Patience wasn’t always Tyler McCumber’s virtue. But he’s learned it traveling a long road to the PGA Tour.

“My Dad [10-time PGA Tour winner Mark McCumber] told me many times that I had to learn more patience.”

ST. SIMONS ISLAND, GA. — Tyler McCumber admits there was a time in his life where he wasn’t the most patient person.

“I didn’t have any,” he said on Wednesday, prior to playing in the RSM Classic Pro-Am at the Sea Island Club’s Seaside Course. “My Dad [10-time PGA Tour winner Mark McCumber] told me many times that I had to learn more patience.”

But the 30-year-old second-generation PGA Tour player has shown that attribute in abundance since turning professional in 2013.

Few players with current PGA Tour status paid more dues and traveled more of the world to do it than McCumber.

He got a Korn Ferry Tour card two years later when he finished third on the PGA Tour Latinoamerica, but then lost it in one season, the product of 12 missed cuts in 20 starts.

McCumber regained his Korn Ferry status in 2018 by winning the Mackenzie Tour-Canada Order of Merit, with three victories and he only lasted one year again — but for the right reason, coming in 22nd on the 2019 money list to earn his PGA Tour card

He then retained it by finishing 99th on the 2020-21 FedEx Cup points list, with two top-10s and five top-25s.

RSM: Tee times, TV | Fantasy | Strokes gained data

“I feel like it was a big learning year,” he said. “Learning all the courses, getting comfortable on Tour … it’s such a fun process, but there’s a lot to take in. Having this sort of weird, hybrid rookie season, with two years under my belt, I’m going to take a step back this offseason and go over what I’ve learned, make a plan for going forward and make the necessary adjustments. But also, sort of soak it in. It was a big year-and-a-half.”

It was an odd situation for everyone. The Tour suspended play because of the pandemic in March of 2020, just two weeks after McCumber posted a 20th-place finish in Puerto Rico. When play resumed in June, he missed six cuts in a row and had to withdraw from another tournament as he battled through a prolonged bout with a stomach virus.

In February, McCumber nearly withdrew from the Genesis Invitational after cutting his finger on a sliding glass door. He shot 67-68 in the first two rounds to get a spot in the final group on Saturday but then shot 77-74 on the weekend and tied for 52nd.

The good news is that the Tour froze the membership status for another year and McCumber was able to rally with a series of strong finishes.

That included a tie for 22nd in The Players Championship, the tournament his father Mark won 33 years before, and a second in at the Tour’s event in the Dominican Republic when Harris English birdied the final hole to win by one shot.

McCumber hasn’t gotten off to the best start in 2021-22. He’s missed four of his first five cuts entering this week’s RSM Classic but he said he’s at peace with the process.

His pattern has been to miss cuts in bunches but rebound quickly. In early 2021, he missed four cuts in a row but rallied at The Players, then tied for 33rd at the Honda Classic and tied for 12th in the Dominican Republic.

After six missed cuts in a row, he tied for 15th at the Wyndham Championship.

“I don’t know why, other than it’s kind of my pattern,” he said. “I’m trying on every shot. Golf is a wild game. There are a lot of variables that are out of your control. I try to focus on what I can control and give my best every shot. But missing a few cuts and then coming back to have chances to win is not a bad pattern. I hope I can flip the script and go in the right direction.”

Paying dues is sort of a family tradition. McCumber’s father needed eight attempts at the PGA Tour qualifying school under the old system to get his card, won his first tournament at the age of 28 and won The Players at 36.

McCumber doesn’t regret the road he’s taken through Canada and Latin America to get to the PGA Tour. Indeed, he’s an avid outdoorsman and surfer and once spent six weeks hitch-hiking in New Zealand and Australia with nothing but his board and his backpack.

He also remains the answer to a trivia question: he’s the only player to earn Korn Ferry Tour status off the money list of two of the three PGA Tour’s international circuits.

“I think golf demands patience and perseverance,” he said. “The path to the PGA Tour took that, plus a strong belief in myself. I’m still figuring out what works but I have a pretty good formula in mind and I’m going to play with that plan and trust and believe it.”

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Check the yardage book: Sea Island’s Seaside Course for the PGA Tour’s RSM Classic

Puttview’s hole-by-hole maps of Sea Island’s Seaside Course provide a peek at the challenges PGA Tour players face this week in Georgia.

Sea Island’s Seaside Course, site of this week’s RSM Classic on the PGA Tour, originally was laid out by famed designers Harry S. Colt and Charles Alison in 1929 and was redesigned by Tom Fazio in 1999.

The event also will be played on the resort’s Plantation Course, which was renovated by Davis Love III in 2019. The first two rounds will be split between the courses, with the final two rounds after the cut being played on Seaside.

The Seaside ranks as the No. 1 public-access layout in Georgia on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for 2021, while the Plantation is No. 13 on that list. The Seaside also is No. 84 on Golfweek’s Best list of all modern courses built in or after 1960 in the U.S., with the Fazio renovation moving the layout from the ranks of classic courses built before 1960.

The Seaside will play to 7,005 yards with a par of 70 for the RSM Classic, while the Plantation will play to 7,060 yards with a par of 72.

Thanks to yardage books provided by Puttview – the maker of detailed yardage books for more than 30,000 courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges that players face this week on the Seaside Course. Check out the maps of each hole below.

Matt Every to make TV debut for Golf Channel at RSM Classic: ‘I’m not afraid of anyone out here. So, I’ll say what I want to say’

The 37-year-old former Florida Gator star is starting a two-event tryout.

SAINT SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. – Matt Every strolled down the practice range at Sea Island Resort, wearing a white hoodie, dark shades and the look of a man without a concern in the world. Instead of gripping a 4-iron this week at the RSM Classic, he’ll be gripping a microphone and making his TV debut for Golf Channel as a guest on-course reporter.

The 37-year-old former Florida Gator star is starting a two-event tryout here and next month at the PNC Championship in Orlando after enduring a season in which he failed to make a cut in 22 starts on the PGA Tour.

“I think it’s going to be good for me to do something different,” he said. “I was going through the motions for quite a while. Mentally I wasn’t there. I think I became jaded and you can’t fake the hunger of a 25 year old who’s never tasted success before vs I’m 37 and not getting any younger. I already didn’t practice a lot and it probably caught up to me.”

Every said he got the idea of becoming a TV golf analyst after seeing the success of Colt Knost, one of his contemporaries, who retired as a player in January 2020 and made a seamless transition to the media world as both a podcast host and Golf Channel/CBS roving reporter.

“We’re very similar in a room,” Every said of Knost. “I’ve had some people whose opinion I value tell me that I’d be good at it and I think I could be. I’m a little different, I do have some edge to me but I’m not out of control, though. I know what’s right and wrong. And I’m not afraid of anyone out here. So, I’ll say what I want to say. I think some people might be afraid I will slip up and say something stupid, but those are people that don’t really know me.”

Every twice won the Arnold Palmer Invitational and more than $10 million in career prize money, but hasn’t made a cut since the Wyndham Championship in August 2020. He missed 20 cuts and withdrew twice in 22 starts last season, and withdrew from the Butterfield Bermuda Championship, his only 2021-22 start, last month.

“I don’t have it in me mentally to go grind on the Korn Ferry (Tour) for a year. There’s no chance,” he said. “That’s me being honest with myself. I don’t want to miss what’s going on in my kids’ lives and it wouldn’t work.”

Every said he’s not quitting golf, calling himself “a recreational golfer,” but isn’t closing the door on the PGA Tour should his competitive juices return. His past champion status should get him into a number of second tier events, what he dubbed “the island tour” – Bermuda, Puerto Rico, Punta Cana in the Dominican Republic, for instance – and if he can earn enough to finish in the top 200 in the FedEx Cup standings, he would earn a berth in the Korn Ferry Tour Finals.

Every always has been one of the more candid interviews, displaying a self-awareness absent in many players. He could be a breath of fresh air to the coverage if he can bring his no-nonsense assessment of his own game to the current players he’s competed against for years. Nearly a decade ago, Every was part of an awkward Golf Channel interview during the Sony Open at Hawaii when then-host Kelly Tilghman grilled him about being arrested for possession of marijuana.

“Yeah, that was awkward, but it was so long ago,” Every said.

Every said he will be shadowing either John Wood or Curt Byrum on Thursday and then the red light goes live on Friday. Golf Channel’s Steve Sands told him to be himself and fight the urge to over-talk.

“I’m hoping if it goes well,” Every said of the tryout, “someone will snag me up.”

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2021 RSM Classic Thursday tee times, TV and streaming info

Everything you need to know for the first round on Sea Island.

Once again, Sea Island, Georgia, will play host to the PGA Tour’s best this week.

Robert Streb is back to defend his title this year at the 2021 RSM Classic, held at a pair of golf courses for the first two rounds. Sea Island’s Seaside course plays to a par 70 at 7,005 yards, while the Plantation course will play as a par 72 at 7,060 yards. The weekend rounds will be only played on the Seaside course.

Check out Thursday’s first-round groupings and tee times below, as well as this week’s complete TV and online streaming schedule. All times are Eastern.

RSM Classic: Fantasy rankings

Tee times

Seaside – 1st tee

Tee time Players
9:30 a.m. Chris Kirk, Kiradech Aphibarnrat, Doug Ghim
9:40 a.m. Chesson Hadley, Jonathan Byrd, Henrik Norlander
9:50 a.m. Max Homa, Louis Oosthuizen, Scottie Scheffler
10 a.m. Cameron Smith, Adam Scott, Joaquin Niemann
10:10 a.m. Sebastián Muñoz, Corey Conners, William McGirt
10:20 a.m. Davis Riley, Matthias Schwab, Austin Smotherman
10:30 a.m. Hayden Buckley, David Skinns, Kevin Yu
10:40 a.m. Austin Cook, Patrick Rodgers, Sam Ryder
10:50 a.m. Brice Garnett, Denny McCarthy, Matt Wallace
11 a.m. Joel Dahmen, Matt Kuchar, Zach Johnson
11:10 a.m. Lanto Griffin, Nate Lashley, Graeme McDowell
11:20 a.m. Roger Sloan, Hank Lebioda, Stephan Jaeger
11:30 a.m. Cameron Young, Jared Wolfe, Kyle Westmoreland

Seaside – 10th tee

Tee time Players
9:30 a.m.
Peter Malnati, John Huh, Brandon Hagy
9:40 a.m.
Alex Noren, Bronson Burgoon, Wyndham Clark
9:50 a.m.
Brendon Todd, J.T. Poston, Jimmy Walker
10 a.m.
Michael Thompson, Martin Trainer, Brian Harman
10:10 a.m.
Russell Knox, Harry Higgs, Sepp Straka
10:20 a.m.
Trey Mullinax, Greyson Sigg, Nick Hardy
10:30 a.m.
Michael Gligic, Alex Smalley, Callum Tarren
10:40 a.m.
Andrew Putnam, Brendan Steele, Matthew NeSmith
10:50 a.m. Emiliano Grillo, J.J. Spaun, Kelly Kraft
11 a.m.
Matt Jones, Jim Herman, Keegan Bradley
11:10 a.m.
Seamus Power, Brian Gay, Dylan Frittelli
11:20 a.m. Kevin Streelman, Scott Gutschewski, Joseph Bramlett
11:30 a.m.
Mito Pereira, David Lipsky, Mickey DeMorat

Plantation – 1st tee

Tee time Players
9:30 a.m.
Chris Stroud, Russell Henley, Vaughn Taylor
9:40 a.m.
Danny Lee, Nick Watney, David Hearn
9:50 a.m.
Stewart Cink, Charles Howell III, Luke Donald
10 a.m.
Cam Davis, Branden Grace, Kevin Tway
10:10 a.m.
Adam Hadwin, Brian Stuard, D.J. Trahan
10:20 a.m.
Sahith Theegala, Dylan Wu, Joshua Creel
10:30 a.m. Taylor Pendrith, Ben Kohles, Brett Drewitt
10:40 a.m. Camilo Villegas, Rory Sabbatini, Doc Redman
10:50 a.m. Lucas Glover, Andrew Landry, Chez Reavie
11 a.m.
Lucas Glover, Andrew Landry, Chez Reavie
11:10 a.m.
Richy Werenski, Adam Long, Brandt Snedeker
11:20 a.m.
Vince Whaley, Aaron Rai, Chad Ramey
11:30 a.m.
Taylor Moore, Andrew Novak, J.P. Griffin

Plantation – 10th tee

Tee time Players
9:30 a.m. Scott Piercy, Luke List, Anirban Lahiri
9:40 a.m. Jhonattan Vegas, Mackenzie Hughes, Kramer Hickok
9:50 a.m. Hudson Swafford, Sung Kang, Patton Kizzire
10 a.m. Tyler Duncan, Keith Mitchell, Davis Love III
10:10 a.m. Ben Crane, Brandon Wu, Justin Lower
10:20 a.m. Adam Svensson, Paul Barjon, Davis Thompson
10:30 a.m. Seth Reeves, Kurt Kitayama, Ludvig Aberg
10:40 a.m. Troy Merritt, Kyle Stanley, Jonas Blixt
10:50 a.m. Tom Hoge, Talor Gooch, Tyler McCumber
11 a.m. Kevin Kisner, Harris English, Robert Streb
11:10 a.m. Webb Simpson, Justin Rose, Jason Day
11:20 a.m. Dawie van der Walt, Max McGreevy, Carl Yuan
11:30 a.m. Lee Hodges, Curtis Thompson, Kyle Wilshire

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