Bryson DeChambeau’s road show comes up flat in final round of Players Championship

Bryson DeChambeau’s road show came up flat in the final round of Players Championship on Sunday at TPC Sawgrass.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – A large portion of the limited numbers of fans allowed to attend the Players Championship flocked all week to watch the biggest show on turf these days.

On Sunday, however, they wondered what was wrong with the leading man of the show, Bryson DeChambeau.

After all, he had owned the weekend in winning the Arnold Palmer Invitational last week, electrifying the galleries with his power – he drove over a lake twice – precision and putting in winning his eighth PGA Tour title.

He had become must-watch TV since adding 40-50 pounds to his frame and plenty of mph to his ball speed. He loved to play to the crowds. He was anything but vanilla and he was winning.

And the reigning U.S. Open champion kept delivering with his firepower and soft touch here at the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass, the home to the PGA Tour’s flagship event. Heading into the final round, he was but two shots out of the lead set by Lee Westwood, who DeChambeau kept at bay in winning at Arnie’s place.

Players Championship: Leaderboard | Photos | Winner’s bag | Money

And then the final round started and DeChambeau looked like a magician who couldn’t pull the rabbit out of a hat, a thespian forgetting lines, a musician missing the beat.

He didn’t devour the first three par-5s. He wasn’t making any putts. And then he topped one – he said he thinned it – with a hybrid off the fourth tee. The man who can dial up 350 yards had just hit one 143 yards into a water hazard.

Puzzled looks peppered the crowds.

His next shot wasn’t much better. After taking a drop, he nearly hit his shot off the course, the ball flying deep into trees. Turns out, he cracked his 4-iron with the mighty blow.

“Golf,” the big man said about what was going on out there. “I was hitting it pretty good for the most part. I don’t know what happened on 4. That’s the game.

“I’m OK with it. Still smiling after. I fought really hard. It just seemed like something wasn’t going my way today for some reason. I could feel it. It was weird. Just numerous putts that I hit, it was like, OK, that’s a really good putt, and it didn’t go in.”

After taking double on the fourth, he was four shots out of the lead but somehow put what happened on the hole in the rearview even though he said he had never done that before in his career in competition.

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“I was trying to hit more of a low bullet and just kind of caught the heel, a little high on the thing. It wasn’t really a top, it was more like a thin ball that just had no spin on it and just knuckled,” he said. “But it’s one of those things that I just didn’t have it all today. I was proud of the way I fought, proud of the way I persevered, and there’s still more tournaments to be had.”

Then the 4-iron cracked.

“I couldn’t use it all day,” he said. “It sounded really weird and just came off horrifically, and I’m like, oh, and there’s a line in the bottom of the club. Things just didn’t pan out the way that I thought they should have, and I set myself behind the 8-ball quick, and I wasn’t able to recover fast enough.”

But he did recover.

He made three birdies and an eagle on the 16th to finish with a 1-under-par 71 and in a tie for third at 12 under, two shots back of Players champion Justin Thomas. And he left TPC Sawgrass with his head held high and looking to the future.

“I can play on golf courses that don’t really suit me,” he said about his biggest takeaway of the week. “That’s a big lesson. I’d also say, no matter what happens, no matter if I pop a shot, no matter if I thin a shot, whatever it was, and make a really good double or could have been triple or quad, I’m still never out of it for the most part. I know my game is good enough in most facets to get it back and compete with the best of them.

“I’m going to go back and work really hard on my golf swing and figure out how to, again, be less sensitive. I was more sensitive last week and pulled out the victory. I got a little lucky. Just putts didn’t fall today.”

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How much money each PGA Tour player won at the Players Championship

Check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned this week at the Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour, folks, especially at the flagship event. Just ask this week’s winner, Justin Thomas.

The 27-year-old continues to rise on the Tour’s career money list, climbing inside the top 20 with his 14th career win. Thomas won the the Players Championship on Sunday at TPC Sawgrass, taking home the top prize of $2.7 million after an impressive weekend with rounds of 8-under 64 on Saturday and 4-under 68 on Sunday.

Lee Westwood, the 54-hole leader for the second consecutive week, finished second at 13 under, with Brian Harman and Bryson DeChambeau T-3 at 12 under.

Check out how much money each player earned this week at the Players Championship.

Players Championship: Leaderboard | Photos | Winner’s bag

Prize money

Position Player Score Earnings
1  Justin Thomas -14 $2,700,000
2  Lee Westwood -13 $1,635,000
T3  Brian Harman -12 $885,000
T3  Bryson DeChambeau -12 $885,000
T5  Talor Gooch -11 $579,375
T5  Paul Casey -11 $579,375
7  Corey Conners -10 $506,250
8  Shane Lowry -9 $468,750
T9  Charles Howell III -8 $339,375
T9  Daniel Berger -8 $339,375
T9  Jason Kokrak -8 $339,375
T9  Victor Perez -8 $339,375
T9  Si Woo Kim -8 $339,375
T9  Sergio Garcia -8 $339,375
T9  Matthew Fitzpatrick -8 $339,375
T9  Jon Rahm -8 $339,375
T17  Sungjae Im -7 $221,250
T17  Charley Hoffman -7 $221,250
T17  Ryan Palmer -7 $221,250
T17  Cameron Smith -7 $221,250
21  Will Zalatoris -6 $183,750
T22 Dylan Frittelli -5 $135,964
T22  Tyler McCumber -5 $135,964
T22  J.T. Poston -5 $135,964
T22  Patrick Reed -5 $135,964
T22  Tom Hoge -5 $135,964
T22  Adam Long -5 $135,964
T22 Abraham Ancer -5 $135,964
T29  Cameron Percy -4 $96,125
T29  Keegan Bradley -4 $96,125
T29  Adam Hadwin -4 $96,125
T29 Joaquin Niemann -4 $96,125
T29  Harry Higgs -4 $96,125
T29  Doug Ghim -4 $96,125
T35  Ryan Moore -3 $73,125
T35  Phil Mickelson -3 $73,125
T35  Brendon Todd -3 $73,125
T35  Jason Day -3 $73,125
T35  Lanto Griffin -3 $73,125
T35  Patton Kizzire -3 $73,125
T41  Collin Morikawa -2 $53,250
T41  James Hahn -2 $53,250
T41 Louis Oosthuizen -2 $53,250
T41  Zach Johnson -2 $53,250
T41  Brendan Steele -2 $53,250
T41  Kyoung-Hoon Lee -2 $53,250
T41 Christiaan Bezuidenhout -2 $53,250
T48  Dustin Johnson -1 $38,036
T48  Adam Scott -1 $38,036
T48  Lucas Glover -1 $38,036
T48  Michael Thompson -1 $38,036
T48  Nick Taylor -1 $38,036
T48  Jordan Spieth -1 $38,036
T48  Chris Kirk -1 $38,036
T55  Denny McCarthy E $34,950
T55  Matt Jones E $34,950
T55  Ryan Armour E $34,950
T58  Billy Horschel 1 $34,050
T58  Kramer Hickok 1 $34,050
T58  Brian Stuard 1 $34,050
T61  Scott Harrington 2 $33,000
T61 Jhonattan Vegas 2 $33,000
T61  Harold Varner III 2 $33,000
T61  Scott Brown 2 $33,000
T65  Patrick Rodgers 3 $32,100
T65  Aaron Wise 3 $32,100
T67 Rory Sabbatini 4 $31,500
T67 Russell Knox 4 $31,500
T69 Martin Laird 5 $30,900
T69  Scott Piercy 5 $30,900
71  Nate Lashley 6 $30,450

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Watch: Justin Thomas tears up in Players Championship post-round interview when asked about late grandpa

When Justin Thomas got emotional when asked a question about his late grandfather, Paul Thomas, after he won the Players Championship.

In the early part of Justin Thomas’s post-round interview after wrapping up the Players Championship title, Thomas was all smiles. There was a lot to smile about, too, after a final-round 4-under 68 that included an eagle, four birdies and ended with a perfectly-struck 5-wood off the 18th tee that curled around the water running up the left side of the hole.

“I fought so hard today, I stayed really patient,” Thomas told Golf Channel immediately after the round.

Thomas also touched on his friend Tiger Woods, who remains in recuperation after a serious car accident last month. He noted that he might have chirped at Woods a little more had he been on-hand to see Thomas win at TPC Sawgrass in person.

But the mood turned somber when Golf Channel interviewer Steve Sands asked Thomas about his late grandfather. Paul Thomas passed away in February, before the final round of the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

“How much of a part of him was with you today?” Sands asked.

“A lot,” Thomas said as he teared up. “Yeah, I wish I could talk to him but I know he’s watching.”

Players Championship: Leaderboard | Photos | Winner’s bag

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Winner’s Bag: Justin Thomas, Players Championship

Check out the Titleist golf equipment Justin Thomas used to win the PGA Tour’s 2021 Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass in Florida.

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The golf equipment Justin Thomas used to win the PGA Tour’s 2021 Players Championship:

DRIVER: Titleist TS3 (9.5 degrees), with Mitsubishi Diamana ZF 60 TX shaft

FAIRWAY WOODS: Titleist TS3 (15 degrees), with Mitsubishi Tensei AV Blue 85 TX shaft; 915Fd (18 degrees), with Fujikura Motore Speeder VC 9.2 Tour Spec X shaft

IRONS: Titleist T100 (4), 620 MB (5-9), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 shafts

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM7 (46 degrees bent to 47.5, 52 degrees bent to 52.5), SM8 (56 degrees bent to 57, 60 degrees bent to 60.5), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 shafts

PUTTER: Scotty Cameron Futura X 5.5 prototype with SuperStroke Traxion PistolGT Tour grip

BALL: Titleist Pro V1x

GRIPS: Golf Pride Tour Velvet Cord

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A PGA Tour golfer could only laugh at himself after hitting a wild shank on 17th hole

This was so relatable.

Sunday’s final round of The Players Championship has been a wild one already with the final group of Lee Westwood and Bryson DeChambeau hitting some truly awful shots on the front nine.

But there was also a really bad shot by a guy who wasn’t in contention and it came at the legendary par-3 17th island hole.

Brendon Todd stepped up to the tee and hit a wild shank that went so far right it almost landed on the little island that has a tree and flowers on it. We never see balls go near that island.

Well, until today.

Todd could only drop his club and laugh at himself as the ball sailed away.

https://twitter.com/PGATOUR/status/1371166936357277696

So relatable.

Todd ended up with a triple bogey on the hole and finished 3 under for the tournament.

The Players: Collin Morikawa leaves the Stadium in good spirits after nearly breaking back-nine record

The back nine of the Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass saved a decent 72-hole score for Collin Morikawa in final round of the Players.

The back nine of the Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass saved a decent 72-hole score for defending PGA champion Collin Morikawa in the final round of The Players Championship on Sunday.

In fact, at the time he finished, it was the best score anyone had posted on the inward side all week.

Morikawa, who won his last start at the World Golf Championship event in Bradenton, birdied four holes in a row after turning at even-par for the day and went on to shoot 6-under 30 on the back for a 66 and a 72-hole total of 2-under 286.

He had a chance to tie the Players record for the back-nine score of 7-under 29 but missed the fairway and the green at No. 18 and settled for a par save on a 4-foot putt.

Rory McIlroy, Kevin Chappell and Shane Lowry set that record, all in the 2016 tournament.

It’s been a struggle most of the week for the world’s No. 4 player, but he can’t wait for another crack at it next year and beyond.

Morikawa opened with a 72 that included three bogeys in his last six holes. He overcame a horrendous start on Friday (four bogeys on the front) to make the cut on the number, then shot 40 on the front on the way to a 76 on Saturday.

“I was a little frustrated after Friday and Saturday’s round because my game feels good,” he said. “I didn’t figure out how to read these greens. It’s something that I’m going to have to learn as the weeks go on. Obviously, every course is going to be different, every green, grass is going to be different. But I needed a little more prep on really figuring out my lines.”

Morikawa was a combined even on the back nine for the first three rounds, with five bogeys and five birdies. After a 2-under front on Thursday, he was 6-over on that side for the rest of the tournament.

He began his birdie streak on Sunday with a 7-footer at No. 10, added another birdie putt of similar length at No. 11, drove right of the green at No. 12, hit an indifferent pitch, but made an 18-foot birdie putt and then dropped a 21-footer birdie at No. 13.

Morikawa missed a long birdie attempt at the 14th, had to make an 8-foot putt for par at No. 15 and made a 5-footer for birdie at the 16th.

Morikawa then nearly went into the water at No. 17, with the ball hitting the green and rolling back into the rough. He was able to get a putter blade on the ball and nailed it from 20 feet away for his last birdie of the day.

He said the 17th green seemed especially firm and had a warning for players who will follow him in the final round.

“Yeah, good luck,” he said. “I thought I hit a great 51-degree wedge. Landed yard and a half, 2 yards on, and I could barely find my ball mark. So I’ll definitely want to watch the last few holes. But should be interesting.”

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Counting a 68 in the first round of last year’s aborted Players that isn’t official, Morikawa has 22 birdies in five tours of the Stadium Course. He believes that the test matches his skills.

“Absolutely … I feel comfortable,” he said. “A lot of tee shots I feel comfortable. I need to figure out how to hit a draw 3-wood off 2 because I was 0-4 this week, but promise you in a year I’ll figure that out.”

Morikawa will defend his PGA title in May at Kiawah Island, South Carolina, but wasn’t sure if getting four rounds at the Stadium Course, then playing at Harbour Town next month will help him.

Pete Dye designed all three courses, and there are similarities from one to the other.

“I haven’t played Kiawah,” he said. “I couldn’t tell you what it looks like, a single hole out there. So for me I’m going to have to figure out lines and everything.”

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Players Championship: Sunday tee times, TV and streaming info

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s what you need to know for the third round of the Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass.

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After last year’s cancellation, the Players Championship is back at TPC Sawgrass’ Players Stadium Course this week.

After 54 holes of the PGA Tour’s flagship event in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, Lee Westwood leads by two shots at 13 under. Bryson DeChambeau is in solo second at 11 under after carding a 5-under 67. Justin Thomas, who shot the low round of the day with a 8-under 64, and Doug Ghim are T-3 at 10 under.

Jon Rahm is among three players to be T-5 at 9 under while Sergio Garcia and two other are T-8 at 8 under.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the final round of the Players Championship. All times are listed in Eastern Standard Time.

Players Championship: Leaderboard | Photos

Tee times

1st hole

Time Players
7:50 a.m. Scott Harrington
7:55 a.m. Collin Morikawa, Martin Laird
8:05 a.m. Rory Sabbatini, Nate Lashley
8:15 a.m. Patrick Rodgers, James Hahn
8:25 a.m. Cameron Percy, Louis Oosthuizen
8:35 a.m. Dustin Johnson, Adam Scott
8:45 a.m. Jhonattan Vegas, Aaron Wise
8:55 a.m. Michael Thompson, Lucas Glover
9:05 a.m. Nick Taylor, Russell Knox
9:15 a.m. Dylan Frittelli, Sungjae Im
9:25 a.m. Zach Johnson, Keegan Bradley
9:40 a.m. Ryan Moore, Brendan Steele
9:50 a.m. Charley Hoffman, Billy Horschel
10 a.m. Brian Stuard, Kramer Hickok
10:10 a.m. Scott Piercy, Kyoung-Hoon Lee
10:20 a.m. Adam Hadwin, Harold Varner III
10:30 a.m. Phil Mickelson, Charles Howell III
10:40 a.m. Joaquin Niemann, Brendon Todd
10:50 a.m. Denny McCarthy, Matt Jones
11:05 a.m. Scott Brown, Tyler McCumber
11:15 a.m. Daniel Berger, Ryan Armour
11:25 a.m. Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Jason Kokrak
11:35 a.m. Victor Perez, J.T. Poston
11:45 a.m. Corey Conners, Jason Day
11:55 a.m. Jordan Spieth, Patrick Reed
12:05 p.m. Patton Kizzire, Lanto Griffin
12:15 p.m. Will Zalatoris, Tom Hoge
12:25 p.m. Adam Long, Shane Lowry
12:40 p.m. Talor Gooch, Harry Higgs
12:50 p.m. Ryan Palmer, Abraham Ancer
1 p.m. Cameron Smith, Si Woo Kim
1:10 p.m. Sergio Garcia, Matthew Fitzpatrick
1:20 p.m. Brian Harman, Chris Kirk
1:30 p.m. Paul Casey, Jon Rahm
1:40 p.m. Justin Thomas, Doug Ghim
1:50 p.m. Lee Westwood, Bryson DeChambeau

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How to watch

Sunday, March 14

TV

NBC: 1-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 7-45 a.m.-6 p.m.
Twitter: 7:45-9 a.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 12-6 p.m.

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

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Among the wreckage, Sergio Garcia sparkles with a 65 to grab lead at Players Championship

Among the wreckage, Sergio Garcia sparkles with an opening-round 65 to grab the lead at the Players Championship.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Carnage played through at the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass during Thursday’s opening round of the Players Championship.

Ben An took an octuple-bogey 11 on the par-3 17th when his first four shots didn’t find the island green. Kevin Na hit three balls into the water on 17 for an 8 and withdrew with a bad back. Defending champion Rory McIlroy hit two balls into the water on the par-4 18th and made an 8 en route to a 79.

Henrik Stenson, who won the 2009 Players, made two double bogeys and two triple bogeys and signed for an 85. Tony Finau came home with a 78, Rickie Fowler a 77, Xander Schauffele a 76.

Somehow, Sergio Garcia didn’t make a number above 5, canned two eagles and took the lead with a 7-under-par 65 to jump out to a two-shot lead. While his performance caught the eye of many, it came of no surprise. Garcia won here in 2008, finished second in 2007, tied for second in 2015 and was third in 2014.

Players Championship: Leaderboard | Photos

“I just love it. I’ve always said it, Valderrama (in Spain) and this course are some of my top favorite ones and for some reason they just, it just kind of fits my eye,” Garcia said. “I see what I want to do pretty much every hole and then it’s a matter of doing it, but definitely I feel more comfortable and I’ve done well.

“So all those things help.”

Among those who had completed their round before play was halted due to darkness, Garcia led Brian Harman by two shots. Harman birdied six of his last 10 holes. At 68 were Matt Fitzpatrick, Corey Conners and reigning Open Championship winner Shane Lowry. Among the four players at 69 was reigning U.S. Open winner Bryson DeChambeau, who won last week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational.

Garcia almost didn’t get to start his excellent journey around Pete Dye’s creation. Garcia had to hustle to the 10th tee to make his starting time of 7:40 a.m. ET.

“I thought I had plenty of time. Obviously I left the range at 7:35, so I figured it’s going to take me probably two, three minutes at most to get to 10,” Garcia said.

It took longer than that and he had to jog the last 50 yards or so while playing partners McIlroy and Webb Simpson were laughing. Garcia made it by 7:39 a.m.

McIlroy, however, never really got going. He doubled the opening hole, made his snowman on the 18th and three other bogeys after the turn. On Sunday after posting a 76 in the final round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational to drop into a tie for 10th, McIlroy said he was looking for a spark to end his winless stretch that dates to the fall of 2019.

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What he needs is a break. He’s played seven of the last eight weeks; he’s definitely not playing next week. And likely not playing the weekend.

“I just think it’s hard to recover when you just haven’t played good,” he said. “I mean, regardless if you take that 18th hole out, it still wasn’t a very good day.”

After giving his take on his play, which is the first anniversary of the PGA Tour’s shutdown last year due to the COVID-19 global pandemic, Garcia talked about his unfortunate day when he tested positive and was forced to miss the November Masters. The 2017 winner of the green jacket withdrawal from the tournament ended a string of 84 consecutive starts in majors.

“It was disappointing, I’m not going to lie,” he said. “But you know that that can happen. That’s why if you didn’t want to take the risk, then you would stay at home and not leave. So it was unfortunate.”

Garcia will alter his travel plans before this year’s Masters and will not play the week before heading to Magnolia Lane. And he will be extra careful leading into the first major of the year.

“We have fans back, so you know that at any time you might get it from any one of them. Not that they’re trying to give it to you or anything like that, but it might happen,” he said. “I would love to get closer to the fans, but there’s too much at risk, at stake for us.”

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The Players Championship: Friday tee times, TV and streaming info

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s what you need to know for the second round of the Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass.

After last year’s cancellation, the Players Championship is back at TPC Sawgrass’ Players Stadium Course this week.

After the opening 18 holes of the PGA Tour’s flagship event in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, Sergio Garcia sits alone atop the leaderboard at 7 under after an impressive Thursday 65. Brian Harman is second at 5 under, with Matthew Fitzpatrick, Corey Conners and Shane Lowry all T-3 at 4 under.

On the other end of the leaderboard, 2019’s defending champion Rory McIlroy is 7 over.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the second round of the Players Championship. All times are listed in Eastern Standard Time.

Players Championship: Leaderboard | Photos

Tee times

1st hole

Time Players
6:45 a.m. Peter Malnati, Emiliano Grillo, Abraham Ancer
6:56 a.m. Anirban Lahiri, Kyoung-Hoon Lee, Robby Shelton
7:07 a.m. Branden Grace, Sung Kang, Jimmy Walker
7:18 a.m. Hudson Swafford, Brandt Snedeker, Scott Piercy
7:29 a.m. Jim Herman, Ryan Armour, Mackenzie Hughes
7:40 a.m. Nate Lashley, Ryan Palmer, Zach Johnson
7:51 a.m. Robert Streb, Marc Leishman, Steve Stricker
8:02 a.m. Chez Reavie, Bubba Watson, Pat Perez
8:13 a.m. Patton Kizzire, Jason Dufner, Kramer Hickok
8:24 a.m. James Hahn, Tommy Fleetwood, Harold Varner III
8:35 a.m. Adam Hadwin, Patrick Rodgers, Mark Hubbard
8:46 a.m. Ryan Moore, Sepp Straka, Scott Harrington
8:57 a.m. Jhonattan Vegas, Talor Gooch, Tom Lewis
12:05 p.m. Kyle Stanley, Lucas Glover, Tyler McCumber
12:16 p.m. Russell Henley, Tom Hoge, Scottie Scheffler
12:27 p.m. C.T. Pan, Graeme McDowell, Matt Kuchar
12:38 p.m. Gary Woodland, Billy Horschel, Ian Poulter
12:49 p.m. Viktor Hovland, Patrick Cantlay, Justin Thomas
1 p.m. Sergio Garcia, Webb Simpson, Rory McIlroy
1:11 p.m. Si Woo Kim, Kristoffer Ventura, Hideki Matsuyama
1:22 p.m. Tyrrell Hatton, Paul Casey, Xander Schauffele
1:33 p.m. Lanto Griffin, Corey Conners, Rickie Fowler
1:44 p.m. Brendon Todd, Adam Long, Andrew Putnam
1:55 p.m. Charl Schwartzel, Doc Redman, Harry Higgs
2:06 p.m. Sam Burns, Wyndham Clark, Victor Perez
2:17 p.m. Scott Stallings, Adam Schenk

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10th hole

Time Players
6:45 a.m. Cameron Tringale, Denny McCarthy, Matthew NeSmith
6:56 a.m. Brian Harman, Cameron Percy, Bernd Wiesberger
7:07 a.m. Martin Laird, Tyler Duncan, Joaquin Niemann
7:18 a.m. Richy Werenski, , Aaron Wise, Kevin Streelman Kevin Streelman
7:29 a.m. Patrick Reed, Jon Rahm, Jordan Spieth
7:40 a.m. Bryson DeChambeau, Collin Morikawa, Dustin Johnson
7:51 a.m. Daniel Berger, Adam Scott, Shane Lowry
8:02 a.m. Andrew Landry, Cameron Champ, Brendan Steele
8:13 a.m. Jason Kokrak, Francesco Molinari, Jason Day
8:24 a.m. Charley Hoffman, Rory Sabbatini, Cameron Davis
8:35 a.m. Matt Jones, Maverick McNealy, Will Zalatoris
8:46 a.m. Chris Kirk, Luke List, Bo Hoag
8:57 a.m. Brian Stuard, Danny Lee, Beau Hossler
12:05 p.m. Alex Noren, Xinjun Zhang, Doug Ghim
12:16 p.m. Louis Oosthuizen, Lee Westwood, Robert MacIntyre
12:27 p.m. Phil Mickelson, Charles Howell III, Tony Finau
12:38 p.m. Sungjae Im, Kevin Kisner, Henrik Stenson
12:49 p.m. Keith Mitchell, Troy Merritt, Brice Garnett
1 p.m. Brian Gay, Michael Thompson, Sebastián Muñoz
1:11 p.m. Cameron Smith, Dylan Frittelli, Keegan Bradley
1:22 p.m. Kevin Na, Carlos Ortiz, Matthew Fitzpatrick
1:33 p.m. Max Homa, J.T. Poston, Russell Knox
1:44 p.m. Stewart Cink, Nick Taylor, Austin Cook
1:55 p.m. Byeong Hun An, Henrik Norlander, Christiaan Bezuidenhout
2:06 p.m. Vaughn Taylor, Jerry Kelly, Joel Dahmen
2:17 p.m. Scott Brown, Sam Ryder

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How to watch

Friday, March 12

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 12-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 6:30 a.m.-6 p.m.
Twitter: 6:30-7:55 a.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 11 a.m.-6 p.m.

Saturday, March 13

TV

NBC (Watch for free on fuboTV): 1-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 7:45 a.m.-6 p.m.
Twitter: 7:45-9 a.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 12-6 p.m.

Sunday, March 14

TV

NBC (Watch for free on fuboTV): 1-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 7-45 a.m.-6 p.m.
Twitter: 7:45-9 a.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 12-6 p.m.

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Byeong Hun An roasts himself on Twitter after making an 11 on 17th hole at Players Championship

Byeong Hun An roasted himself on Twitter after making an 11 on the famous 17th hole at the Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass.

The first round of the Players Championship has been a very wet one already as we’ve seen a ton of tee shots on the legendary par-3 17th hole land in the water.

We told you earlier about Kevn Na’s disaster of a time on that hole in which he chipped in for an 8 after hitting three shots in the water. He later withdrew from the tournament with a back injury.

Well, a little later in the day Byeong Hun An walked over to the 17 tee and made Na’s 8 look like nothing. An hit four balls in the water and ended up with an 11, which is the second-highest score to ever be recorded on the island hole (during the Players Championship, I’m sure amateurs who have played the course have fared worse).

An had the perfect tweet after his round, though, as he was able to make fun of himself a bit.

Players Championship: Leaderboard | Photos

An then made double-bogey on the 18th hole, meaning he needed 17 strokes to play the final two holes. He finished his round at 11 over.

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