PGA Championship: Why do caddies hold an umbrella over the ball on tee shots?

Golf balls can behave very differently when they are covered in rain.

ROCHESTER, N.Y. — With rain soaking Oak Hill Country Club on Saturday, the 2023 PGA Championship is testing every player’s ability to hit shots in soggy conditions while trying to stay dry.

But as the golfers prepare to hit their tee shots, you may notice that caddies hold an umbrella over the ball instead of their player. There’s a good reason for that.

Modern rain suits do an excellent job of keeping players dry, and unlike the foul-weather gear from 20 or 30 years ago, today’s jackets and pants are breathable, so golfers don’t feel clammy. Rain gloves actually get tackier as they get wetter, and waterproof footwear does an amazing job of keeping golfers’ feet dry. So golfers can stay fairly dry even in heavy downpours.

Golf balls, on the other hand, can behave very differently when they are covered in rain.

The grooves of an iron can not dig into or grab the cover of a wet ball as easily as they can a dry ball. As a result, instead of compressing against the face at the moment of impact, wet golf balls tend to slide up the hitting surface, which produces a shot that flies higher and with less spin.

Sahith Theegala
Carl Smith, Sahith Theegala’s caddy, keeps his ball dry on the first tee Saturday at the 2023 PGA Championship. (David Dusek/Golfweek)

The same thing happens, to a slightly lesser degree, when players hit a wet ball with a driver, even though drivers don’t have grooves. The wet ball skims up the face and comes off with less spin, making its flight less controllable.

So on tee shots and putts, when a player has a chance to pick up his ball and place it either on a tee or the green, caddies focus on keeping it dry.

You will also notice that many players reach for a towel (which is often hanging in the spokes of their umbrella) and dry the face of the club they are about to use. Again, it’s to help create the driest contact possible.

Callaway Chrome Soft X
Golf balls that are wet are harder to spin and control. (David Dusek/Golfweek)

On shots played from the fairway or around the green, there is no point in holding an umbrella over the ball because it is already wet. To reduce the effects of water getting between the ball and the edges of the grooves, many manufacturers design the grooves of wedges to be wider and deeper than the grooves found in irons, creating a channel-like effect that helps to enhance spin. Some companies also have microgrooves and surface-roughening treatments on their wedges to improve performance in wet conditions, but the main grooves are doing most of the work when it rains.

If players are able to hit pitch shots and chip shots with good spin, there is no guarantee that the ball will stop the way it typically would on a dry green. Low, spinning shots often hydroplane and slide on wet grass, reducing the effects of spin, while high-spinning shots that come down more vertically often peal back on rain-softened greens.

On rainy days, gauging exactly how the ball will react coming off the face and how it will behave on it hits the green is a skill that is as valuable as green reading.

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2023 PGA Championship tee times for Saturday’s third round at Oak Hill

Here’s everything you need to know for Saturday’s third round of the PGA Championship.

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Two days of the PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, New York, are in the books, and big names are all over the leaderboard.

Scottie Scheffler, Viktor Hovland and Corey Conners are tied for the lead at 5 under, while Justin Suh and Bryson DeChambeau are tied for fourth at 3 under. Brooks Koepka is 2 under through two rounds, and Rory McIlroy is two behind at even par.

There were several big names that missed the weekend, including Rickie Fowler, Cameron Young and Tom Kim.

Here’s everything you need to know for Saturday’s third round of the 2023 PGA Championship at Oak Hill.

More PGALive updates | How to watch

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Saturday tee times

1st tee

Tee time Player
8:10 a.m.
Mark Hubbard, Rikuya Hoshino
8:20 a.m.
Yannik Paul, Denny McCarthy
8:30 a.m.
Jordan Spieth, Lee Hodges
8:40 a.m.
Zach Johnson, Justin Thomas
8:50 a.m.
Patrick Rodgers, Kazuki Higa
9 a.m.
Alex Smalley, Thomas Detry
9:10 a.m.
Tyrrell Hatton, Phil Mickelson
9:20 a.m.
Tony Finau, Chris Kirk
9:30 a.m.
Taylor Montgomery, Thomas Pieters
9:40 a.m.
Adrain Meronk, Dean Burmester
10 a.m.
Cameron Smith, Jon Rahm
10:10 a.m.
Thriston Lawerence, Tom Hoge
10:20 a.m.
Xander Schauffele, Ben Taylor
10:30 a.m.
Chez Reavie, Lucas Herbert
10:40 a.m.
Taylor Moore, Pablo Larrazabal
10:50 a.m.
Sam Stevens, Padraig Harrington
11 a.m.
Joel Dahmen, Nicolai Hojgaard
11:10 a.m.
Adam Hadwin, Matt Wallace
11:20 a.m.
Hideki Matsuyama, Max Homa
11:30 a.m.
Patrick Reed, Tommy Fleetwood
11:40 am.
Hayden Buckley, Sihwan Kim
12 p.m.
Sahith Theegala, J.T. Poston
12:10 p.m.
Stephan Jaeger, Victor Perez
12:20 p.m.
Collin Morikawa, Adam Scott
12:30 p.m.
Beau Hossler, Kurt Kitayama
12:40 p.m.
K.H. Lee, Harold Varner III
12:50 p.m.
Eric Cole, Ryan Fox
1 p.m.
Patrick Cantlay, Mito Pereira
1:10 p.m.
Cam Davis, Dustin Johnson
1:20 p.m.
Keegan Bradley, Matt NeSmith
1:40 p.m.
Rory McIlroy, Shane Lowry
1:50 p.m.
Min Woo Lee, Adam Svensson
2 p.m.
Sepp Straka, Keith Mitchell
2:10 p.m.
Justin Rose, Michael Block
2:20 p.m.
Callum Tarren, Taylor Pendrith
2:30 p.m.
Bryson DeChambeau, Brooks Koepka
2:40 p.m.
Viktor Hovland, Justin Suh
2:50 p.m.
Scottie Scheffler, Corey Conners

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PGA Championship: Justin Rose continues comeback with 69-70 start at Oak Hill

“This is just going to be four days of kind of getting the most out of each day.”

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ROCHESTER, N.Y. — With so much attention paid to younger European stars like Jon Rahm, Rory McIlroy and Viktor Hovland, it’s easy to forget that England’s Justin Rose, who is now 42, was one of the elite ball strikers in golf just a few years ago. He possessed a fantastic blend of power with consistency, both off the tee and from the fairway, and those traits helped him win the 2013 U.S. Open at Merion, along with seven PGA Tour events between 2010 and 2015. He won the 2018 FedEx Cup and attained the No. 1 spot on the Official World Golf Ranking. His shortcoming was putting, but when he caught a hot week with his putter, Rose was almost unbeatable.

Then a series of injuries sidetracked Rose, including a back injury that forced him to withdraw from the 150th British Open at St. Andrews.

But while his results faltered (Rose missed five cuts in 18 PGA Tour events last season and recorded just two top 10s), his game was actually improving and in February, Rose broke through at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am to earn his first PGA Tour victory since the 2019 Farmers Insurance Open.

2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am
Justin Rose poses with the trophy on the 18th hole during the continuation of the final round of the 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am at Pebble Beach Golf Links. (Photo: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports)

Now, at Oak Hill Country Club, he is flashing the form of a player who might be able to contend again at a major. Rose shot 70 in the second round of the PGA Championship and heads into the weekend at 1 under par. With rain and wind expected on Saturday, he’s in contention.

“I think, historically, I’ve won typically on harder golf courses than not, so I think [Oak Hill] fits my profile from that point of view,” Rose said after signing his card Friday. “This is right up there. This is kind of, it feels a little bit of a hybrid kind of PGA-U.S. Open, yeah, this week. Looking forward to the test.”

Ironically, while great ball striking was the hallmark of Rose’s game since he turned pro in 1999, his putting has been his strength in recent years. As you can see in the chart below, he has consistently been among the best putters on the PGA Tour for the last three seasons. Now healthy, his iron game is returning to form, and that could make him a contender at Oak Hill.

Rose’s win at Pebble Beach also carries weight here in Rochester where he was asked if winning in February gave him confidence.

“Just proving that you can win again, I felt, was the biggest thing for me,” he said. “Not necessarily just winning, but how I won. I felt very, very comfortable once I kind of got into that winning position, and it was kind of clear that it was going to be right now or never. I kind of really settled into it well. I feel like that was kind of the biggest learning at Pebble. Those conditions versus these conditions, I think they’re completely different. This is a whole other test. But yeah, just I’ve done it before, and just the fact of knowing I can do it again is important.”

A loose pitch shot on the sixth hole lead to a bogey on Friday, and his tee shot went into the left rough on the seventh, leading to another bogey. For the day, he hit just one of 14 fairways off the tee, and when he was asked how he could shoot 70 hitting only one fairway he laughed and said, “Smoke and mirrors, I guess.”

Smoke and mirrors won’t work for 36 more holes, but if Rose continues to putt well and can straighten out his driving, he has proven that he remembers how to win.

“This is just going to be four days of kind of getting the most out of each day.”

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2023 PGA Championship tee times for Friday’s second round at Oak Hill

Everything you need to know for the second round of the 2023 PGA Championship.

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The eyes of the golf world are on Upstate New York for the second men’s major championship of the season.

The world’s best players have descended upon Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, New York, for the 105th playing of the PGA Championship, the fourth time the PGA of America has chosen the Donald Ross design to host its signature men’s event.

Day 1 at Oak Hill is in the books and big names are scattered across the leaderboard. Bryson DeChambeau opened with a 4-under 68, Scottie Scheffler shot a 3-under 67 while Jon Rahm stumbled to a 6-over 76.

However, it’s Eric Cole at the top as he’s 5 under through 14 holes. The first round was suspended due to darkness.

Here’s everything you need to know for Friday’s second round of the 2023 PGA Championship at Oak Hill.

More PGA: Live updates | How to watch

Friday tee times

1st tee

Time Players
7 a.m. Sam Ryder, Gabe Reynolds, Brandon Wu
7:11 a.m. Sadom Kaewkanjana, Ben Kern, Thorbjorn Olesen
7:22 a.m. Webb Simpson, Y.E. Yang, Danny Willett
7:33 a.m. Sepp Straka, Harris English, Robert Macintyre
7:44 a.m. Thomas Pieters, Keith Mitchell, Pablo Larrazabal
7:55 a.m. Lucas Herbert, Brian Harman, Callum Shinkwin
8:06 a.m. Tom Kim, Sam Burns, Abraham Ancer
8:17 a.m. Sungjae Im, Chris Kirk. Seamus Power
8:28 a.m. Si Woo Kim, Stephan Jaeger, Anirban Lahiri
8:39 a.m. Victor Perez, Aaron Wise, Jordan Smith
8:50 a.m. Chris Sanger, J.J. Spaun, David Micheluzzi
9:01 a.m. Thomas Detry, J.J. Killeen, Matt Wallace
9:12 a.m. Nick Hardy, Greg Koch, Eric Cole
12:30 p.m. Trey Mullinax, Josh Speight, Kazuki Higa
12:41 p.m. Adam Schenk, Colin Inglis, Thriston Lawrence
12:52 p.m. Min Woo Lee, Andrew Putnam, Emiliano Grillo
1:03 p.m. Harold Varner III, Scott Stallings, Nicolai Hojgaard
1:14 p.m. Steve Holmes, Adrian Otaegui, Davis Riley
1:25 p.m. Scottie Scheffler, Brooks Koepka, Gary Woodland
1:36 p.m. Rory McIlroy, Justin Thomas, Collin Morikawa
1:47 p.m. Shane Lowry, Jordan Spieth, Viktor Hovland
1:58 p.m. Matthew Fitzpatrick, Cameron Smith, Jon Rahm
2:09 p.m. Luke Donald, Adrian Meronk, Yannik Paul
2:20 p.m. Kenny Pigman, Davis Thompson, Maverick McNealy
2:31 p.m. Keegan Bradley, Jason Day, Bryson DeChambeau
2:42 p.m. Jesse Droemer, Matt NeSmith, Rikuya Hoshino

10th tee

Time Players
7:05 a.m. Matt Cahill, Taylor Montgomery, Cam Davis
7:16 a.m. Michael Block, Hayden Buckley, Taylor Pendrith
7:27 a.m. Alex Beach, Brendon Todd, Sihwan Kim
7:38 a.m. Patrick Reed, Rasmus Hojgaard, Nick Taylor
7:49 a.m. Christiaan Bezuidenhout, John Somers, Chez Reavie
8 a.m. Tommy Fleetwood, Cameron Young, Hideki Matsuyama
8:11 a.m. Adam Scott, Max Homa, Tony Finau
8:22 a.m. Xander Schauffele, Tyrrell Hatton, Dustin Johnson
8:33 a.m. Patrick Cantlay, Rickie Fowler, Phil Mickelson
8:44 a.m. Alex Smalley, Russell Henley, Mito Pereira
8:55 a.m. Adam Hadwin, Matt Kuchar, Talor Gooch
9:06 a.m. Justin Rose, Billy Horschel, Francesco Molinari
9:17 a.m. Russell Grove, Patrick Rodgers, Ben Taylor
12:25 p.m. Shaun Micheel, Braden Shattuck, Steven Alker
12:36 p.m. Ben Griffin, Chris French, Joel Dahmen
12:47 p.m. Wyatt Worthington II, Nico Echavarria, Wyndham Clark
12:58 p.m. Tom Hoge, Ryan Fox, K.H. Lee
1:09 p.m. Paul Casey, Adam Svensson, Beau Hossler
1:20 p.m. Zach Johnson, Kurt Kitayama, Sahith Theegala
1:31 p.m. Corey Conners, Ockie Strydom, Joaquin Niemann
1:42 p.m. Kevin Kisner, Jimmy Walker, Padraig Harrington
1:53 p.m. Alex Noren, J.T. Poston, Mackenzie Hughes
2:04 p.m. Lee Hodges, Callum Tarren, David Lingmerth
2:15 p.m. Taylor Moore, Denny McCarthy, Brendan Steele
2:26 p.m. Jeremy Wells, Justin Suh, Adri Arnaus
2:37 p.m. Anthony Cordes, Mark Hubbard, Dean Burmester

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2023 PGA Championship: A slimmer, happier and more hopeful Bryson DeChambeau shoots 66 at Oak Hill

“Luckily, I was able to play some really good golf, hit a lot of fairways, did my job and made some putts.”

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ROCHESTER, N.Y. — A year ago, Bryson DeChambeau looked like he could start at nose tackle for the Buffalo Bills, but on Thursday at Oak Hill Country Club, where he shot an opening round 66, the 29-year-old looked more like a running back or a safety.

The 2020 U.S. Open winner still has broad shoulders and a muscular frame, but the bulk he amassed chugging protein shakes, putting himself through grueling workouts and training his body to maximize speed is gone. So is the sour demeanor, at least for a day. Shooting 66 will do that, but DeChambeau seemed more upbeat about his play than he has been in over a year.

That said, Thursday’s performance was not something DeChambeau saw coming.

“I was looking at [the course] throughout the week and was like, ‘Man, I don’t know how shooting under par is even possible out here,'” DeChambeau said. “Luckily, I was able to play some really good golf, hit a lot of fairways, did my job and made some putts.”

Before the tournament started, pundits and players were comparing Oak Hill to a U.S. Open venue, possibly Winged Foot or Bethpage Black, with thick rough, narrow fairways and tricky greens. DeChambeau saw it too and played a U.S. Open-style golf Thursday, hitting nine of 14 fairways off the tee and 15 of 18 greens in regulation. He also averaged 347 yards per tee shot — the man still has crazy speed — but Thursday’s consistency is what DeCheambeau has been missing for over a year.

“It’s been a while, so it was nice to come back and start to finally figure out what’s going on with my golf swing,” he said. “As I’ve told you guys before, I’ve struggled with my driving. You see me out there on the range, that’s something I don’t want to do. I don’t want to be out there all night, but I’ve had to figure out what I did so well in 2018 and what made me so successful then. I feel like I’m catching on and trending in that direction. I figured out a couple of things this week, and it certainly paid off today.”

The physical transformation started after DeChambeau couldn’t figure out why he felt tired, sick and run down about a year ago. He took a blood test that checked for allergies and food sensitivities and discovered he needed to make some changes.

“I was allergic to corn, wheat, gluten, dairy, pretty much everything I liked, I couldn’t eat,” he said with a smile. “I took that out. Started taking it out in August and over the course of time I’ve lost all this inflammation, lost a lot of fat and slimmed down like crazy. I lost 18 pounds in 24 days. It was crazy. It wasn’t fat. It was all water weight.”

Bryson DeChambeau
Fans were eager for high-fives and fist bumps with Bryson DeChambeau as he walked off the 18th green Thursday at Oak Hill Country Club. (David Dusek/Golfweek)

Going from 5,500 calories a day to 2,900, and losing weight, has not decreased DeChambeau’s power. Thursday, he hit 6-iron, 8-iron into the 462-yard seventh hole.

“It’s still an asset, and it was a fun experiment, but I definitely want to play some good golf now,” DeChambeau said.

The physical changes DeChambeau has made are easy to see, but the mental struggles he has been trying to overcome are not apparent from the outside. When players who have achieved success start to struggle, like everyone else, they begin to question themselves. DeChambeau, who missed the cut at the Masters and finished T-56 at the 2022 U.S. Open before joining the LIV Tour last summer, also missed the cut last month at the 2023 Masters. His best finish in a no-cut, 48-man field LIV event was 10th last year in Chicago. He admits that he wondered if he’d ever play elite golf again.

“The emotions have definitely fluctuated pretty high and pretty low, thinking I have something and it fails and going back and forth,” DeChambeau said. “It’s humbling. Golf, and life, always have a good way of kicking you on your you know what when you are on your high horse.”

It’s hard to know whether the rest of the 2023 PGA Championship will challenge DeChambeau more physically or mentally. He’ll be happy if he keeps hitting fairways and making putts, like any other golfer. If he spends the day on Friday hacking out of the rough, watching approach shots find bunkers and putts lip out, his attitude will be tested.

Thursday showed that Bryson DeChambeau can still shoot a low round on a tough golf course in a major. Thursday, that was enough for him.

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PGA Championship history: Jack Nicklaus’ win at Oak Hill in 1980 showed his dominance and versatility

“Frankly, I hit the ball poorly all week,” Nicklaus said. “But my putter was fantastic. I ran the tables with my putter.”

When Jack Nicklaus came to Oak Hill Country Club’s East Course in 1980 for the 62nd playing of the PGA Championship, he had already reclaimed his spot on a pedestal atop the golf world.

After failing to capture a single PGA Tour win during the 1979 season, marking the first time that had happened since he joined the Tour in 1962, there were whispers that the game had passed the Golden Bear by. Many were looking to a corps of younger players that included Fuzzy Zoeller and Seve Ballesteros, both of whom captured majors during the ‘79 campaign, to dominate the game’s mantle.

But Nicklaus ended any premature talk about his demise when he posted an impressive victory at Baltusrol in the U.S. Open during the spring of 1980. And after securing his first major of a new decade, Nicklaus came to Oak Hill, a course he had long appreciated, with a chance to secure a fifth PGA Championship and a 17th major.

But to understand the origins of his passion and desire to win the Wanamaker Trophy, one needs to step back 30 years earlier, when the 1950 PGA Championship was held at Scioto Country Club in Columbus, Ohio, where the Nicklaus family had a membership.

With the help of his teacher, Scioto’s head professional Jack Grout, a 10-year-old Nicklaus gained access to the locker room to meet many of the stars of the game, including acquiring autographs from Hall of Famer Sam Snead, eventual champion Chandler Harper, who had been assigned to father Charlie Nicklaus’s locker, and most memorably Lloyd Mangrum.

“I can still see that slim, dark figure sitting at a table with a fan of cards in one hand and a glass of hooch in the other and a cigarette dangling from his lips, and recall how intimidated I was when he turned to me and gave me that famous tough look of his and snarled, ‘Whaddya want, kid?’ ” Nicklaus wrote in My Story, his 1997 autobiography. “But he signed my autograph book, and I remember being extremely proud of my courage in standing up to such a fearsome character.”

Nicklaus often has credited that experience with shaping his desire to be a professional golfer when he grew up.

Jack Nicklaus poses with the PGA Championship trophy at Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, N.Y., Sunday, Aug. 10, 1980

By the time he came to Oak Hill, courage and Nicklaus were synonymous. Perhaps the most intriguing piece of perspective in what was a truly dominant performance during the 1980 event was Nicklaus’ inaccuracy off the tee. After looking sharp through the first few months that summer, the Ohio native sprayed the ball around a course that demands precision.

He had one secret weapon, however — a putter that was almost as hot as Western New York temperatures that climbed into the 90s.

“Prior to the PGA Championship at Oak Hill, I had played pretty well that year,” Nicklaus said. “Unfortunately, going into that tournament, I started hitting the ball poorly. And frankly, I hit the ball poorly all week. But my putter was fantastic. I ran the tables with my putter.”

Nicklaus opened the tournament with rounds of 70 and 69, and he first trailed leader Craig Stadler and then Dr. Gil Morgan, who took the lead at the tournament’s midpoint.

Jack Nicklaus, who led the PGA at the end of the third round, blasts out of the sand on the seventh hole of the Oak Hill Country Club during fourth round of the PGA Championship in Rochester, N.Y., Sunday, Aug. 10, 1980.

In the third round, however, Nicklaus was scintillating on the greens, making up for wayward shots by draining a multitude of important putts. By the end of the day, he’d gone from a stroke down to up three on Lon Hinkle.

“I hit the ball all over the place,” he later said. “And when you hit the ball all over the place and still shoot 66 that’s pretty good.”

On Sunday, with a commanding lead, the Golden Bear coasted home to a comfortable win over runner-up Andy Bean, who finished seven shots behind. His margin of victory was the best in PGA Championship history until surpassed by Rory McIlroy’s effort at the Ocean Course of the Kiawah Island Golf Resort.

With the win, Nicklaus earned his fifth and final Wanamaker trophy, locking him in a tie with hometown hero Walter Hagen for the all-time PGA Championship record. He would only go on to win one more major, the 1986 Masters.

Nicklaus has heaped praise on the course through the years, one that ranks 42nd on Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses list, just a single spot behind Southern Hills, which hosted the 2022 PGA Championship.

“Oak Hill is a beautiful, northern, tree‑lined, softly‑rolling piece of property that was very enjoyable to play. It’s a good test,” Nicklaus said. “Nobody has ever really chewed it apart, and it’s one you’ve got to play smart on, but you’ve got to control your golf ball, and you’ve also got to putt, because the greens are not easy greens.”

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak contributed to this report.

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PGA Championship: Cameron Young feels at home at Oak Hill

Cameron Young has remained soft-spoken, offering little fodder for journalists seeking juicy quotes or exhilarating fist-pumps.

ROCHESTER, N.Y. — There are golfers who possess undeniable charisma, like Rory McIlroy or the LPGA Tour’s captivating Maria Fassi. They effortlessly command attention, whether they’re standing on the tee box or engaging in hushed conversations with their caddies. Spectators, television audiences and media members alike can’t look away.

Cameron Young is just the opposite. Since his arrival on the PGA Tour last year, the 26-year-old has remained soft-spoken, offering little fodder for journalists seeking juicy quotes in the media tent or exhilarating fist-pumps on the 18th green. However, for anyone looking to see an exhibition of raw power that seems destined to secure major championships and play a pivotal role in future Ryder Cups, then Cameron Young is the man to watch.

This week’s tournament is not a home game for Young, who grew up playing at Sleepy Hollow Golf Club, 300 miles southeast of Rochester in Briarcliff Manor, New York, but it feels like one.

“Even walking down the first hole today, there’s something familiar about just the grasses and kind of the weather that I feel like is unique to this part of the country,” Young said. “It was beautiful out there today, and even just something as simple as that just feels very familiar to me.”

Sleepy Hollow Golf Club owes its creation to the legendary golf course architects Charles Blair Macdonald, Seth Raynor and A.W. Tillinghast. Oak Hill, another esteemed New York course, was masterfully designed by Donald Ross. Both courses exude a traditional pedigree, challenging golfers to navigate treacherous bunkers, evade the unforgiving rough, and conquer undulating greens. It’s a style of play that Young comprehends and embraces wholeheartedly.

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“To get some really tight, bent-grass, poa-annua fairways [like here at Oak Hill] is really fun for me. I think it’s really rewarding with your iron play,” Young said. “I think it opens the door to hit a bunch of shots that you can’t necessarily [play at] other places, so that’s something that I really enjoy. I think the chipping, the wedges and the iron play off those really tight fairways is something that I look forward to any time we get to come up this way.”

In addition to his third-place finish at last season’s PGA Championship, the former Wake Forest standout was the runner-up at the British Open and finished T-7 at this season’s Masters. Since January 2022, he has moved from 134th to 15th this week on the Official World Golf Ranking, so no one will be surprised if he’s in the mix again, and Young’s even-keeled demeanor seems ideal for the big stages. He doesn’t get overwhelmed by the moment.

For Young, last year’s PGA Championship was a significant milestone. “I had finished high in big tournaments, but having a chance to win a major on a Sunday was a little different,” he said. “I would say the level of comfort did kind of sneak up on me.”

Young shaved his beard a few days ago after his wife said, “Why don’t you shave,” so you may not recognize him on Thursday when he tees off at at 1:25 with Tommy Fleetwood and Hideki Matsuyama. What you might recognize on Sunday evening, however, is Young’s name on the first page of the leaderboard.

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‘I feel like a different player’: Tony Finau on his major progress and why he’s the perfect fit for the 2023 PGA Championship at Oak Hill

“More confident in my game and my abilities than I’ve ever been and just who I am as a person and as a player.”

Tony Finau made his first appearance in the PGA Championship during his rookie season on the PGA Tour in 2015.

He was in contention during the third round on Saturday, and while he didn’t end up winning – Finau finished T-10 – it was then that he knew he was major material.

“It was cool just to get a taste of it,” said Finau on Tuesday ahead of the 2023 PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, New York. “At that time I think I knew that someday I could win a major championship. It didn’t happen that week and hasn’t happened since, but it definitely gave me a fun taste of what major championship golf was like and that my game is fit for major championships.”

Finau’s major championship history started at the PGA, so it’s only fitting that his first major title come at the PGA of America’s premier event, especially given his current form. Finau has two wins and four top 10s this season, most recently at the Mexico Open just last month.

“I feel like a different player, more so than I’ve ever been. More confident in my game and my abilities than I’ve ever been and just who I am as a person and as a player,” Finau explained. “I think those things will serve me well as I continue down my path in my career.”

More PGA: Expert picks, odds | Sleepers | Live updates

Not only is he in good form, but Finau’s game is a perfect fit for the demanding Donald Ross test that is Oak Hill.

“You’ve got to hit it far and you’ve got to hit it straight,” said Finau, who ranks 17th in total driving, third in Strokes Gaines: Tee-to-Green and first in Strokes Gained: Approach this season. “This golf course is going to start from the tee box. If you’re not hitting enough fairways, you’re not going to be able to play this place very good.”

Players want to treat every week as if they’re the same, but we all know the majors are different. That said, the quest for a first major win doesn’t change Finau’s approach.

“I don’t think the recipe changes too much for me with the type of golf I’ve been playing lately,” he explained. “I’ve won four times in the last calendar — if we kind of go back, the last calendar year, so it just tells me that my game is better than it’s ever been, and confidence I think is as high as it’s ever been leading up into major season.”

“That’s the exciting part for me, and I look forward to this week.”

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Rory McIlroy, Justin Thomas and Collin Morikawa: These featured groups for the 2023 PGA Championship at Oak Hill are loaded

Which groups are you watching on Thursday?

The second men’s major championship of 2023 is here as the best players in the game are in Rochester, New York, for the PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club.

Justin Thomas is the defending champion thanks to his playoff win over Will Zalatoris last year at Southern Hills in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

The betting favorite, however, is Scottie Scheffler (+700), the No. 2-ranked player in the Official World Golf Ranking. Scheffler most recently tied for fifth at the AT&T Byron Nelson. Jon Rahm is next on the odds list at +750 followed by Rory McIlroy at +1400.

Golf fans across the world owe a thank you note to the folks responsible to putting together the featured groups this week.

Here are some of the best threesomes set to tee it up Thursday. All tee times ET.

More PGA: Live updates | Odds, expert picks | Full tee times

2023 PGA Championship tee times for Thursday’s first round at Oak Hill

Everything you need to know for the first round at Oak Hill.

The eyes of the golf world are on Upstate New York for the second men’s major championship of the season.

The world’s best players have descended upon Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, New York, for the 105th playing of the PGA Championship, the fourth time the PGA of America has chosen the Donald Ross design to host its signature men’s event.

With a world class field comes some can’t miss groupings, and the first two rounds will feature a handful of star-studded groups.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for Thursday’s first round of the 2023 PGA Championship at Oak Hill.

More PGA: Live updates | Odds, expert picks | How to watch

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Thursday tee times

1st tee

Time Players
7 a.m. Shaun Micheel, Braden Shattuck, Steven Alker
7:11 a.m. Ben Griffin, Chris French, Joel Dahmen
7:22 a.m. Wyatt Worthington II, Nico Echavarria, Wyndham Clark
7:33 a.m. Tom Hoge, Ryan Fox, K.H. Lee
7:44 a.m. Paul Casey, Adam Svensson, Beau Hossler
7:55 a.m. Zach Johnson, Kurt Kitayama, Sahith Theegala
8:06 a.m. Corey Conners, Ockie Strydom, Joaquin Niemann
8:17 a.m. Kevin Kisner, Jimmy Walker, Padraig Harrington
8:28 a.m. Alex Noren, J.T. Poston, Mackenzie Hughes
8:39 a.m. Lee Hodges, Callum Tarren, David Lingmerth
8:50 a.m. Taylor Moore, Denny McCarthy, Brendan Steele
9:01 a.m. Jeremy Wells, Justin Suh, Adri Arnaus
9:12 a.m. Anthony Cordes, Mark Hubbard, Dean Burmester
12:30 p.m. Matt Cahill, Taylor Montgomery, Cam Davis
12:41 p.m. Michael Block, Hayden Buckley, Taylor Pendrith
12:52 p.m. Alex Beach, Brendon Todd, Sihwan Kim
1:03 p.m. Patrick Reed, Rasmus Hojgaard, Nick Taylor
1:14 p.m. Christiaan Bezuidenhout, John Somers, Chez Reavie
1:25 p.m. Tommy Fleetwood, Cameron Young, Hideki Matsuyama
1:36 p.m. Adam Scott, Max Homa, Tony Finau
1:47 p.m. Xander Schauffele, Tyrrell Hatton, Dustin Johnson
1:58 p.m. Patrick Cantlay, Rickie Fowler, Phil Mickelson
2:09 p.m. Alex Smalley, Russell Henley, Mito Pereira
2:20 p.m. Adam Hadwin, Matt Kuchar, Talor Gooch
2:31 p.m. Justin Rose, Billy Horschel, Francesco Molinari
2:42 p.m. Russell Grove, Patrick Rodgers, Ben Taylor

10th tee

Time Players
7:05 a.m. Trey Mullinax, Josh Speight, Kazuki Higa
7:16 a.m. Adam Schenk, Colin Inglis, Thriston Lawrence
7:27 a.m. Min Woo Lee, Andrew Putnam, Emiliano Grillo
7:38 a.m. Harold Varner III, Scott Stallings, Nicolai Hojgaard
7:49 a.m. Steve Holmes, Adrian Otaegui, Davis Riley
8 a.m. Scottie Scheffler, Brooks Koepka, Gary Woodland
8:11 a.m. Rory McIlroy, Justin Thomas, Collin Morikawa
8:22 a.m. Shane Lowry, Jordan Spieth, Viktor Hovland
8:33 a.m. Matthew Fitzpatrick, Cameron Smith, Jon Rahm
8:44 a.m. Luke Donald, Adrian Meronk, Yannik Paul
8:55 a.m. Kenny Pigman, Davis Thompson, Maverick McNealy
9:06 a.m. Keegan Bradley, Jason Day, Bryson DeChambeau
9:17 a.m. Jesse Droemer, Matt NeSmith, Rikuya Hoshino
12:25 p.m. Sam Ryder, Gabe Reynolds, Brandon Wu
12:36 p.m. Sadom Kaewkanjana, Ben Kern, Thorbjorn Olesen
12:47 p.m. Webb Simpson, Y.E. Yang, Danny Willett
12:58 p.m. Sepp Straka, Harris English, Robert Macintyre
1:09 p.m. Thomas Pieters, Keith Mitchell, Pablo Larrazabal
1:20 p.m. Lucas Herbert, Brian Harman, Callum Shinkwin
1:31 p.m. Tom Kim, Sam Burns, Abraham Ancer
1:42 p.m. Sungjae Im, Chris Kirk. Seamus Power
1:53 p.m. Si Woo Kim, Stephan Jaeger, Anirban Lahiri
2:04 p.m. Victor Perez, Aaron Wise, Jordan Smith
2:15 p.m. Chris Sanger, J.J. Spaun, David Micheluzzi
2:26 p.m. Thomas Detry, J.J. Killeen, Matt Wallace
2:37 p.m. Nick Hardy, Greg Koch, Eric Cole

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