close
close
Ludvig Aberg Details of mysterious disease that made him lose almost 10 pounds

Ludvig Aberg puts his hands in his head during the Farmer Insurance Open.

The mysterious illness, which Ludvig Aberg has opened at Farmers Insurance, sounds miserable.

Getty pictures

Ludvig Aberg had a blasty start at the farmers’ insurance in 2025 before he was hit by an evil illness that took him a few weeks to fight himself.

The 25-year-old Swede fought through the illness in Torrey Pines three weeks ago, but in the following week he got the best of him during the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. With his symptoms, Aberg ran from the tournament after the first round. He released last week to get healthy before returning back to Torrey Pines for the Genesis Invitation this week.

After a 6-off-par 66 in the second round on Friday, Aberg will start the weekend on fifth reasons, four shots before the pace that 36-hole leader Davis Thompson has set.

After the round on Friday, Aberg decided that in two days at the Farmers Insurance Open, which lost almost 10 pounds.

“Yes, it was rough for a while,” said Aberg. “It started – round 1 was fine, round 2 was fine and I woke up in the middle of the night. I think that must have been on Friday evening because we started the third round on Wednesday, and I started to hand over and I started all of these things and it was not very pleasant. And then it was okay for a few days, and then it somehow changed with Pebble to like feverishly and almost like body pain and tremors. First, I was really hot. Then I got very cold.

“In two days, a total of about eight pounds lost, so that’s not the right way to lose weight.”

The tour has been going on for a few weeks. A number of players dropped from the farmers due to flu -like symptoms, and the disease got the way through the tour. Rickie Fowler withdrew after the first round of the World Cup Phoenix of last week due to an illness.

But Aberg still doesn’t know exactly what disease has worried him.

“I don’t know. If I knew it, I would tell you,” said Aberg. “My first initial reaction was food poisoning because it was a kind of timeline, but then she moved to the fever. I don’t know. I only know that it was not fun and I’m glad I am over it.

Aberg seemed to be command after the opening round of the Farmers Insurance Open, but a 75-79 finish caused by his illness-brought him out of the tournament, which Harris finally won.

Now is healthy, it is pleased to get another crack in Torrey Pines that houses the Genesis Invitational after the forest fires in Los Angeles have forced the tournament to move from Riviera.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *