Cameron Davis turns heads with share of Northern Trust lead to start the playoffs

Cameron Davis’s name was probably never mentioned in discussions about potential winners, but he has a share of the Northern Trust lead.

NORTON, Mass. – The NBA Playoffs started this week, and in the opening game of their series against the Los Angeles Lakers, the eighth-seed Portland Trailblazers upset the Western Division’s top-seeded team. The Orlando Magic, another 8-seed, defeated the Eastern Division’s top team, the Milwaukee Bucks.

Like Lakers and Bucks fans, golf lovers probably assumed that one of the top-ranked players this week at TPC Boston would take command early at the Northern Trust. Justin Thomas tops the FedEx Cup point list and is ranked No. 2 in the world. Collin Morikawa arrived in Norton, Massachusetts, ranked second in FedEx Cup points thanks to winning the PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park two weeks ago. Maybe Rory McIlroy, he’s won twice on this course.

Cameron Davis’s name was probably never mentioned in discussions about potential winners. Andy why should it be? Entering this week, he was 203rd on the Official World Golf Ranking, No. 91 on the FedEx Cup point list and he’s missed the cut in four of the seven PGA Tour events he has played since the Tour’s restart. But on a New England morning that was so beautiful James Taylor probably wrote a song about it, Davis, 25, lit up TPC Boston. He carded eight birdies en route to a 64 and a share of the first-round lead.


Northern Trust: Leaderboard | Best photos


“My swing was a little sloppy, and I wasn’t hitting the ball very solid on the range,” Davis said Thursday evening. “The start to this back nine, which is where I started my round, is very strong, and (I) hit a lot of good quality shots. I feel really proud of the way I dug in.”

Davis is joined by other players who did not get a lot of attention heading into the week: Harris English and Kevin Streelman.

“It helps when the greens are soft,” said English, who was a standout at the University of Georgia. “Five-iron into No. 11, then a really good shot, a 5-iron, at No. 12. (On) 13 I hit 8-iron and 14 I hit 7-iron. A lot of mid-irons, a lot of long irons and I feel like you’ve got to hit those clubs well. I felt like my iron game was on point.”

That’s one way to describe it. English hit 15 of 18 greens in regulation and finished the day ranked No. 1 in proximity to the hole and second in strokes gained approach the green, a stat that measures how much of an edge a player has on the field based on his iron game.

“I don’t swing it like everybody else, and other people don’t swing it like I do,” English said after being asked about switching coaches and searching for a better move. “I can’t look at how Rory swings it, how Dustin swings it, how Brooks swings it. I mean, everybody is different, and I’ve begun to realize that.”

Streelman, 41, came into the week ranked No. 22 in FedEx Cup points. He has two runner-up finishes this season but hasn’t won a PGA Tour event since the 2014 Travelers Championship. A strong showing here could put him in a position to reach his first Tour Championship since 2013.

“(I) just kind of did what I was supposed to today, and you’ve got to keep pushing,” Streelman said. “I think the wind is not going to be a major factor this weekend. The weather looks beautiful. The course in perfect shape. I’m excited to get out in the morning with even better greens than we had today.”

Another Georgia Bulldog who had a great day was two-time Masters champion Bubba Watson, who shot 65 in the afternoon wave.

“The problem that I’ve had over the last year or so is the mental part, the thinking,” Watson said. “I’ve been trying to work on that a little bit. I knew my ballstriking was in the right spot. We’ve got three more days, so I could shoot 102 tomorrow, but right now, I’m hitting the driver really nicely. I’ve got an old (Ping) B60 (putter) in the bag now from my junior days, so I rolled the ball nicely as well.”

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Other players who shot 65 on Thursday were Louis Oosthuizen, Scott Piercy, Kevin Kisner, Matthew Wolff and Charley Hoffman, who won on this course in 2010, and Sebastian Munoz, who birdied his first seven holes.

Among the notable players who also posted low scores are:

  • Daniel Berger, Adam Scott and Tommy Fleetwood (66)
  • Rickie Fowler and Dustin Johnson (67)
  • Justin Thomas, Xander Schauffele and Tiger Woods (68)

Woods put his old Scotty Cameron putter in the bag on Thursday, taking out the longer and heavier putter that he used at the PGA Championship.

“I had a good feel today. I had nice pace, and I like the speed of these greens,” Woods said. ” They’re fast. Even though they’re soft, but they’re still quick.”

Brooks Koepka withdrew from the Northern Trust on Wednesday due to a hip injury, and on Thursday morning, Ryan Moore withdrew after playing seven holes in 2-over par due to a back injury. Neither player was already inside the top 70 spots on the FedEx Cup point list, so they are out of the playoffs.

Among the notable players who struggled on Thursday were Phil Mickelson (74), Marc Leishman (75) and Graeme McDowell (77).

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Northern Trust field, by the rankings

We break down the field at the 2020 Northern Trust by the Golfweek/Sagarins and the Official World Golf Rankings.

The FedEx Cup playoffs begin this week at TPC Boston with the Northern Trust.

An exceptionally strong field this week includes all of the top 12 players in the Golfweek/Sagarin Professional Rankings and 19 of the top 20.

The Northern Trust field is broken down below according to each player’s ranking in the Golfweek/Sagarin and in the OWGR. In addition to those rankings, we’ve added another column this week. Each player’s heat index number is their ranking just in events played since the Tour restarted the season in June.


FedEx Cup Playoffs guide | Fantasy rankings | Tee times, TV info


For the 2019-20 season, the average ranking of the winner heading into the week in which they won has been 79.03 in the Golfweek/Sagarins and 102.52 in the OWGR.

Player GW/Sagarin OWGR Heat Index
 Rory McIlroy 1 3 10
 Jon Rahm 2 1 11
 Xander Schauffele 3 10 1
 Justin Thomas 4 2 4
 Bryson DeChambeau 5 8 2
 Patrick Cantlay 6 12 7
 Collin Morikawa 7 5 8
 Daniel Berger 8 18 5
 Tiger Woods 9 16 18
 Webb Simpson 10 6 25
 Harris English 11 113 9
 Abraham Ancer 12 25 3
 Gary Woodland 14 22 27
 Matthew Fitzpatrick 15 20 21
 Patrick Reed 16 9 22
 Tony Finau 17 15 17
 Adam Hadwin 18 60 26
 Dustin Johnson 19 4 34
 Hideki Matsuyama 20 27 80
 Billy Horschel 21 30 23
 Viktor Hovland 22 32 6
 Sungjae Im 23 24 77
 Mark Hubbard 24 133 14
 Joel Dahmen 25 59 51
 Tyrrell Hatton 27 14 56
 Scottie Scheffler 28 45 100
 Tommy Fleetwood 29 13 119
 Adam Scott 30 11 N/R
 Jason Day 31 34 37
 Louis Oosthuizen 32 26 61
 Matt Kuchar 34 23 60
 Cameron Tringale 35 184 133
 Talor Gooch 36 141 108
 Scott Stallings 37 200 20
 Cameron Champ 38 70 36
 Brian Harman 39 138 87
 Doc Redman 40 94 42
 Paul Casey 42 19 99
 Ian Poulter 43 56 30
 Kevin Na 44 31 49
 Ryan Palmer 45 36 102
 Bud Cauley 46 130 93
 Adam Long 47 73 70
 Jordan Spieth 49 63 47
 Zach Johnson 50 180 35
 Denny McCarthy 51 172 103
 Dylan Frittelli 52 96 63
 Brendon Todd 53 42 76
 Harold Varner III 54 104 68
 Marc Leishman 55 21 184
 Brendan Steele 56 98 33
 Lanto Griffin 59 78 134
 Pat Perez 60 155 52
 Matt Jones 61 89 121
 Matthew Wolff 62 37 62
 Patrick Rodgers 64 188 94
 Kevin Kisner 66 33 58
 Sam Burns 67 162 43
 Richy Werenski 68 132 45
 Joaquin Niemann 69 69 54
 Rickie Fowler 70 35 131
 Shane Lowry 72 28 97
 Brooks Koepka 73 7 96
 Alex Noren 75 116 75
 Phil Mickelson 76 52 40
 Carlos Ortiz 77 143 196
 Byeong Hun An 78 55 156
 Max Homa 80 71 182
 Nick Taylor 81 112 186
 Henrik Norlander 82 147 16
 Corey Conners 83 68 78
 Chez Reavie 84 38 69
 Russell Henley 86 153 67
 Rory Sabbatini 90 92 118
 J.T. Poston 91 66 164
 Maverick McNealy 92 176 193
 Tyler Duncan 93 158 31
 Si Woo Kim 94 86 44
 Keegan Bradley 97 84 105
 Brandt Snedeker 99 64 191
 Justin Rose 100 17 146
 Luke List 101 126 82
 Brian Stuard 104 145 127
 Charles Howell III 105 82 154
 Kevin Streelman 107 48 46
 Adam Schenk 109 204 86
 Bubba Watson 114 65 149
 Ryan Moore 115 123 187
 Tom Hoge 116 135 205
 Danny Lee 117 114 234
 Troy Merritt 121 127 141
 Sebastián Muñoz 122 109 208
 Lucas Glover 123 93 83
 Mackenzie Hughes 125 74 24
 Cameron Davis 130 203 174
 Cameron Smith 136 53 228
 Tom Lewis 137 51 66
 Matthew NeSmith 138 199 256
 Brice Garnett 140 219 209
 Bo Hoag 142 278 177
 Scott Piercy 144 124 287
 Jason Kokrak 146 67 170
 Xinjun Zhang 147 131 259
 Harry Higgs 150 148 366
 Michael Thompson 156 107 91
 Charley Hoffman 166 154 225
 Sung Kang 168 62 313
 Sepp Straka 175 144 72
 Emiliano Grillo 178 140 168
 Andrew Landry 186 118 152
 Nate Lashley 195 95 327
 Graeme McDowell 200 58 321
 Sam Ryder 213 212 275
 Ryan Armour 223 173 114
 Kyoung-Hoon Lee 236 224 292
 Zac Blair 239 230 339
 Keith Mitchell 243 115 306
 Beau Hossler 248 249 504
 Robby Shelton 259 166 369
 Wyndham Clark 265 181 364
 Brian Gay 278 267 387
 Scott Harrington 295 238 398
 Jim Herman 298 91 130
 Scott Brown 303 174 309

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Wyndham Championship field, by the rankings

We break down the field at the 2020 Wyndham Championship by the Golfweek/Sagarins and the Official World Golf Rankings.

We’ve arrived at the meat of the 2020 season, with one major down and the FedEx Cup Playoffs on the horizon. The Wyndham Championship is on tap this week at Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina.

Only three of the top players in the Official World Golf Ranking are in the field, and those include Webb Simpson, Brooks Koepka and Patrick Reed. Harris English, at No. 10, is the highest-ranked playing according to the Golfweek/Sagarin Rankings.

The Wyndham Championship field is broken down below according to each player’s ranking in the Golfweek/Sagarin and in the OWGR.

For the 2019-20 season, the average ranking of the winner heading into the week in which they won PGA Tour event has been 68.96 in the Golfweek/Sagarins and 95.78 in the OWGR.

Player Golfweek/Sagarin OWGR
 Harris English 10 111
 Webb Simpson 11 6
 Abraham Ancer 12 24
 Patrick Reed 19 9
 Sungjae Im 22 27
 Billy Horschel 24 38
 Mark Hubbard 28 140
 Tommy Fleetwood 29 13
 Cameron Tringale 32 178
 Brendon Todd 33 44
 Scott Stallings 35 203
 J.B. Holmes 36 114
 Talor Gooch 40 149
 Brooks Koepka 42 7
 Brian Harman 44 138
 Paul Casey 45 19
 Jordan Spieth 46 60
 Wesley Bryan 48 763
 Carlos Ortiz 53 141
 Lanto Griffin 54 76
 Doc Redman 55 126
 Pat Perez 56 152
 Corey Conners 57 67
 Adam Long 58 72
 Bud Cauley 61 132
 Rory Sabbatini 62 87
 Patrick Rodgers 63 184
 J.T. Poston 65 66
 Matt Jones 66 89
 Denny McCarthy 67 194
 Chez Reavie 70 37
 Zach Johnson 71 216
 Matthias Schwab 72 83
 Alex Noren 73 108
 Joaquin Niemann 74 69
 Harold Varner III 77 122
 Charles Howell III 79 79
 Maverick McNealy 81 171
 Justin Rose 82 17
 Kevin Kisner 84 34
 Henrik Norlander 85 142
 Sam Burns 90 175
 Shane Lowry 91 28
 Ryan Moore 92 116
 Danny Lee 93 107
 Lucas Glover 96 86
 Brandt Snedeker 98 64
 Luke List 103 123
 Jason Dufner 105 292
 Russell Henley 107 172
 Brian Stuard 109 147
 Matt Wallace 112 45
 Brice Garnett 113 212
 Si Woo Kim 114 115
 Adam Schenk 115 204
 Tyler Duncan 117 167
 Tom Hoge 121 137
 Jhonattan Vegas 122 156
 Sebastián Muñoz 123 104
 Chris Kirk 125 265
 Harry Higgs 127 145
 Mackenzie Hughes 128 73
 Jim Furyk 131 99
 Xinjun Zhang 133 127
 Troy Merritt 134 124
 Joseph Bramlett 136 241
 Sung Kang 140 61
 Charley Hoffman 141 151
 Bronson Burgoon 142 267
 Vaughn Taylor 145 119
 Chesson Hadley 147 218
 Brandon Hagy 150 331
 Scott Piercy 152 120
 Will Gordon 154 197
 Matthew NeSmith 155 196
 Tom Lewis 157 51
 Sepp Straka 158 142
 Cameron Davis 169 228
 Bo Hoag 170 288
 Graeme McDowell 171 58
 Tim Wilkinson 172 377
 Danny Willett 173 39
 Charl Schwartzel 175 181
 Rafa Cabrera Bello 179 62
 Chase Seiffert 181 198
 Jason Kokrak 182 70
 Sam Ryder 183 208
 Branden Grace 188 85
 Nate Lashley 192 90
 Chris Baker 196 428
 Austin Cook 198 343
 Kyoung-Hoon Lee 200 220
 Grayson Murray 202 435
 Fabián Gómez 204 237
 Keith Mitchell 206 109
 Beau Hossler 208 244
 Kyle Stanley 209 180
 Zac Blair 211 227
 Andrew Landry 213 117
 Russell Knox 214 187
 Kristoffer Ventura 219 169
 Wyndham Clark 226 173
 Hudson Swafford 230 320
 Scott Harrington 231 232
 Nick Watney 233 260
 Aaron Baddeley 235 301
 Chris Stroud 236 280
 Mark Anderson 242 371
 Brian Gay 248 256
 Robby Shelton 249 159
 Ryan Armour 260 185
 J.J. Spaun 264 358
 Cameron Percy 272 355
 Luke Donald 273 387
 Patton Kizzire 280 289
 Aaron Wise 282 195
 Bill Haas 286 537
 Hank Lebioda 289 309
 C.T. Pan 290 121
 Doug Ghim 296 496
 Robert Streb 298 316
 Vincent Whaley 301 436
 Ryan Brehm 318 382
 Rob Oppenheim 319 481
 Tyler McCumber 325 466
 Jimmy Walker 327 334
 Kiradech Aphibarnrat 328 190
 David Hearn 332 507
 D.J. Trahan 333 369
 Kramer Hickok 334 312
 Peter Malnati 341 302
 Scott Brown 343 176
 Michael Gellerman 354 500
 Kevin Tway 380 199
 Roger Sloan 398 310
 Jim Herman 401 318
 Michael Gligic 412 493
 Seamus Power 420 398
 Arjun Atwal 436 1186
 Rhein Gibson 449 389
 Greg Chalmers 453 731
 Matt Every 486 345
 Ted Potter Jr. 521 339
 Sebastian Cappelen 526 362
 Ben Taylor 527 671
 Nelson Ledesma 589 405
 Bo Van Pelt 642 2054
 Davis Love III 678 905
 Michael Kim 728 1153
 Akshay Bhatia 758 2054
 Martin Trainer 836 476
 Carl Pettersson N/R 1162

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Fantasy golf power rankings for the 2020 Wyndham Championship

As the Wyndham Championship begins at Sedgefield Country Club, check out these fantasy golf power rankings.

The PGA Tour moves back to the East Coast for this week’s Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina. The tournament has a stronger field than usual as many of the PGA Tour’s best are still vying for entry to the beginning of the FedExCup Playoffs next week. Below, we’ll look at the top fantasy golf picks for the 2020 Wyndham Championship.

2020 Wyndham Championship: Fantasy Golf Top 30

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Odds last updated Tuesday at 6:19 a.m. ET.

30. Matthias Schwab (+8000)

Missed the cut at the PGA Championship after a T-3 finish at the Barracuda Championship. Debuts at this tournament for his fifth PGA Tour event since the midseason pause.

29. Christiaan Bezuidenhout (+7000)

Also missed the cut last week after a pair of quality finishes in strong fields at the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational (T-20) and the Memorial Tournament (T-22).

28. Jordan Spieth (+4500)

Finished T-71 last week with a final round of 3 under. Averaged -0.55 Strokes Gained: Putting per round, according to Data Golf, for a rare negative performance on the greens.

27. Russell Henley (+5000)

Ranked seventh in the field last week with 1.78 SG: Approach per round. Finished T-37 at 1-under par with 1.06 strokes lost putting per round.

26. Tom Lewis (+7000)

Missed the cut last week following a T-2 at the WGC event. A two-time winner of the Portugal Masters on the European Tour who could have success against one of the weaker PGA Tour fields he has faced.

Doc Redman plays a shot during the second round of the Rocket Mortgage Classic. (Photo: Brian Spurlock – USA TODAY Sports)

25. Doc Redman (+9000)

Tied for 29th last week in just his third career major appearance. Missed the cut in this event each of the last two years but is averaging 1.02 strokes gained on the average Tour pro over his last 20 rounds.

24. Zach Johnson (+12500)

Was tied for third after an opening-round 66 last week but shot a 6-over 76 Friday to miss the cut. He’s much better suited for the shorter course and has averaged 1.24 strokes gained per round over 12 laps at Sedgefield.

23. Rafa Cabrera Bello (+15000)

RCB has averaged 1.13 strokes gained over his 10 trips around Sedgefield. Finished fifth in 2016 and 11th in 2018.

Related: Tiger Woods takes this week off; where will we see him next?

22. Rory Sabbatini (+8000)

Has played 18 career rounds at this venue with an average of 1.36 strokes gained per round. Has three top 10s in his last four appearances, including a sixth in 2019.

21. Matt Wallace (+9000)

Another European Tour star making his debut in this PGA Tour event. Had a lackluster T-77 finish last week just three weeks after a T-4 in a similar field at the Memorial.

Looking to place a bet on the 2020 Wyndham Championship? Get some action on it at BetMGMBet Now!

20. Chez Reavie (+5000)

Disappointingly finished T-75 at the PGA Championship following a T-6 in the WGC event. He struggled off the tee last week, but he’s seventh on Tour this season in Driving Accuracy.

19.  J.T. Poston (+6600)

The 2019 champ missed three straight cuts before a T-30 finish at the WGC and a T-75 last week. No one who made the cut last week did worse than Poston’s 0.59 strokes lost on approach per round.

18. Shane Lowry (+4500)

Lowry will need to be much better around the greens this week, but it’s usually a slight strength of his game. He finished seventh here in 2017 before a missed cut last year.

17. Si Woo Kim (+4000)

Won this event in 2016 but missed the cut in 2018 before a fifth-place finish last year. Tied for 13th last week with 2.18 SG: Tee-to-Green per round.

16. Kevin Kisner (+4000)

Put together a closing round of 67 to finish T-19 at the PGA Championship. Gained 1.28 strokes putting and 1.22 on approach. Two top 10s in the Wyndham Championship in three trips since 2014.

15. Ryan Moore (+4000)

The 2009 winner also has finishes of sixth and 10th in the last five years. He’s averaged 1.12 strokes gained per round over 28 rounds at Sedgefield.

Brooks Koepka watches after playing a shot from the rough at the 2020 PGA Championship. (Photo: Kelvin Kuo – USA TODAY Sports)

14. Brooks Koepka (+1000)

Playing here for the first time since a sixth-place finish in 2015. He should make it to The Northern Trust while entering the week 92nd in the FedExCup standings, but he’ll need a good showing in the next two weeks to qualify for the BMW Championship.

Related: Brooks Koepka discovers karma is a bitch, shoots final-round 74

13. Joaquin Niemann (+6600)

The first winner of the 2019-20 PGA Tour season at A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier enters the week 25th in the FEC standings. Finished 13th in this event last year with 1.38 SG: Putting per round.

12. Sergio Garcia (NA – late entry)

The 2012 champ was a late entry Friday afternoon after missing the cut in San Francisco, California. He’s 134th in the FEC standings and seems motivated to continue his season.

11. Corey Conners (+5000)

Tied for 22nd in this event last year with 1.29 SG: Off-the-Tee per round. Missed the cut last week with a horrendous putting performance but had been showing well in strong fields with a T-22 at the Memorial and a T-30 at the WGC.

10. Billy Horschel (+3300)

Averaging 1.53 strokes gained on the average pro over his last 20 rounds. Finished sixth in this event last year and fifth in 2016, and has played in six straight years.

9. Brandt Snedeker (+5000)

Averaging 1.06 strokes gained per round over 40 trips around Sedgefield. His better results have come in recent years, as he has four top 10s and a win (2018) in his last 10 appearances.

8. Brendon Todd (+3500)

Todd missed the cut in his two appearances here, but the two-time 2019-20 winner is coming off a T-17 at the PGA Championship and a T-15 at the WGC and should be able to finish better in a weaker field.

7. Harris English (+2500)

Has finished in the top 20 in four straight events. Averaging 1.07 SG: Tee-to-Green for the season. The top-ranked player in the field by the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings.

6. Sungjae Im (+4000)

Enters the week fifth in the FEC standings even with two missed cuts in his last three events. Debuted with a sixth-place finish here last year.

Paul Casey reacts after his putt on the 15th hole during the final round of the 2020 PGA Championship. (Photo: Kelvin Kuo – USA TODAY Sports)

5. Paul Casey (+2000)

Shot a final-round 66 to finish in a tie for second with Dustin Johnson last week. Ranked second in the field with 3.05 SG: Tee-to-Green per round.

4. Tommy Fleetwood (+1600)

Struggled to a closing 3-over 73 to finish T-29 at TPC Harding Park. Making his debut at this event while 85th in the FEC standings. Averaging 0.69 SG: Tee-to-Green for the season.

3. Justin Rose (+2200)

Ranks just 103rd in the FEC standings partially due to a lighter schedule this year. Making his first appearance here since a fifth-place showing in 2009. Finished ninth at the PGA Championship.

2. Patrick Reed (+1600)

The 2013 champ hasn’t finished better than 22nd (twice) in his three appearances here since his victory. Averaged 1.54 SG: Putting on these greens last year. Making his final tune-up for his defense of next week’s Northern Trust.

1. Webb Simpson (+1000)

Simpson won this event in 2011 following an eighth-place finish in 2010. He has finished outside of the top 10 just three times in his last eight appearances and has back-to-back runner-up finishes. He’s averaging 1.85 strokes gained at Sedgefield over 42 career laps.

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Tiger Woods closes PGA Championship with 67, finishes week in the red

Tiger Woods fired a closing 3-under 67 at the PGA Championship that included five final-round birdies at TPC Harding Park.

So far off the lead starting the final round of the PGA Championship, Tiger Woods had a big-picture goal for Sunday at TPC Harding Park. His year is just starting, what with two more majors coming down the pipe in September and October, plus the FedEx Cup playoffs. Sunday was about building momentum for the future.

Woods effectively did that on a foggy morning in San Francisco, logging five birdies and just two bogeys for a final-round 3-under 67 that pushed him to 1 under for the tournament.

On the eve of the final round, when Woods was coming off a second round in which he struggled mightily with green speeds – using the new Scotty Cameron prototype putter he had put into play this week – he set a goal of finishing the week in the red. He managed to accomplish that.


Leaderboard | TV info | Tee times | Photos


Woods had birdies on Nos. 4, 5, 7, 14 and 17. His two bogeys came at the notoriously difficult par-3 eighth and the closing par-4 18th.

Sunday marked just the eighth round Woods has played since the PGA Tour returned in June. He played last month’s Memorial Tournament and finished T-40 there. He is not in the field for next week’s Wyndham Championship.

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Tiger Tracker: Tiger Woods’ final round at the PGA Championship

Follow Tiger Woods’ final round at the PGA Championship with shot-by-shot updates from TPC Harding Park.

When Tiger Woods came out of the gates on Thursday with an opening 2-under 68 at TPC Harding Park, it sparked some excitement. After subsequent rounds of 72 over the next two rounds at the PGA Championship, Woods fell to a tie for 59th, 11 off the pace and well down the leaderboard.

Woods spent the past two rounds struggling to find the right speed on the greens. On Saturday, he flared a handful of shots right off the tee, leaving himself with a bit of trouble to contend with (though Saturday’s first birdie at the par-4 16th came after a punch-out from behind a giant cypress tree trunk).

Will Woods be able to find something in Sunday’s final round of the PGA Championship? While it might not mean much for this week, it could help set him on the right trajectory for the year’s two remaining majors, a September U.S. Open and a November Masters.

We’re tracking Woods’ final round as he plays alongside Tom Hoge. Keep up with our shot-by-shot coverage below.

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Tiger Woods struggles to get anything going on moving day at PGA Championship

Tiger Woods ended the third round of the PGA Championship with another round of 2-over 72. It left him at 2 over for the championship.

Nothing says more about Tiger Woods’ Saturday at TPC Harding Park than that by No. 15, when he holed a par save from 7 feet, it produced a relieved grin.

A 7-footer for par is not usually cause for celebration for a 15-time major winner, but Woods didn’t have it on the greens in the third round of the PGA Championship. It was a round that included many of the same struggles he experienced in the second round.

The grin only grew on the next hole when Woods punched out from behind a tree, well right of the fairway, and holed his first birdie of the day. Until that hole, he had been in danger of ending an impressive streak. Woods had made at least one birdie (or eagle) in every major championship round since the opening round of the 2010 U.S. Open.


Leaderboard | TV info | Tee times | Photos


The streak remains intact, though, and Woods ended the day with another round of 2-over 72. It left him at 2 over for the championship.

The round ended any real chance Woods had of claiming his 16th major title this week at Harding Park. By the time Woods was off the course, leader Haotong Li, at 8 under, still had an hour to go until his tee time.

On Saturday, Woods contended with fewer bunkers but missed more tee shots – particularly to the right. It was a mostly clear, albeit cool, day in the San Francisco Bay Area as Woods teed off alongside Keith Mitchell just before lunch. The wind picked up as the round went along.

Woods’ best shot of the day came at the closing hole, when he stuffed a crisp approach to 5 feet for a second and final birdie.

Still, with bogeys at Nos. 8, 11, 12 and 13, Woods had fallen more than 20 spots on the leaderboard by the end of his day.

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Tiger Tracker: Tiger Woods’ third round at the PGA Championship, shot by shot

Follow Tiger Woods’ third round at the PGA Championship with shot-by-shot updates from TPC Harding Park.

It all comes down to the putter.

Tiger Woods struggled mightily on the greens during a second-round 2-over 72 at TPC Harding Park at the PGA Championship. He took 31 putts, and the longest one he holed was 10 feet for a birdie on No. 10.

“They looked faster than what they were putting,” Woods said after Friday’s round.

Aside from that, Woods has looked confident in his swing and in his game. He’ll start the third round at even par, eight shots off Haotong Li’s lead, and with his work cut out for him on the weekend.

We’re tracking his round, shot by shot, so keep up below.

Pre-round

Tiger has arrived. Check out some practice-range action.

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Tiger Woods struggles through Friday at PGA Championship, barely makes weekend

Tiger Woods struggled to get anything going on Friday at TPC Harding Park for the PGA Championship.

After a smooth and seemingly effortless opening round of 2-under 68, Tiger Woods couldn’t get anything to go his way Friday in his second trip around TPC Harding Park in San Francisco. After a late tee off alongside Justin Thomas and Rory McIlroy, Woods seemed to struggle for every small victory on the course. He ended the day with a 2-over 72.

He didn’t make his first birdie until No. 10, also the first hole where he dropped a legitimate putt.

Truly, Woods didn’t hole a putt outside of 3 feet on his front nine. This, a day after birdie conversions from 8, 32, 4, 14 and 12 feet in the first round.


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Instead, Woods made two bogeys on the front nine. They came at the par-3 third, where he missed a 10-footer after blasting out of the sand, and No. 9, where he was in both a fairway bunker and a greenside bunker.

In fact, Woods found himself in an inordinate amount of bunkers on Friday, and with poor results. He was zero for seven when it came to getting up-and-down from the sand.

Birdies on Nos. 10 and 16 were the highlight of the back nine, but also very necessary. After Woods bogeyed Nos. 13 and 15 – the latter coming off an approach blown over the back of the green – he found himself sitting on the cutline of 1 over.

The birdie at No. 16 was crucial in getting to the weekend.

By the time Woods was trudging through the final holes, his body language suggested both disappointment and fatigue in his lackluster play. Still,  he’ll live to play two mores rounds.

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Tiger Tracker: Tiger Woods’ second round at the PGA Championship

Follow Tiger Woods’ second round at the PGA Championship with shot-by-shot updates from TPC Harding Park.

Tiger Woods at a major will always turn heads (even if there aren’t all that many heads on property this week at TPC Harding Park to turn). When Woods showed up at the PGA Championship on Thursday, he looked fit, fluid and sharp – and pain-free – from the get-go.

Woods opened the first round with a birdie, added another on the 13th and then offset his three bogeys with three more birdies. His opening 2-under 68 left him very much in the conversation.

Woods drew an afternoon tee time for Friday, and once again will play alongside Rory McIlroy and Justin Thomas. We’re tracking his second round, shot for shot, so keep with us here.


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Pre-round

We saw some shades of old Tiger on Thursday at TPC Harding Park, but if you’re interested in how his swing has evolved over the years, take a look at this montage and get fired up for his Friday round.

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