Jon Rahm goes bogey-free to take third-round lead at Torrey Pines

Jon Rahm shot a bogey-free 65 Saturday at Torrey Pines and leads the Farmers Insurance Open by one shot.

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SAN DIEGO – World No. 3 Jon Rahm began his third round in the Farmers Insurance Open with a chip-in birdie from 21 feet on the first hole and then holed his approach from 113 yards on the second hole for an eagle 2.

“And I almost made birdie on three,” Rahm said. “Had 25, 30 feet, and it did graze the hole. I thought I made it honestly. I thought it might be one of those days.”

It was. Rahm added four more birdies and signed for a bogey-free, 7-under-par 65 to take the 54-hole lead at Torrey Pines. But after his round, he spoke to the importance the role his lob wedge played en route to significant par saves on the fifth out of a bunker, on the sixth out of a bunker, and on the 15th out of a bunker. And the up-and-down from a bunker on 13 for birdie was pretty big, too, he added. And the four-footer he made for par on the 11th was huge.

MORE: Leaderboard | TV info | Updates | Photos

“Hard to know where to begin. I mean, the chip‑in on one and hole‑out on two, 3 under through two holes, no putts. Yeah, a pretty good start, pretty good way to get things going,” Rahm said. “But I would say the MVP of today would be my lob wedge. It changed a round that could have been 3, 4 under, which is still a great round, into a bogey‑free 7 under. Especially those bunker shots. They weren’t easy and I made it look pretty easy after seeing some of the highlights.

“Hopefully I don’t need it tomorrow, hopefully I can hit a few more greens and give myself more birdie chances. It all starts off the tee, so hopefully I can put the ball on the fairway and play good from there.”

Rahm is at 12 under after rounds of 68-71-65 and knows he’ll have to play well come Sunday as a bunch of players are within reach of winning the trophy. His nearest rival is Ryan Palmer, the 36-hole leader who is a shot back after a 71. Last year, Rahm and Palmer teamed to win the Zurich Classic.

World No. 2 Rory McIlroy, who can become the top player in the world with a victory, is one of four players three shots back. Among those four shots behind are Tony Finau, Patrick Reed and two-time Farmers champion Brandt Snedeker.

Five shots back is Tiger Woods, who’s won the Farmers a record seven times and won the 2008 U.S. Open here.

“My approach? Just play the best round that I can, honestly,” Rahm said. “It all starts off the tee. So putting the ball in the fairway, I’m feeling comfortable enough to fire at some of those pins and hopefully get it going early on.”

Rahm has always felt comfortable in these parts. He got down on one knee and proposed to his now wife, Kelley Cahill, near the grounds of Torrey Pines. He won his first PGA Tour title here in the 2017 Farmers Insurance Open, becoming the youngest winner in tournament history (he was 22). And he visits as often as he can.

“It’s just a really good atmosphere,” he said. “And we come here so often that it almost feels like, with Phoenix and Spain, a home event honestly. We spend a lot of time here. We stay at the same hotel every time we come and it’s just comfortable. That’s the best word, comfortable and familiar, and once you’re comfortable and you just keep on going in that routine, it’s easier to play good golf.”

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Eddie Pepperell takes lead at Dubai Desert Classic

After a second-round 67, Eddie Pepperell took the lead at Omega Dubai Desert Classic.

After shooting a second-round 67, Eddie Pepperell has taken the lead at the Omega Dubai Desert Classic.

Pepperell, who leads at 8 under through 36 holes at Emirates Golf Club in Dubai, sits one-shot ahead of Dean Burmester, Robert Karlsson and defending champion Bryson DeChambeau.

Ashun Wu and Romain Langasque sit T-5 at 6 under while four other golfers including Kurt Kitayama of the United States are T-7 at 5 under.

LEADERBOARD: Dubai Desert Classic scores

Pepperell, who carded six birdies Friday, missed the cut in his last two events, the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship and the South African Open. He opened the European Tour’s 2020 season T-19 at the Alfred Dunhill Championship in November.

The 29-year-old Englishman finished the first round with a 69 and sat in a tie for third with 11 other golfers.

Pepperell tees off his third round alongside Karlsson Saturday afternoon.

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2020 Ladies European Tour schedule released

The Ladies European Tour released its 2020 schedule Friday.

Talk about an instant turnaround. The Ladies European Tour schedule is out, and it’s a massive step in the right direction. There are seven new events on the docket for 2020, including 15 in Europe. Overall prize money is up $4.96 million (4.5 million euros) to $19.8 million (18 million euros).

Anne van Dam now serves as an ambassador for the new Dutch Ladies Open, played at her home course, Rosendealsche Golf Club, in Arnhem.

There are two new tournaments in Sweden, including the $1.65 million (€1.5 million) Scandinavian Mixed Hosted by Henrik & Annika and the Creekhouse Ladies Open. The tour also returns to Switzerland with the new VP Bank Ladies Swiss Open next September.

The previously announced Saudi Ladies Championship offers a $1 million purse.

The season ends with the Andalucía Costa del Sol Open de España Femenino in November, an event that doubled its prize fund to $661,917 (€600,000). It also marks the end of the Race to Costa del Sol, a season-long competition offering $275,798 (€275,000) between the top three finishers on the official ranking.

“It’s important to have an event in your country to help develop the game and inspire the next generation,” said van Dam, “just as I was inspired when I was able to watch and then play in the Dutch Ladies Open when I was young. The 2020 schedule is looking really strong and I’m so pleased to have an event in the Netherlands.”

Late last year, LET players voted almost unanimously to combine efforts with the LPGA. The new LPGA-LET Joint Venture board includes: includes six directors from the LET (Marta Figueras-Dotti, Eleanor Givens, Catriona Matthew, Liz Young, Justin Abbott and Alastair Ruxton), four Directors from the LPGA (Commissioner Mike Whan, Liz Moore, Kathy Milthorpe and Mike Nichols), one from The R&A (Chief Executive Martin Slumbers) and one from the European Tour (Chief Executive Keith Pelley).

Left to right: European Tour executive director Keith Pelley, LET chair Marta Figueras-Dotti, LET CEO Alexandra Armas, European Solheim Cup Captain Catriona Matthew and LPGA Commissioner Mike Whan at the LET’s headquarters at Buckinghamshire Golf Club in England. (Ladies European Tour)

“The LET and the LPGA only began working together in September 2019, but we’ve been blown away with the results in the first 90 days and the positive response from across the golf industry,” LPGA commissioner Mike Whan said in a statement. “With overall purse increases and seven new events, our athletes will have more opportunities for success. It’s exciting to think what we can accomplish after a full year of working with our new Board. We have a long way to go, but I’m so happy to say that this is the best position that European women’s professional golf has ever been in.”

Matthew, the 2019 and 2021 European Solheim Cup captain, has committed to compete on the LET this season. The LPGA veteran and Women’s British Open winner lives with her husband and two daughters in Scotland.

“This is a tour that existing players and those joining for the first time should be proud to be part of,” said Matthew. “I’ll be keeping an eye on some of the exciting young players coming through as we look ahead to retaining the Solheim Cup in Toledo next year.”

2020 LET Schedule

*subject to currency exchange rates

Date Title/Location Euro/USD prize fund
Feb. 20-23 Australian Ladies Classic Bonville, Bonville Golf Resort, Bonville, New South Wales, Australia €240,000*/$264,766.80
Feb. 27 – March 1 Women’s New South Wales Open, Dubbo Golf Club, New South Wales, Australia €210,000*/$231,670.95
March 12-14 Investec South African Women’s Open, Westlake Golf Club, Cape Town, South Africa €200,000*/$220,639
March 19-22 The Saudi Ladies Championship, Royal Greens Golf & Country Club, King Abdullah Economic City, Saudi Arabia €901,000*/$1,000,000
May 7-9 Jabra Ladies Open, Evian Resort Golf Club, Evian-les-Bains, France €200,000/$220,639
May 14-17 La Reserva de Sotogrande Invitational, La Reserva Club de Sotogrande, Sotogrande, Spain €300,000/$330,958.50
May 29-31 The Mithra Belgian Ladies Open, Naxhelet, Wanxe, Belgium €200,000/$220,639
June 4-7 Lalla Meryem Cup, Royal Golf Dar Es Salam (Blue Course), Rabat, Morocco €450,000/$496,437.75
June 11-14 Scandinavian Mixed Hosted by Henrik & Annika, Bro Hoff Slott Golf Club (Stadium Course), Stockholm, Sweden €1,500,000/$1,654,792.50
July 2-5 Dutch Ladies Open, Rosendealsche Golf Club, Arnhem, the Netherlands €200,000/$220,639
July 16-19 Estrella Damm Mediterranean Ladies Open, Club de Golf Terramar, Sitges, Spain €300,000/$330,958.50
July 23-26 Evian Championship, Evian Resort Golf Club, Evian-les-Bains, France €3,700,000*/$4,100,000
Aug. 5-8 Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games, Kasumigaseki Country Club (East Course), Saitama, Japan N/A
Aug. 6-9 UK Event Confirmed €991,500*/$1,100,000
Aug. 13-16 Aberdeen Standard Investments Ladies Scottish Open, The Renaissance Club, North Berwick, Scotland €1,352,000/$1,500,000
Aug. 20-23 AIG Women’s British Open, Royal Troon, Ayrshire, Scotland €4,055,000*/$4,500,000
Aug. 28-30 TIPSPORT Czech Ladies Open, Golf Course Karlstejn, Liten, Czech Republic €200,000/$220,639
Sept. 3-6 Creekhouse Ladies Open, Kristianstads Golfklubb (Åhus Östra Course), Åhus, Sweden €400,000/$441,278
Sept. 10-12 VP Bank Swiss Ladies Open, Golfpark Holzhäusern, Ennetsee, Switzerland €200,000/$220,639
Sept. 17-20 Lacoste Ladies Open de France, Golf du Médoc (Chateaux Course), Le Pian-Médoc, France €325,000/$358,538.38
Sept. 24-27 Ladies European Thailand Championship, Phoenix Gold Golf & Country Club, Thailand €300,000/$330,958.50
Oct. 1-4 Hero Women’s Indian Open, DLF Golf & Country Club, Gurgaon, India €450,000*/$500,000
Nov. 4-6 Omega Dubai Moonlight Classic, Emirates Golf Club (Faldo Course), Dubai, United Arab Emirates €260,000/$286,830.70
Nov. 12-15 Event Confirmed €300,000/$330,958.50
Nov. 26-29 Andalucía Costa del Sol Open de España Femenino, location TBC, Spain €600,000/$661,917

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WATCH: Two minutes with Morgan Pressel

While chatting with LPGA player Morgan Pressel, Beth Ann Nichols asked how Pressel will be able to play with her sister Madison Pressel.

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Beth Ann Nichols spoke with Morgan Pressel during the inaugural Gainbridge LPGA at Boca Rio and the two discussed the second event of the LPGA season and a family tie to the event.

Morgan’s sister, Madison Pressel, is also playing in the Gainbridge LPGA so Nichols asked about similarities between the two sisters’ games.

“I think that we have similar games in the sense that we hit balls the same distance, you know, similarities there,” Morgan said. “I say that she’s probably a better iron player and I’d say you know maybe my putting is a little bit stronger but we work together. She’ll shoot me a note when she’s on tour like, ‘I’m really struggling with this,’ or ‘This is a problem,’ and I’ll be like, ‘Send me video, send me this, how are you feeling?’”

For more on Morgan’s favorite hole at Boca Rio Golf Club and if she imagines herself holding the inaugural event’s trophy, watch the video above.

Farmers Insurance Open: Updates, scores, TV info

Find live updates, viewing information and scores from the Farmers Insurance Open.

The PGA Tour’s West Coast swing moves from the Coachella Desert to the San Diego coast for the 2020 Farmers Insurance Open.

The North Course and South Course at famed Torrey Pines play host to a loaded field of 156 players with Tiger Woods making his 2020 debut alongside Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm, Patrick Reed, Rickie Fowler and Jordan Spieth.

MORE: Leaderboard | Tee times, TV info

Woods, an eight-time winner at Torrey Pines (seven Farmers wins, 2008 U.S. Open), highlights the week’s featured groups with Rahm and Collin Morikawa. They will tee off on the 10th hole on the North course on Thursday at 12:40 p.m. for the first round. On Friday, they will tee off at 1:40 p.m. on the 1st tee on the South.

Other featured groups: McIlroy, Cameron Smith, Brandt Snedeker; Fowler, Phil Mickelson, Xander Schauffele; Jason Day, defending champ Justin Rose and Spieth.

Updates

https://twitter.com/golfweek/lists/farmers-insurance-open

How to watch, listen

Thursday

TV: 3 – 7 p.m. ET, Golf Channel.
PGA Tour Live: (Featured Groups, Featured Holes), 12 – 7 p.m. ET.
PGA Tour Live on Twitter: 12 – 1 p.m. ET.
Radio: 1 – 7 p.m. ET, PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio.

Friday

TV: 3 – 7 p.m. ET (Golf Channel)
PGA Tour Live: (Featured Groups, Featured Holes), 12 – 7 p.m. ET.
PGA Tour Live on Twitter: 12 – 1 p.m. ET.
Radio: 1 – 7 p.m. ET, PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio.

Saturday

TV: 1 – 2:45 p.m. ET (Golf Channel), 3 – 6 p.m. ET (CBS).
PGA Tour Live: (Featured Groups, Featured Holes) Saturday, 10:30 a.m. – 6 p.m. ET.
PGA Tour Live on Twitter: 10:30 – 11:30 a.m. ET
Radio: 1 – 6 p.m. ET, PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio.

Sunday

TV: 1 – 2:45 p.m. ET (Golf Channel), 3 – 6:30 p.m. ET (CBS).
PGA Tour Live: (Featured Groups, Featured Holes), Sunday, 11:15 a.m. – 6:30 p.m. ET.
PGA Tour Live on Twitter: 11:15 a.m. – 12:15 p.m. ET
Radio: 1 – 6:30 p.m. ET, PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio.

Gaby Lopez survives seven-hole playoff to win LPGA TOC

Gaby Lopez outlasted Inbee Park and Nasa Hataoka to win the Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions.

A gutsy Gaby Lopez poured in a 25-foot birdie putt on the seventh playoff hole to claim the season-opening Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions. The 197-yard par-3 18th proved a beast of a hole all week long, with only six birdies recorded among LPGA players. Lopez was responsible for three of them.

What started out as a three-way playoff with LPGA Hall of Famer Inbee Park, Nasa Hataoka and Lopez was whittled down to two once darkness fell at Tranquilo Golf Course. Flood lights and a Jumbotron lit up the green as fans chanted “One more hole!” Ultimately, Hataoka and Lopez had to come back on a chilly Monday morning to resume play as temperatures dipped into the 40s.

“I proved to myself that I can win any situation,” said Mexico’s Lopez, who claimed her second LPGA title.

On Sunday, Lopez birdied the 18th in regulation to cap off a 66 and make her way into the playoff. The changing conditions had her switching between a 3 hybrid and 4 hybrid throughout the evening. By Monday morning, however, Lopez said she had the distance worked out precisely with the help of her caddie, coach and Trackman. She even backed off a bit behind the tee markers on the seventh playoff hole, striking a 3-hybrid exactly as she designed.

After matching pars on the first six playoff holes, Lopez poured in the first birdie on a putt she’d seen several times before. Hataoka had a chance to match it from only 12 feet but missed it left so badly it never had a chance.

It marked the fourth-longest sudden-death playoff in tour history, matching the 2004 LPGA Takefuji Classic where Cristie Kerr defeated Seol-An Jeon. The longest sudden-death playoff came at the 1972 Corpus Christi Civitan Open when Jo Ann Prentice defeated Sandra Palmer and Kathy Whitworth in 10 holes.

When Golf Channel’s Jerry Foltz asked Lopez if she was glad she didn’t have to see Tranquilo’s 18th hole for another 52 weeks, she smiled and said no.

“I do have a feeling for this hole,” she said.

It made her a winner once more.

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Alexandra Armas named Ladies European Tour CEO

Alexandra Armas is no longer the Acting CEO of the Ladies European Tour, but permanent CEO.

Acting CEO of the Ladies European Tour (LET) Alexandra Armas has been named permanent CEO, it was announced Monday.

The search for a new CEO began in September when former CEO Mark Lichtenhein stepped down from the position. Armas was named Acting CEO in October. From 2008-2012, Armas also served as LET Executive Director.

Armas will report to the LPGA-LET Joint Venture Board of Directors, chaired by LPGA Commissioner Mike Whan. Armas becomes permanent CEO shortly after the newly-formed LPGA-LET joint venture earned the official support of the R&A and European Tour earlier this month and LET players voted in favor of the joint venture in November.

“I am incredibly excited to be given the opportunity to lead the Ladies European Tour at what is a real turning point for women’s golf and professional sport,” Armas said in a statement. “The vision for the LPGA-LET partnership is a completely new project and I believe strongly that we are heading in the right direction to take the LET to greater heights. I look forward to working on the evolution of the business to grow the opportunities for LET members.”

Armas, who played college golf and earned a master’s degree in Business during her time at Wake Forest, also has experience as a player on the LET. She played on the tour from 2001-2005.

Armas has used the past three months as Acting CEO to work alongside the board and build the 2020 LPGA-LET schedule which will be announced Friday.

“Every great team needs a great leader and we are lucky to have Alexandra, who has the experience, passion and relationships necessary to quickly rebuild the LET schedule and brand,” Whan said in a statement. “From working with Alexandra during her previous stint at the LET and since she re-joined the team in October, I am incredibly impressed with her ability to deal with our various stakeholders and partners with grace and skill.

“As Acting CEO of the new LET, she has already proven herself and our Board believes that she is the right person to manage our business long-term and drive strong growth in the years ahead as the permanent leader of this Joint Venture.”

John Smoltz wins celebrity LPGA TOC, pros await Monday finish

MLB Hall-of-Famer John Smoltz won back-to-back celebrity Diamond Resorts TOC titles Sunday, while the pros await a Monday playoff finish.

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. – It’s billed as the biggest party on tour. And the fatheads that line the 18th tee box, where the feel-good tunes are blasting, deliver on that promise.

But as Diamond Resorts CEO Mike Flaskey will tell you, this is no “slap-and-giggle” affair. Yes, John Smoltz will stop and sign an autograph even after a three-putt, but he came to win. Again.

The MLB Hall of Famer made it look easy on the celebrity side by wrapping up a successful title defense with one hole to play in the Stableford format with 150 points. On the LPGA side, it looked like another Hall of Famer, Inbee Park, might collect her 20th LPGA title until she splashed one on the third playoff hole. Instead it was Nasa Hataoka and Gaby Lopez who moved on to play five extra holes under the lights at the 197-yard par-3 18th in the season-opening Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions.

Alas, darkness won.

The two players will return on Monday at 8 a.m. ET to complete the tournament. It’s the longest playoff since the 2018 ANA Inspiration, when Pernilla Lindberg defeated Inbee Park in eight extra holes.

Inbee Park during the final round of the Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions at Tranquilo Golf Course at Four Seasons Golf and Sports Club Orlando in Lake Buena Vista, Florida. (Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

Flaskey said they had 141 applications on the celebrity side that they couldn’t accept. A committee had to be formed so that Flaskey wasn’t the one saying no. While it has quickly become a popular draw, Flaskey said many of the celebrities that live in his Isleworth neighborhood in Orlando, Florida, would love to play alongside the LPGA, but the format is too much to handle.

This isn’t a team event like the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Celebrities play on their own in a Stableford format in their own division for a $500,000 purse. Flaskey said it takes a special type of celebrity to put themselves under the gun on network TV. There are nightly concerts and cocktails, but Flaskey wanted to fill his tournament field with ballers. The elite field of LPGA winners and all-star athletes and artists makes the LPGA’s TOC a truly unique event.

The hope was that likes of Justin Verlander and Josh Donaldson, who reportedly signed a $92 million contract with the Twins last week, would remind folks that golf can be cool.

“At the end of the day, when you don’t have a Tiger (Woods),” said Flaskey, “you’d better figure out something different in golf because the same old, same old is just not exciting the younger generation.”

Angela Stanford, a first-timer at the tour’s revamped TOC, felt like she was living in a “dream world.” During Saturday’s round, all she could think about was how cool it would be to throw a football to Larry Fitzgerald. Stanford is a baseball superfan, having been to every MLB ballpark in the U.S. The most nervous she got playing alongside the likes of Smoltz and Josh Beckett was tossing the ball to her caddie to get it cleaned. And then catching it when he threw it back.

“I did tell Ray (Allen) that I made 90 free throws in a row in high school,” said Stanford. “I was hoping to impress him.”

Stanford, one of the few over-40 players on the LPGA, asked several athletes for tips on nutrition late in their careers. Allen talked about the importance of eating the same foods on the road as she does at home.

“I didn’t want to tell him that I pack my Diet Dr. Pepper, that’s not really athletic,” she said, flashing air quotes.

The Arizona Cardinals’ Fitzgerald said he has long admired Park and enjoyed “the clinic” she put on for him in the second round. Park, a seven-time major winner and Olympic champion, couldn’t keep that momentum going through Sunday, however, and let an opportunity slip that would’ve taken her one step closer to her ultimate goal for 2020 – a return to the Olympics.

Park’s caddie, Brad Beecher estimates that she went through a dozen putters last season trying to find the answer. Late last year she put a newer model of the Odyssey Sabertooth back in the bag, the same putter she used to win three consecutive majors in 2013.

Should Park regain that putting prowess, she won’t be denied in getting to Tokyo.

“Yeah this is only my first event back for 2020,” said Park, “and I have already played good golf this week. Just not great today.”

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As stars stumble, Scottie Scheffler, Andrew Landry open up a lead at American Express

Scottie Scheffler’s golf ball started down the middle of the 18th fairway at the Stadium Course at PGA West and started to move left, too far left, headed for a large lake. But the ball never found the lake. It hit the rocks on the edge of the lake, …

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Scottie Scheffler’s golf ball started down the middle of the 18th fairway at the Stadium Course at PGA West and started to move left, too far left, headed for a large lake.

But the ball never found the lake. It hit the rocks on the edge of the lake, bounced high into the air and back onto the fairway grass.

Those are the kind of breaks that can determine a golf tournament, and it certainly determined that Scheffler would be tied for the lead after the third round of the American Express golf tournament on Saturday.

“I was just trying to hit a little draw 3-wood, and I drew it a lot,” Scheffler laughed. “I’m not sure if it would have crossed up there, so it was a great break bouncing off the rocks like that. I guess you take them where you can get them.”

MORE: Tee times, TV info | Leaderboard | Updates

The big bounce allowed Scheffler to make a par on the closing par-4 and complete a 6-under 66 under warm and calm conditions in La Quinta. That puts Scheffler, a two-time winner on the Korn Ferry Tour last year, at 21 under for the tournament, tied with Andrew Landry.

Landry, who lost the desert title in a four-hole playoff with Jon Rahm in 2018, managed a 65 on the Nicklaus Tournament Course at PGA West to reach 21 under. That gives Landry and Scheffler a four-shot lead over second-round co-leader Rickie Fowler. Fowler was just 2 over through eight holes Saturday on the Stadium Course, but rallied with four birdies the rest of the round for a 70 and a 17-under total.

Rickie Fowler on the fifth hole during The American Express on the Stadium Course at PGA West. (Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports)

Rough start for Rickie

“Typically, you’re going to have nine holes throughout 72 that may not go exactly how you want to, and a couple mental errors cost me, and just really struggled to get things going early,” Fowler said. “So I was actually surprised by the green speed early on.”

As Scheffler and Landry made birdies and marched away from the field, other golfers worked to stay within reach of the leaders. Ryan Moore and Chase Seiffert are tied for fourth at 16 under, with Moore shooting 67 on the Stadium Course and Seiffert shooting 67 on the Nicklaus Tournament Course.

For Scheffler, just 23 and a rookie on the PGA Tour, Saturday’s round was his first encounter with Pete Dye’s Stadium Course, the toughest of the three courses in the American Express rotation. He walked away with the 66 but with respect for a course he’ll play again Sunday in the final pairing with Landry and Fowler.

“It’s a tough course. It’s a good track,” Scheffler said. “If you’re not on your game, you can really struggle. There’s a lot of trouble out there, so you’ve got to hit a lot of quality shots to keep the ball in play, so it’s a good track. Good test.”

Scheffler birdied three of his first five holes to grab the lead. He added three more birdies on the back nine for a bogey-free 66, but he actually trailed Landry late in the round.

Landry’s round started on the back nine of the Nicklaus Tournament Course and featured a 6-under 30 on that nine, including four consecutive birdies to close. Landry added birdies on the fourth and fifth holes to take the lead at 22 under, but a bogey on the par-3 eighth knocked him back down into the tie with Scheffler.

It wasn’t a round Landry thought featured great ball-striking but he was pleased with his solid play around the greens.

Grinding at the American Express

“There were a couple holes out there where I missed the green and left myself in some good spots, left myself in some bad spots, made some really clutch par putts and that was kind of the deal that kept my momentum going throughout the day,” Landry said. “So started off hitting the ball really well and just kept on grinding it out.

“It’s been a heck of a week so far with my ball striking and just kind of, one day’s ball striking, the next day’s putting and putting’s just been here all week,” he said. “So we’ll just keep riding it out and see what happens (Sunday).”

Scottie Scheffler during The American Express on the Stadium Course at PGA West. (Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports)

While Scheffler’s name isn’t that familiar to casual golf fans, he had a big year in 2019 on the Korn Ferry Tour. And he’s hoping he can keep his winning ways going with the same game and same attitude that he used last year. He’ll take that skill and attitude against Fowler, a five-time winner on the tour, and Landry, who has one tour victory in 2018.

“Winning is pretty similar at all levels of the game, and I feel like I’ve gone a good job of closing tournaments out, especially this year on the Korn Ferry Tour,” Scheffler said. “So looking back on that experience should definitely help, and it should be a fun day.”

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One-armed amateur golfer makes incredible hole-in-one at American Express

One-armed amateur golfer Laurent Hurtubise won the hearts of golf fans everywhere when he made a hole-in-one at the American Express.

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Laurent Hurtubise is 61 years old, but this week at the American Express pro-am in the California desert, the Canadian amateur said that he feels much more like 17.

That feeling began Thursday when Hurtubise, who was born without a right hand or forearm, made a hole-in-one on the 151-yard par-3 No. 4 at the PGA West Stadium Course in La Quinta, Calif.

He used a six-iron and his tee shot dropped near the front of the green and rolled directly to the pin and fell into the hole. He threw his hat and left arm into the air in celebration.

MORE: Third round tee times, TV info | Scores

Tour pro Greg Chalmers played in the group and witnessed the shot.

“We all went up in celebration and Laurent went ballistic and maybe let out a few choice words,” Chalmers said, according to Golf Channel. “But who could blame him? It was an incredible shot.”

So incredible, in fact, that it caught national attention and was ESPN’s top play on the nightly SportsCenter Top 10 countdown. Hurtubise concluded the day with a round of drinks at a local club, still reveling in the moment hours later.

“It was hard playing today,” Hurtubise said with a chuckle Friday at La Quinta Country Club. “Everyone congratulating and everything, so it was hard staying in the moment.”

Paired with pros Tyler McCumber and Nelson Ledesma on Friday, Hurtubise still finished his second round with a five-under 67 and sits tied for 96th on the pro-am leader board after two days.

He’ll play the Jack Nicklaus Tournament Course on Saturday.

Hurtubise played with Chalmers and pro Troy Merritt on Thursday, and both were floored that an amateur with one arm could make a hole in one on the PGA Tour.

“That was the coolest experience I’ve had on the golf course,” Merritt told PGATour.com.

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Hurtubise said that Merritt privately told him that he was an inspiration to him and that the moment made his week.

It was amateur playing partner Joe Pusateri, though, who inspired the shot. Hurtubise said he watched Pusateri eagle the third hole and that made him want to try to eagle on the fourth. His caddie told him to use the six-iron for a fade that would land about 10 feet in front of the hole.

Hurtubise gave it a try.

Amateur golfer Laurent Hurtubise putts on the 8th green at the La Quinta Country Club during round two of the American Express golf tournament in La Quinta, Calif., on Friday, January 17, 2020. (Taya Gray/The Desert Sun)

“So, I hit a fade and it landed about five or six yards on the green and it rolled about 15 yards to the pin,” said Hurtubise, who perfected his one-handed forehand swing playing hockey, baseball and golf for much of his life. “I heard ‘clunk’ and it disappeared. That was it.

“It was incredible.”

This is the seventh time Hurtubise has played here at this event. He skipped last year and made a snap decision to play here again about a month ago.

Hurtubise took some time off from the sales retention business he runs, and he and his girlfriend caught a flight down here on Jan. 11. Five days later, he recorded the swing of his life.

Hurtubise said he likes the courses down here because they play a little like his home course, with open fairways, greens that aren’t too elevated and bunkers that aren’t too deep.

In 50 years of playing, Hurtubise said that it was his third hole-in-one. But, he noted, this was clearly the best of the three. He called it the hole-in-one of his career — one he won’t soon forget.

“You know, during the tournament, on the Stadium Course,” Hurtubise marveled.

“It makes me eight feet tall.”