. It would have prevented any of the confusion and speculation we have now. The way he just kind of disappeared, and Good Good's awkward acknowledgement of it after the fact, all had a weird vibe. It makes sense why people are questioning the situation.

  2. Wouldn’t know if this nobody if it wasn’t for Good Good. His golf isn’t good enough to watch on its own, it’s personality isn’t captivating and he’s at the lowest viewership he’s ever seen. Feel bad for him, but biggest mistake of his life

  3. OK let's just imagine this. You have had a friend group that you have grown up with and are now in your late teens early twenties, you guys make videos together and have fun but you've come to the point where you have decided that you aren't going to be doing this for the rest of your life. Sometimes there will be a reason they split up, but most of the time everyone is just going down their own paths in life. So just leave these guys alone.

  4. Good Good Golf isn't just a fun channel, and it's not necessarily a brotherhood–it's a JOB. It's an actual corporation that, by all accounts, was treating Grant like an entry-level employee instead of a senior partner. And if you feel you're not getting the most out of your job, you have every right to find a different one. Period. I will continue to follow everyone involved in all of their respective endeavors (except maybe Steven Castaneda, because I don't think he brings much personality or skill to the process).

  5. They both wanted to work towards going pro! And when you watch them now they are putting in the work, they both left to chase a career in professional golf so shut up and allow them to chase their dreams

  6. Grant will quickly pass into History… While Good Good is advancing forward and will do Great without Him, Its going to be the Biggest Mistake Grant as ever made…😂

  7. It sounds like they thought they had a great opportunity to capitalize as a singular player entity which could in fact, change the course of their entire family lineage…so I’d say they “evaluated their options and came up with a long term solution??” 🤷‍♂️
    Keep in mind there is such a thing as missing the opportunity…no one wants to be that dude. Good luck yall

  8. I thought like Shaq or Tom Brady or Lando Norris were "celebrity golfers". Who the hell is this guy? what does celebrity golfer mean now?

  9. Trash human being. He left because they brought in Luke. He was no longer the best golfer in the group in his opinion. Hahahahah he'll never get the type of ppl good good gets on their channel. There's a reason it's literally just him and tig 99 percent of the time.

  10. I enjoy Grants dialogue, etc. Micah, however, is a little whiny and annoying. I'm amazed TaylorMade gave him free equipment when he hits it like dogshit most of the time.

  11. While I believe Micah made a huge mistake leaving good good I think grant will be fine. Still seems so crazy to choose to leave what is quickly becoming a juggernaut amongst YouTube golf channels. Maybe the group dynamic is hard to deal with but I have to believe at such a young age it's not a bad thing to let the money do the decision making until you have F.U. money.

  12. The Good Good group is very similar to the Jackass crew. Young friends having fun, blow up, eventually members start to mature and look for other ventures. People will always watch Good Good videos because were here for entertainment… but their videos are definitely missing something now.. Garret is the only one with a fun personality to watch thats left.

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