Here’s how many out-of-city officers assisted Scottsdale police at the chaotic WM Phoenix Open. Are more needed?

Multiple agencies sent reinforcements to TPC Scottsdale to help quiet the chaos.

At least a dozen law enforcement agencies sent more than 100 officers to assist Scottsdale with public safety services at this year’s WM Phoenix Open, where large crowds, soggy conditions and alcohol spelled trouble for event organizers.

Massive weekend crowds were unable to spread out on the grass banks around the course given the muddy conditions, creating such congestion that the gates were closed Saturday to afternoon ticketholders.

Alcohol fueled the heckling of players and other bad behavior during the four-day tournament.

Scottsdale police arrested a record 54 people, tripling the number from the previous year. And 211 fans were ejected from the event, which is more than twice the amount thrown out during the past two Opens. While these are still small percentages in comparison to the crowds on hand, it’s a trend organizers are hoping to reverse.

There were widespread reports of fans entering without tickets being checked or scanned, in an attempt to unclog the main entrance.

Tournament chair George Thimsen, in an interview with Golfweek Thursday, said organizers would review this year’s event as they planned next year’s tournament, and crowd size would be reviewed.

“I would say that likely there will be less people on a Friday and a Saturday at our event and that we would focus on quality over quantity,” he said.

He acknowledged “a lot of humans” at the event but did not characterize conditions as unsafe.

More: Viral videos of — let’s just say lubricated — fans at the 2024 WM Phoenix Open

“That’s because of the hard work of our first responders and law enforcement and volunteers,” he said. “There may have been some frustrated fans … But at the end of the day, I think it (closing the gates) was the right call, and it was a successful event.

“From a safety perspective, there wasn’t a lot of major issues, and we feel thankful and blessed for that.”

A fan pounds two beers together and chugs them before getting arrested near the 17th hole during the second round at the WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale.

He said, “We have, you know, our PD all over … the course and supporting throughout the tournament.” He did say he expected a stronger police presence next year, “especially from a player perspective.”

Scottsdale police coordinate efforts with other Phoenix area departments to provide security. Pro Em is the company that provides event management and security staff at the tournament.

It remains unclear what the overall total number of officers was at the event or how that stacks up to previous years, but Scottsdale Police Department spokesperson Aaron Bolin said it “was staffed very similarly to every other year we have done it.

“This event is planned so well in advance and we have a ton of historical data as we staff it each year,” Bolin said. “We do have, according to our models and according to what has worked for us in the past, adequate staffing.”

The Arizona Republic asked 14 local law enforcement agencies how many officers and other resources they provided at the Open.

Scottsdale police declined to specify. “We do not want people with bad intentions to know how many officers and resources are staffed and working at the event. We don’t discuss it for security reasons,” Sgt. Allison Sempsis said.

Peoria and Mesa police did not immediately provide an answer. But 11 other departments confirmed they sent officers to the tournament.

  • Tempe: Sent approximately 50 officers between Wednesday and Saturday to provide “support” for the event. The department said the number of its officers assigned this year was lower than usual because of other events.
  • Arizona Department of Public Safety: Sent about 30 off-duty troopers. The department was unable to provide the number of troopers it sent during previous years.
  • Chandler: Sent about a dozen officers to provide support on bicycles.
  • Surprise: Sent four bicycle officers who worked with Scottsdale’s bike team but provided no enforcement on “incidents that result in charges.”
  • Gilbert: Had about 12 officers on bike teams and night traffic units. The department had a more limited presence at the open than usual because of officers’ regular shifts on Thursday through Saturday.
  • Apache Junction: Sent six officers who assisted Scottsdale police and the private security company.
  • Arizona State University Police: Sent four officers from Wednesday to Saturday.
  • Queen Creek and Goodyear: Sent one and two dog units to the Open, respectively. Goodyear’s unit did explosive sweeps every morning.
  • Phoenix police and Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office: Only sent deputies and officers to the “Know Your Limit” event on Friday and Saturday to highlight the effects of alcohol consumption. The agencies provided no enforcement.
2024 WM Phoenix Open
Fans pack the walkway near the 10th hole during the third round of the 2024 WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. (Photo: Rob Schumacher-USA TODAY Sports)

The staffing models the Scottsdale department uses involve a lighter police presence on Tuesday and Wednesday for pre-tournament events, when Pro Em is mostly able to manage the crowds, Bolin said.

Thursday through Saturday is when law enforcement agencies ramp up their efforts as more fans arrive.

Bolin said security at the tournament is so well done, Scottsdale police “have outside police agencies and event coordinators actually come to our tournament, in particular, to see how we do it and how we are successful.” He noted that a team of police officers from Sweden previously had visited to learn from the Phoenix Open’s practices.

Some of the chaotic fan behavior was a matter for Pro Em security rather than the police, Bolin said. An increased police presence or different law enforcement model would not have made much of a difference when it came to constraining some of that, he said.

More: WM Phoenix Open vows ‘operational audit’ to avoid repeat of events at TPC Scottsdale

“I’m not really sure that a different staffing model would have solved any of the issues that were out there, that people are posting about, people sliding down hills, things like that. Just because something isn’t golf etiquette, or it’s … raucous behavior doesn’t necessarily mean it’s against the law.”

Reporter Sam Kmack covers Tempe, Scottsdale and Chandler. Follow him on X @KmackSam or reach him at sam.kmack@arizonarepublic.com.

WM Phoenix Open vows ‘operational audit’ to avoid repeat of events at TPC Scottsdale

“There’s some major improvements and operational things that we are looking to make.”

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — The 2024 WM Phoenix had a fantastic finish with a playoff that ended just before dark Sunday but this year’s version of the People’s Open is being remembered for rain, muddy conditions and the social media videos of fans drinking too much and getting into it with players.

Four days after its conclusion, tournament director George Thimsen told Golfweek there have already been long discussions about how to be better next time around, especially for the third round on Saturday, always the most highly attended day of the week.

“With respect to Saturday, I think we have a lot of things to learn from,” Thimsen said. “I think that we understand that it was a challenging set of circumstances that we had to navigate.”

Using the term “operational audit,” Thimsen said the Thunderbirds, the civic group that runs the WMPO at TPC Scottsdale, will look at the entire week.

“Each year as this tournament continues to grow, the Thunderbirds and all of our partners in law enforcement and first responders, we meet and we do a post-mortem of the event,” he said. “What are some of the key learnings that how can we continue to improve? And obviously this year, there’s some major improvements and operational things that we are looking to make and the Thunderbirds are committed to doing that.

“We’re committed to making this an event that the community is proud of. But, yeah, on that Saturday, the weather that morning and just the sheer number of people that still wanted to come out and enjoy the event, it did create a lot of congestion.”

Days of rain made many of the grassy hillsides unusable for fans. Well, mostly unusable except for the fan caught on viral video sliding shirtless face first in the muck, then getting doused in beer from several of his friends.

More: Viral videos of — let’s just say lubricated — fans at the 2024 WM Phoenix Open

Do the Thunderbirds feel like part of the future plan is the discouragement of excessive drinking?

“We’re going to be addressing the distribution channels of alcohol and the alcoholic beverages to our guests and we’re going to make the necessary changes that we need to once we are able to diagnose everything, all elements of it,” Thimsen said.

Other social media videos showed Zach Johnson and Billy Horschel getting into it with fans who crossed the line with comments to the golfers. Johnson in particular, when asked a full day later about the situation

“You’re hitting me at a very emotional point right now, so if I were to say if I’m gonna come back, I’d probably say no,” Johnson told The Arizona Republic. “But at the same time, I have no idea.”

Things may have come to a head around 2 p.m. on Saturday when the tournament gates were closed, even to fans who purchased tickets. That led to social media outrage. To make it up to those fans, Thimsen said they can send an email to orders@wmphoenixopen.com and after providing an order number, a ticket number or an email associated with the original order, get a full refund.

“We own up to it, we take full responsibility and own that Saturday was not perfect and we want to continue to prove that but the stage was not the normal stage that we have,” he said.

2024 WM Phoenix Open
Justin Thomas thanks the crowd after his putt on the 10th green during the second round of the 2024 WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. (Photo: The Arizona Republic)

Chance Cozby, executive director of the Thunderbirds, was on Golf Channel Monday and called Saturday a “turning point.” On Tuesday, he and next year’s WM Phoenix Open tournament chairman Matt Mooney visited Pacific Palisades, California, ahead of this week’s Genesis Invitational. The Sports Business Journal reported that the duo met with PGA Tour players throughout the day to get feedback, the most common being that fans didn’t seem to get out of line when uniformed police officers were stationed in highly visible areas.

Tournament organizers stopped announcing attendance figures in 2019. In 2018, the tournament reported a weekly attendance of 719,179 and a Saturday attendance of 216,818, the most ever in a single day on record for the event. That Saturday was also the third year in a row the attendance surpassed the 200,000 mark.

I think there’s been a lot of speculative numbers out there and we actually don’t have a number that we have officially communicated internally yet so I don’t have a number,” Thimsen said when asked about a 2024 number.

What is still being tracked are public-safety security issues. The numbers show that arrests went from 18 to 54 from 2023 to 2024 and that ejections went from 102 to 211.

Security issues 2022 2023 2024
Calls for service 440 558 653
Arrests 0 18 54
Ejections 90 102 211
Trespass 14 41 73

Source: Arizona Department of Liquor License and Control

If last Saturday’s attendance was close to the 2018 mark of more than 200,000, then the 211 fans tossed out represents 0.1 percent and the 54 fans arrested is 0.03 percent of all the fans who attended.

Still, seeing those numbers double and triple, respectively, is a trend moving in the wrong direction.

The full operational audit will take time to complete but one distinct possibility is that fewer tickets will be sold on the popular days of Friday and Saturday in future years.

“I think that one thing you can definitely count on is that we’re going to make improvements and diagnose through our operational audit what makes the most sense for our tournament,” Thimsen said. “But if I were a betting man, I would say that likely there will be less people on a Friday and a Saturday at our event and that we would focus on quality over quantity.

“You know, we’re proud of the uniqueness and energy of the WMPOs. It is the People’s Open but we do understand that we need to make changes and not necessarily, you know, always bigger, but definitely always to get better.”

The Phoenix Open donated more than $14 million to charities after the 2023 event, bringing the lifetime total to close to $110 million.

“We’re hoping to be able to get to announce a number very similar because people are out there partying with a purpose,” Thimsen said. “I think that that’s really the main focus, that I hope people can rally around, which is, yes, there are some things out there that are fun to see on video and kind of scroll through when you’re on your social media but at the end of the day, we’re making a really big impact for our community here and that’s why we do what we do.”

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Lynch: The nasty hangover from TPC Scottsdale is being felt at Riviera. Is it time to call last orders at the Phoenix Open?

One spectator was upset when beer sales were suspended. “There was nothing else to do but watch golf.”

LOS ANGELES — It’s difficult to find more disparate experiences in consecutive weeks on the PGA Tour calendar than the WM Phoenix Open and the Genesis Invitational.

One is held at a modern course designed with spectator flow in mind, the other isn’t. One is at the center of every sporting conversation in its host city that week, the other isn’t. One is viewed by some Tour players with an aversion usually reserved for gas station sushi, the other isn’t. One attracts and engages fans at a level that’s the envy of most tournaments on the schedule, the other doesn’t. One stretchers out more inebriated, vomit-flecked fans than LIV draws in, the other doesn’t.

On the grounds at Riviera Country Club, much of the chatter remains focused on events at TPC Scottsdale, where the viral social media videos included Tour pros in terse exchanges with spectators, a pair of Two-Can Van Dammes brawling, shirtless belly slides in the mud, and a barely-conscious chap perched on a stool, blissfully unaware that he was also urinating.

It’s golf, but plastered.

The WM Phoenix Open is a known quantity. Tour players understand that the party vibe at TPC Scottsdale isn’t just tolerated, it’s welcomed. Merchandise offerings celebrate the boozy bro culture, like T-shirts proclaiming the wearer got hammered at the 16th hole. One friend at Riviera said he heard from a spectator in Scottsdale who was upset when beer sales were suspended. “There was nothing else to do but watch golf,” they griped.

That scene isn’t to all tastes, so many players choose to skip it. But the festivities last week proved two things: that giving free rein to jackasses doesn’t end well, and that the Tour’s new reality will force an uncomfortable reckoning for its most popular event.

The social media era has spawned a disease in many sports, in which a handful of spectators believe buying a ticket makes them part of the entertainment, apparently convinced there’s an audience dying to hear their slurred witticisms or watch them guzzle beer from a shoe. In most venues, that group is blessedly small. Not so at the Phoenix Open. To an extent  —certainly more than they’re accustomed to — Tour players need to suck it up and tune out oafs riding the rope lines while offering commentary. That’s just part of being a professional athlete. The issue in Scottsdale is that the rope line is no longer the final frontier. Players won’t — and shouldn’t — tolerate people running onto the course to make snow angels in the bunkers, or yelling during the hitting of a shot with the intent of distracting competitors.

The standard defense offered by WMPO loyalists — if you don’t like it, stay home — is no longer fit for purpose. Only the stars can vote with their feet and walk. For everyone else, starts in Tour events are tougher to come by than ever, so staying home is a luxury they can’t afford. And if the Phoenix Open sees the quality of its field decline because of boorish fan behavior, that’s a problem. If women working on-site feel unsafe because of groups of leering drunks, that’s a problem. If spectators are emboldened to go inside the ropes, that’s a problem. When fans gleefully initiate and record conflict with competitors, that’s a problem.

Whose problem? The PGA Tour’s, partially, since that’s the brand being damaged. But moreso for the Thunderbirds organization that runs the event.

It’s not like the Phoenix Open needs to be taken over by the temperance movement — and the game certainly needs reminders these days that fans matter just as much as players — but there has to be a line on appropriate conduct that is policed effectively, and right now that line hasn’t so much been blurred as entirely erased. The alternative is more elite players choosing not to compete, more fans opting not to put their kids in the middle of a bawdy piss-up, and more reluctance on the part of the Tour and its partners to embrace the entire experience.

Perhaps Riviera needs a little more TPC Scottsdale, but TPC Scottsdale needs a lot more Riviera. Perhaps it’s futile to ask spectators in search of a party to act responsibly, but it’s sure as hell not too much to ask of the tournament organizers.

Fans were loving Smylie Kaufman and Kevin Kisner commentating the 16th hole at the WM Phoenix Open

Yup. Kiz was booing bad shots all afternoon.

Announcers openly booing players? Acceptable at the WM Phoenix Open.

And there were no shortage of boos Saturday afternoon and evening at TPC Scottsdale, especially on the 16th tee box. The rowdiest hole in golf is known for good shots being praised and bad ones being ridiculed.

But the announcers getting in on the fanfare? That’s what Smylie Kaufman and Kevin Kisner did on Saturday’s broadcast. NBC Sports set the duo up a few yards from the 16th tee box, and from the first tee shot, they provided a different type of commentary than we’ve seen from an NBC broadcast in some time.

Sure, Colt Knost and Amanda Renner have set up shop on this hole in previous years and done a stellar job, but with the CBS crew having the week off thanks to the Super Bowl, it was NBC’s time to showcase something new.

They may have struck gold.

Fans chimed in on social media in support of the duo and their non-stop debauchery from the 16th tee. Kisner even had a football he would pass to players for them to toss into the crowd, but the duo didn’t hold back commentating on the golf.

They praised good shots and boo’ed bad ones. They were clearly having fun, and the excitement of the 16th hole truly came through on the broadcast.

Kevin Kisner and Smylie Kaufman on the 16th tee box. (Photo: NBC Sports)

Here’s some of the best reactions to the duo making their debut from the tee box.

Last call for Hard K: Jim Knous makes cut in final start before taking job with Ping

It’s been five years since a Monday qualifier won a PGA Tour event.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — If this is Jim Knous’s final PGA Tour event, he can at least say he made it to one more weekend.

“I want to see what that Saturday Colosseum vibe is like on No. 16. I want to hear them roar,” he said. “I need to get in there and hit a good shot so I can hear them roar.”

Knous who was inside the cutline at 3 under overall with four holes remaining when play was halted Friday night, went birdie-par-bogey-birdie to post a 66 on Saturday morning. That got him to 4 under, well inside the cutline.

Knous, 34, earned his way into the tournament in the Monday qualifier at Pinnacle Peak Country Club, shooting 7-under 65 and advancing through a 4-for-3 playoff.

But it’s last call because Knous decided it’s time to hang up his golf spikes and is set to begin a new position working at Ping as a fitting and education engineer. Knous, who lost a playoff for the 2012 NCAA Division II title, is the most successful player to come out of Colorado School of Mines, which is also where Ping’s vice president of fitting and performance Marty Jertson went to school and he has long taken an interest in Knous, who has played Ping equipment throughout his career.

“Working with the fitters, design engineers, R&D. A broad scope position so I can branch out later once I maybe find out what I’m good at or what I like to do there,” said Knous of his new which begins Feb. 26. “I got a cubicle. Let’s go.”

Knous made his PGA Tour debut at the 2017 WM Phoenix Open. It took seven years after turning pro before Knous earned his Tour card for the 2019 season. In all, he has made 44 Tour starts as well as nearly 100 more on the Korn Ferry Tour in his 11 years as a pro. But the grind of being on the fringes of the pro game also have taken their toll. He failed to get through Q-School this year and decided it was time to put his civil engineering degree to use.

But first, Knous has his college coach, Tyler Kimble, on the bag at TPC Scottsdale. Wife, Heidi, and the couple’s three kids watched his opening round and father, Jim, and mother, Ellen, were among his supporters walking with him on Friday afternoon. He holed out a bunker shot for birdie at 18, his ninth hole of his second round, and lifted his arms to the sky in delight.

“Clipped it just perfectly and went in and I just said, ‘Yeah, baby, let’s go.’ I was super psyched,” he said.

Then he birdied his next three holes. Last call will have to wait two more rounds because on Saturday morning, in the pouring rain, he chipped in for birdie at No. 6, flagged it at No. 7 but left the birdie putt an inch short in the heart of the hole and took three putts at No. 8. But he bounced back to drain a 23-foot birdie putt at the last and shot 66. He posted a 36-hole total of 4-under 138 and is T-34 at the midway point of the tournament.

“Thanks for the ride,” his father, an avid golfer who got his son started in the game at about 2, said in an interview with PGA Tour.com.

But Knous knows it is time to do something else after being on the road for 197 nights in 2022.

“That just wears on you as a person, as a dad. So we made the decision to try to look for other opportunities,” he said on Saturday after making the cut.

“I’m very proud of my career, but it’s time to be a dad,” Knous told Monday Q. “I’m just going to enjoy everything about this week, no matter what.”

The Beer Snake at the WM Phoenix Open’s 16th hole is alive and well

The long stack of green cups is making waves at the famous party hole once again.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — If you’ve been watching the WM Phoenix Open, you’ve probably noticed the Beer Snake. You might not have known that’s what you were looking at it, but it’s real.

And it’s spectacular.

As you might imagine, beer is consumed in large quantities on the famous 16th hole at TPC Scottsdale, and the Beer Snake is one long stack of the empty plastic beer cups.

When fans finish off a cup of liquid refreshment, they start stacking. The plastic cups are actually cool souvenirs with the WM Phoenix Open’s 16th hole logo on them, but when the Beer Snake gets going, there’s no stopping the fun.

In 2023, security actually did break up the Beer Snake.

2023 WM Phoenix Open
An Arizona Department of Public Safety trooper removes a beer-snake from fans at the 16th hole during the 2023 WM Phoenix Open. (Photo: Rob Schumacher/The Arizona Republic)

This year, the Beer Snake is back. Golf Channel showed it in all its green glory several times Friday during second-round coverage. Expect more of the same Saturday, always the loudest, wildest and most highly attended day of the week.

Early in the week, it seemed tournament officials were more than OK with the Beer Snake in 2024, as there is a can koozie for sale in the Fan Shop with the “Make the Snake” slogan on it.

2024 WM Phoenix Open
Merchandise at the 2024 WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. (Photo: Todd Kelly/Golfweek)

On Saturday, an officer with the Scottsdale Police Department was seen confiscating a long stack of the green cups.

2024 WM Phoenix Open
A Scottsdale police officer confiscates a Beer Snake from fans on the 16th hole during the 2024 Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. (Photo: Joe Rondone/The Arizona Republic)

You might partially credit Sam Ryder for this phenomenon.

After he made a hole-in-one on the 16th hole in 2022, hundreds of fans chucked their beer cans and aluminum bottles down, many of them half-full or more, onto the par-3 hole.

The next year, tournament organizers, citing safety concerns, started serving beer in those plastic cups instead. Now, instead of throwing, they’re stacking at the Phoenix Open.

What’s it really like to play the 16th hole at the WM Phoenix Open? This PGA Tour pro explains

Hahn provided some insight to the craziness that is the 16th hole.



SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Augusta National has No. 12. Pebble Beach has No. 7. TPC Sawgrass has the 17th.

All par 3s. All iconic. All a part of the lore of the game.

But for several years now, the 16th hole at TPC Scottsdale – normally an innocuous challenge – has become one of the bucket-list places in the game, for pro golfers and fans alike. And there’s really nothing like it anywhere in the game.

It was long known as the party hole at the Stadium Course, but a hole-in-one there by Tiger Woods in 1997 really ignited things. That year, fans surrounded the hole, but the thought of a triple-decker grandstand hadn’t yet materialized.

These days, it’s known as the Coliseum, a mini-stadium packed with close to 18,000 fans, all seemingly breathing down the necks of those golfers who partake in the challenge.

2023 WM Phoenix Open
James Hahn interacts with fans on the 16th hole during the second round of the 2023 WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo: Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

What does it feel like to walk through the tunnel? How do you handle all the noise? What about the name-calling or the singing or chanting? And is it really cool for fans to boo you when you miss the green?

James Hahn, an 11-year veteran on the PGA Tour with two career victories, has played the tournament 11 times and made the cut eight times, which means he has had 38 cracks at making an ace on the 16th hole.

During a recent media event, Hahn let Golfweek tag along for the four closing holes, Nos. 15 through 18. It’s the most exciting stretch on the Sundays of the WM Phoenix Open. Hahn provided some insight to the craziness that is the 16th hole.

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Watch: Drone video shows the 16th hole at TPC Scottsdale is ready for 2024 WM Phoenix Open

This drone video will get you fired up for 16.

While we await the Monday finish at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, it’s easy to peek ahead to later this week when TPC Scottsdale – and the 16th hole arena – takes center stage.

Host to Post Malone on Saturday for the third Concert in the Coliseum, the 16th hole is now primed and ready for golf at the outdoor party that is the WM Phoenix Open.

With three levels of private suites, the arena is generally considered to be able to seat about 18,000 fans. Construction on the Coliseum starts mid-October each year and becomes the focal point of the tournament.

It’ll start getting rowdy Wednesday during the pro-am but the fun in the sun really begins with Thursday’s first round. Saturday is the pinnacle, when the tournament has its largest crowds and when the general-admission seats are full by 7:15 in the morning.

To get you pumped, check out this drone flyover video:

Photos: Arena already under construction at famed 16th hole at TPC Scottsdale

The 2024 WM Phoenix Open isn’t for another three and a half months.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — All eyes in the golf world for the next few days will be trained on Marco Simone Golf Club in Italy, specifically the rowdy first hole at the Ryder Cup.

Meanwhile, construction has begun on another golf arena halfway around the world from Rome.

Crews have started the buildout on the 16th hole at TPC Scottsdale ahead of the 2024 WM Phoenix Open, set for Feb. 8-11.

The famous par-3 hole has become a bucket-list place for pro golfers and fans alike. The 150-yard hole is almost unrecognizable in its normal state.

Crews at the Stadium Course are also already building out the suites and grandstands along the par-4 17th hole as well.

Scene and heard: Saturday’s third round at 2023 WM Phoenix Open

Here are some of Saturday’s best moments from the 16th hole.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — On the eve of the Super Bowl, the WM Phoenix Open certainly drew large crowds and didn’t fall short of providing entertainment.

Friday’s action at the 16th hole warmed up the crowd after a streaker made waves and swam through the water hazards from the 17th hole and 18th hole. With another sellout crowd at TPC Scottsdale for the third round, Saturday was bound to be entertaining.

From crowd sing-alongs to sightings of other sports figures, here are some of Saturday’s best moments from the 16th hole.

A sweet scene

With the second round cutting into Saturday morning, there was plenty of idle time at the 16th hole before the first group of the third round trickled in around noon.

As it got closer for the action to begin, the video boards had a little fun and began a sing-along to the crowd-pleaser, “Sweet Caroline.”

That wasn’t the only tune that the crowd sang either. A group dressed as the Founding Fathers (wigs and all) sang the national anthem that caught on. A few days earlier, a group serenaded Canadian golfer Adam Hadwin with ‘O Canada’ at the 16th hole.

Welcome back

Brittney Griner hasn’t made many public appearances since being released from a Russian penal colony after a prisoner swap for Viktor Bout, a Russian arms dealer, in December. But the Phoenix Mercury center was at the 16th hole with her wife, Cherelle, on Saturday. Griner had previously made her first public appearance last January when she surprised participants at a MLK Day march in downtown Phoenix.

Griner was interacting with fans at the 16th hole while enjoying the action from between the ropes. Griner still intends to come back to the Mercury this season. The team has yet to re-sign Diana Taurasi and Griner, but traded Diamond DeShields on Saturday.

Sunny times

It hasn’t been a week since Matt Ishbia was introduced as the new majority owner for the Phoenix Suns and Mercury, but he’s already acquainted with one of the area’s biggest sporting events. The Suns have garnered lots of buzz this week on top of Ishbia’s introduction. Late Wednesday night, the Suns pulled off a blockbuster trade for Kevin Durant and earned widespread praise.

Ishbia was among many attendees at the 16th hole, including Suns players Chris Paul, Devin Booker, and Josh Okogie, and Washington Mystics player Elena Delle Donne.

Ishbia and Paul watched Rory McIlroy tee off as McIlroy finished with a par 3 at the hole.

A gift from below

In a tournament that already has a lot of interactions between the players and the fans, there’s even more going on at the 16th hole.

Golfer Ryan Palmer continued his yearly tradition of treating fans with a golf ball that has $10 attached to it and says “Have a beer.”

Green day

Saturday at the Open means a green out and fans who arrived in the grandstands of the 16th hole received a free green t-shirt. WM and the Thunderbirds will donate money to sustainability-focused nonprofits for everyone wearing green on Saturday.

The large amount of attendees that came for the Super Bowl and the Open certainly contributed to Saturday’s green out with many Eagles fans in attendance.

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