Two sides. One cup.

Your friend group's golf tournament. Without the spreadsheet.

Sides handles the draft, the matchups, and the trash talk. You just show up to play. Built for the recurring tournament that matters to your group — the one you've been running with a Google Sheet and a group chat for years.

See it in action

Draft, score, brag. Repeat.

Tournament dashboard

Live, all in one place.

Standings, your next match, every round in flight. Everyone in your group sees the same thing, the same way.

Sides tournament dashboard

Captain mode

Draft your sides.

Two captains, alternating picks. Like the Ryder Cup but with worse golf.

Captain mode draft results

Score on the green

Hole-by-hole entry.

Tap your number. Color-coded for birdie, bogey, the occasional snowman.

Live score entry

Round setup

Real formats, no spreadsheet.

Match Play, Best Ball, Alternate Shot, Stableford. Pick the format your group actually argues about.

Round configuration with format selection

Built for the recurring tournament with friends.

Set up your club once. Run tournaments year over year. The trophy case follows your group through every cup.

Captain mode
Two captains take turns drafting players. Like the Ryder Cup but with your friends and probably worse golf.
AI sportscaster Soon
Live commentary on every pick, every match, every choke. The trash talk writes itself — you just live with it.
Trophy case that lasts
Your club persists across tournaments. Brag about who won the 2023 Cup three years from now.

Tournament flow

From "let's do this" to a winner.

Three steps. The friction lives in the spreadsheet you're leaving behind.

  1. 1

    Form your club

    One organizer, one invite link, your friends pile in. The club is the persistent thing — tournaments come and go.

  2. 2

    Pick captains, draft sides

    Two captains, alternating picks. Reds and Blues drawn in minutes — the kind of draft drama your group chat has been waiting for.

  3. 3

    Play, score, brag

    Match-play scoring with handicaps, hole-by-hole. The winning side hoists the cup. The losing side waits a year to even the score.