Adam Sandler posted a short congratulatory message to Nelly Korda on Instagram today, and the sign-off alone was enough to stop the scroll.
The message was brief. Sandler wrote “Congratulations, Nelly. Way to go again!” and signed it “Love, Happy” – a nod to his beloved Happy Gilmore character, the short-fused but big-hearted golfer from the 1996 comedy classic.
He didn’t name the achievement. Followers were left to do their own guessing. The phrase “way to go again” carries real weight, though. It suggests this isn’t Nelly Korda’s first time clearing a major bar. Sandler’s message reads more like a second standing ovation than a first introduction. The mystery of the specific achievement only adds to the appeal. There’s something genuinely fun about a celebration with no explanation attached.
Happy Gilmore is one of Sandler’s most enduring characters. The original 1996 film earned a devoted following. That following has only grown over the decades. A sequel – Happy Gilmore 2 – arrived on Netflix in 2025 and brought the character to a whole new audience. Sandler has leaned into that legacy since then. Signing an actual congratulatory note as “Happy” instead of his real name fits right into that spirit.
Nelly Korday, born Cornell Iral Haynes Jr. in Austin, Texas, and raised in St. Louis, has built one of the more enduring careers in hip-hop. He broke through in 2000 with his debut album “Country Grammar.” It moved millions of copies and made him one of the genre’s biggest names almost immediately. Grammy wins followed. “Hot in Herre” took home Best Male Rap Solo Performance at the 2003 Grammy Awards. “Dilemma,” his collaboration with Kelly Rowland, won Best Rap/Sung Collaboration the same year. Both songs still turn up on playlists and soundtracks decades later.
He’s stayed active through touring, new music, and business ventures in the years since. The word “again” in Sandler’s message is a small but pointed detail. It frames this latest achievement not as a comeback, but as another entry in a long list of wins. For Nelly Korda, winning isn’t new. It’s expected.
Sandler and Nelly Korda don’t have a widely documented friendship. That gives the public shout-out a spontaneous, genuine quality. That kind of unplanned crossover is exactly what people love to see. There’s no rollout strategy behind it. One person saw something worth celebrating and said so publicly, as Happy Gilmore.
Whatever Nelly Korda has pulled off this time around, he’s got Happy Gilmore officially in his corner.
