PGA Championship: Round 1 tee times, TV/streaming info

Here are Round 1 tee times and TV and online streaming information for the PGA Championship.

The season’s first major is finally here.

The PGA Championship begins Thursday at TPC Harding Park.

Tiger Woods is in the field along with the world’s top rankings golfers including Justin Thomas, Jon Rahm, Brooks Koepka, Rory McIlroy and Bryson DeChambeau.

The PGA of America announced John Daly and Vijay Singh withdrew Monday due to health concerns and an in jury respectively. Francesco Molinari and Padraig Harrington also withdrew from the PGA Championship due to concerns over traveling to the United States amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Harding Park will be the first TPC course to host a major championship and the fourth municipal course to host. 2020 will also mark the first time San Francisco has hosted a PGA Championship.

Here are first-round tee times and viewing information for the PGA Championship.

Tee times

All times are listed in Eastern.

1st tee

Tee time Players
10 a.m. Brian Harman, Jeff Hart, C.T. Pan
10:11 a.m. Andrew Landry, Rod Perry, Nate Lashley
10:22 a.m. Sung Kang, John O’Leary, Dylan Frittelli
10:33 a.m. Erik van Rooyen, Russell Henley, Carlos Ortiz
10:44 a.m. Ryan Palmer, Kevin Kisner, Michael Thompson
10:55 a.m. Bud Cauley, Lucas Glover, Tyrrell Hatton
11:06 a.m. Alex Beach, Rich Beem, Shaun Micheel
11:17 a.m. Rafa Cabrera Bello, Ryo Ishikawa, Jason Kokrak
11:28 a.m. Bernd Wiesberger, Danny Lee, Vaughn Taylor
11:39 a.m. Keith Mitchell, Marrhias Schwab, Brendan Steele
11:50 a.m. Joel Dahmen, Luke List, Victor Perez
12:01 p.m. Mike Lorenzo-Vera, Marty Jertson, Tom Lewis
12:12 p.m. David Muttitt, Mackenzie Hughes, Harris English
3:30 p.m. Tyler Duncan, J.R. Roth, Christaan Bezuidenhout
3:41 p.m. Lanto Griffin, Rich Berberian, Jr., Joost Luiten
3:52 p.m. Jim Herman, Rob Labritz, Shaun Norris
4:03 p.m. Adam Hadwin, Brandt Snedeker, Xinjun Zhang
4:14 p.m. Kevin Na, Patrick Reed, Robert MacIntyre
4:25 p.m. Matthew  Wolff, Bubba Watson, Graeme McDowell
4:36 p.m. Tommy Fleetwood, Viktor Hovland, Hideki Matsuyama
4:46 p.m. Rickie Fowler, Bryson DeChambeau, Adam Scott
4:58 p.m. Jon Rahm, Phil Mickelson, Sergio Garcia
5:09 p.m. Paul Casey, Ian Poulter, Webb Simpson
5:20 p.m. Matt Wallace, Matt Kuchar, Marc Leishman
5:31 p.m. Sepp Straka, Ryan Vermeer, Si Woo kim
5:42 p.m. Sebastian Muñoz, Justin Bertsch, Benjamin Hebert

10th tee

Tee time Players
10:05 a.m. Scottie Scheffler, Danny Balin, Tom Hoge
10:16 a.m. Mike Auterson, Rory Sabbatini, Nick Taylor
10:27 a.m. Tony Finau, Danny Willett, Patrick Cantlay
10:38 a.m. Martin Kaymer, Jason Dufner, Jason Day
10:49 a.m. Daniel Berger, Xander Schauffele, Steve Stricker
11 a.m. Henrik Stenson, Collin Morikawa, Zach Johnson
11:11 a.m. Brooks Koepka, Gary Woodland, Shane Lowry
11:22 a.m. Jordan Spieth, Dustin Johnson, Justin Rose
11:33 a.m. Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy, Justin Thomas
11:44 a.m. Louis Oosthuizen, Max Homa, Matt Fitzpatrick
11:55 a.m. Abraham Ancer, Charl Schwartzel, Joohyung Kim
12:06 p.m. Corey Conners, Zach J. Johnson, Chez Reavie
12:17 p.m. Scott Piercy, Alex Knoll, Andrew Putnam
3:25 p.m. Bob Sowards, Kurt Kitayama, Richy Werenski
3:36 p.m. Haotong Li, Benny Cook, Jorge Campillo
3:47 p.m. Byeong Hun An, Talor Gooch, Sungjae Im
3:58 p.m. J.T. Poston, Joaquin Niemann, Harold Varner III
4:09 p.m. Ken Tanigawa, Emiliano Grillo, Cameron Tringale
4:20 p.m. Brian Stuard, Jim Furyk, Billy Horschel
4:31 p.m. Matt Jones, Jazz Janewattananond, Kevin Streelman
4:42 p.m. Jimmy Walker, Davis Love III, Keegan Bradley
4:53 p.m. Cameron Smith, Denny McCarthy, Cameron Champ
5:04 p.m. Troy Merritt, Wyndham Clark, Chan Kim
5:15 p.m. Doc Redman, Jason Caron, Brendon Todd
5:26 p.m. Judd Gibb, Lucas Herbert, Mark Hubbard
5:37 p.m. Shawn Warren, Marcus Kinhult, Adam Long

Viewing information

All times are listed in Eastern.

Thursday, Aug. 6

First round Featured Group 1 (one morning, one afternoon): 10 a.m. – 10 p.m., ESPN+
First round Featured Group 2 (one morning, one afternoon): 10 a.m. – 10 p.m., ESPN+
First round TV coverage: 4 – 10 p.m., ESPN
First round coverage: 4 – 10 p.m., SiriusXM (Channel 208 or 92).
PGA Championship Clubhouse Report: 10 p.m., CBS Sports Network

Friday, Aug. 7

Second round Featured Group 1 (one morning, one afternoon): 10 a.m. – 10 p.m., ESPN+
Second round Featured Group 2 (one morning, one afternoon): 10 a.m. – 10 p.m., ESPN+
Second round TV coverage: 4 – 10 p.m., ESPN
Second round coverage: 4 – 10 p.m., SiriusXM (Channel 208 or 92)
PGA Championship Clubhouse Report: 10 p.m., CBS Sports Network

Saturday, Aug. 8

Third round coverage: 11 a.m. – 1 p.m., ESPN+
Third round Featured Group 1 (one morning, one afternoon): 11 a.m. – 10 p.m., ESPN+
Third round Featured Group 2 (one morning, one afternoon): 11 a.m. – 10 p.m., ESPN+
Third round TV coverage: 1 – 4 p.m., ESPN
Third round TV coverage: 4 – 10 p.m., CBS
Third round Featured Hole (No. 18): 4 – 10 p.m., ESPN+
Third round coverage: 4 – 10 p.m., SiriusXM (Channel 208 or 92).
PGA Championship Clubhouse Report: 10 p.m., CBS Sports Network

Sunday, Aug, 9

Final round coverage: 10 a.m. – Noon, ESPN+.
Final round Featured Group 1 (one morning, one afternoon): ESPN+.
Final round Featured Group 2 (one morning, one afternoon): ESPN+.
Final round TV coverage: Noon – 3 p.m., ESPN.
Final round TV coverage: 3 – 9 p.m., CBS.
Final round coverage: 3 – 10 p.m., SiriusXM (Channel 208 or 92).
Final round Featured Hole (No. 18): 3 p.m. – 9 p.m., ESPN+.
PGA Championship Clubhouse Report: 9 p.m., CBS Sports Network

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How to bet Tiger Woods at the PGA Championship: Odds to win & prop bets

Here are the best ways to bet on Tiger Woods at the PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park.

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Tiger Woods will try to win the PGA Championship for a record-tying fifth time this week at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco, California.

A win would also give him the PGA Tour’s all-time record with 83, and it would move him to within two major wins of Jack Nicklaus’ record 18. Below, we look at the best bets for Tiger Woods at the 2020 PGA Championship.


Betting odds | TV | Fantasy power rankingsPlayers to watch


Tiger Woods’ history at TPC Harding Park

Few in this field have any sort of experience at TPC Harding Park, which will host a PGA Tour major for the first time. Woods won the last stroke play event played here: The 2005 WGC-American Express Championship, winning in a playoff over John Daly.

He was also a member of the winning U.S. team at the 2009 Presidents Cup played here.

Tiger Woods’ odds to win the PGA Championship

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Tuesday at 9:17 a.m. ET.

Woods is +3300 to win the PGA Championship. He’s 10th by the betting odds in one of the strongest PGA Tour fields we’ll see in 2020. Tiger enters this week ranked eighth by the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings and ranks eighth in the field. It’s a rare instance of him actually being slightly underpriced to win.

Tiger regularly draws an overabundance of betting action. He was easily the most-heavily bet golfer at the Memorial Tournament ahead of his disappointing T-40 finish.

If you like to bet Tiger, this will likely be your best opportunity this year. He’s only +1600 to win the US Open and +1400 to win the Masters.

Looking to place a bet on Tiger Woods or this tournament? Get some action on it at BetMGM in CO, IN, NJ and WV!  Sign up and bet at BetMGM now!

Best props on Tiger Woods at the PGA Championship

Top 10 finish: +250

Based on Woods’ relative rank in the Golfweek world rankings in this field, he should finish in the top 10. Outside of his 2019 Masters win, his last best result in a major was a runner-up at the 2018 PGA Championship.

The rough is less penal here than at the US Open and his wayward tee shots from the Memorial won’t be as detrimental.

To have a bogey-free round: +500

This one draws a PASS. This is a major and the course will play tough. It has been renovated and lengthened considerably since it last hosted a PGA Tour event. The tight greenside bunkers and tree-lined fairways will also provide plenty of opportunities for high scores.

Top American: +2000

Of the top golfers in the field with meaningful experience at TPC Harding Park, two – Rory McIlroy and Adam Scott – come from outside the US. Justin Thomas (+600) and two-time defending champ Brooks Koepka (+750) pose the biggest threat to Woods’ chances from his home country. Back the experience for a 20-1 return.

Top 5 after 1st round: +800

Woods was five shots back of leader Tony Finau after the opening round of the Memorial following a 71. He was also five shots back of Matt Kuchar after the first round The Genesis Invitational before falling to 68th with a disappointing weekend.

He has had a couple weeks off to rest the back and his best golf is most likely to come earlier in the week.

To make the cut: -223

The reigning Masters champ missed the cut in two of four majors last year, including the PGA Championship but also has a total of three top-10 finishes in his last eight majors. He hasn’t missed a cut since the 2019 Open Championship.

He’s a safe bet to be within the top 65 and ties at the end of Round 2.

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PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park: TV, streaming information

This will be the 30th year that CBS will carry the PGA Championship. Combined with ESPN and ESPN+, there will be 170 hours of TV coverage.

TPC Harding Park had to wait an extra three months for the 102nd PGA Championship but that wait is almost over as golf’s first major of 2020 takes center stage.

Harding Park will be the first TPC course to host a major championship and the fourth municipal course to host. 2020 will also mark the first time San Francisco has hosted a PGA Championship.

CBS is broadcasting the PGA Championship for the 30th consecutive year. ESPN, meanwhile, is carrying the PGA Championship for the first time in 30 years, as the cable network enters the first year of an 11-year deal with the PGA of America.

The subscription-based digital platform ESPN+ will serve as the exclusive streaming partner for the championship. ESPN+ will start its coverage with the opening tee shot on both Thursday and Friday, an event first.

The three outlets will have a combined 170 hours of live coverage, with 134 of those hours on the two ESPN outlets. ESPN+ touting “first-ever opening tee shot to last putt coverage on Thursday and Friday.”

Golf will be live in prime-time till 10 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday and until 9 p.m. for Sunday’s final round.

Nantz, Faldo together again at 18

Jim Nantz will once again anchor the CBS coverage and he’ll be joined in the 18th hole tower in San Francisco by Nick Faldo, who up until now, had been doing his TV commentary from a studio in Orlando because of safety precautions due to the COVID pandemic.

Ian Baker-Finch will be on the 17th hole while Frank Nobilo will be at 16. Dottie Pepper, CBS Sports’ lead on-course reporter, will also be at TPC Harding Park, as will fellow on-course reporters Mark Immelman and Trevor Immelman. The coverage on CBS will include drones, Fly Cams, 4D replays and TopTracer.

Van Pelt, Duval in ESPN’s 18 tower

Scott Van Pelt will be joined by David Duval, who joins ESPN this week. The two will anchor the network’s coverage from the 18th tower.

ESPN’s hole announcers: Sean McDonough, Bob Wischusen and Dave Flemming. ESPN’s on-course reporters: Andy North, Billy Kratzert, Colt Knost and Olin Browne. Featured Group coverage features Matt Barrie, Andrew Catalon, Brian Crowell and Luke Elvy with analysis from Curtis Strange, Jason Bohn, Stuart Appleby and 1996 PGA Championship winner Mark Brooks. On-course reporters will be Jane Crafter, Ned Michaels and Olin Browne.

Even more online

PGAChampionship.com will have exclusive content, such as “PGA Championship LIVE on the Range,” which will provide fans with a live look at “rotating video bays of players as they prepare to compete in this year’s first major. Toptracer analytics will calculate live the distance, spin, ball height and other key data points of each featured competitor,” according to pga.com.

How to watch the TV, streaming coverage

Note that all times listed are ET.

Tuesday, Aug. 4

Preview show revealing groups and tee times as well as news conferences and player interviews: Noon, ESPN+.

Wednesday, Aug. 5

Preview show with news conferences and player interviews: 1 p.m., ESPN+.

Thursday, Aug. 6

First round Featured Group 1 (one morning, one afternoon): 10 a.m. – 10 p.m., ESPN+.

First round Featured Group 2 (one morning, one afternoon): 10 a.m. – 10 p.m., ESPN+.

First round TV coverage: 4 – 10 p.m., ESPN.

First round coverage: 4 – 10 p.m., SiriusXM (Channel 208 or 92).

PGA Championship Clubhouse Report: 10 p.m., CBS Sports Network

Friday, Aug. 7

Second round Featured Group 1 (one morning, one afternoon): 10 a.m. – 10 p.m., ESPN+.

Second round Featured Group 2 (one morning, one afternoon): 10 a.m. – 10 p.m., ESPN+.

Second round TV coverage: 4 – 10 p.m., ESPN.

Second round coverage: 4 – 10 p.m., SiriusXM (Channel 208 or 92).

PGA Championship Clubhouse Report: 10 p.m., CBS Sports Network

Saturday, Aug. 8

Third round coverage: 11 a.m. – 1 p.m., ESPN+.

Third round Featured Group 1 (one morning, one afternoon): 11 a.m. – 10 p.m., ESPN+.

Third round Featured Group 2 (one morning, one afternoon): 11 a.m. – 10 p.m., ESPN+.

Third round TV coverage: 1 – 4 p.m., ESPN.

Third round TV coverage: 4 – 10 p.m., CBS.

Third round Featured Hole (No. 18): 4 – 10 p.m., ESPN+.

Third round coverage: 4 – 10 p.m., SiriusXM (Channel 208 or 92).

PGA Championship Clubhouse Report: 10 p.m., CBS Sports Network

Sunday, Aug, 9

Final round coverage: 10 a.m. – Noon, ESPN+.

Final round Featured Group 1 (one morning, one afternoon): ESPN+.

Final round Featured Group 2 (one morning, one afternoon): ESPN+.

Final round TV coverage: Noon – 3 p.m., ESPN.

Final round TV coverage: 3 – 9 p.m., CBS.

Final round coverage: 3 – 10 p.m., SiriusXM (Channel 208 or 92).

Final round Featured Hole (No. 18): 3 p.m. – 9 p.m., ESPN+.

PGA Championship Clubhouse Report: 9 p.m., CBS Sports Network

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

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John Daly, Vijay Singh withdraw from PGA Championship

Amid the coronavirus pandemic, John Daly and Vijay Singh have withdrawn from the 2020 PGA Championship.

Two past PGA Championship winners have withdrawn from this year’s event.

John Daly, who won the 1991 PGA Championship, and Vijay Singh, winner of the 1998 and 2004 PGA Championships, have withdrawn from the 2020 event at TPC Harding Park.

The PGA of America revealed Singh, 57, withdrew due to an injury. The 34-time PGA Tour champion last competed Sunday during the PGA Tour Champions’ Ally Challenge in Grand Blanc, Michigan, finishing T-41 at 3 under.

Singh’s last PGA Championship appearance was in 2018 in which he made the cut and finished in 78th at 3 over.

Daly, 54, caused a stir at the 2019 PGA Championship by using a golf cart during the tournament after receiving a waiver from the PGA of America under the Americans with Disabilities Act. Tiger Woods was critical of the decision as was Golfweek’s Eamon Lynch.

“It’s very awkward (to use a cart) and it’s almost to a point where it’s embarrassing,” Daly said after his first round in 2019. “I don’t want to ride all the time, but if I don’t, I won’t be able to finish. I enjoy playing and I’m still competitive. It’s not really ego, I feel committed.”

Daly finished the 2019 tournament at Bethpage Black at 11 over after 36 holes, missing the cut.

Daly withdrew due to health concerns, according to the PGA of America. The five-time PGA Tour winner also competed during Ally Challenge, finishing T-58 at even par.

Denny McCarthy will replace Daly and Emiliano Grillo will replace Singh in the PGA Championship field.

Francesco Molinari and Padraig Harrington also withdrew from the PGA Championship due to concerns over traveling to the United States amid the coronavirus pandemic. They are replaced by Troy Merritt and Talor Gooch.

The PGA Championship begins Thursday at TPC Harding Park at San Francisco with no spectators.

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Three players to watch at the PGA Championship, based on the data

A data-based look shows three players to keep an eye on at 2020 PGA Championship at Harding Park.

A three-peat in sports is rare. In the history of major championship golf, the achievement has been nearly nonexistent.

Consider that arguably the two most accomplished men in the sport’s history, Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods, never won a specific major three straight years. None of the five men to win the modern career Grand Slam achieved the feat.

The last player to win any of the four majors in three straight years was Peter Thomson, who won three of his five British Open titles in 1954, ’55 and ’56. Those three championships were held on different courses, but at least the tournament was contested in the same place on the calendar.

That cannot be said for Brooks Koepka’s pursuit of three PGA Championships in a row.

Should Koepka win at TPC Harding Park – scheduled for Aug. 6-9 – he will become the fourth player in the men’s game since 1900 to win one of the professional majors three straight years. He’ll have done so with the event held in August, then May, then in August again – each year in a different time zone. Whether that makes it more impressive is debatable, but undoubtedly it would make it unique.

Koepka has become the game’s biggest force in major championships. Over the past three years, he leads all players in rounds led (13), top-five finishes (seven) and scoring average (69.3) across the majors. Koepka is gaining more than three full strokes on the field per round in that stretch, nearly a full shot per round more than his nearest competitor.

Koepka is a combined 70 strokes under par in the majors over the last three years. Since 1995, the only player with a better three-year cumulative score to par in the majors was Tiger Woods, who was 92 under in 2000 through 2002. In his last 10 major starts, Koepka has more wins (four) than finishes of worse than sixth place (two).

Brooks Koepka (Photo by Brian Spurlock/USA TODAY Sports)

Brooks Koepka

No man has won the PGA Championship three straight years in the stroke-play era. Koepka can become the first if he continues the stellar ballstriking that carried him to victories at Bellerive in 2018 and Bethpage Black in 2019.

Srokes gained long game: This category combines a player’s performance off the tee and approaching the green. Nobody has been better at that in the PGA Championship recently than Koepka – he leads everyone in that stat since 2016.

Birdie barrage: Koepka has racked up 98 birdies (or eagles) in the PGA Championship since 2015, eight more than any other player.

Leading man: Koepka has led or been the co-leader following 13 major championship rounds since 2017, more than twice as many as anyone else. Jordan Spieth and Kevin Kisner are tied for second with six apiece.

Rory McIlroy (Photo by Bill Streicher/USA TODAY Sports)

Rory McIlroy

The last time the world’s best players competed at TPC Harding Park, it was McIlroy who came out on top. At the 2015 WGC Match Play, McIlroy beat Gary Woodland in the final to claim his 11th PGA Tour title.

Number one: The top spot in the world and Harding Park go hand in hand. In 2005, Woods won the WGC held there while No. 1 in the Official World Golf Ranking. In 2009, Woods (No. 1 again) went 5-0-0 to lead the U.S. Presidents Cup win. And in 2015, McIlroy won the Match Play as the top player in the OWGR.

Ballstriking travels: McIlroy has been No. 1 or No. 2 on the PGA Tour in strokes gained tee to green since the beginning of last season.

Scoring opportunities: Every win in McIlroy’s PGA Tour and European Tour career has come with a score double digits under par. The average winning score at the PGA Championship the past 30 years is -10.9, the lowest of the four majors.

Rickie Fowler (Photo by Brian Spurlock/USA TODAY Sports)

Rickie Fowler

He has eleven top-10 finishes in major championships, the most of any player without a victory since the start of 2011. Now 31 years old, Fowler is still two years younger than Phil Mickelson was when he broke through at the 2004 Masters.

Major presence: Since the start of 2014, only five players have a better scoring average than Fowler in majors (70.6). All five of those players are major champions. Is Fowler next?

Gaining strokes: Only two players have averaged two or more strokes gained per round in the majors since 2017: Fowler and Koepka.

California love: It would be fitting for Fowler to get his first major win in his home state of California. The last California-born player to win a major in the Golden State was Woods at the 2008 U.S. Open.

Golfweek partnered on this story with 15th Club, a firm that works with players, media entities, manufacturers and tours around the world in telling the true story of golf performance. Gwk

This article originally appeared in Issue 3 – 2020 of Golfweek magazine. Click here to subscribe.

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Francesco Molinari and Padraig Harrington the latest WD’s at PGA Championship

The former major winners are the latest to take “an abundance of caution” and skip the first major of the year.

Major champions Padraig Harrington and Francesco Molinari both withdrew from next week’s PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park.

Harrington, the winner of two British Opens and the 2008 PGA Championship at Oakland Hills, tweeted on July 30 that he wouldn’t be traveling to the U.S., in search of his fourth major title.

“As COVID-19 currently looks to be under control in Ireland, I am taking the prudent approach by following the guidelines and reducing the risk as much as possible by staying at home,” he wrote. “I’m sure I’ll be watching every shot on TV with great interest and hopefully I’ll have many more years to play in the PGA Championship.”

Molinari, the winner of the 2018 British Open, tweeted on July 2 that he was planning to move to the U.S., and “the hope is to be back for the PGA in August.”

He hasn’t played since the Players Championship in March. In an email to Golfweek, he wrote, “I just don’t feel ready to play having only moved in the last couple of weeks. I want to get the set up right for my family and me first, then come back when I’ve had a chance to prepare properly. I’m not sure yet when that will be, hopefully soon.”

Molinari and Harrington were replaced in the field by Troy Merritt and Talor Gooch.

The loss of Molinari, ranked No. 33 in the Official World Golf Ranking, means the PGA Championship will feature 95 of the top 100 in the world. Shugo Imahira, Eddie Pepperell, Thomas Pieters, and Lee Westwood previously chose not to play.

Brooks Koepka weighs in on PGA Championship, his friends, fear and Bryson DeChambeau

The defending PGA champion weighs in on fear, his lack of a rivalry with Rory McIlroy, his friends on the PGA Tour and Bryson DeChambeau

There has been a symmetry to Brooks Koepka’s glittering run in both the U.S. Open and PGA Championship since 2017. Each of his winning streaks was birthed in the Midwest (Bellerive, Erin Hills) and cemented in New York (Shinnecock Hills, Bethpage Black). Will both end in California?

Last summer at Pebble Beach, Koepka finished second in his bid to become the first man in 115 years to win three straight U.S. Opens. Next month he aims to become the first man in 93 years to win three straight PGA Championships. We caught up with the four-time major winner to talk about his tilt at history, why he doesn’t have a rival and what he really thinks of Bryson DeChambeau.

Lynch: Did the pandemic break help or hinder your preparation for the PGA Championship?

Koepka: Given that I was injured (a knee injury), it was a blessing in disguise. Now I’m 100-percent healthy, the best I’ve felt in three years. Speed is there. Mobility is there. Now it’s a matter of going out and playing.

Does bidding for three straight wins add to the pressure?

I can only go off experience, and the U.S. Open was just another major (Koepka won the 2017 and 2018 U.S. Opens before finishing second in 2019 at Pebble Beach). I wasn’t thinking about three in a row. I was thinking, “I’m here to do a job. Let’s go win it.” That’s how I’ll approach this one.

So the experience from Pebble Beach will be beneficial.

It could be, just for the fact that I played well at Pebble. I’ve lost to one person the last three years. If you think of all the applicants, that’s pretty neat. I can fall back on the thought process.

Are you prepared for the possibility that the PGA might yet be canceled?

If we can play, great. I’ll be there. If not, well, we’ll try next year.

Have you looked to see who last won three PGAs in a row? Or three straight in any major?

No, but I’m sure you have. (Told it was Walter Hagen 93 years ago, and Peter Thomson in the Open Championship in the ’50s.) That’s pretty crazy, isn’t it? When you think how many great players have come through, to do something only a few have ever done is pretty cool.

What’s your game plan for Harding Park?

They played the Match Play there in ’15, so I remember it. It’s a big-boy golf course. You’ve got to hit it long and straight. I show up and Monday is all about sight lines off the tee. Tuesday is figuring out where to miss if the pin location is in a particular place. Wednesday, kind of go play nine. It’s my relaxing day.

Will the absence of fans bother you?

I’m going to miss them, for sure. I like hearing s— when I mess up, and I like hearing the good stuff. You can ride their energy.

What do you consider your greatest strength?

I’m very good when it comes to difficult situations, how to handle it when things aren’t going my way.

And your weakness?

Getting very relaxed. It doesn’t happen in majors; it happens in regular PGA Tour events. It’s not placing enough importance on your day-to-day job. You can get lackadaisical.

You’re the only player who hears that he needs to do in Tour events what he does in majors.

My argument to that is people don’t realize I have finished second nine times. All my top-10s last year were top-5s. You can backdoor a top-10, but if you’re top-5 then you’re pretty damn close to having a chance to win.

Koepka – pictured with (from left) Dustin Johnson, Ian Poulter and caddie Ricky Elliott at Harbour Town Golf Links – said he doesn’t have or need close friends on Tour. (Streeter Lecka/Getty Images)

Who’s your best friend on Tour?

I’m not close with any of the guys out here. We are friends, but at the same time I’ve got enough friends. I see these guys 22 weeks of the year. When I go home I don’t need to see them for another 30 weeks, you know?

So you’re not as close as you were with DJ (Dustin Johnson)?

That got blown out of proportion because we worked out in the same gym. We no longer do that. All of last year at least we weren’t working out together. I’ve got all the friends I need, friends that I grew up with and enjoy being around. They’re not big into the golf scene. I don’t go play with guys when I’m at home. I don’t stick to myself, but if I’m practicing I’m not trying to help other guys out at the same time. I’m not going to tee it up in a practice round with guys. I feel like you’re giving them an advantage in how you see the golf course and strategy.

Rory McIlroy and Brooks Koepka have exchanged the No. 1 spot, but Koepka doesn’t believe they have a real rivalry. (Streeter Lecka/Getty Images)

You said you don’t see Rory McIlroy as a rival. Did that change any when he took your No. 1 ranking?

I just don’t view anyone as a rival. When I said that, I meant when have we ever competed going down the back nine besides Memphis? It hasn’t happened in a major. I would even argue Tiger and Phil weren’t a rivalry. If it’s one-sided, how is there a rivalry? Rivalries are created.
Look at football, soccer, basketball – those teams have been in the championship game consistently or are from the same town. Golf is just not that way.

So you don’t look for anyone’s name when you scroll a leaderboard.

I look at the low score, see where I’m at and just plug on. I’m not concerned with how anyone else plays. I’m only worried about myself, and so is every other player out here. You notice where other guys are – Rory’s made a charge, or Tiger’s made a charge – but if my name isn’t at the top, I gotta make a run regardless.

You’ve never liked the notion that golfers ought to be deferential to each other. Fair to say you enjoy poking?

I do, it’s fun. I enjoy it when people give me a jab. I’m not going to start anything, but if you’re going to take a shot at me, I’ll take a shot at you. [Laughs] I’ll make sure my shot hurts a little bit worse.

At last year’s Northern Trust, I was standing with [Koepka’s caddie] Ricky Elliott when Bryson DeChambeau asked him to tell you to make any comments about slow play to his face. When you got the message, you went right over to talk to him. That face-to-face stuff doesn’t happen much on Tour.

Golfers hate confrontation. I don’t know what it is, but they’re afraid of it. With a lot of guys, when they fire somebody, they’ll have their manager fire them instead of having the balls to do it themselves. That’s ridiculous. If you have an issue, go say it face to face. Listen, I don’t have to like you, but I can respect you. I’ve never had a problem with Bryson. I just thought he was slow. Then when he went up to Ricky and was like, “Tell your man to come find me and say it face to face.” Well, I thought that was kind of an oxymoron to go to Ricky. I thought it was kind of cowardly, if I’m honest. But at the same time, if he’s going to say that then I’m going to go up and say, “Okay, I’m here.”

Do you enjoy playing with him?

I don’t get paired with him much. We’re two totally different people. He wouldn’t be anyone I would hang out with outside of golf, and I think he would say the same thing. Which is totally cool. There’s nothing wrong with that. Just two completely different personalities. I’ve got no issue with him. He’s just never going to be my best friend, we’ll put it that way.

What separates you from other guys out here?

People get afraid. People get nervous.

Have you ever been afraid on a golf course?

No. I got a little nervous the first time I teed it up at Augusta, but that was more excitement. Nerves I don’t get. Nerves come from thinking of results. There’s a lot of times you’re going to fail and a lot of times you’re going to succeed. It’s just a matter if it’s the right time.

If not nerves, then what do you feel on the closing holes of a major?

It’s tunnel vision the whole way around, but on the back nine you kind of black out a little. Get in your own world. If your life depended on it and you had to make a par or birdie, what would you do? That’s kind of the approach I have.

Do you still sit on the beach in Florida every winter to take stock of the year and set goals?

This year I was in La Jolla [California], so I wrote my goals there. I spent a month and a half there doing rehab.

Care to share the goals?

Double digits in the majors is definitely one of them. I think that’s very attainable. I don’t focus on the other wins. You’ll always remember how many majors Jack Nicklaus or Arnold Palmer or Tom Watson or Gary Player won, but I don’t think you could tell me how many PGA Tour events they won. That’s no shot at the Tour, but that’s what you’re remembered by. In basketball it’s how many championships you’ve won.
In football it’s how many rings you’ve got. My whole thing is the majors.

In between majors, any plans to show your ass in public again this year?

Now that everyone has seen my ass (on social media posts in a thong), I’m definitely not going to turn around and take a photo that way. Everybody’s good. I think they’ve seen me enough.

Forecaddie: PGA Championship to feature biggest locker room ever

With no fans to purchase shirts, hats and memorabilia, the PGA turned the 60,000-square-foot merchandise shop into the player locker room.

The Man Out Front has been practicing social distancing all his life so it’s really no big adjustment now that it has become more socially acceptable.

As professional sports ramp up again, one of the other big buzzwords is “the bubble” and TMOF commends the PGA of America for creating one big bubble for the players and taking social distancing to the max at the upcoming PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park.

When shelter-in-place restrictions in March halted the build-out of the infrastructure, the PGA did some outside-the-box thinking. What to do with the 60,000-square-foot merchandise pavilion at a fan-less major championship? Well, they reengineered the structure into the player locker room for the 156-man field. That should allow for plenty of space for pros to stash all their gear and stretch out.

“It was practically already built and we re-engineered it,” said Barry Deach, championship director of the 2020 PGA at TPC Harding Park. “It will probably be the biggest locker room ever.”

So, how did they repurpose the original locker room location? That’s now the on-site media center for the skeleton crew of approximately 50 media that will be in attendance while the rest of the Fourth Estate have been asked to cover the event using a virtual media center. (They also established a virtual volunteer experience so that the 3,000+ volunteers who signed up but whose services no longer will be needed can still be part of the event from at home.)

Instead of 50,000-60,000 spectators on-site each day traipsing after Tiger and Rory and Rickie, Deach says there will be well under 2,000 people on site.

“And never more than 1,000 at a given time,” he said.

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Tiger Woods to skip WGC FedEx St. Jude Invitational

Tiger Woods won’t be playing in Memphis , which means he will have only played once in the lead up to the first major, the PGA Championship.

Tiger Woods won’t be walking in Memphis next week, he announced on Twitter.

Woods’s preparation for his pursuit of major title No. 16 won’t include an appearance at next week’s WGC FedEx St. Jude Invitational ahead of the PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco, which begins Aug. 6.

“Disappointed to miss the WGC FedEx, but doing what I think is best to prepare me for the PGA Championship and FedEx Cup playoffs,” Woods wrote.

Woods typically doesn’t like to play the week before a major championship. Since turning pro in 1996, he’s only played in 12 tournaments leading into a major. However, all 12 of those occurrences had been the week before the PGA Championship in its former August date, giving hope that he might play this year’s WGC.

Woods’s surgically-repaired back seemingly has prevented him from making back-to-back starts. The last time he did so? The 2019 Genesis Open and WGC Mexico Championship, but his balky back forced him to miss the Arnold Palmer Invitational two weeks later and limited his play in the lead up to the Masters.

Woods has always built his schedule around the four majors, but winning a fifth green jacket and 15th major title at the 2019 Masters has breathed new life into his quest to break Jack Nicklaus’s record of 18 majors. Woods, 44, knows his window is closing and so he’s limited his schedule more than ever to protect the health of his back. Last year, he didn’t play a tournament between the Masters and PGA in May and the U.S. Open and British Open in July and missed the cut in both.

Woods has never played in the Tour’s annual stop in Memphis since turning pro. In fact, the only time Woods has teed it up in the birth city of Elvis is when he held a children’s golf clinic at Pine Hills Golf Course in August 1997. Hopes for landing Woods improved when the FedEx St. Jude Invitational was elevated to WGC status in 2019.

Woods has won a record 18 WGC’s, but he’s only competed in four tournaments this season and skipped several tournaments he typically plays, including the API and the Players Championship, hobbled by back issues before the Tour’s season was suspended in March due to coronavirus.

“I feel so much better than I did then,” he said ahead of The Memorial last week, his lone start since the Tour resumed play in June at the Charles Schwab Challenge. “I’ve been able to train and concentrate on getting back up to speed and back up to tournament speed.”

After a five-month absence, Woods finished T-40 at The Memorial. Woods struggled with his putting and on Friday his clubhead speed was down significantly.

“I couldn’t quite turn back and couldn’t quite clear,” he said. “It was a bit of a struggle.”

After shooting a final-round 76, Woods termed the week “a lot of positives,” while conceding he needed more reps. But whether those reps would consist of practice rounds at Medalist Golf Club, his home course in Florida, or in Memphis, Tiger kept his plans for when he’d compete next close to the vest.

“Soon,” he told Amanda Balionis on CBS after his round.

Not soon enough for a walk through Memphis.

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It’s official: PGA Championship staying put at TPC Harding Park, but with no fans

The first major in the reshaped 2020 season will be held at TPC Harding Park as scheduled but there won’t be any fans to see it.

The PGA of America confirmed today that the show must go on — minus the fans. The 102nd PGA Championship remains scheduled for Aug. 6-9 at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco. The decision to play golf’s first men’s major championship of 2020 without spectators was made in coordination with the state of California and the city and county of San Francisco.

“We are thrilled to welcome the PGA Championship to San Francisco,” said San Francisco Mayor London N. Breed. “We are able to safely take this step toward reopening because of the ongoing sacrifices of our citizens, the continued committed work of our healthcare workers and the early action we took to battle COVID-19.”

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The San Francisco Chronicle first reported on June 17 that public health officials had approved plans to hold the event, but without spectators due to the coronavirus pandemic. Daily attendance had been expected to approach 40,000.

“We are both inspired and honored to ‘play on.’ In doing so, we will spotlight not only the beauty of TPC Harding Park, but the fortitude of San Francisco and its remarkable people,” said PGA of America CEO Seth Waugh. “While the local community cannot be with us physically on-site, we will certainly carry their spirit of resilience and unity with us as we stage our major championship, on their behalf, for all the world to see and enjoy.”

This year’s PGA will be the first on the West Coast since the event was held outside Seattle in 1998, and the first major in San Francisco since the 2012 U.S. Open at the Olympic Club. It also will serve as the first major of the PGA Tour’s revamped schedule in which the British Open was canceled and the U.S. Open delayed until September and the Masters until November. Prior to its postponement on March 17, the PGA Championship was originally scheduled for play May 14-17.

The PGA said that those who purchased tickets directly from the PGA of America will be contacted to facilitate refunds.

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