How much money each player won at the WGC-Workday Championship

Check out how much money each player earned this week at the WGC-Workday Championship in Florida.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour, folks. Just ask this week’s winner, Collin Morikawa.

The reigning PGA champion held it together coming down the stretch at The Concession Golf Club in Bradenton, Florida, to finish at 18 under and three shots ahead of another up-and-coming talent, Viktor Hovland, along with Brooks Koepka and Billy Horschel.

Morikawa has now collected four titles on the PGA Tour despite being just 24. He joins Tiger Woods as the only players to win a major championship and a WGC title before turning 25

Check out how much money each player earned this week at the 2021 WGC-Workday Championship.

WGC-Workday: Leaderboard | Photos | Winner’s bag

Prize money

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Collin Morikawa -18 $1,820,000
T2 Viktor Hovland -15 $783,333
T2 Brooks Koepka -15 $783,333
T2 Billy Horschel -15 $783,333
5 Scottie Scheffler -14 $430,000
T6 Louis Oosthuizen -12 $320,667
T6 Rory McIlroy -12 $320,667
T6 Webb Simpson -12 $320,667
T9 Jason Kokrak -11 $237,500
T9 Patrick Reed -11 $237,500
T11 Cameron Smith -10 $189,667
T11 Kevin Na -10 $189,667
T11 Matthew Fitzpatrick -10 $189,667
14 Tony Finau -9 $165,000
T15 Carlos Ortiz -8 $147,333
T15 Justin Thomas -8 $147,333
T15 Hideki Matsuyama -8 $147,333
T18 Brendon Todd -7 $125,500
T18 Aaron Rai -7 $125,500
T18 Jason Day -7 $125,500
T18 Abraham Ancer -7 $125,500
T22 Bryson DeChambeau -6 $100,833
T22 Lanto Griffin -6 $100,833
T22 Tyrrell Hatton -6 $100,833
T22 Sebastian Munoz -6 $100,833
T22 Max Homa -6 $100,833
T22 Will Zalatoris -6 $100,833
T28 Joaquin Niemann -5 $82,500
T28 Thomas Detry -5 $82,500
T28 Sungjae Im -5 $82,500
T28 Min Woo Lee -5 $82,500
T32 Jon Rahm -4 $72,000
T32 Christiaan Bezuidenhout -4 $72,000
T32 Sergio Garcia -4 $72,000
T35 Chan Kim -3 $64,500
T35 Daniel Berger -3 $64,500
T37 Erik van Rooyen -2 $59,000
T37 Trevor Simsby -2 $59,000
T39 Marc Leishman -1 $55,000
T39 Xander Schauffele -1 $55,000
T41 Kevin Kisner E $52,500
T41 Jason Scrivener E $52,500
43 Gary Woodland 1 $51,000
T44 Brandon Stone 2 $48,500
T44 Mackenzie Hughes 2 $48,500
T44 Tommy Fleetwood 2 $48,500
T44 Matt Kuchar 2 $48,500
T48 David Lipsky 3 $44,500
T48 Shane Lowry 3 $44,500
T48 Cameron Champ 3 $44,500
T48 Yuki Inamori 3 $44,500
T52 Wade Ormsby 4 $41,500
T52 Victor Perez 4 $41,500
T54 Ryan Palmer 5 $38,300
T54 Justin Rose 5 $38,300
T54 Bubba Watson 5 $38,300
T54 Adam Scott 5 $38,300
T54 Dustin Johnson 5 $38,300
T59 Bernd Wiesberger 7 $36,250
T59 Rafael Cabrera Bello 7 $36,250
T61 Robert MacIntyre 8 $35,000
T61 Brad Kennedy 8 $35,000
T61 Lee Westwood 8 $35,000
T64 Laurie Canter 9 $33,875
T64 Sami Valimaki 9 $33,875
66 Harris English 10 $33,500
67 Rasmus Hojgaard 12 $33,250
T68 Andy Sullivan 13 $32,875
T68 J.C. Ritchie 13 $32,875
70 Lucas Herbert 14 $32,500
71 Daniel van Tonder 15 $32,250

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Winner’s Bag: Collin Morikawa, WGC-Workday Championship

A complete list of the golf equipment Collin Morikawa used to win the 2021 WGC-Workday Championship.

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A complete list of the golf equipment Collin Morikawa used to win the 2021 World Golf Championships-Workday Championship:

DRIVER: TaylorMade SIM (8 degrees), with Mitsubishi Diamana D+ Limited 70 TX shaft

FAIRWAY WOOD: TaylorMade SIM Titanium (14 degrees), SIM2 (19 degrees), with Mitsubishi Diamana D+ Limited 80 TX shafts

IRONS: TaylorMade P-7MC (4-6), TaylorMade P730 (7-PW), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 shafts

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM8 (52, 56 degrees), TaylorMade Milled Grind 2 (60 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400

PUTTER: TaylorMade Spider FCG

BALL: TaylorMade TP5

GRIPS: Golf Pride Z Grip (full swing) / SuperStroke Traxion Tour 1.0 (putter)

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Collin Morikawa earns fourth win at WGC-Workday Championship

Collin Morikawa followed his 2020 PGA Championship win with his first World Golf Championships victory at the WGC-Workday Championship.

The world’s best golfers descended on Florida this week for the first World Golf Championships event of the season, and they did not disappoint.

Amid a field of 14 of the top 15 players in the Golfweek/Sagarin men’s ranking, Collin Morikawa emerged as the winner, claiming the WGC-Workday Championship at The Concession Golf Club in Bradenton, Florida, at 18 under. The former Cal Bears star shot a 3-under 69 in the final round, holding off Viktor Hovland and Brooks Koepka, who each made a run up the leaderboard on Sunday.

If you’re keeping track at home, that’s now four wins for the 24 year old in just two years on Tour.

WGC-Workday: Leaderboard | Photos | Winner’s bag

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Morikawa won his first event at the 2019 Barracuda Championship just months after turning pro, then claimed last July’s Workday Charity Open in a playoff with Justin Thomas before winning his first major at the PGA Championship a month later.

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PGA champ Collin Morikawa sees lead fall to 2 heading into final round of Workday at The Concession

Collin Morikawa is looking for his first win since winning the PGA Championship at The Concession headed into Sunday.

BRADENTON, Fla. – The rest of the field was getting a headache looking at the scoreboards during the third round of the World Golf Championships-Workday Championship.

At the top was Collin Morikawa, who was giving The Concession Golf Club a concussion. The reigning PGA champ was battering the diabolical course that drives most players batty with eight birdies in his first 12 holes and headed to the 13th tee with a five-shot lead.

But Morikawa limped home with two bogeys and was forced to make two gut-check par putts to remain in the lead. Thus, heads have cleared and Sunday’s final-round no longer looks to have the makings of a runaway.

Morikawa, who made nine birdies in his second round, still signed for a 5-under-par 67 and his once imposing lead is down to two through 54 holes.

At 15 under, Morikawa is two shots clear of Billy Horschel (69) and Brooks Koepka (70), who battled through a neck injury to remain in contention.

WGC-Workday: Leaderboard | Photos | Tee times, TV info

Webb Simpson (69) is three back and Rory McIlroy (66) and Patrick Reed (69) will start four behind. Four others are at 10 under.

“Got off to a really good start and just kept rolling birdie after birdie, really didn’t think about it, game was playing really boring, playing simple, hitting fairways and hitting greens,” Morikawa said.

But he three-putted for bogey on the par-5 13th and he never got it going again.

“I just kind of psyched myself out and in my head it was going to be a tough hole, but that doesn’t mean I should be three‑putting, doesn’t mean I should leave my putt five feet short,” Morikawa said. “Tomorrow I’m just going to stay committed for every hole, every shot I hit and we’ll see what happens.

“There’s so many positives to take from those first 12, but I have a lot to learn from those last six. I didn’t play great the last six, but a lot to learn from heading into tomorrow. Just to kind of clear my head to get ready for the 18‑hole grind.”

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Koepka hopes his neck feels better in the final round.

“It sucks,” he said of the injury. “Doesn’t feel any better. Just one of those things, I’ve had it for a long time, so I’m ready for an off week next week. Go get some treatment here now and get worked on in the morning, and from there just hope for the best. Hopefully it loosens up.

“Have to go through a whole bottle of Aleve and Advil just trying to make it for two days. It’s annoying because I spotted a few shots just to the field, but it is what it is.”

A few shots can disappear quickly at The Concession. McIlroy said the course yields a lot of birdies but it can bite you very quickly even without doing much wrong. Or as Reed said, it’s definitely a course where no lead is big enough.

McIlroy gave himself an outside chance despite his swing still being a work in progress as he tries to win for the first time since the fall of 2019.

“I’m getting it around, put it that way,” McIlroy said. “I don’t feel like I’m flushing it by any means, but it’s a work in progress and I’m seeing some good signs, which I guess is encouraging.

“After I made birdies on 7 and 8 and I got to 6 under for the tournament, I said to Harry (Diamond, his caddie), ‘Let’s get to 10 by the end of the day and let’s see where that leaves us.’”

Rory McIlroy during the third round of the 2021 World Golf Championships-Workday Championship at The Concession. (Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

McIlroy made four birdies and an eagle coming home.

“I shot one better than that,” he said. “I think if you’re within three or four, you still feel like you’ve got a reasonable chance.”

Morikawa has his best chance of winning for the first time since the PGA.

He had been scuffling a tad since leaving TPC Harding Park in San Francisco with the Wanamaker Trophy. While he’s still the No. 6 player in the world, he had nearly as many missed cuts – three – as top-10s – four in 13 starts since the PGA Championship. He also had four other finishes north of 40th.

This led Morikawa to chance to a saw putting grip, especially seeing as the stats showed he was in the 200s on the PGA Tour in Strokes Gained: Putting. The move didn’t work in last week’s Genesis Invitational but it’s doing just fine this week.

And he got a chipping lesson from Paul Azinger that has helped his confidence.

“I’m feeling well with my irons, I’m feeling good, but when I do miss, I’m able to make up‑and‑downs and that’s kind of the best feeling you want to have when you’re staying aggressive with 18 more,” Morikawa said.

As for his putting, he said he’ll likely make more adjustment but right now he loves his new stroke. As far as the lead, he knows it’s not very big.

“Anything can happen,” he said. “I know all the guys behind me, they’re very capable of going low. That’s why I’ve got to be ready from hole 1 and be ready all the way through the round tomorrow.

“You’ve got to have a mind of a goldfish, right? You’ve got to be able to forget and forgive. So come tomorrow I’m sure there’s going to be a couple wayward shots or a bad shot here or there, but I’ve got to know that I’m still putting one foot forward in front of the other and trying to close out the tournament.”

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WGC-Workday Championship: Sunday tee times, TV and streaming info

Check out Sunday tee times and streaming information for the 2021 WGC-Workday Championship.

The PGA Tour’s West Coast swing has come and gone, with all the attention shifting to South Florida for the first World Golf Championships event of the year.

A field of quite literally the world’s best players is on hand this week at The Concession Golf Club in Bradenton, Florida, with the top 18 players in the Golfweek/Sagarin Pro Rankings all teeing it up.

Collin Morikawa heads into Sunday with a two-shot lead after carding 5-under 67 in the third round. Tied for second are Billy Horschel and Brooks Koepka at 13 under. Webb Simpson sits in solo fourth at 12 under while Rory McIlroy and Patrick Reed round out the top 5 at 11 under.

Check out Sunday’s tee times, TV and streaming info for the final round of the World Golf Championships-Workday Championship below.

WGC-Workday: Leaderboard | Photos

Tee times

Hole 1

Tee Time Players
7:35 a.m. Lucas Herbert
7:40 a.m. Roberrt MacIntyre, Andy Sullivan
7:50 a.m. Lucas Canter, Danie van Tonder
8 a.m. Bernd Wiesberger, JC Ritchie
8:10 a.m. Ryan Palmer, Brad Kennedy
8:20 a.m. Lee Westwood, Wade Ormsby
8:30 a.m. David Lipsky, Justin Rose
8:40 a.m. Sami Valimaki, Rafa Cabrera Bello
8:50 a.m. Brandon Stone, Victor Perez
9 a.m. Shane Lowry, Bubba Watson
9:10 a.m. Harris English, Erik van Rooyen
9:20 a.m. Kevin Kisner, Rasmus Hojgaard
9:40 a.m. Xander Schauffele, Marc Leishman
9:50 a.m. Adam Scott, Jon Rahm
10 a.m. Dustin Johnson, Mackenzie Hughes
10:10 a.m. Cameron Champ, Tommy Fleetwood
10:20 a.m. Chan Kim, Joaquin Niemann
10:30 a.m. Trevor Simsby, Christiaan Bezuidenhout
10:40 a.m. Matt Kuchar, Carlos Ortiz
10:50 a.m. Yuki Inamori, Bryson DeChambeau
11:10 a.m. Tyrrell Hatton, Lanto Griffin
11:20 a.m. Thomas Detry, Jason Scrivener
11:30 a.m. Brendon Todd, Daniel Berger
11:40 a.m. Gary Woodland, Cameron Smith
11:50 a.m. Aaron Rai, Sebastian Munoz
12 p.m. Sungjae Im, Kevin Na
12:10 p.m. Max Homa, Min Woo Lee
12:20 p.m. Jason Day, Justin Thomas
12:40 p.m. Jason Kokrak, Will Zalatoris
12:50 p.m. Tony Finau, Sergio Garcia
1 p.m. Abraham Ancer, Louis Oosthuizen
1:10 p.m. Hideki Matsuyama, Matthew Fitzpatrick
1:20 p.m. Viktor Hovland, Scottie Scheffler
1:30 p.m. Rory McIlroy, Patrick Reed
1:40 p.m. Brooks Koepka, Webb Simpson
1:50 p.m. Collin Morikawa, Bill Horschel

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TV, radio information

Sunday, Feb. 28

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 12-2:30 p.m.
NBC: 2:30-7 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 12:15-7 p.m.
Twitter: 8-9:15 a.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 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.

WGC-Workday Championship: Saturday tee times, TV and streaming info

Check out Saturday tee times and streaming information for the PGA Tour’s WGC-Workday Championship.

The PGA Tour’s West Coast swing has come and gone, with all the attention shifting to South Florida for the first World Golf Championships event of the year.

A field of quite literally the world’s best players is on hand this week at The Concession Golf Club in Bradenton, Florida, with the top 18 players in the Golfweek/Sagarin Pro Rankings all teeing it up.

After a second round 6-under 66, Brooks Koepka leads by one shot at 11 under. Cameron Smith, Billy Horschel and Collin Morikawa are T-2 at 10 under. Tony Finau, Webb Simpson and Matthew Fitzpatrick are T-5 at 9 under.

Other notable names in the top 20 are Rory McIlroy and Justin Thomas who are T-13 at 5 under and Bryson DeChambeau T-20 at 3 under.

Check out Saturday’s tee times, TV and streaming info for the third round of the World Golf Championships-Workday Championship below.

WGC-Workday: Leaderboard | Photos

Tee times

Hole 1

Tee Time Players
7:50 a.m. Andy Sullivan
7:55 a.m. Lucas Herbert, Brad Kennedy
8:05 a.m. Bernd Wiesberger, JC Ritchie
8:15 a.m. Bubba Watson, Danie van Tonder
8:25 a.m. Rasmus Hojgaard, Sami Valimaki
8:35 a.m. Rafa Cabrera Bello, Laurie Canter
8:45 a.m. Harris English, Tommy Fleetword
8:55 a.m. David Lipsky, Dustin Johnson
9:05 a.m. Mackenzie Hughes, Erik van Rooyen
9:15 a.m. Matt Kuchar, Robert MacIntyre
9:25 a.m. Carlos Ortiz, Brendon Todd
9:35 a.m. Brandon Stone, Min Woo Lee
9:55 a.m. Adam Scott, Victor Perez
10:05 a.m. Trevor Simsby, Daniel Berger
10:15 a.m. Justin Rose, Jon Rahm
10:25 a.m. Xander Schauffele, Thomas Detry
10:35 a.m. Max Homa, Lee Westwood
10:45 a.m. Ryan Palmer, Jason Scrivener
10:55 a.m. Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Tyrrell Hatton
11:05 a.m. Marc Leishman, Shane Lowry
11:15 a.m. Sungjae Im, Lanto Griffin
11:25 a.m. Wade Ormsby, Chan Kim
11:35 a.m. Kevin Na, Aaron Rai
11:45 a.m. Joaquin Niemann, Cameron Champ
12:05 p.m. Yuki Inamori, Sebastian Munoz
12:15 p.m. Bryson DeChambeau, Will Zalatoris
12:25 p.m. Jason Day, Sergio Garcia
12:35 p.m. Gary Woodland, Viktor Hovland
12:45 p.m. Rory McIlroy, Jason Kokrak
12:55 p.m. Scottie Scheffler, Justin Thomas
1:05 p.m. Abraham Ancer, Hideki Matsuyama
1:15 p.m. Kevin Kisner, Louis Oosthuizen
1:25 p.m. Matthew Fitzpatrick, Patrick Reed
1:35 p.m. Tony Finau, Webb Simpson
1:45 p.m. Billy Horschel, Collin Morikawa
1:55 p.m. Brooks Koepka, Cameron Smith

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TV, radio information

Saturday, Feb. 27

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 12-2:30 p.m.
NBC (Stream on CBS All Access): 2:30-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 11:15 a.m.-6 p.m.
Twitter: 8-9:15 a.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

Sunday, Feb. 28

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 12-2:30 p.m.
NBC (Stream on CBS All Access): 2:30-7 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 12:15-7 p.m.
Twitter: 8-9:15 a.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 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.

Brooks Koepka feeling right at home in Workday at The Concession

Brooks Koepka has recovered from his knee and hip-related injuries from last season and has the 36-hole lead at the WGC-Workday Championship

BRADENTON, Fla. – It hasn’t taken Brooks Koepka very long to feel right at home at The Concession.

Try one day, two tops.

While Koepka and the lion’s share of the field had never seen the golf course before this week’s World Golf Championships-Workday Championship, he wasn’t thrown a bit. The former world No. 1 and four-time major champion tacked on a 6-under-par 66 Friday to his opening 67 and took a one-stroke lead through 36 holes at 11 under.

“It’s just a typical south Florida golf course,” said Koepka, comparing it to The Bear’s Club, The Medalist, The Floridian, the courses he plays near his home. “Those little run‑off areas around the green, every Florida course seems to have them. You can get out of position real quick and kind of short‑side yourself and you’re not far off a good shot. All the courses are kind of the same.

“I feel like if I’ve had good numbers this week, ball‑striking it really well where I feel like I can get it close and can take advantage of those good numbers. I’ve had a good game plan. Doesn’t matter what the wind is, you can still kind of put it in the same spot. I don’t hit that many drivers around here, a lot of 3‑woods and just try to put it in the fairway.”

WGC-Workday: Leaderboard | Photos

Koepka leads a trio of golfers at 10 under – Cameron Smith (66), Billy Horschel (67) and Collin Morikawa (64).

Tony Finau, who has 37 top-10s since he won his lone PGA Tour title in 2016, shot 67 to move to 9 under, where he’s joined by Webb Simpson (69) and Matthew Fitzpatrick (69).

Defending champion Patrick Reed (68) and Kevin Kisner (69) are at 8 under.

While Koepka made 112 feet of putts in the first round, he canned 67 feet worth of putts in the second round. That’s because he was hitting the ball closer to the hole, especially in a three-hole stretch where he scored from seven feet on the 15th, five feet on the 16th and four feet on the 17th.

“To get real technical, just taking it a little more what feels inside and then kind of releasing the putter head as the downswing starts,” Koepka said of the tweaks he’s made to his putting stroke. “If it goes straight back, it gets a little shut.

“The change has been good and I like where it’s at.”

He likes how his body is feeling, too. Koepka is healthy again after spending much of the fall of 2019 and most of 2020 battling knee and hip injuries, and he won earlier this year in the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

“Once my body was right, it was only a matter of time before my swing kind of came into, I don’t know, came into a groove I guess you could say,” he said. “In December it finally was like it started to click, so I put in the work, it’s just now I’m starting to see it.”

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Morikawa, the reigning PGA champ, saw nine birdies on his scorecard as he and Bryson DeChambeau have shot the lowest round – 64 – of the week.

“I just made some putts,” Morikawa said. “I worked a lot on my chipping, talked to Paul Azinger a little bit before this week and that feels really good and that’s what’s kind of kept me back, that’s what made me have a bunch of six, eight‑footers. And to finally feel confident if I do miss a green that I can get up and down, it’s a lot of confidence.

“My putting has never felt this good and whether I make or miss putts, knowing that my stroke is good, line‑wise, tempo, that’s all that matters.”

While Finau has yet to earn win No. 2 on the PGA Tour, he’s not discouraged about all his near misses. He’s finished runner-up in his last three starts.

“Every year I just try and get better and I feel like I’ve done that again this year,” Finau said. “I think experience has been my biggest life teacher and I’ve been able to just use some of those experiences of just falling short to just keep me hungry and keep working. I’ve worked extremely hard on my game and it’s nice to see some success early in the year.”

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Bryson DeChambeau’s big turnaround and talking swing changes

DeChambeau set his career-best with nine birdies and tied for the low round of the day with 64, a 13-shot improvement over his 77 Thursday.

Bryson DeChambeau improved by 13 strokes on Friday at The Concession Golf Club in Bradenton, Florida.

If only that meant he’d shot 54, he might be leading. DeChambeau posted hockey sticks in Thursday’s first round of the WGC Workday Championship, an ugly 77, as he was done in by an erratic driver and putter. To no surprise, there was no concession by the reigning U.S. Open champion who rebounded to card a career-best nine birdies and sign for a course-record 8-under 64.

How does one shoot 13 strokes better overnight?

“I didn’t play terrible yesterday,” DeChambeau said, “I just didn’t get anything going my way, especially on that back nine. Had some bad mistakes and that’s what happened. I made some good putts and good strokes today that just luck went my way today.”

WGC-Workday: Leaderboard | Photos

DeChambeau was considered one of the favorites given that the course seems tailor made for his game and he had won the individual NCAA Men’s Championship at The Concession in 2015. DeChambeau’s performance didn’t sit well with him, but without a cut to worry about this week, he knew he still had three rounds to get his revenge on the Jack Nicklaus-Tony Jacklin designed layout.

“Very down on myself,” DeChambeau said. “I felt like I made some great changes this week and albeit they aren’t perfect changes, I definitely didn’t feel like I shot 5 over yesterday. I knew coming into this today just keep your head down and keep going in the right direction, try to keep going in the right direction making the same swing and I was fortunate enough to persevere today. It was a lot of perseverance, my caddie kept me strong and we just kept plodding along and making some great putts out there.”

Starting on the back nine, where he had shot 41 the day before, DeChambeau had a clean nine holes and sprinkled in three birdies at Nos. 12 and the two par-5s, Nos. 13 and 17. DeChambeau gave one stroke back at No. 1, missing the green short and failing to get it up and down for his only dropped shot of the day. He bounced back with birdies at Nos. 2 and 3, then poured in a 28-foot birdie putt at No. 5 and closed with three birdies to come home in 31.

DeChambeau’s 13-stroke improvement lifted him to 3-under 141, eight strokes behind the leader Brooks Koepka. His 64 tied for the low round of the day with Collin Morikawa.  It likely will take torching The Concession two more times to be part of the conversation on Sunday, but DeChambeau is hard at work in his quest to get better. He’s still learning how to harness his power surge.

“There’s some weird stuff going on now at high speeds. You could see it last year, I was hitting it really hard and it was going really far, but there were times it would go really far off the map as well. I’m trying to understand why those occur, and sometimes it’s not necessarily golf swing,” he explained. “There’s just technology that we don’t know about yet that’s hindering it unfortunately across the board. Nobody knows how to play a 200‑mile an hour ball speed and barely mis‑hit it, sometimes it doesn’t react the way you think it should.

“So we’ve got to figure out what we’re doing and Cobra and I are working really hard trying to figure it out. We’re doing a great job and in a couple weeks I’ll have some interesting stuff that will hopefully help mitigate some of those errors at high speeds so I can swing it fast again.”

Asked if he would go hit balls at the practice range after scoring 13 shots better, DeChambeau left no doubt.

“Heck, yeah,” he said. “I’m always trying to improve my golf swing. Didn’t feel perfect out there or as comfortable as I think I should be. I’m just going to work on ingraining those feels a little bit better and hopefully I can miss it again in the right places like I did today. And also hit it a little bit better, that would be a great combo.”

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‘What the hell?’ Patrick Reed rebounds from topped shot, two water balls to stay in contention at WGC-Workday

The top wasn’t the only weird occurrence during Patrick Reed’s odd round. The defending champion also hit two balls into water hazards.

BRADENTON, Fla. – What the hell?

That’s what Patrick Reed instantly said Friday after his second shot on the par-5 third hole at The Concession during the second round of the World Golf Championships-Workday Championship left the face of his 3-wood.

In this rare instance, his ball barely got airborne and instead of taking flight, it took the low road and scampered down the fairway all of 122 yards and came to rest in a bunker.

Embarrassing? Yes. Infuriating? A tad. Baffling? Bingo.

“With having that tree in front of me, I tried to really knock that thing down and hit like a low cut,” Reed said. “I think that’s the first time I ever actually probably had enough shaft lean and enough body in front of the golf ball where I actually hit that ball on the center of the face and it had to have just literally hit right in the ground in front and it went forward.”

But the ball ended up at a perfect number to the green for Reed – 142 yards – and he hit a brilliant shot from the bunker to 5 feet and made birdie. So, yes, while even pros top shots, pros can rebound with birdies.

That wasn’t the only weird occurrence during Reed’s odd round. The defending champion also hit two balls into water hazards – one with his tee shot on the par-4 fifth and one when he spun his wedge from 103 yards off the green at the par-4 eighth. Both led to bogeys.

“The first one in the water on 5, literally, right on the middle of the downswing with driver, my back foot slipped behind me and I pulled it left,” Reed said. “The second one, I’m still shocked with how that ball ended up in the water. I took a club that not only was going to get over the tree but was going to fly past the hole.

WGC-Workday: Leaderboard | Photos

“If anything, we’re bringing long into play, not short. When I hit it and I saw it in the air, I’m sitting there thinking this is going to fly 10, 15 feet past and it might spin. It flew short. Still can’t believe it.”

But on this latest day of a year that has been anything but humdrum, Reed rebounded with six birdies and posted his second consecutive 4-under-par 68 and will start the third round three shots behind leader Brooks Koepka.

Reed just doesn’t do normal. Noise travels with the 2018 Masters champion as he plays around the globe and this year has been no different. But he brushes whatever static lands on him and moves forward.

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Just as he did after the rules controversy during the third round of the Farmers Insurance Open that sparked outrage on social media. It was declared he had acted properly in receiving penalty-free relief from an embedded ball on the 10th hole and the next day he overwhelmed the field en route to victory.

His weird year also included weathering the storm that brought Texas to its knees. Reed’s home can be warmed and lit by generators, and he had friends and family over so they could escape the hazardous cold. The storm also gave Reed a chance to build snowmen with his two children.

So a topped shot and two water balls isn’t going to knock Reed down.

“I basically just kind of reset,” Reed said. “I felt like I’m still making some good golf swings and putting myself in spots that you need to in order to attack this golf course. There towards the end, it was just kind of a couple head-scratchers.

“You move on.”

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WGC-Workday Championship: Friday tee times, TV and streaming info

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the second round of the WGC-Workday Championship.

The PGA Tour’s West Coast swing has come and gone, with all the attention shifting to South Florida for the first World Golf Championships event of the year.

A field of quite literally the world’s best players is on hand this week at The Concession Golf Club in Bradenton, Florida, with the top 18 players in the Golfweek/Sagarin Pro Rankings all teeing it up.

Check out Friday’s tee times, TV and streaming info for the second round of the World Golf Championships-Workday Championship below.

WGC-Workday: Leaderboard | Photos

Tee times

Hole 1

Tee Time Players
10:58 a.m. Andy Sullivan, Cameron Champ, Brandon Stone
11:09 a.m. Kevin Na, Cameron Smith, Christiaan Bezuidenhout
11:20 a.m. Billy Horschel, Sergio Garcia, Aaron Rai
11:31 a.m. Ryan Palmer, Louis Oosthuizen, Bernd Wiesberger
11:42 a.m. Will Zalatoris, Bubba Watson, Sami Valimaki
11:53 a.m. Danie van Tonder, Brad Kennedy, Yuki Inamori
12:15 p.m. David Lipsky, JC Ritchie, Trevor Simsby
12:26 p.m. Chan Kim, Jason Scrivener, Laurie Canter
12:37 p.m. Justin Thomas, Rory McIlroy, Max Homa
12:48 p.m. Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka, Daniel Berger
12:59 p.m. Xander Schauffele, Matthew Fitzpatrick, Adam Scott
1:10 p.m. Matthew Wolff, Victor Perez, Shane Lowry

Hole 10

Tee Time Players
10:58 a.m. Robert MacIntyre, Mackenzie Hughes, Lucas Herbert
11:09 a.m. Tyrrell Hatton, Harris English, Gary Woodland
11:20 a.m. Min Woo Lee, Justin Rose, Carlos Ortiz
11:31 a.m. Bryson DeChambeau, Patrick Reed, Viktor Hovland
11:42 a.m. Jon Rahm, Tony Finau, Hideki Matsuyama
11:53 a.m. Tommy Fleetwood, Abraham Ancer, Kevin Kisner
12:04 p.m. Brendon Todd, Erik van Rooyen, Wade Ormsby
12:15 p.m. Scottie Scheffler, Sebastián Muñoz, Rafa Cabrera Bello
12:26 p.m. Sungjae Im, Jason Day, Lanto Griffin
12:37 p.m. Collin Morikawa, Webb Simpson, Joaquin Niemann
12:48 p.m. Marc Leishman, Lee Westwood, Matt Kuchar
12:59 p.m. Jason Kokrak, Rasmus Hojgaard, Thomas Detry

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TV, radio information

Friday, Feb. 26

TV

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

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 11 a.m.-6 p.m.
Twitter: 11 a.m.-12 p.m.

RADIO

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

Saturday, Feb. 27

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 12-2:30 p.m.
NBC (Stream on CBS All Access): 2:30-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 11:15 a.m.-6 p.m.
Twitter: 8-9:15 a.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

Sunday, Feb. 28

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 12-2:30 p.m.
NBC (Stream on CBS All Access): 2:30-7 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 12:15-7 p.m.
Twitter: 8-9:15 a.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

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