Jon Rahm sets mark for most money earned in a single PGA Tour season

Jon Rahm sets mark for most money earned in a single PGA Tour season

Jon Rahm sets mark for most money earned in a single PGA Tour season

There’s a new benchmark for most money won in a single season on the PGA Tour. And it’s not even May.

Jon Rahm finished solo second at the 2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta, falling short of defending his title but still good enough to earn $839,300 for his efforts.

That brings his 2022-23 season total to $14,462,840, surpassing the $14,046,910 that Scottie Scheffler earned last season.

Rahm has four victories this season, with two of them coming in designated events. He banked $2.7 million at the Sentry Tournament of Champions and  $3.6 million for winning the Genesis Invitational. His Masters victory brought home another $3.24 million.

Rahm has opted out of this week’s Wells Fargo Championship, but he will likely have nine or ten more events this season to really run his total out there.

In his career, Rahm is now at $49,486,883, on the doorstep of surpassing the $50 million mark.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/5wlVIFN
Steven Alker repeats at Insperity Invitational but real story is that he won with his former caddie's family, friends on hand

Steven Alker repeats at Insperity Invitational but real story is that he won with his former caddie's family, friends on hand

Steven Alker repeats at Insperity Invitational but real story is that he won with his former caddie's family, friends on hand

The Insperity Invitational was inspirational for Steven Alker.

Earlier this year, Alker’s caddie Sam Workman died less than three weeks removed from caddying a second-place finish in Hawaii to open the 2023 season. Workman passed away on Feb. 6 from cancer at his home in Beeville, Texas, about 100 miles south of San Antonio, a “sudden passing” according to Alker in a post on Instagram.

This week, dozens of Workman’s family and friends made their way to The Woodlands Country Club near Houston to follow Alker and root him on.

“Great support. We had a nice dinner last night,” Alker said after his round Saturday. “I think there’s some more folks from Beeville and Silsbee, so it was a good crowd out there, had good support.”

In honor of Workman this week, PGA Tour Champions players wore ribbons with the Houston Astros logo, Workman’s favorite baseball team.

2023 Insperity Invitational

A Houston Astros logo on the hat of Steven Alker in honor of his caddie Sam Workman during the final round of the 2023 Insperity Invitational at The Woodlands Golf Club in The Woodlands, Texas. (Photo: Tim Heitman/Getty Images)

The Workman gallery must have made a difference, as Alker cruised to a four-shot victory, his first in 2023.

Alker started the day at 9 under and leading by three. In his final round, he had a birdie and nine pars his first 10 holes but the field never really threatened to track him down. Steve Stricker did get it to 11 under but Alker caught fire late with birdies on Nos. 11, 12, 13, 15 and 17 to get to 15 under. He closed with a par on 18 for a final-round 66.

“It’s huge,” he said. “You can see the emotion on 18. I just saw a sea of orange today, just reminded me of Sam.”

The orange was in reference to Workman’s family and friends all wearing Houston Astros jerseys.

Alker and Workman first worked together in the Bahamas in 2019 on the Korn Ferry Tour. He was, in Alker’s words, “a motivator, a decision-maker and a fighter.”

Workman saw first-hand Alker’s amazing late-in-golf-life run to the top of the PGA Tour Champions. He was the 2022 Charles Schwab Cup after winning four times while also notching 18 top 10s in 23 starts.

Alker, who has now won the Insperity in back-to-back seasons, had his son on the bag for the first time this week, as Ben Alker made his debut as a caddie. The duo saw immediate dividends with an opening-round 66. Alker shot a second-round 69 and closed with another 66 to cap off a memorable week.

“My son was on the bag today,” Alker added. “It doesn’t get any better than that.”

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/5wlVIFN
Watch: Bailey Chamblee makes a 'hole-in-three' on No. 17 at TPC Sawgrass

Watch: Bailey Chamblee makes a 'hole-in-three' on No. 17 at TPC Sawgrass

Watch: Bailey Chamblee makes a 'hole-in-three' on No. 17 at TPC Sawgrass

Bailey Chamblee, the wife of former PGA Tour player and Golf Channel/NBC analyst Brandel Chamblee, had a magic moment Sunday at TPC Sawgrass.

The two were playing a round at the Stadium Course and Bailey Chamblee hit her tee shot into the water at the par-3 17th hole.

Nothing unusual there. According to estimates, around 10,000 balls per year are retrieved from the water around the Island Green.

But Bailey, a host on Golf Channel’s Morning Drive and a former member of the Old Dominion women’s golf team, did the next best thing and it was captured on video and posted on Twitter by her husband.

After her ball hit the water she laughed briefly then had a ball tossed to her by a member of their group, re-teed and then hit another shot within 12 seconds.

This time the ball went in the hole, as she bored her shot through a fierce wind that was blowing from left-to-right.

“You did not just do that!” someone in their group exclaimed twice.

Bailey Chamblee grabbed her head with both hands and walked a few steps away. She then got hugs from two of the people in their group and her husband then picked her up and spun her around several times.

“As I’ve tried to tell [Golf Channel co-worker Paul McGinley] a million times on #LiveFrom, this is a great hole,” Chamblee said on the Twitter post. “Bails making a Freddy Couples on 17.”

That reference is to the famous shot two-time Players champion Fred Couples made in 1999 when he went in the water at No. 17, re-teed, then slam-dunked his third shot in the hole.

And Chamblee was poking fun at himself in the tweet. He has been a frequent critic of 17th hole and once said that its capricious nature hurts The Players Championship’s status of being considered a major.

“I think it comes too late in the round,” Chamblee said in a 2013 conference call before The Players. “I think it has the potential to play too much of a role for the quality of the hole. It’s 130 yards and . . . sometimes it’s an absolute nothing short iron when the wind is not blowing. But when the wind is blowing, there is too much luck involved in the shot and too much of the penalty for a miss.

“I really do think this tournament should be a major,” Chamblee continued. “I absolutely think this tournament should be a major. I think one of the things that keeps it from really getting its due is the 17th hole.”

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/5wlVIFN
'Nobody enjoys it and it’s not fair': Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player, Lee Trevino and Annika Sorenstam address golf's pace of play problem

'Nobody enjoys it and it’s not fair': Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player, Lee Trevino and Annika Sorenstam address golf's pace of play problem

'Nobody enjoys it and it’s not fair': Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player, Lee Trevino and Annika Sorenstam address golf's pace of play problem

When Jack Nicklaus says slow play is a problem, you know the topic has officially jumped the shark.

Nicklaus was asked to opine on the pace of play of professional golf during a press conference on Saturday at The Woodlands in Houston ahead of competing in the Greats of Golf, a nine-hole exhibition played during the Insperity Championship on PGA Tour Champions.

“They do have a problem on the Tour today,” Nicklaus said. “The golf ball is a part of the problem. The longer the golf ball goes, the longer the courses get, the more you have to walk, the longer it’s going to take. I don’t think it’s good for the game. (The USGA and R&A have proposed) bringing the golf back. I think it’s a good start. It’s the first time they’ve done that in forever. We’ll see where it goes with that.

“It’s got to be equitable,” Nicklaus added, “but they need to make an example and stay with it. It’s not very pleasant to watch somebody stand over the ball for half an hour.”

Slow play has made headlines recently after weather delays forced the Masters to go to threesomes and split tees in the final round and the glacial pace was exposed on TV. Brooks Koepka, who played in the final group, called out Patrick Cantlay, who also took his time on multiple occasions at the RBC Heritage the following week but pointed out that he was never put on the clock in either instances. Slow play has been a chronic problem in the game and rarely gets addressed in any meaningful way. But that wasn’t the case in Nicklaus’s rookie year.

The Golden Bear always was a deliberate player but he learned early in his career that his pace of play was too slow. He was penalized two strokes during the second round at the 1962 Portland Open by PGA official Joe Black. Nicklaus still rolled to a six-stroke victory but he learned an important lesson that day.

“It was the best thing that ever happened to me,” Nicklaus said, noting that Black told him, “Jack, you can take as long as you want over the golf ball to play but be ready when it’s your turn.”

“I always tried to stay out of everybody’s way,” Nicklaus continued. “I didn’t want to bother anybody lining up my putt while they were lining up their putt so I stayed back. I didn’t want to start walking my yardages off. I took a while over the golf ball but that wasn’t the problem. The problem was being ready to play. I realized after playing on the Tour for a while that it’s also a courtesy to the field. It’s not fair to do that.”

Nicklaus also blamed caddies for being part of the problem.

“By the time they get through talking, I couldn’t hit a shot anyway,” he said. “It’s a problem.”

The Greats of Golf gathered on Saturday, April 29, 2023, at the Insperity Invitational and played a nine-hole exhibition. (Courtesy Insperity Invitational)

Gary Player echoed that sentiment. “It’s just not fair to the others to be taking the amount of time,” he said. “You are allocated a certain amount of time and you have to adhere to that or you should be penalized.”

Player noted that golfers have three practice rounds and then they spend too much time around the green doing Aim Point and studying their yardage books. “You didn’t see Bobby Locke, Ben Crenshaw or Tiger Woods doing that,” Player said.

“I read the green from 50 yards,” Lee Trevino added. “Keep staring at it while you’re walking you can see every curve on that green. Before you ever get there to read that putt you know exactly the direction it’s going.”

Annika Sorenstam said the problem with pace of play starts at the junior level.

“The juniors watch the pros and they see the Masters and see how much time the pros take and do the same thing,” she said. “I know the AJGA does a good job, but then they get to college and it all goes away and then they turn pro. I think it is a root problem from the beginning.

“Nobody enjoys it and it’s not fair. We’re running out of time, time is a precious commodity, right, so I think start at the very beginning and teach them to hit when you’re ready and go. The more we think, the more complicated it gets, right, so just hit and go.”

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/KAP7tWG
2023 LIV Golf Singapore prize money payouts for each player and team

2023 LIV Golf Singapore prize money payouts for each player and team

2023 LIV Golf Singapore prize money payouts for each player and team

Talor Gooch keeps on cashing in.

The 31-year-old Oklahoman guided his RangeGoats GC to a sweep this weekend at LIV Golf Singapore after winning his second consecutive event, this time via a playoff with Fireballs captain Sergio Garcia. The pair finished tied atop the leaderboard at 17 under at Sentosa Golf Club on Sentosa Island, Singapore, but it will be Gooch who leaves with the top prize of $4 million for his efforts. Over 13 LIV starts, Gooch has made $19,641,232.

Garcia will take home $2.25 million for his runner-up finish, while third-place Brooks Koepka, who finished one shot outside the playoff, earned $1.5  million.

Check out how much money each player and team earned at LIV Golf’s fifth event of its 2023 season.

LIV Golf Singapore: Photos | Leaderboard

LIV Golf Singapore individual prize money

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Talor Gooch -17 $4,000,000
2 Sergio Garcia -17 $2,250,000
3 Brooks Koepka -16 $1,500,000
4 Scott Vincent -15 $1,000,000
5 Mito Pereira -14 $800,000
T6 Jason Kokrak -12 $655,000
T6 Cameron Smith -12 $655,000
T8 Joaquin Niemann -11 $468,333
T8 Charles Howell III -11 $468,333
T8 Harold Varner III -11 $468,333
T11 Peter Uihlein -10 $380,000
T11 Cameron Tringale -10 $380,000
T13 Phil Mickelson -9 $330,000
T13 Eugenio Chacarra -9 $330,000
T13 Patrick Reed -9 $330,000
T16 Louis Oosthuizen -8 $280,000
T16 Marc Leishman -8 $280,000
T16 Jediah Morgan -8 $280,000
T19 Bryson DeChambeau -7 $245,000
T19 Kevin Na -7 $245,000
T19 Anirban Lahiri -7 $245,000
T19 Carlos Ortiz -7 $245,000
T23 Dustin Johnson -6 $208,750
T23 Danny Lee -6 $208,750
T23 Bubba Watson -6 $208,750
T23 Thomas Pieters -6 $208,750
T27 Brendan Steele -5 $190,000
T27 Laurie Canter -5 $190,000
T27 Ian Poulter -5 $190,000
T30 Matt Jones -4 $175,000
T30 Henrik Stenson -4 $175,000
T30 Paul Casey -4 $175,000
T33 Sebastián Muñoz -3 $160,000
T33 Charl Schwartzel -3 $160,000
T33 David Puig -3 $160,000
T36 Richard Bland -2 $145,000
T36 Graeme McDowell -2 $145,000
T36 Bernd Wiesberger -2 $145,000
T36 Lee Westwood -2 $145,000
T36 Pat Perez -2 $145,000
T41 Martin Kaymer -1 $133,750
T41 Branden Grace -1 $133,750
T41 Matthew Wolff -1 $133,750
T41 Dean Burmester -1 $133,750
45 Sihwan Kim 1 $127,500
46 Chase Koepka 2 $125,000
47 Abraham Ancer 4 $122,500
48 James Piot 8 $120,000

LIV Golf Singapore team prize money

Place Team Score Earnings
1 RangeGoats GC -37 $3 million
2 Fireballs GC -34 $1.5 million
3 Crushers GC -32 $500,000

LIV owns a 75 percent stake in each franchise and provided teams with an undisclosed amount of operating capital for the year. The teams are expected to largely run on their own dime this season, with team prize earnings going directly towards its day-to-day costs.

The upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund has long been criticized as a way for the Kingdom to sportswash its controversial human rights record. Saudi Arabia has been accused of politically motivated killings, torture, forced disappearances and inhumane treatment of prisoners. Members of the royal family and Saudi government were accused of involvement in the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist and Washington Post columnist.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/KAP7tWG
Talor Gooch wins LIV Golf Singapore in playoff, RangeGoats claim team title

Talor Gooch wins LIV Golf Singapore in playoff, RangeGoats claim team title

Talor Gooch wins LIV Golf Singapore in playoff, RangeGoats claim team title

Talor Gooch is LIV Golf’s first back-to-back winner.

After nearly blowing a 10-shot lead last week in Australia, Gooch defeated Fireballs GC captain Sergio Garcia in a playoff for his second consecutive win on Sunday at Sentosa Golf Club on Sentosa Island. Brooks Koepka finished one shot outside the playoff in third at 16 under.

“I know that I’m not going to continue playing this level of golf forever. So you just enjoy it while it comes and try to make it last as long as you can,” said Gooch. “So you try to savor these moments and try to feel these feelings and emotions and try to remember ’em so that when they go away you can really get back as quickly as possible.”

LIV Golf Singapore: Photos | Leaderboard

“We all believed that he could do this. We knew he could do this. And this is just the start of it,” said Gooch’s RangeGoats captain, Bubba Watson. “When you get a taste of it, you want more of it.”

It was a RangeGoats GC sweep in Singapore as the squad won their first team title at 37 under, three shots clear of Fireballs GC (-34) and five clear of third place Crushers GC (-32).

This week’s event, the fifth of LIV’s 14-event league season, was the first that Dustin Johnson’s 4Aces GC did not finish on the podium inside the top three. The 4Aces won the inaugural team title last year.

Laurie Canter made the third hole-in-one in LIV’s short history and second in as many weeks, this time on the par-3 17th.

“We couldn’t see it go in because the, it was just the way the light was on the green at the time. So kind of saw it bounce and heard like a sort of murmur that it was going to be a half-decent shot,” said Canter. “And then everyone up at the green went mental at it.”

After consecutive international tournaments LIV Golf will return to the United States in two weeks with back-to-back stateside events, first with LIV Golf Tulsa, May 12-14, at Cedar Ridge Country Club in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, and then with LIV Golf D.C., May 26-28, at Trump National Golf Club in Potomac Falls, Virginia.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/KAP7tWG
'He’s about 200 club lengths from where he was': Brooks Koepka took relief in Singapore and left announcers confused

'He’s about 200 club lengths from where he was': Brooks Koepka took relief in Singapore and left announcers confused

'He’s about 200 club lengths from where he was': Brooks Koepka took relief in Singapore and left announcers confused

There’s no doubt that Brooks Koepka is back to playing strong golf.

Since moving to play in the LIV Golf League, Koepka has won twice, the only golfer to do so, and even held the 54-hole lead at the Masters earlier this month before a final-round 75 (insert 72-hole tournament jokes here).

Even this week at LIV Golf Singapore at Sentosa Golf Club, Koepka finds himself a shot out of the lead heading into Sunday’s final round.

However, it’s a drop he took during the first round in Singapore that’s making the rounds. It even had LIV announcers questioning what was going on.

Let’s set the scene. Koepka was playing the par-4 15th hole measuring 428 yards when his tee shot went right. When reaching his ball, Koepka and his caddie, Ricky Elliott, said their line to the green was blocked by the LIV Golf Fan Village setup, so they asked for temporary immovable obstruction relief.

LIV on-course analyst Dom Boulet said on the CW live stream, “I’m not sure what he’s asking for,”  who then asked Elliott what was going on, according to Golf.com. Elliott confirmed Koepka was getting line-of-sight relief and he could drop on either side.

This still left commentators confused.

“It doesn’t appear there is anything between him and the hole,” David Feherty said.

Boutlet responded: “Well, there are toilets over there. Ricky just told me it’s line of sight. I think it’s the port-a-loos perhaps. But I didn’t think that was an option, to be honest with you. I mean, he’s got to go through a couple of trees to take that option.”

Koepka proceeded to pick up his ball and walk toward the 16th past some tents. It was there he spoke with a rule official on where he could take the drop.

“And under the local rule, he can take relief on either side of the TIO,” rules analyst Tony Zirpoli said on the broadcast. “It probably gives him a better shot. So, he’s taking the smart way out by taking that other side relief. And it’s also a long walk.”

Feherty added: “It sure is. It’s an unusual situation that there would be such a gap. He’s going to walk to the point, Tony, where he has a clear look?”

Boulet: “He’s going to drop in the middle of the 16th fairway.”

Zirpoli: “He will have a clear view of the edge of the TIO. He will then get a one club-length corridor, and then from that one club-length corridor, he gets an additional one club length, which is his relief area.”

Feherty: “Well, he’s about 200 club lengths from where he was.”

Koepka proceeded to drop his ball just on the 16th fairway.

“I heard Ricky say 167; that’s what they’re measuring it because that’s where they wanted to take relief — the same distance,” Boulet said. “Now I didn’t think it was an option what he had to go over there — port-a-loo or tent or whatever it was he was going over. But David Blake, referee, gave him the ruling, and he’s got a big break here.”

Added Feherty: “You take them when you can get them. You get plenty of bad breaks. That’s a good one.”

Koepka then hit his second shot over trees in front of him to 8 feet, and he two-putted for par.

Also during the Masters earlier this month, there was a rules controversy involving Koepka and Elliott and Gary Woodland. He was later absolved of the rules violation.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/dvhtIfO
Photos: On Justin Thomas' 30th birthday, we look back on his greatest moments in golf

Photos: On Justin Thomas' 30th birthday, we look back on his greatest moments in golf

Photos: On Justin Thomas' 30th birthday, we look back on his greatest moments in golf

Justin Thomas has accomplished a lot in his young career.

After graduating from Alabama, Thomas won on the Korn Ferry Tour in 2014 before transitioning to the PGA Tour.

Since making it to the big stage, the now 30-year-old has collected 15 wins, including two major championships — the 2017 and 2022 PGA Championships.

On top of his success at Tour events, Thomas has represented the United States in five team events: the 2017, 2019 and 2022 Presidents Cups and the 2018 and 2020 Ryder Cups.

To honor Thomas’ transition out of his 20s, we look back on the greatest moments in his career.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/dvhtIfO
The leaderboard at LIV Golf Singapore remains loaded, as Talor Gooch and Sergio Garcia pace the field with 18 to go

The leaderboard at LIV Golf Singapore remains loaded, as Talor Gooch and Sergio Garcia pace the field with 18 to go

The leaderboard at LIV Golf Singapore remains loaded, as Talor Gooch and Sergio Garcia pace the field with 18 to go

There have been plenty of big names who have hoisted a trophy through the LIV Golf League’s first two seasons, like Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka and Cameron Smith. But there hasn’t been a leaderboard as good as the one we’ve got in Singapore with 18 to play.

Sentosa Golf Club has provided great theater through two rounds of LIV Golf Singapore, as last week’s winner in Adelaide, Talor Gooch, and Sergio Garcia are tied for the lead at 13 under. Brooks Koepka, the only two-time winner on LIV, is a shot behind. Then there’s Cameron Smith at 11 under and Phil Mickelson, who at one time held the lead early in the second round after a hole-out eagle, at 10 under.

“Obviously the caliber of players here, it just shows,” Garcia said of the packed leaderboard. “On a day like today where there wasn’t much wind the course was gettable. We were able to pick the ball up on the fairway, so that always probably makes it one or two shots easier.”

Preferred lies were in play during round two because of wet course conditions. And Garcia, Gooch and others took advantage.

Garcia fired a bogey-free 7-under 64 to move into a tie for the lead. His best finish since moving to LIV Golf are a pair of fourths last season in Jeddah and Chicago.

Meanwhile, Gooch is looking to join Koepka as a two-time winner and the first back-to-back winner. He carded seven birdies and a lone bogey, signing for 6-under 65 to remain tied for the lead.

LIV Golf Singapore: Photos

“Sergio and I had a bunch of fun out there and Cam as well,” Gooch said. “Our group played really well again, and we were just kind of feeding off each other the whole day. It felt like Cam kind of got off running, and then I kind of came running in the middle, and then Sergio got it going on the back.”

Gooch is 32 under in his past five rounds.

Koepka shot 65 for the second straight day to sit a shot behind and earn a final-group tee time on Sunday. Mickelson was 5 under thru 5 holes and finished his day at 5 under for the round, but he’s solo seventh. Scott Vincent and Cameron Tringale are tied for fourth at 11 under with Smith, who is finding his form after a slow start to the season.

The second round will air on the CW from 1-6 p.m. Saturday. However, final-round action gets underway at 8 p.m. ET Saturday in the United States. The final round will also air on tape delay Sunday.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/dvhtIfO
2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta Start Time Saturday, Tee Times, Pairings & ESPN+ Live Streaming Coverage

2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta Start Time Saturday, Tee Times, Pairings & ESPN+ Live Streaming Coverage

2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta Start Time Saturday, Tee Times, Pairings & ESPN+ Live Streaming Coverage

After two rounds, Tony Finau sits atop the leaderboard at -13 in the 2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta at Vidanta Vallarta.

With a seven-under 64 on Friday in the second round, Finau has a one-stroke lead over Erik Van Rooyen.

Here’s everything you need to know ahead of the third round of the 2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta, from tee times to TV and streaming info.

Watch the PGA Tour all season long without cable! Start watching now with a free trial to Fubo. And catch PGA Tour Live streaming, plus tons of other live sports and programming, with ESPN+.

Tee times and pairings

Time Players
10:38 AM ET
Nicolai Hojgaard, Aaron Baddeley, Jonas Blixt
10:49 AM ET
Geoff Ogilvy, Charley Hoffman, Francesco Molinari
11:00 AM ET
Joseph Bramlett, Ben Taylor, Adam Long
11:11 AM ET
Derek Ernst, Carl Yuan, Cody Gribble
11:22 AM ET
Lanto Griffin, Scott Piercy, Brice Garnett
11:33 AM ET
Stephan Jaeger, Emiliano Grillo, Austin Cook
11:44 AM ET
Greyson Sigg, Alejandro Tosti, Chez Reavie
11:55 AM ET
Beau Hossler, Trevor Werbylo, Raul Pereda
12:06 PM ET
Michael Kim, Jon Rahm, Taylor Pendrith
12:17 PM ET
Estanislao Goya, Ben Martin, Cameron Champ
12:28 PM ET
Austin Smotherman, Jimmy Walker, Akshay Bhatia
12:39 PM ET
Andrew Putnam, Will Gordon, Eric Cole
12:50 PM ET
Erik Van Rooyen, Brandon Wu, Tony Finau

Hole 10

Time Players
10:38 AM ET
Seonghyeon Kim, Harry Hall, Mark Hubbard
10:49 AM ET
Carson Young, Vincent Norrman, Byeong-Hun An
11:00 AM ET
James Hahn, Nicolas Echavarria, Andrew Novak
11:11 AM ET
Kevin Chappell, David Lipsky, Satoshi Kodaira
11:22 AM ET
Augusto Nunez, Austin Eckroat, Seung-Yul Noh
11:33 AM ET
Patrick Rodgers, Nate Lashley, Richy Werenski
11:44 AM ET
Dylan Wu, Ryan Gerard, Kevin Roy
11:55 AM ET
Ze-Cheng Dou, Bill Haas, Ryan Moore
12:06 PM ET
Maverick McNealy, Lee Hodges, Michael Gligic
12:17 PM ET
Sebastian Vazquez, Derek Lamely, Trevor Cone
12:28 PM ET
Gary Woodland, Cameron Percy
12:39 PM ET
Jonathan Byrd, Wyndham Clark

Round 3 TV & Streaming Information

You can watch Golf Channel and more for free on Fubo. ESPN+ is the exclusive home for PGA Tour Live streaming.

  • Thursday Coverage: Golf Channel
  • Friday Coverage: Golf Channel
  • Saturday Coverage: Golf Channel, CBS
  • Sunday Coverage: Golf Channel, CBS
Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/dvhtIfO
2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta Saturday tee times, TV and streaming info

2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta Saturday tee times, TV and streaming info

2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta Saturday tee times, TV and streaming info

Two rounds of the 2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta are in the books and we’re headed to the weekend at Vidanta Vallarta.

After opening with a 65 on Thursday, Tony Finau, who finished as one of the runner-ups to Jon Rahm south of the border last year, caught fire on Friday and shot a 7-under 64 and leads by one with 36 holes to go.

Rahm is six back of Finau at 7 under but is the second betting favorite to win on Sunday (+700)

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for Saturday’s third round of the 2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta. All times Eastern.

1st tee

Tee time Players
10:38 a.m.
Aaron Baddeley, Nicolai Hojgaard, Jonas Blixt
10:49 a.m.
Geoff Ogilvy, Francesco Molinari, Charley Hoffman
11:00 a.m.
Ben Taylor, Joseph Bramlett, Adam Long
11:11 a.m.
Carl Yuan, Derek Ernst, Cody Gribble
11:22 a.m.
Lanto Griffin, Brice Garnett, Scott Piercy
11:33 a.m.
Stephan Jaeger, Emiliano Grillo, Austin Cook
11:44 a.m.
Greyson Sigg, Chez Reavie, Alejandro Tosti
11:55 a.m.
Beau Hossler, Trevor Werbylo, Raul Pereda
12:06 p.m.
Michael Kim, Jon Rahm, Taylor Pendrith
12:17 p.m.
Cameron Champ, Ben Martin, Tano Goya
12:28 p.m.
Austin Smotherman, Akshay Bhatia, Jimmy Walker
12:39 p.m.
Andrew Putnam, Will Gordon, Eric Cole
12:50 p.m.
Tony Finau, Erik van Rooyen, Brandon Wu

10th tee

Tee time Players
10:38 a.m.
S.H. Kim, Mark Hubbard, Harry Hall
10:49 a.m.
Carson Young, Vincent Norman, Byeong Hun An
11:00 a.m.
Andrew Novak, James Hahn, Nico Echavarria
11:11 a.m.
David Lipsky, Satoshi Kodaira, Kevin Chappell
11:22 a.m.
S.Y. Noh, Austin Eckroat, Augusto Nunez
11:33 a.m.
Ricky Werenski, Nate Lashley, Patrick Rodgers
11:44 a.m.
Ryan Gerard, Dylan Wu, Kevin Roy
11:55 a.m.
Zecheng Dou, Bill Haas, Ryan Moore
12:06 p.m.
Lee Hodges, Maverick McNealy, Michael Gligic
12:17 p.m.
Trevor Cone, Sebastian Vazquez, Derek Lamely
12:28 p.m.
Gary Woodland, Cameron Percy
12:39 p.m.
Jonathan Byrd, Wyndham Clark

TV, streaming, radio information

You can watch Golf Channel for free on fuboTV. ESPN+ is the exclusive home for PGA Tour Live streaming. All times Eastern.

Saturday, April 29

TV

Golf Channel: 1-3 p.m.
CBS: 3-6 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.
Peacock: 1-3 p.m.
Paramount+: 3-6 p.m.

Sunday, April 30

TV

Golf Channel: 1-3 p.m.
CBS: 3-6 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.
Peacock: 1-3 p.m.
Paramount+: 3-6 p.m.

We occasionally recommend interesting products, services, sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/dvhtIfO
With the family of his recently deceased caddie at his side and his own son now on his bag, Steven Alker just keeps churning

With the family of his recently deceased caddie at his side and his own son now on his bag, Steven Alker just keeps churning

With the family of his recently deceased caddie at his side and his own son now on his bag, Steven Alker just keeps churning

Pardon Steven Alker if his emotions get a hold of him at some point this week. It’s only natural.

With his son, Ben, making his debut on his bag and family members of fallen caddie Sam Workman in attendance at The Woodlands Country Club, Alker fired a 66 during Friday’s first round of the Insperity Invitational, moving to the top of a packed leaderboard alongside Justin Leonard and Colin Montgomerie.

Winning the 2022 title on this golf course was special, but considering the circumstances, a repeat might hold even more sentimental value for the native of New Zealand.

Workman had become more than a friend since the two first worked together in the Bahamas in 2019 on the Korn Ferry Tour. He was, in Alker’s words, “a motivator, a decision-maker and a fighter.”

Together, they experienced Alker’s dramatic rise from grinding on the Korn Ferry Tour in his late 40s (Alker’s last event on the PGA Tour was 2017) to dominating the PGA Tour Champions in 2022 and winning the season-long Charles Schwab Cup. Alker, 51, won four events, was second in four others and had 18 top 10s in 23 starts last season, a meteoric rise in which Workman played a big part.

But earlier this year, Alker announced that Workman had been diagnosed with terminal cancer.

“He was complaining about some pain and having a few problems,” Alker said in February at the Chubb Classic. Workman had liver cancer that spread to his stomach. A week later, Alker was mourning the loss of his closest mate on the course after spending most of that time by Workman’s side at his home in Beeville, Texas. Workman was 55.

Alker is especially grateful Workman was able to experience his resurgence that started with his first win on the Champions Tour, the 2021 TimberTech Championship at Broken Sound in Boca Raton.

It was the first time Workman was on the bag of a winner and Alker presented him the flag from the 18th green.

In honor of the caddie, who was a huge Houston Astros fan, each of the PGA Tour Champions players is wearing an Astros ribbon in his honor.

And on Friday, a number of Workman’s friends and family members made the three-hour trek from Beeville, a small town that sits less than an hour from Corpus Christi and the Gulf of Mexico.

When asked what it meant to see Workman’s crew on hand, Alker admitted it was significant.

“(It means) a whole lot. We’ve got a bunch today. We’re going to have even more tomorrow, some of the Beeville crowd,” Alker said. “The ribbons are a nice touch, and great to have some of the family out, so good support today.”

Alker, who started on the back nine, rolled in birdies on four of the first six holes to get out to a hot start. And he did so with his son making his debut, something that allowed for some quality bonding time.

“It is special. Obviously, just the time, spending the time together,” Alker said prior to Friday’s round.

And how did he fare?

“He did fantastic. This really is his first competitive round. We’ve done some fun rounds, but he was great.” Alker said. “The ball was always clean. We had some spot-on yardages. He actually did some yardages today. It was great. Yeah, he did very, very well.”

Reporter and columnist Tom D’Angelo of the Palm Beach Post contributed to this post.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/dvhtIfO
2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta: A 65 in a PGA Tour debut and a swarm of bees among takeaways from first round

2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta: A 65 in a PGA Tour debut and a swarm of bees among takeaways from first round

2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta: A 65 in a PGA Tour debut and a swarm of bees among takeaways from first round

Raul Pereda is ranked 810th in the Official World Golf Ranking. Before Thursday’s opening round of the 2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta, he had never played a round on the PGA Tour.

By the end of his first 18 holes, he was tied for second after an opening 6-under 65.

What a debut.

The 26-year-old, one of seven players from Mexico playing in Puerto Vallarta at Vidanta Vallarta this week, was born in Mexico City and played collegiately at Jacksonville University. In his most recent starts on PGA Tour Latinoamerica and the Mexican tour, he has a mixed bag of results. A few top fives. A few missed cuts.

Now, he’s near the lead of a PGA Tour event.

“I just think more than the score I’m proud I was able to stay very present shot by shot,” Pereda said. “My coach, my old coach from school just told me just enjoy shot by shot, and sometimes it sounds easier said than getting it done. I was just able to stay in the present and give myself opportunities and roll it very good today.”

His old coach, Mike Blackburn, has talked with Pereda about taking everything shot-by-shot and living in the moment. And that paid off.

“My mental game was on point, my driver was very good, I think my strategy was very good,” Pereda said. “I think it was all on me today.”

Austin Smotherman, meanwhile, birdied his final four holes, including a chip-in on the ninth, his last of the day, and leads at 8 under after the opening round. Pereda is in a group two shots behind including Tony Finau, Stephan Jaeger, Eric Cole and Taylor Pendrith.

Defending champion and World No. 1 Jon Rahm finished at 4 under after an even-par front nine.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/Onlb69y
2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta Friday tee times, TV and streaming info

2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta Friday tee times, TV and streaming info

2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta Friday tee times, TV and streaming info

There was plenty of action from the first round in Mexico.

Austin Smotherman leads at 8 under, shooting a 63 that included a chip in on his final hole. Jon Rahm, in his title defense, shot 4-under 67, with him playing his final nine holes in 4 under. Then there’s Tony Finau, who finished runner-up last year, who shot 6 under on Thursday and is in a tie for second.

And you can’t forget the player making his PGA Tour debut who shot 6 under. Or the swarm of bees that took over the 10th fairway at one point.

Friday is going to be fun.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for Friday’s second round of the 2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta. All times Eastern.

More Mexico Open: Odds, expert picks

1st tee

Tee time Players
8:45 a.m.
Brian Stuard, Kelly Kraft, Joseph Bramlett
8:56 a.m.
Chris Stroud, Ryan Moore, Lee Hodges
9:07 a.m.
Dylan Frittelli, Adam Long, Geoff Ogilvy
9:18 a.m.
Lanto Griffin, J.B. Holmes, Maverick McNealy
9:29 a.m.
Kevin Tway, Brian Davis, David Lipsky
9:40 a.m.
Ted Potter Jr., Ricky Barnes, Henrik Norlander
9:51 a.m.
Satoshi Kodaira, Charley Hoffman, Richard Johnson
10:02 a.m.
Kevin Chappell, Tyson Alexander, Kyle Reifers
10:13 a.m.
Harrison Endycott, Brent Grant, Jose de Jesus Rodriguez
10:24 a.m.
Aaron Rai, Michael Gligic, Alvaro Ortiz
10:35 a.m.
Matti Schmid, Trevor Cone, Sebastian Vazquez
10:46 a.m.
Derek Lamely, MJ Daffue, Omar Morales
1:50 p.m.
Jonas Blixt, Doug Ghim, Stephan Jaeger
2:01 p.m.
Michael Kim, Harry Higgs, Robby Shelton
2:12 p.m.
Martin Trainer, Hank Lebioda, Eric Cole
2:23 p.m.
Jon Rahm, Emiliano Grillo, Alex Noren
2:34 p.m.
Lucas Glover, Gary Woodland, Austin Smotherman
2:45 p.m.
Matt Wallace, Garrick Higgo, Richy Werenski
2:56 p.m.
D.A. Points, Beau Hossler, Callum Tarren
3:07 p.m.
Kevin Streelman, George McNeill, Wyndham Clark
3:18 p.m.
Sean O’Hair, Patrick Rodgers, Brandon Wu
3:29 p.m.
Kyle Westmoreland, Ryan Gerard, Cristobal Del Solar
3:40 p.m.
Harry Hall, Kevin Roy, Jose Toledo
3:51 p.m.
Boo Weekley, Vincent Norrman, Mateo Fernandez De Oliveira

10th tee

Tee time Players
8:45 a.m.
Jimmy Walker, Bill Haas, Greyson Sigg
8:56 a.m.
William McGirt, Byeong Hun An, Andrew Novak
9:07 a.m.
Andrew Putnam, James Hahn, Wlill Gordon
9:18 a.m.
Nico Echavarria, Tony Finau, Camilo Villegas
9:29 a.m.
Luke List, Cameron Champ, Brandon Matthews
9:40 a.m.
Chez Reavie, Erik van Rooyen, Francesco Molinari
9:51 a.m.
Brice Garnett, Arjun Atwal, Matthias Schwab
10:02 a.m.
Patton Kizzire, Ben Martin, S.Y. Noh
10:13 a.m.
Scott Piercy, Kyle Stanley, Aaron Baddeley
10:24 a.m.
Austin Eckroat, Augusto Nunez, Zach Bauchou
10:35 a.m.
Scott Harrington, Carl Yuan, Alejandro Tosti
10:46 a.m.
Tano Goya, Nicolai Hojgaard, Roberto Lebrija
1:50 p.m.
Greg Chalmers, Kevin Stadler, D.J. Trahan
2:01 p.m.
Sung Kang, Grayson Murray, Fabian Gomez
2:12 p.m.
Wesley Bryan, Peter Malnati, S.H. Kim
2:23 p.m.
Martin Laird, Taylor Pendrith, Alex Smalley
2:34 p.m.
Mark Hubbard, Doc Redman, Max McGreevy
2:45 p.m.
Derek Ernst, Scott Brown, Cameron Percy
2:56 p.m.
Nate Lashley, Nick Watney, Jonathan Byrd
3:07 p.m.
Austin Cook, Ryan Armour, Ben Crane
3:18 p.m.
Cody Gribble, Tommy Gainey, Ben Taylor
3:29 p.m.
Dylan Wu, Akshay Bhatia, Steve Jurgensen
3:40 p.m.
Carson Young, Paul Haley II, Jose Cristobal Islas
3:51 p.m.
Zecheng Dou, Trevor Werbylo, Raul Pereda

TV, streaming, radio information

You can watch Golf Channel for free on fuboTV. ESPN+ is the exclusive home for PGA Tour Live streaming. All times Eastern.

Friday, April 28

TV

Golf Channel: 3:30-6:30 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 1-6:30 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 8:45 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
Peacock: 3:30-6:30 p.m.

Saturday, April 29

TV

Golf Channel: 1-3 p.m.
CBS: 3-6 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.
Peacock: 1-3 p.m.
Paramount+: 3-6 p.m.

Sunday, April 30

TV

Golf Channel: 1-3 p.m.
CBS: 3-6 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.
Peacock: 1-3 p.m.
Paramount+: 3-6 p.m.

We occasionally recommend interesting products, services, sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/Onlb69y
LPGA: Linnea Johansson, No. 358 in the world, leads after 64 at Wilshire Country Club

LPGA: Linnea Johansson, No. 358 in the world, leads after 64 at Wilshire Country Club

LPGA: Linnea Johansson, No. 358 in the world, leads after 64 at Wilshire Country Club

Linnea Johansson ranks 358th in the world, but the Swede’s opening 7-under 64 puts her atop the leaderboard early at the JM Eagle LA Championship. Johansson hit all 14 fairways, 15 greens and took 26 putts in her fifth round on tour this season. It marks the first time she’s broken par.

“I’ve been working a lot on my swing and trying to get a little bit more consistent ball flight, and I think that was very helpful today because I was able to attack a little bit more of the pins out there and give myself chances,” said Johansson of her bogey-free day. “The greens can be tricky, a lot going on, but I managed to read them and match the speed today, and they dropped for me.”

Johansson, 29, began her career at Nova Southeastern before transferring to Oklahoma State. After several seasons on the Epson Tour, she earned her LPGA card in 2020 and is still looking for her first career top-10 finish. Eight of the top-10 players in the world at in the field in Los Angeles.

“Obviously it’s been a little ride for me the past couple of years, struggling a little bit out here,” said Johansson. “The girls are good. It’s the best players in the world, so it should be tough, and so it is. It’s tough for everybody.

“But days when it clicks and when you really hit the shots that you want and manage to roll putts in, that’s the days you really enjoy it a little bit more, and it’s competitive out here, but starting off the tournament here like this, it’s great.”

Minjee Lee, a former champ at Wilshire Country Club, holds a share of second with Gemma Dryburgh.

Cristie Kerr opened with a 67. The 45-year-old is making her fourth start to the season this week, with her best finish, a 73rd, coming at the Lotte Championship.

Lilia Vu, last week’s winner at the Chevron Championship, shot 69.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/Onlb69y