Love, family and why the PNC Championship (still) matters to Lee Trevino

“We talk about it all year.”

ORLANDO – When Lee Trevino started prepping to compete in this year’s PNC Championship, the World Golf Hall of Fame member and six-time major champion topped several balls on the range. Was arguably the best ball-striker in the game lifting his head? Say it ain’t so.

“I never, ever remember doing this in my life,” Trevino said.

His son, Daniel, 31, who is his partner in the two-person scramble format team event that begins on Saturday at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club, suggested he go see renowned instructor Randy Smith, who teaches world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler. But Trevino made a vow many years ago that he wouldn’t take a lesson from anybody that he could beat. Trevino dialed up Smith and when he answered he said, “Have you got 15 minutes to look at me? I think you can beat me now.”

The lesson helped. Trevino recounted on the Subpar podcast that five weeks ago he made a birdie and nine pars and shot 82 in a fundraiser at Dallas National.

“What are you complaining about?” Daniel said. “You broke your age.”

Trevino, 84, calls the PNC Championship his major and he talks about it all year. He’s played in every edition dating to the inaugural event in 1995 when 10 major winners gathered with their sons. He’s assumed the role of the field’s elder statesman, which has evolved to feature 20 major champions (including women such as Annika Sorenstam) and their relatives competing for the Willie Park Trophy. There’s a wait list just to get in the field.

“It’s like people trying to qualify for Augusta,” Trevino said.

PNC: Saturday tee times | Photos

It’s interesting that he should mention the Masters, the only one of the four majors that he never won. He’s failed to win the PNC Championship, too, but the family gathering reflects the growing importance that familial bonds have come to mean to him.

Trevino never knew his father and that absence surely affected Trevino’s outlook on life. He grew up in a household where he rarely heard an encouraging word and re-enacted his youth with his children. “I gave them the roof over their heads, but I didn’t give them the love,” he said. “I was a screamer. I’d have a few beers and get crazy with the kids.”

Rick Trevino, his oldest, recalled in a first-person magazine article that his father would fly in to visit him once or twice a year in Green City, Missouri, where Rick lived with Trevino’s first wife, Linda, and they would speak by phone once every month or two, but otherwise they didn’t have much of a relationship. In later years, Rick would serve as his father’s caddie at the Legends of Golf when it was held at Big Cedar Lodge in Branson, Missouri, not far from where he lived. Lesley, Tony and Troy — his children from his second marriage — became accustomed to a house in which their father was rarely present. It was nothing for him to be gone for eight consecutive weeks. In a Sports Illustrated article, Trevino was once asked if his son Tony had come to resent his absent father. “I think so,” Trevino said, “and I don’t blame him.

“My wives raised four kids that I did not know. I had no clue who they were. I didn’t go to a high school basketball game or a recital. I went to graduation, and that’s it,” he said. “Before I knew it, they were grown up and gone.”

Trevino credits Jack Nicklaus for demonstrating a better way. He recounted teaming with Nicklaus at the 1971 World Cup in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida. When they finished a practice round, Trevino suggested that they hit the range. Nicklaus had other ideas. His oldest child, Jackie, had a high school football game. Trevino joined Nicklaus at the stadium. “Never in my wildest dreams would I have ever done that,” Trevino said

Only later in life did Trevino figure out how to emulate Nicklaus.

“Golf was his living, but he didn’t make it his life,” Trevino told Golf Digest’s Dave Shedlodski of Nicklaus. “I put golf first, and he taught me that was a mistake. I’m a better father now than I ever was. That’s Jack’s impact on me. It says a lot that it has nothing to do with golf.”

Trevino’s youngest children, Olivia and Daniel, were the beneficiaries of their father’s epiphany. The third time was the charm. His family with Claudia Bove, his third wife, became his priority, and nothing stood in the way of time spent with Olivia, born in 1989, and Daniel, who came along four years later. “I’ve been given a mulligan,” Trevino once said. “I was a father before, but not a dad.”

2023 PNC Championship
Lee Trevino of the United States reacts after a pro-am partner made a putt on the second hole prior to the PNC Championship at The Ritz-Carlton Golf Club on December 14, 2023 in Orlando, Florida. (Photo by Mike Mulholland/Getty Images)

In the early years of the team event, Trevino alternated playing with Tony in odd years and Rick in even years. But once Daniel made his debut in 2006, there’s been no rotation. Parental pride swells inside of Trevino whenever he talks about playing golf with Daniel. “You can’t separate us,” Trevino said. “He’s gonna reap from all the neglect I did my other kids.”

While Nicklaus and fellow contemporaries Raymond Floyd and Hale Irwin have all stopped competing in the father-son, Trevino shows no signs of calling it a day, even if his knees may ache, and according to tournament founder Alastair Johnston, he has a lifetime exemption into the limited field.

“He supported me in this event from the beginning and I told him, ‘You can come back for as long as you want,’ and I’ve kept my word,” Johnston said.

And so Team Trevino rolls on. Two years ago, they held the lead with four holes to go only to finish T-3.

“As soon as we get on the plane and go back we start reminiscing about where we made the mistakes and what we need to work on for next year,” Trevino said. “We talk about it all year.”

2023 PNC Championship Saturday tee times and streaming moving up to avoid weather

Everything you need to know for Saturday’s round at the PNC Championship.

It’s time for the final Silly Season event of the year.

The 2023 PNC Championship is set to get underway Saturday at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club in Orlando. In the field are 20 teams of former major or Players champions from the PGA Tour, LPGA or PGA Tour Champions along with one of their family members.

Eighteen teams return from last year, including defending champions Vijay and Qass Singh. Out of the field this year are Gary Player and his son, Jordan, as well as Jordan Spieth and his father, Shawn. Replacing them will be Steve Stricker and his daughter, Izzi, and Retief Goosen and his son, Leo.

Here’s a look at Saturday’s tee times and pairings for the 2023 PNC Championship. Tee times will go early Saturday off split tees because of the threat of weather.

In addition, NBC announced Friday morning that Saturday’s live coverage will start at 8:15 a.m. ET exclusively on Peacock. The streaming service was originally going to start the first round at 1 p.m. ET. The 2:30 p.m. start time on NBC will not change and will now feature a replay of the first-round action.

Sunday’s TV and streaming coverage remains on schedule as originally announced. All times listed below are ET.

PNC Championship: How to watch

Saturday tee times

1st tee

Tee time Players
7:30 a.m.
Team Langer, Team Cink
7:43 a.m.
Team Annika, Team Harrington
7:56 a.m.
Team Singh, Team Goosen
8:09 a.m.
Team Korda, Team Stricker
8:22 a.m.
Team Woods, Team Thomas

10th tee

Tee time Player
7:30 a.m.
Team O’Meara, Team Kuchar
7:43 a.m.
Team Leonard, Team Faldo
7:56 a.m.
Team Trevino, Team Lehman
8:09 a.m.
Team Price, Team Furyk
8:22 a.m.
Team Duval, Team Daly

TV info

Saturday, Dec. 16

Peacock: 8:15 a.m. ET
NBC/Peacock: 2:30 p.m. – 6 p.m. ET

Sunday, Dec. 17

Golf Channel/Peacock: 12 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. ET
NBC/Peacock: 1:30 p.m. – 4:30 p.m. ET

Photos: 2023 PNC Championship at Ritz-Carlton Golf Club

Here are some of the best photos from the 2023 PNC Championship.

The PNC Championship is one of the most fun events on the schedule and this year’s edition should be no different.

Tiger Woods, after making his return to golf at the Hero World Challenge earlier this month, will play the 36-hole two-day event at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club in Orlando, Florida, with his son, Charlie. Team Woods finished runner-up to the Dalys in 2021.

Other major champions in the field include Justin Thomas (playing with his dad, Mike), Nelly Korda (father Petr), John Daly (son John II) and Annika Sorenstam (son Will).

Vijay and Qass Singh are back in Florida to defend their title.

Here are some of the best photos from the 2023 PNC Championship.

Team USA’s win is great, but inaugural World Champions Cup shows event might be here to stay

“It’s beaten every expectation I had. It was just incredible.”

BRADENTON, Florida ― After Friday’s second round of the World Champions Cup, which saw Team International clinging to a half-point lead over Team USA, International captain Ernie Els opined that any lead didn’t really mean anything until maybe the last putt.

The inaugural event at The Concession Golf Club didn’t come down to the last putt. But it did the last hole.

Trailing Team International on Sunday by 2.5 points with three holes to play, Team USA got clutch play down the stretch from David Toms and Billy Andrade and overcame the margin to win the inaugural event at The Concession Golf Club.

Team USA finished with 221 points, Team International was second with 219, and Team Europe third with 208. Over the final three holes, the 56-year-old Toms, who won 13 PGA titles from 1992 to 2017, earned 4.5 out of a possible 6 points. One match earlier, Andrade, filling in for injured Team USA captain Jim Furyk, registered 11 points, besting International’s Vijay Singh and Europe’s Miguel Angel Jimenez.

Team USA’s vice captain Bill Andrade, left, watches David Toms drink out of the World Champions Cup trophy to celebrate at The Concession Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Swinger-USA TODAY Sports

But trailing by half a point after leading for much of Sunday, Team International had a chance to pick up two points and the tournament championship on the par-4 No. 9 closing hole when Toms and Team Europe’s Bernhard Langer bogeyed.

All International’s Retief Goosen had to do was make par to collect the two points and give his team the victory. But Goosen, a winner of two U.S. Opens, hit his approach shot into the penalty area. His double-bogey earned him zero points, while the USA and Europe each earned a half-point.

The format called for three points to be available for each hole. The lowest score earned 2 points, the second lowest 1 point, and the third lowest earned zero. If teams tied with a score, the points were split. If two teams tied with a low score, they each earned 1.5 points, with third place earning nothing.

After the post-match ceremony, each member of Team USA walked into the media interview room draped in an American flag. Later, they poured champagne into the championship trophy and drank from it.

Team International’s Stephen Ames reacts after his birdie putt on the ninth at The Concession Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Swinger-USA TODAY Sports

Toms’ play over the final three holes keyed the USA’s victory. Before taking the half-point lead heading into the final hole, USA had trailed by as many as six points.

“I think, really, what I really liked about this team,” Furyk said, “and I always talk about the personalities and how easy these guys are to get along with, but this is a feisty group. I think we’ve got a bunch of guys who have good short games, good putters, guys that don’t give up, guys that will grind it out and finish a hole for you.”

Another big contributor to Team USA was Jerry Kelly, who played a bogey-free nine holes to earn 12.5 points, the most of any player during the morning singles. Team International captain Els, who earned 12 points during the bogey-free nine-hole morning singles, felt for Goosin, his teammate.

Team InternationalÕs Retief Goosen chips up to the eighth hole during their morning round at The Concession Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Swinger-USA TODAY Sports

“I really feel for Retief,” he said. “He had such a tough lie there. To be this close at the end of the day . . . yeah, we lost basically the last couple of matches.”

Even Toms didn’t think his team had a chance, particularly when USA trailed by 6 points.

“On No. 8, I had a putt to win the hole,” he said, “and one of the guys in the crowd said something to the effect that it was a big putt. I was like, at that point, I didn’t even know it would mean anything, honestly, because I didn’t know where we stood. I made the putt, so that was good. Then I got to the 18th tee and I heard “USA! USA!” after Billy (Andrade) made his putt and I was like, man, we have to be in good shape.”

Said Team USA Brett Quigley about the format, “It’s beaten every expectation I had. It was just incredible. It was way more fun than I thought it would be and just so much love. The team aspect of it, because every week we’re doing our own thing and we go home and we go to the next week. This week, to have our families here, our caddies so involved and all the players genuinely pulling for each other made it so special.”

“The U.S. guys kept grinding out the 18th,” Els said. “We just couldn’t make that one putt up the hill. I missed it, K.J. missed it, Vijay (Singh) missed it. Unfortunately, Retief had such a tough lie.

“What a week, what a format. This thing works.”

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These five golfers – four of them Aussies – earned 2024 PGA Tour Champions tour cards at Q school at TPC Scottsdale

TPC Scottsdale’s Champions Course was host for the 72-hole qualifying tournament.

The PGA Tour Champions had five tour cards for 2024 up for grabs at TPC Scottsdale’s Champions Course this week.

The final stage of Q School for the senior circuit provided 78 golfers 72 holes to snag status for next season.

By Friday, 73 of those golfers came up short, including Baseball Hall of Famer John Smoltz (dead last by eight shots at 22 over), 72-year-old Dick Mast (who shot or beat his age two times this week), Notah Begay, Shaun Micheel, Ted Purdy, Carlos Franco and Bryan Hoops, the lone amateur in the field who missed out on a playoff by a stroke.

All is not lost for those who finished sixth through 30th, as they will be eligible to apply for PGA Tour Champions Associate Membership for 2024, which would then get them into qualifiers.

But for those lucky top five, they are now fully exempt into all open, full-field events for the 2024 season on the PGA Tour Champions.

Here’s a closer look at what turned out to be an Aussie takeover, with Australian golfers earning four of the five cards.

Eric Axley goes low at PGA Tour Champions Q School with front-nine 28; Wes Short, Jr. leads

After an opening eagle, Axley had six straight birdies to start his second round.

There’s going low.

And there’s what Eric Axley is doing Wednesday during the second round of the PGA Tour Champions Q School final stage.

Starting on the back nine on the Champions Course at TPC Scottsdale, Axley eagled the par-5 10th hole. Nice start.

He then went birdie-birdie-birdie-birdie-birdie-birdie to get to 8 under through six holes.

Axley finally cooled off with pars on the par-5 17th and par-4 18th. Still, he made the turn in 28 and was officially on 59 watch.

“Once I eagled No. 10, it seemed like the birdies weren’t much more than tap-ins,” Axley said. “I think I had it inside three feet on each of my first eight holes, except the par-3 16th. There, I had 192 yards and hit it to six feet, but still made it. So, everything just felt really comfortable down that stretch of holes.”

The 28 ties the low nine-hole score on the PGA Tour Champions in 2023.

He then parred Nos. 10 and 11 but a disastrous quadruple 7 on the par-3 third hole, his 12th of the day, did some damage to his scorecard. He would later birdie Nos. 5, 6 and 7 to post a 7-under 64 and walk off the course tied for sixth. He ended the day in a tie for seventh.

“I hit a weird tee shot on No. 3 that ended up in a bad spot,” he said. “I couldn’t get it on the green from where I was, so I ended up having a bogey putt from 20 feet. I ran that by three feet, then ran it by three feet coming back. So, that was a four-putt. It was like getting punched in the stomach when you aren’t prepared for it. But, I did bounce back somewhat with three more straight birdies on 5, 6 and 7. So, that helped.”

Axley, 49, has one win – the 2006 Valero Texas Open – in 209 starts on the PGA Tour and $3.2 million in career earnings. He doesn’t turn 50 until April 22 next year but is vying for one of five tour cards being handed out this week for the 2024 season.

Wes Short, Jr., shot a 63 on Wednesday and sits at 12 under, alone in first at the halfway mark. He had seven birdies and an eagle. Daniel Chopra, Shane Bertsch and Cameron Percy are tied for second at 11 under. Alan McLean is solo fifth at 10 under.

Other notables include Dick Mast, the last golfer in the field at age 72, beat his age by shooting an even-par 71; Scottsdale’s Bryan Hoops, the lone amateur in the field, tied for 12th after scores of 64-72; and former Major League pitcher John Smoltz is last. He followed his first-round 80 with a 76. He is 14 over.

PGA Tour Champions Q school final features a former major winner, a former Major Leaguer, a Golf Channel analyst and a 72-year-old

Smoltz will be vying for one of five cards that will be handed out at TPC Scottsdale.

Baseball Hall of Famer John Smoltz is among the 78 golfers who earned a spot in the final stage of qualifying for the PGA Tour Champions.

Smoltz, 55, will be vying for one of five cards that will be handed out at the end of the week at TPC Scottsdale’s Champions Course.

Smoltz won 213 games over a 21-year career as a pitcher. In three previous attempts at Q school, he hasn’t finished better than tied for 54th in the first stage.

Smoltz won a World Series with the Atlanta Braves in 1995. He won the National League Cy Young award in 1996. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2015.

He hasn’t competed on PGA Tour Champions since 2021, but he has played in nine events overall, including the 2018 U.S. Senior Open.

Other notables/hopefuls at TPC Scottsdale this week include:

  • NBC/Golf Channel reporter Notah Begay III, back at qualifying for a second year in a row
  • Former Arizona State golfer Todd Demsey, who likes to use persimmon clubs
  • Shaun Micheel, whose lone PGA Tour win was the 2003 PGA Championship
  • Ted Purdy, who grew up down the I-10 in Tucson and went to the University of Arizona
  • 54-year-old amateur Bryan Hoops of Scottsdale, who claims 19 holes-in-one, with 15 of them coming in tournaments
  • Jonathan Kaye, who won two PGA Tour events, including the 2004 FBR Open (now the WM Phoenix Open) at the TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course
  • 72-year-old Dick Mast, who’s played in 360 PGA Tour events and another 191 Champions events without a win. He does have four victories on the Korn Ferry Tour, the most recent in 1999. He got in the field at the last minute after Andrew Marshall withdrew

The first tee times are Tuesday at 8:30 a.m. local (10:30 a.m. ET). Smoltz is playing alongside Daniel Chopra and Jason Bohn at 8:52 a.m. local time off the first tee. The event concludes on Friday. Admission is free for anyone interested in attending.

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Tiger Woods and son Charlie officially in field for PNC Championship

Team Woods is back.

Fans of Tiger Woods are going to get to see him plenty in the next month.

First, he’s set to make his competitive return next week at the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas. Then, two weeks after that, he’ll return to Orlando with his son, Charlie, as they team up again for the PNC Championship at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club in Orlando.

The pairing was announced Wednesday, as if there’s not enough to give thanks for this week.

This will be their fourth time playing together, finishing runner-up to Team Daly in 2021. Last year, Team Woods finished T-8 at 20 under. Charlie, 14, helped his high school win a state championship in Florida earlier this month.

Vijay Singh and his son, Qass, won the tournament last year. Other teams in the field this year include Justin Thomas and father Mike, the Singhs, Nelly Korda and her father Petr, Annika Sorenstam and her son Will and many others.

Professionals in the PNC Championship must be past major champions.

The pro-am is set for Dec. 15 while competition follows the next two days. Here’s the TV schedule

Dec. 15: Golf Channel, 12 to 2:30 p.m., ET.  (pro-am)
Dec. 16: NBC, 2:30 to 6 p.m. ET
Dec. 17: Golf Channel, 12 to 1:30 p.m. ET; NBC, 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. ET

MLB Hall of Famer John Smoltz earns spot in Final Stage of PGA Tour Champions Q-School

Smoltz hadn’t finished better than T-54 in three prior appearances at the first stage of PGA Tour Champions Q-School.

From the mound to the golf course, John Smoltz is proving to be a heckuva athlete.

The Major League Baseball Hall of Famer earned a spot into final stage qualifying through PGA Tour Champions Q-School after finishing T-14 at this week’s first stage at Buckhorn Springs in Valrico, Florida. Smoltz posted scores of 71-73-74-71, finishing at 1-over 289 for the week, to earn one of 18 spots into final stage qualifying.

Smoltz hadn’t finished better than T-54 in three prior appearances at the first stage of PGA Tour Champions Q-School.

Smoltz, 55, will be in the field of 80 next month at TPC Scottsdale’s Champions Course, where final stage will be contested Dec. 5-8. Only five cards are up for grabs.

Slowly, Smoltz has been making a name for himself on the golf course after his illustrious baseball career. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2015, won a Cy Young Award and earned eight National League All-Star team selections.

Smoltz hasn’t competed on PGA Tour Champions since 2021, but he has competed in nine events overall. He also competed in the 2018 U.S. Senior Open.

2023 Charles Schwab Cup Championship prize money payouts for each PGA Tour Champions player

First place at Phoenix Country Club in 2023 is good for $528,000.

PHOENIX — With his Charles Schwab Cup Championship title, Steven Alker now has seven wins, 39 top-10s and 31 top-5 finishes in 53 starts on the PGA Tour Champions.

He banked a first-place prize of $528,000 at Phoenix Country Club on Sunday in the 2023 season finale, pushing his career on-course earnings on the over-50 circuit to $7,297,721, a number that puts him 67th on the PGA Tour Champions all-time money list. In 87 events on the PGA Tour, Alker earned $841,849. He made $1,477,017 in 304 starts on Korn Ferry Tour.

The New Zealander is winning about every eight times he tees it up on tour and this latest victory came in his adopted home state of Arizona. Alker moved to Scottsdale in 2002.

Photos: See the action from Phoenix Country Club

Check out the prize money payouts at the 2023 Charles Schwab Cup Championship at Phoenix Country Club, the final event of the season.

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Steven Alker -18 $528,000
T2 Stephen Ames -17 $276,000
T2 Ernie Els -17 $276,000
T4 Richard Green -14 $165,375
T4  Vijay Singh -14 $165,375
T4 Thongchai Jaidee -14 $165,375
T4 Padraig Harrington -14 $165,375
T8 Jerry Kelly -13 $87,000
T8 Bernhard Langer -13 $87,000
T8 K.J. Choi -13 $87,000
T8 Alex Cejka -13 $87,000
T12 Y.E. Yang -12 $70,500
T12 Retief Goosen -12 $70,500
14 Miguel Angel Jimenez -10 $66,000
T15 Harrison Frazar -9 $61,500
T15 David Toms -9 $61,500
17 Dicky Pride -8 $57,000
T18 Billy Andrade -7 $51,000
T18 Joe Durant -7 $51,000
T20 Marco Dawson -6 $39,000
T20 Colin Montgomerie -6 $39,000
T22 Paul Stankowski -4 $31,500
T22 Paul Broadhurst -4 $31,500
T24 Steve Flesch -3 $27,750
T24 Justin Leonard -3 $27,750
26 Charli Wi -2 $25,500
T27 Darren Clarke -1 $23,250
T27 Ken Duke -1 $23,250
29 Rob Labritz E $21,750
T30 Robert Karlsson +1 $19,875
T30 Brett Quigley +1 $19,875
T30 Mark Hensby +1 $19,875
T30 Ken Tanigawa +1 $19,875
34 Mike Weir +2 $18,000
35 Rob Pampling +8 $17,250

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