Scottie Scheffler’s victory at the 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational proved his first PGA Tour win was no fluke

“When the conditions get really tough and the field gets really good, I get excited.”

Colt Knost and the other PGA Tour pros who called Royal Oaks Golf Club in Dallas home used to call Scottie Scheffler their little shadow.

Every chance he could he’d flip over a range ball bucket and watch renowned instructor Randy Smith give lessons to the likes of Knost, Hunter Mahan, Harrison Frazar, Justin Leonard, and Martin Flores and he absorbed all this knowledge on how to play the game.

“He’s like a sponge,” Smith said.

Scheffler, 26, soaked up what it took to be a winner, too. In the final round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational, he shot an even-par 72 at Bay Hill Club and Lodge in Orlando to claim the title by a stroke.

On a warm, sunny day that baked greens to a yellowish shade of split pea soup, scores soared in a frisky, fickle wind that puffed about the course, nudging golf balls in various directions. It was survival of the fittest and Scheffler’s steely 5-under 283 total was just enough to edge the trio of Viktor Hovland, Tyrrell Hatton and Billy Horschel.

“I feel punch drunk,” said 2018 API champion Rory McIlroy after a 76 left him T-13. “The weekend, it’s like crazy golf.”

He wasn’t exaggerating. Only four of 77 players in the field managed to break par in the final round while 18 signed for 78 or higher, including Troy Merritt who ballooned to an 87. The field combined to shoot 266-over par on Sunday for the highest scoring average in a round (75.5) at this event since 1981. It also marked the highest finish by a winner of a non-major on Tour since Jon Rahm shot a 75 at the 2020 Memorial Tournament.

Scheffler’s 5-under par 72-hole total was the highest in relation to par since Rahm won the 2020 BMW Championship at 4 under. And Scheffler’s 283 aggregate is the second-highest winning score on Tour since the start of the 2014-15 season, behind the 284s from Tyrrell Hatton at the 2020 API and Danny Willett at the 2016 Masters.

In other words, Scheffler, who calls Dallas home, needed to be Texas tough to get the job done. It was a performance that showed off his grit and gumption. Meredith Scheffler called her husband a fighter.

“I mean, did you watch today, I guess?” she said. “That was a really good example.”

2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational
Scottie Scheffler celebrates a par putt on the 15th green during the final round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard at Arnold Palmer Bay Hill Golf Course on March 06, 2022, in Orlando, Florida. (Photo: Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

He needed to be tough over the final 36 holes as a U.S. Open broke out a few months early at Arnie’s Place.

“This course is a total beat-down,” Scheffler said. “I’m usually pretty competitive, so when the conditions get really tough and the field gets really good, I get excited.”

Scheffler, the winner of the Arnold Palmer Award as the PGA Tour’s Rookie of the Year in 2020, won for the second time in his past three tournaments and the champion’s alpaca-red sweater fit him nicely. It took 71 starts to notch his first win at the WM Phoenix Open in February 2022, but hardly any time at all to validate.

Scheffler opened with rounds of 70-73 before shooting one of the rounds of the tournament on Saturday, a 4-under 68 that included three birdies and an eagle on the inward nine and the best nine-hole score of the week (31).

In the final round, Scheffler overcame a sluggish start with bogeys on two of his first three holes and missed a 5-foot par putt at nine to make the turn one stroke behind Hovland. But as others faltered in the howling wind, Scheffler didn’t make another bogey. He tacked on a birdie at the par-5 12th to reach 5 under and made pars all the way to the house, including two putts from 70 feet at the last. It was a triumph of willpower as much as athletic skill.

Gary Woodland showed how quickly fortunes could change. The 2019 U.S. Open champion drilled his second at the par-5 16th to 24 feet and canned the putt for eagle to seize the lead for the first time all week at 6 under.

But one hole later, Woodland caught the front greenside bunker with his tee shot at the par 3 and failed to escape on his first attempt. “I tried to chunk it, and I chunked it, chunked it too much,” he said.

He missed a 5-foot bogey putt and just as quickly as he had assumed the lead, it was gone. Then he made bogey at the last to close in 73 at 3-under 285 and finish T-5 with Chris Kirk, who earned a berth in the 150th British Open along with Talor Gooch, who tied for seventh, as the top finishers that weren’t already qualified for the British Open, the final men’s major of the year at St. Andrews.

2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational
Viktor Hovland (left) meets Scottie Scheffler on the first hole during the final round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational golf tournament. (Photo: Reinhold Matay-USA TODAY Sports)

Hovland pinballed in and out of the lead over the weekend. Trailing by one to start the day, he stiffed his tee shot at the par-3 seventh and made birdie to grab the lead. As further proof of the carnage going on at Bay Hill on Sunday, Hovland made bogey at the next two holes and still held the lead at the turn. He extended it to two strokes after a birdie at 11, but it was short-lived. Hovland was tied with Scheffler after a birdie at 16, but failed to get up and down from the bunker at 17 — he was 3 of 13 in bunker saves for the week — and his 17-foot birdie putt at 18 came up short.

“I felt like I should have won,” said Hovland, adding that his finish would “sting a little bit.”

Horschel, the 54-hole co-leader, played his first 10 holes in 5 over but made two birdies coming home and had a 33-foot putt at the last to force a playoff but it was not to be.

“I don’t give up,” Horschel said. “I’ll go down in flames before I tap out.”

Scheffler won despite hitting only five fairways and nine greens in regulation. The last player to find the winner’s circle despite not having his ‘A game’ and spraying it all over the lot? Tiger Woods at the 2013 Farmers Insurance Open. Scheffler, who used a version of Tiger’s signature TaylorMade irons, wore Nike’s TW model shoes and shirt at the Masters, and used to study his YouTube clips, recalled Tiger’s dominance at Bay Hill and what it meant to him to play at Arnie’s course as a junior in an AJGA event.

“We watched it so many times on TV, watching Tiger win this tournament and make his putts on 18. So just kind of being on the same grounds where all that type of historic stuff had happened, it was just really cool coming here and being able to play,” Scheffler said. “It was really special for them to let us come and play this golf course.”

In the final round, Scheffler handled the imposing sequence of finishing holes that test not only the skills but the nerves of a player better than anyone else. At 15, his drive missed the fairway to the left and settled behind a tree in a pile of pine needles. He advanced it no more than 30 yards.

2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill
Scottie Scheffler of the United States converses with his caddie Ted Scott on the 12th hole during a pro-am event prior to the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard at Arnold Palmer Bay Hill Golf Course on March 02, 2022 in Orlando, Florida. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

“I was trying to hit like this low hook runner and get up there around the green somewhere,” Scheffler said. “I don’t know what happened. It just didn’t come out. There was pine straw in front of me that I couldn’t move. There was a leaf behind my ball … I thought I’d hit it at least through the fairway.”

Scheffler didn’t allow himself to dwell on the negative.

“I just told myself 5 is not a bad score, and that’s kind of a comforting feeling on those hard golf courses,” he said.

But he would do better than make bogey. He wedged to some 20 feet from the cup and drained the putt with authority to stay in the driver’s seat.

“I made a 4 somehow, which was kind of a miracle at that point in the round,” he said.

At the par-5 16th, Scheffler’s tee shot found more trouble, taking a bad bounce into a brutal lie in the sand. This time he managed to advance his ball about 50 yards, but his lie in the rough was hardly any better and he was forced to lay up. But Scheffler escaped unscathed again, pitching from 70 yards to six feet and holing the putt.

“I didn’t let any mistakes hurt me on the back nine,” he said. “I would say that’s probably really where I credit the win.”

It was a fight to the finish but Scheffler wouldn’t have it any other way.

“Being out here and competing and being able to actually win a tournament is pretty joyful,” he said.

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2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player at Bay Hill

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour. Just ask Scottie Scheffler.

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

The 25-year-old Texan is riding an absolute heater early in 2022, with wins in two of his last three starts following his victory on Sunday at the 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational. Scheffler shot an even-par 72 in near-U.S. Open conditions to win by one over the trio of Tyrrell Hatton, Viktor Hovland and Billy Horschel.

For his efforts, Scheffler will take home the top prize of $2,160,000, while Hatton, Hovland and Horschel each earned a cool $908,000. Check out how much money each player earned this week below.

APILeaderboard | Photos | Winner’s bag

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Prize money payout

Position Player Score Earnings 
1 Scottie Scheffler -5 $2,160,000
T2 Tyrrell Hatton -4 $908,000
T2 Viktor Hovland -4 $908,000
T2 Billy Horschel -4 $908,000
T5 Gary Woodland -3 $463,500
T5 Chris Kirk -3 $463,500
T7 Lucas Herbert -2 $390,000
T7 Talor Gooch -2 $390,000
T9 Sam Burns -1 $339,000
T9 Matt Fitzpatrick -1 $339,000
T11 Keegan Bradley E $291,000
T11 Corey Conners E $291,000
T13 Cameron Young 1 $228,000
T13 Russell Henley 1 $228,000
T13 Graeme McDowell 1 $228,000
T13 Rory McIlroy 1 $228,000
T17 Aaron Wise 2 $183,000
T17 Jon Rahm 2 $183,000
T17 Max Homa 2 $183,000
T20 Hideki Matsuyama 3 $131,400
T20 Beau Hossler 3 $131,400
T20 Tommy Fleetwood 3 $131,400
T20 Christiaan Bezuidenhout 3 $131,400
T20 Sungjae Im 3 $131,400
T20 Nick Watney 3 $131,400
T26 David Lipsky 4 $87,600
T26 Brendan Steele 4 $87,600
T26 Adam Scott 4 $87,600
T26 Si Woo Kim 4 $87,600
T26 Jason Kokrak 4 $87,600
T26 Sebastián Muñoz 4 $87,600
T32 Thomas Pieters 5 $67,000
T32 Adam Long 5 $67,000
T32 Nick Taylor 5 $67,000
T32 Patton Kizzire 5 $67,000
T32 Tom Hoge 5 $67,000
T32 Charles Howell III 5 $67,000
T38 Alex Smalley 6 $53,400
T38 Patrick Rodgers 6 $53,400
T38 Sergio Garcia 6 $53,400
T38 Will Zalatoris 6 $53,400
T42 Dylan Frittelli 7 $37,464
T42 Pat Perez 7 $37,464
T42 Padraig Harrington 7 $37,464
T42 Zach Johnson 7 $37,464
T42 Adam Schenk 7 $37,464
T42 Davis Thompson 7 $37,464
T42 Ian Poulter 7 $37,464
T42 K.H. Lee 7 $37,464
T42 Taylor Moore 7 $37,464
T42 Taylor Pendrith 7 $37,464
T52 John Pak 8 $28,170
T52 Matt Jones 8 $28,170
T52 Lanto Griffin 8 $28,170
T52 Rickie Fowler 8 $28,170
T52 Danny Willett 8 $28,170
T52 Stephan Jaeger 8 $28,170
T52 J.J. Spaun 8 $28,170
T52 Martin Laird 8 $28,170
60 Brendon Todd 9 $27,000
T61 Keith Mitchell 10 $26,040
T61 Danny Lee 10 $26,040
T61 Sam Ryder 10 $26,040
T61 Matthew Wolff 10 $26,040
T61 Denny McCarthy 10 $26,040
T61 Vince Whaley 10 $26,040
T61 Cameron Champ 10 $26,040
T68 Hayden Buckley 11 $24,720
T68 Greyson Sigg 11 $24,720
T68 Marc Leishman 11 $24,720
T68 Lee Westwood 11 $24,720
72 Paul Casey 13 $24,120
73 Maverick McNealy 14 $23,880
T74 Lucas Glover 16 $23,400
T74 Anirban Lahiri 16 $23,400
T74 Troy Merritt 16 $23,400
77 Chez Reavie 19 $22,920

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‘I feel punch drunk:’ Battered Rory McIlroy needs to clear mind after dire weekend at Arnold Palmer Invitational

“It’s hard to keep your patience out there,” McIlroy said after another rough weekend at Bay Hill.

Most people count down the hours until the weekend arrives.

Unless they’re playing in the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill Club & Lodge in Orlando.

“I feel punch drunk, to be honest,” Rory McIlroy said after he wrapped up play on Sunday by signing for a 4-over-par 76. That was the same score he posted in Saturday’s third round when high winds arrived, the course became very firm, the rough remained nasty and the greens got glassy.

McIlroy, who won the 2018 Arnold Palmer Invitational with weekend rounds of 67-64, grabbed the first-round lead with a 65 and followed up with a 72. But then things sort of got out of hand – again.

“The weekend, it’s like crazy golf,” said McIlroy, who finished at 1 over and in a tie for 13th. The Northern Irishman wasn’t the only one to get beat up at Bay Hill; the field average in the final round was north of 75. And Scottie Scheffler won his second PGA Tour title, finishing at 5 under – the first single-digit winner on the PGA Tour since Jon Rahm won the 2021 U.S. Open.

APILeaderboard | Photos | Winner’s bag

“You just don’t get rewarded for good shots,” McIlroy continued. “Like I’m venting here, and I’m frustrated and whatever. I think, as well, the frustration is it’s a carbon copy of what’s happened the last three years here. I started off really, really well. Friday afternoon conditions got a little tougher.

“Then over the weekend it’s sort of been the same stuff.

“So three years in a row it’s sort of been start off, lead the golf tournament, then you just sort of regress and come back to the field each and every day. Yeah, it’s frustrating. It’s hard to keep your patience out there.”

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Next up for McIlroy and the game’s best players – The Players Championship on Pete Dye’s wicked Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach. Florida. McIlroy will try as hard as he can to get the Bay Hill weekend out of his mind.

“Sort of the way the conditions are, it makes you feel as if you’re not playing as good as you are,” he said. “Like I’m playing good. I’m hitting good shots. I’m swinging the club well. I’m chipping well. I’m putting well. But it can knock your confidence whenever the conditions are like this.

“I’m certainly playing better than shooting 8 over over the weekend. It’s just a matter of trying to regroup and forget about this week, and next week’s going to be a completely different test.

“I just need a day off tomorrow to forget about what’s happened this week.”

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Winner’s Bag: Scottie Scheffler, Arnold Palmer Invitational

Check out the clubs that got the job done at Bay Hill.

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A complete list of the golf equipment Scottie Scheffler used to win the PGA Tour’s 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational:

DRIVER: TaylorMade Stealth Plus+ (8 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black 7X shaft (from $599.99 at GlobalGolf)

FAIRWAY WOOD: Nike VR Pro (13.5 degrees), with Fujikura Atmos Black Tour Spec 8 X shaft

IRONS: Srixon ZU85 (3), with Nippon Pro Modus3 Hybrid Tour X, Srixon ZX7 (4), TaylorMade P-7TW (5-PW), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 shafts (P-7TW irons from $1,999 at taylormadegolf.com)

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM8 (50, 56, 60 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 shafts (from $159 at GlobalGolf)

PUTTER: Scotty Cameron Special Select Timeless Tour prototype

BALL: Titleist Pro V1 (from 49.99 at GlobalGolf)

GRIPS: Golf Pride Tour Velvet

We occasionally recommend interesting products, services, and gaming opportunities. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage

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‘Angry Golfer’ Tyrrell Hatton had a good reason for not yelling ‘fore!’ after hooking it through a fairway at Bay Hill

“I didn’t shout fore out of pure embarrassment,” Hatton said.

Tyrrell Hatton had a shocking warmup before Sunday’s final round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill Club & Lodge.

Well, that’s the word he used to describe it.

Please explain, Mr. Hatton.

“With the second driver I hit, I think I missed the ninth fairway left from the driving range,” he said. “I didn’t shout fore out of pure embarrassment. No one on a driving range should ever have to shout fore.

“That kind of shows you how bad it was.”

The ninth hole runs parallel to the driving range, which is about 150 yards wide. If the flew his shot over the ninth fairway, that was one huge hook.

So, yes, it was a shocking shot.

The 2020 Arnold Palmer Invitational winner and star of the DP World Tour’s Angry Golfers spot, however, recovered.

“Luckily enough, I don’t know what I found, but just started hitting the ball good again,” Hatton said of his final round. “I played really good, and I’m very happy with that. Luckily, we didn’t have too many wides out there on the golf course.

“Maybe I was a bit more focused out there.”

On a day when the field averaged north of 75, and a day after he was clobbered by Bay Hill en route to a third-round 78, Hatton shot 3-under-par 69 to finish at 4 under and in second place, one shot behind Scottie Scheffler.

It was one of only two scores in the 60s – Lucas Hebert shot 68.

“Very fortunate to win this tournament two years ago when it was again really, really tough. But I just went out there and tried my best,” Hatton said. “I had to hole over 120 feet pf putts today, which is surprising to hear. I know I putted well, but you’re putting so defensively, you’re trying to just cozy up to the hole.

“We know the weekends are pretty brutal here. I think the greens get so quick sometimes, pin positions just seem brutal. And it’s just, like I said, you have to play defensively and try your best to get the ball as close as you can. When you’re putting, if you do miss, you don’t want it too far away on the next one.

“So I guess I feel like I’ve done a good job of that.”

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Scottie Scheffler earns second PGA Tour win in last three starts with 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational title

The win is Scheffler’s second after claiming last month’s WM Phoenix Open.

A whopping 11 players were within three shots of the lead when the final group made the turn on Sunday at the 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational, setting up for a back-nine finale that would’ve made the event’s namesake proud.

Scottie Scheffler hung tough and was steady as could be to emerge from the pack and claim the title following an even-par performance at Bay Hill Club and Lodge in Orlando. From 69 feet away, Scheffler rolled his birdie putt just inches short on the 18th green, leaving a tap-in par to take the clubhouse lead at 5-under. The 25-year-old Texan earned his first PGA Tour win last month after a playoff with Patrick Cantlay at the WM Phoenix Open.

APILeaderboard | Photos

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Tyrrell Hatton, Viktor Hovland and Billy Horschel all finished T-2 at 4 under, with Gary Woodland and Chris Kirk T-5 at 3 under.

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The best golf club tosses in history — from Rory McIlroy to Judge Smails

A recent club throw got us thinking: what are some of the other best on-course meltdowns?

Whether you’re a touring professional golfer, an avid amateur or weekend hacker, every player has hit a bad shot out on the golf course and felt the urge to wind up and throw his or her club.

Exhibit A: Matt Jones on Saturday after making par on the 11th hole at Bay Hill during the third round of the PGA Tour’s Arnold Palmer Invitational in Orlando.

“Matt a little frustrated there,” announcer Steve Sands said on the broadcast. “Did you hear what he said? He said, ‘I’m done, I’ve had enough of it.’”

So that got us thinking: What are some of golf’s greatest club tosses? From Rory McIlroy to Judge Smails, here are a few of the best.

APILeaderboard | Photos | PGA Tour Live on ESPN+
More: Drone shots of all 18 holes at Bay Hill

Arnold Palmer Invitational: It’s survival of the fittest with Bay Hill ‘on a knife’s edge’

Bay Hill bites back with dry greens, windy challenges as Talor Gooch, Billy Horschel share third-round lead.

ORLANDO – Graeme McDowell stiffed his approach at 18, tapped in for birdie and signed for 3-under 69 at Arnold Palmer’s Bay Hill and Lodge for one of just seven rounds in the 60s on the third day of the Arnold Palmer Invitational. But that doesn’t mean the former U.S. Open champ wasn’t spent after a trying day on the course.

“It’s a stressful golf course with a lot of shots that stress you out,” he said.

McDowell, who lives in the City Beautiful, planned to kick up his feet, check out the remainder of the broadcast, fire up the grill and watch the rest of the field get roasted by baked-out greens.

“I might have to drink a little less wine than I was going to,” said McDowell, who teed off more than three hours ahead of the leaders Saturday. “It’s very difficult out there and not getting any easier.”

By the end of the day, McDowell stood tied for sixth at 3 under. The wind blew and scores soared. Just ask rookie Hayden Buckley, who skied to an 84 and ditched his putter outside scoring and left his caddie to retrieve it. At least he finished the round with his short stick. Australian Matt Jones heaved his into a lake in frustration.

“It’s just on a knife edge,” said Rory McIlroy, who struggled to 76 and was tied with McDowell after three rounds. “The last few years, we sort of know what to expect coming here. It just seems to be this way over the weekend. It’s just hard. It’s hard not to get frustrated.”

APILeaderboard | Photos | PGA Tour Live on ESPN+

McDowell described the greens as icy and the rough as U.S. Open length. Add in the crosswinds and it was a recipe for disaster.

“If you don’t hit the fairway, it’s almost impossible to hit a green,” McIlroy said.

Billy Horschel was one of the few, the proud to shoot in red figures, sinking a 30-foot birdie putt from just off the green – after taking a fortunate free drop from the rough because of a sprinkler head – at 18 to post 1-under 71 and share the 54-hole lead at 7-under 209 with Talor Gooch. Those who embraced the challenge, such as Horschel, seemed to fare better.

“This is awesome golf. It’s testing and it wears you down,” he said. “I can’t even say we all enjoy it all the time, but we do enjoy because it does reward fairly good golf shots on a regular basis. It rewards people who think their way through a shot and how it needs to be played to really turn out properly.”

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“It was not fun, but it’s the right test,” said Max Homa, who made a hole-in-one at the 14th en route to a 73 and attested to Scottie Scheffler tying for low round of the day with 68. “I played with a guy who’s one of the best players in the world, and he played a really good round of golf and made it look pretty easy.

“If you’re out of position, you have no chance, but you put yourself out of position. So I think it’s quality that’s going to separate the field into who played really well, who played well, who played OK and who didn’t play well. I think that’s the way golf should be.”

To his point, only 16 of the 78 players that made the cut were in red figures after three rounds. For a time it looked as if Viktor Hovland might run away with the tournament. The 24-year-old Norwegian holed out for eagle from 38 yards in a greenside bunker at the par-5 sixth hole to offset a shaky bogey-bogey start to his third round.

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“I kind of thought I was in no-man’s-land, just try to chunk it out there and give myself a putt at it. Came out really soft and landed in the first cut and just died and went in,” he said. “That was really nice for at least the next few holes, and I was really in a good rhythm until some bad shots on the back nine.”

He was 10 under for the tournament and leading Gooch by four strokes at the turn after a birdie at No. 8. That happened to be his final birdie of the day, and he sprinkled four bogeys on his inward card including at the final two holes to shoot 75 and trail the co-leaders by a shot.

When asked if he enjoys playing a tournament where single digits could very well be enough to win Sunday and earn his first victory on U.S. soil, Hovland said, “To be honest, not really. I think now it’s maybe on the border where everything kind of becomes a scrambling competition. As I’ve said before, that’s not really the strength of my game. But what I think is cool at least is I’m able to be in contention in a tournament under these conditions that don’t really play into my hands.”

Horschel, who was born and raised in Grant-Valkaria, Florida, about 90 minutes from Bay Hill, said he expected Sunday to be an emotional day, especially if he were to slip into the winner’s red alpaca sweater.

“It would be very special. You said I grew up an hour from here, came here as a kid, caddied in the Pro-Am multiple times. A lot of family and friend support around here,” he said. “Then you add on Arnold Palmer’s name to it. It would be something very special that at the end of my career I could say that was a special victory.”

Sunday tee times for the PGA Tour’s 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill

Everything you need to know for the final round from Bay Hill.

The PGA Tour’s Florida Swing continues this weekend in Orlando as a loaded field of the game’s best are at Bay Hill Club and Lodge for the 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational.

Billy Horschel and Talor Gooch are tied for the lead after three rounds with Viktor Hovland a single stroke back heading into Sunday.

Horschel said there’s a ton of significance in playing at Bay Hill.

“I grew up an hour from here, came here as a kid, caddied in the Pro-Am multiple times. A lot of family and friend support around here,” Horschel said. “Then you add on Arnold Palmer’s name to it. It would be something very special that at the end of my career I could say that was a special victory.

“But I’ve got to do a really good job of controlling my emotions more and not getting ahead of myself.”

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the fourth round of the 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational. All times Eastern.

API: Leaderboard | Photos | PGA Tour Live on ESPN+

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Tee times

 

Time Players
6:55 a.m. Hayden Buckley
7 a.m. Keith Mitchell, Greyson Sigg
7:10 a.m. Chez Reavie, Danny Lee
7:20 a.m. Maverick McNealy, Lucas Glover
7:30 a.m. Sam Ryder, Matthew Wolff
7:40 a.m. Dylan Frittelli, Anirban Lahiri
7:50 a.m. Padraig Harrington, Pat Perez
8 a.m. Zach Johnson, John Pak
8:15 a.m. Alex Smalley, Marc Leishman
8:25 a.m. Hideki Matsuyama, Matt Jones
8:35 a.m. David Lipsky, Patrick Rodgers
8:45 a.m. Adam Schenk, Brendan Steele
8:55 a.m. Sergio Garcia, Lee Westwood
9:05 a.m. Lanto Griffin, Denny McCarthy
9:15 a.m. Davis Thompson, Rickie Fowler
9:25 a.m. Brendon Todd, Danny Willett
9:40 a.m. Vince Whaley, Cameron Champ
9:50 a.m. Adam Long, Thomas Pieters
10 a.m. Paul Casey, Nick Taylor
10:10 a.m. Stephan Jaeger, Ian Poulter
10:20 a.m. Adam Scott, Lucas Herbert
10:30 a.m. K.H. Lee, Si Woo Kim
10:40 a.m. Jason Kokrak, Taylor Moore
10:50 a.m. Cameron Young, Patton Kizzire
11:05 a.m. Taylor Pendrith, J.J. Spaun
11:15 a.m. Sebastián Muñoz, Troy Merritt
11:25 a.m. Beau Hossler, Tommy Fleetwood
11:35 p.m. Sam Burns, Martin Laird
11:45 p.m. Jon Rahm, Aaron Wise
11:55 p.m. Keegan Bradley, Max Homa
12:05 p.m. Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Tom Hoge
12:15 p.m. Charles Howell III, Tyrrell Hatton
12:30 p.m. Will Zalatoris, Sungjae Im
12:40 p.m. Russell Henley, Nick Watney
12:50 p.m. Corey Conners, Matt Fitzpatrick
1 p.m. Graeme McDowell, Rory McIlroy
1:10 p.m. Gary Woodland, Chris Kirk
1:20 p.m. Viktor Hovland, Scottie Scheffler
1:30 p.m. Billy Horschel, Talor Gooch

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How to watch/listen

You can watch Golf Channel for free on fuboTVESPN+ is the exclusive home for PGA Tour Live streaming. All times Eastern.

Sunday, March 6

TV

Golf Channel: 12:30-2:30 p.m.
NBC: 2:30-6 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 7:15 a.m.-6 p.m.

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Watch: Max Homa’s first PGA Tour ace highlights wild ride on back nine at Bay Hill; fans will get tickets for 2023

Max Homa picked a fine time to sink his first ace on the PGA Tour.

There’s no need to roast this swing.

Max Homa picked a fine time to sink his first ace on the PGA Tour. After a turbulent stretch that saw Homa post a double bogey, then a birdie, then a bogey, the three-time PGA Tour winner rolled in his tee shot on the 14th hole during Saturday’s third round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill Club and Lodge.

With a stiff breeze in his face, Homa stepped to the tee box with the stick 163 yards away and hit one that landed softly on the front of the green, rolled toward the flag and nestled into the cup.

The California native followed with a little dance and a smile before his caddie, Joe Greiner, came in for a hug.

The wild ride continued after 14 — Homa birdied No. 16 then posted bogeys on 17 and 18 to finish the day with a 73. He sits at 1 over for the tournament.

API: Leaderboard | Photos | PGA Tour Live on ESPN+

In honor of the ace, Mastercard will donate $200,000 to the Arnold & Winnie Palmer Foundation. Also, those who were watching in the Palmer Patio certainly were happy to see the ball roll in. The tournament’s chief sponsor will provide tournament fans who purchased tickets to that area on the 14th hole for Saturday’s round with two grounds passes to the 2023 event.

Although it’s Homa’s first hole-in-one on Tour, it was the sixth ace on No. 14 in tournament history, including two last season — one from Kris Ventura and another from Jazz Janewattananond.

Here’s a look at the hole via drone from our videographer, Gabe Gudgel: