Wyndham Clark made his relationship with Emily Tanner public on Saturday, posting a photo on Instagram that appeared to confirm the golfer’s new romance with the social-media entrepreneur. Clark wrote, “Par 3 with my good luck charm 🌺,” in the May 24 post, a simple line that turned a Masters week connection into a public reveal.
Tanner answered with a two-word comment on Clark’s post, and Jena Sims also replied, adding to the reaction around the announcement. The post was the kind of hard launch that lands fast in golf circles because it ties together a major champion, a visible influencer and a relationship that had already been playing out around Augusta.
Tanner was Clark’s caddie at the Masters Par 3 Tournament, and her own posts from that stretch had already hinted at a close link to the golfer. On April 9, she shared a clip of her golf swing and wrote, “At least one of us got a hole in one 😅 maybe next year #masters,” before following up on April 14 with more photos and the line, “Last of the Augusta crumbs ⛳️💕.”
Clark’s post did more than introduce Tanner to his followers. It also put a name and face to a relationship involving a player who has spent much of the spring back in contention. On May 23, Clark said, “It’s fun being in contention,” while discussing the Byron Nelson, and he added that whether a player needs to shoot 8-under or 1-under to win, the pressure feels the same because “you still feel the same heat.”
That matters because Clark is not just another PGA Tour name testing his form. He has three career wins, including the 2023 U.S. Open, and has earned more than $30 million over his PGA Tour career. A player with that resume attracts attention when he speaks about contention, but the Instagram reveal shifted the focus to the person beside him as well.
Tanner brings her own following to the moment. She is the founder of Over Social Agency, a full-service influencer marketing agency, and has 729,000 Instagram followers, giving the relationship a built-in audience well beyond the golf world. In that sense, the reveal was less a private update than a public crossover between two people already used to life on camera and online.
The wrinkle is that the relationship did not arrive as a formal statement or through a traditional interview. Clark let the post carry the message, using a Masters reference and a flower emoji instead of explanation. That leaves the exact timing of the pair’s relationship largely off the record, even as the social-media trail from April and the May 24 post makes the answer clear enough for anyone following along.
For Clark, the next step is on the course, where the attention will now follow both his score and the new public chapter in his personal life. For Tanner, the post confirmed what her Augusta breadcrumbs had already suggested: the relationship is no longer a hint.

