Jordan Spieth heats up quickly in chilly L.A. to grab share of Genesis Invitational lead

It wasn’t one of those edge-of-your-seat, Jordan Spieth rounds. Instead, this was Steady Eddie golf.

It didn’t take Jordan Spieth very long to quickly warm up on a chilly Thursday morning north of Los Angeles.

Starting on the back nine, he birdied his first two holes in the opening round of the Genesis Invitational hosted by Tiger Woods at Riviera Country Club. And after the sun finally broke through the clouds and the thermometer passed 60 degrees, Spieth had a total of seven birdies to offset two bogeys and signed for a 5-under 66.

That placed the three-time major champion and world No. 14 atop the leaderboard in the early going of the final tournament of the West Coast swing. It wasn’t one of those edge-of-your-seat rounds Spieth tees up on a regular basis, there wasn’t any out-of-this-world scrambling, and there definitely wasn’t an edge-of-a-cliff, hair-rising moment like his shot on the eighth hole at Pebble Beach two weeks ago, where he tied for second.

Tee times, TV info | ESPN+ streaming info for PGA Tour Live

Instead, it was Steady Eddie type of golf; he missed just four greens in regulation, there were no chip-ins or hole-outs, and his longest birdie putt came from 20 feet. That included a 7-footer on the 10th.

“I kind of caught the left lip to make that birdie putt and last week I didn’t seem to catch any of the right side of kind of the breaks on the greens, so it was really nice,” said Spieth, who tied for 60th last week in the WM Phoenix Open. “Put in a lot of work the last three days on the putting green, hours and hours with (coach) Cameron (McCormick) to try and really get comfortable stroking it. It was nice to kind of feel like that hard work paid off by getting a break there on the first couple holes. I was able to kind of putt pretty confidently from there.

Genesis Invitational 2022
Jordan Spieth plays a second shot on the eighth hole as fans look on during the first round of the 2022 Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California. (Photo: Cliff Hawkins/Getty Images)

“I’ve been striking the ball really well, got a little off on the weekend last week but this whole stretch, really for the last six months I’ve been striking the ball really nicely. It’s just been about having the putter heat up.”

The stars have come out for the Genesis as the top 10 players in the official world ranking are in the field. And the stars didn’t take long to light up the leaderboard near Hollywood.

Another Texan joined Spieth at the top of the leaderboard as Scottie Scheffler, playing in the same group, also posted 66. Scheffler, who won last week’s Phoenix Open for his first PGA Tour title and is ranked No. 9, eagled the par-5 first and added four other birdies to offset a lone bogey.

Many of his peers think once Scheffler won his first title the floodgates would open. Scheffler has said he’ll just keep playing his best but there was a difference in his first tournament as a PGA Tour winner: his grouping. He was put in the A-list category and played with Spieth and world No. 1 Jon Rahm.

“I definitely got a different pairing, finally got out of the first‑off group, so that was nice,” Scheffler said. “I didn’t feel much different. I think it took me a little while to kind of get going. Early pro‑am yesterday, early round today, coming off last week, I didn’t really get as much rest as I wanted to.

“But I’ll get some rest this afternoon.”

Among a large group at 67 were No. 2 Collin Morikawa and No. 8 Justin Thomas.

Rahm shot 69, as did No. 7 and Olympic gold medalist Xander Schauffele.

Among the late starters were top-10 players Viktor Hovland, Rory McIlroy, Dustin Johnson, Hideki Matsuyama and Patrick Cantlay.

Spieth, who won last year’s Valero Texas Open to snap a nearly four-year winless drought, is seeking his 13th PGA Tour title. Early last year, he was trying to find his form and was clearly not the player he is today.

“I have a lot more tools,” Spieth said. “I feel like I can hit any shot if it presents itself fearlessly and at this point last year I still felt a lot more scar tissue, didn’t want to play certain shots really, especially like taking 5 or 6, when you get in between clubs and you’ve got to hit something softly with a pinch fade or even a high draw taking some off.

“I really wouldn’t have even tried it last year at this point.”

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Matt Fitzpatrick withdraws from Genesis Invitational at Riviera

Fitzpatrick withdrew from the Genesis Invitational pro-am early in the week.

One of the “sleepers” coming into the week at Riviera Country Club was Englishman Matt Fitzpatrick. He’s been in good form to start 2022 with top-10s at both the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and WM Phoenix Open. However, it was announced Thursday morning that the European Ryder Cupper has withdrawn from the Genesis Invitational.

It was reported earlier in the week that Fitzpatrick withdrew from the Wednesday pro-am and wasn’t on property Tuesday due to a non-COVID bug.

Fitzpatrick has seen some success at this tournament in recent seasons, finishing T-30 in 2020 and T-5 last season.

He’ll have to wait another week to pursue his first PGA Tour win.

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No. 6 at Riviera features rare design feature: A bunker in the middle of the green

Go around or go over: Players face unusual options with bunker in green on No. 6 at Riviera.

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No. 10 at Riviera steals much of the architectural spotlight each year during the PGA Tour’s Genesis Invitational, offering players a glimpse of a drivable par-4 green that most of them fail to reach from the tee.

But it is in no way the only bit of interesting design at Riviera, the California classic gem that has hosted three major championships and became synonymous with Ben Hogan decades ago, earning the moniker “Hogan’s Alley.” Riviera ranks No. 4 in California on Golfweek’s Best list of private courses, and it is No. 18 on Golfweek’s Best list of all classic courses built in the U.S. before 1960.

Another favored hole is No. 6, a 199-yard par 3 with a bunker sunk in the putting surface. Not to the side, not front or back, but almost in the middle of the putting surface.

Tee times, TV info | ESPN+ PGA Tour Live streaming info | Check the yardage

Riviera isn’t the only course to present such a feature, but it is rare. And while it’s possible to putt around it if your tee shot lands on the putting surface but on the opposite side of the sand from the flag stick, there are plenty of pros who have not been amused over the years.

Riviera StrackaLine
The StrackaLine yardage book for Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California, site of the PGA Tour’s Genesis Invitational, shows the bunker embedded in the green of No. 6. (Courtesy of StrackaLine)

Billy Casper, for example, was a supreme strategist with one of the best short games on the PGA Tour in the 1950s and ’60s. A shorter hitter than other stars of that era such as Jack Nicklaus, Casper pitched and putted his way to 57 Tour wins and three major titles.

But even Casper was flummoxed by the bunker in the middle of the green on the sixth hole at Riviera Country Club. One year in the Los Angeles Open – now the Genesis Invitational – Casper was on that green after his tee shot but on the wrong side of the pit, with no great options to putt around the trap.

Irritated, the normally reserved Casper is said to have taken three practice swings, each removing a chunk of grass from the green. He then cleanly pitched his ball from off the surface of the green to within a few inches of the hole to save par. He had made his point with the practice swings.

Riviera StrackaLine
The StrackaLine yardage book for Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California, site of the PGA Tour’s Genesis Invitational (Courtesy of StrackaLine)

Most of the time, players who end up on the wrong side of the bunker can use the serious slopes to guide the ball relatively close to the hole, or at least to the proper side of the bunker. At least that’s the plan, but it’s no easy task. Three-putts are plentiful, and there have been dozens of four-putts on that green since 2003. In 2011, Brian Davis four-putted the hole in consecutive rounds.

Riviera Genesis No. 6
A view from behind No. 6 at Riviera for the Genesis Invitational, with its infamous bunker toward the left of the frame (Todd Kelly/Golfweek)

The key is to hit the approach to the proper side, but even Tour pros miss sometimes. And among those who do, there are still some players willing to swipe a wedge off the putting surface to loft the ball over the sand, regardless of the divot such a play might leave on the green. And yes, it’s completely within the rules. Players can use any of their 14 clubs at any time, and no rule says a player must use a putter on a green.

It’s all part of Riviera’s charm, so long as you aren’t the player who managed to hit the green in regulation and still find yourself short-sided.

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‘I’m so sick of it:’ Rory McIlroy gives another blistering take on potential Saudi Arabia-backed golf league

Rory McIlroy: “You’ve got the top players in the world are saying no, so that has to tell you something.”

I’m so sick of it.

That’s Rory McIlroy’s take on talking, hearing and being asked about the proposed Super Golf League, which is backed by Saudi Arabia’s sovereign fund and would rival the PGA Tour. The noise has ramped up on the Greg Norman-led league that would pay exorbitant guaranteed money and potentially siphon off some of the game’s biggest names.

A few players and others have chimed in on what they have heard, but to date, there has not been one player who has said he would jump to a rival league. And there have been reports that PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan will ban any player from the Tour if he joins the Super Golf League.

McIlroy, 32, has repeatedly said he would not join the league and at times has been pointed with his remarks about the proposed circuit. But McIlroy’s voice carries weight and carries far, and his take will continue to be sought.

Genesis Invitational 2022
Rory McIlroy speaks at a news conference at the 2022 Genesis Invitational at the Riviera Country Club. (Photo: Robyn Beck/AFP)

“Not so Super League,” McIlroy said when a question about the league was being asked Wednesday during his news conference ahead of the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club north of Los Angeles.

“Oh, I’m so sick of it.”

But he sucked it up and answered follow-up questions.

Tee times, TV info | ESPN+ PGA Tour Live streaming info

“I guess I’m intrigued who would (join). Certainly for the younger guys, like it just seems a massive risk,” McIlroy said. “I can maybe make sense of it for the guys that are getting to the latter stages of their career, for sure. I don’t think that’s what a rival golf league is really; that’s not what they’re going to want, is it?

“They don’t want some sort of league that’s like a pre‑Champions tour. I don’t know. I understand the financial part of it for guys that are later on in their career. But you look at the people that have already said no. (Jon) Rahm, No. 1 in the world, Collin Morikawa, myself. Like, you’ve got the top players in the world are saying no, so that has to tell you something.”

Add Tiger Woods, Brooks Koepka and Justin Thomas to the list, too.

The world No. 5 and four-time major champion serves on the PGA Tour’s policy board and, in addressing the Saudi Arabia’s possible league, McIlroy alluded to the PGA Tour’s financial strength.

“There’s a forecast through 2025. Any forecast that the PGA Tour has produced in the last 10 years, they’ve hit their target. So the forecast for 2025, it looks good,” he said. “I think the executive leadership team on the Tour are doing a really good job. It’s sort of a turbulent time in the world of professional golf but I think we’ve got the right people sort of doing the right things.”

While he wouldn’t share numerical details, McIlroy did say, “There’s a ton of guys out here that are going to get rich if they play well, put it that way.”

As for McIlroy’s recent play, he went to Holywood to get in the right frame of mind for Hollywood this week. McIlroy spent a week in Holywood, Northern Ireland, where he was raised, after a disappointing finish in the Dubai Desert Classic three weeks ago. McIlroy hit his approach from 255 yards to the par-5 18th on the final day into the water and fell to third place.

“Obviously the end of that tournament in Dubai was disappointing, made a bad swing at a bad time, but I did a lot of really good things in there that I can’t forget about,” he said. “I try to just focus on the couple negatives that were there and tried to work on those last week and felt like I’ve put in quite a bit of time and quite a bit of work since Dubai and game actually feels pretty good coming here.

“My game feels in a much better place coming into this year at this event compared to last year. I didn’t play so well here last year, and I was sort of, sort of searching a little bit for things, but game feels a lot more settled this time around.”

Since winning his 20th PGA Tour title at the CJ Cup at The Summit in Las Vegas in October, which was his second victory of last season and earned him lifetime status once he completes playing 15 years on the Tour (he’s in year 14), McIlroy has four top-18 finishes in as many starts.

In five starts at Riviera, McIlroy’s never been worse than a tie for 20th. He missed the cut last year and tied for fifth and fourth the two previous trips to L.A. He loves the course and feels his game is in a good place, especially after meeting up with his coach, Michael Bannon, in Holywood, and spending time with friends and family.

“He was with me before the Middle East in Florida for a week. It was nice. I hadn’t been home in over two years just because of COVID, so it was nice to get back, nice to see some people, nice to introduce our daughter to her extended family,” McIlroy said. “It was nice. I got a stomach virus in the middle of that week, so I didn’t see much of anyone for a while, which wasn’t great. It was nice to be home. I don’t think you realize how much you miss it until you go back and see some people. It was certainly nice, a nice way to get over the disappointment of Dubai.”

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Riviera’s short No. 10: The stats, the maps and the challenge

Short 10th at Riviera is long on challenge in the Genesis Invitational.

The par-4 10th at Riviera Country Club is easily within range of all the players on the PGA Tour, with the green downhill and the hole checking in at just 315 yards on the scorecard. Each year during the PGA Tour’s Genesis Invitational, No. 10 appears to be the epitome of a short, drivable hole – ripe for the taking.

Except it isn’t.

The PGA Tour reports that during the 2021 Genesis, there were 373 total tee shots on No. 10, with 297 of those taking aim at the green or its surrounds. Of those, only five came to rest on the putting surface. That’s a 1.7-percent success rate, and Tour pros never really take on tee shots that offer those kinds of odds. If they did, they probably wouldn’t be on Tour long.

And that’s the genius of the 10th, designed by George C. Thomas and William P. Bell on the track that opened in 1927 in Pacific Palisades on the outskirts of Los Angeles. The whole place is genius, come to think of it: Riviera ranks No. 4 in California on Golfweek’s Best list of private courses, and it is No. 18 on Golfweek’s Best list of all classic courses built in the U.S. before 1960.

Riviera StrackaLine
The StrackaLine yardage book for Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California, site of the PGA Tour’s Genesis Invitational (Courtesy of StrackaLine)

Even the pros sometimes struggle to decide how best to hit that tee shot and commit fully to it. It’s a quandary incited by the heavily sloping green, the cross bunkers, even a handful of palm trees. It’s a green that’s easy to miss from 100 yards, from 20 yards, from the front bunker, from the back bunker – it’s as much a Ping Pong table as a putting surface, and it’s not uncommon to see players go back and forth over the green on successive shots. Nowhere is precision more greatly demanded than on the likely pitch into No.  10, especially when the flag is in the back-right portion of the green. Trajectory, spin and distance control are all musts.

An array of cross-bunkers complicate matters off the tee for anyone attempting to play conservatively, but Tour pros can basically ignore those hazards should they choose to smack driver or even 3-wood off the tee. Two other bunkers flank the landing area some 40-50 yards short of the green, and another bunker waits just short of the green on the direct path to the hole.

The putting surface runs diagonally from front-left to back-right between three greenside bunkers, and the surface itself is tilted dramatically to the back and left. The best angle of approach is from left of the green, allowing the player the most surface with which to work while threading the bunkers. Many players hedge to the left off the tee in attempt to set up that angle, but that means the tee ball must avoid the left fairway bunker, several palm trees and an assortment of shrubbery.

Riviera StrackaLine
The StrackaLine yardage book for Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California, site of the PGA Tour’s Genesis Invitational (Courtesy of StrackaLine)

Even if a pro navigates all that safely with a solid tee shot that finds safety left of the green, it’s not uncommon to see players miss the green or hit shots woefully short of the flag, especially when it’s in the back-right. The sloping green challenges every kind of pitch or chip, constantly steering balls back and to the left.

Actually reaching the front-left portion of the green off the tee doesn’t necessarily set up a short eagle putt or a breezy two-putt birdie. The Tour reported that of those five tee balls that found the putting surface in 2021, only one of them ended up within 60 feet of the hole – Harold Varner III struck his tee ball to 18 feet 4 inches from the cup in the fourth round and made birdie. The other four players still had plenty of work left.

Genesis Invitational
The 10th hole at Riviera Country Club, site of the Genesis Invitational. (Photo: Todd Kelly/Golfweek)

Worth noting: Only one player made eagle on No. 10 in 2021, and it came in a most unlikely fashion. In the first round, Sergio Garcia hit his tee shot into one of the worst spots, the right fairway bunker. From there, he blasted his ball from the sand 44 yards into the cup. Nobody would ever suggest deliberately taking such a route.

It all seems so simple, but clearly it’s not. The 10th played to a 3.88 scoring average in 2021, and in 2018 it played to a scoring average over par at 4.06, according to ShotLink data provided by the Tour. It ranks as the second-toughest par 4 of less than 350 yards on Tour since 2013 with a 3.92 scoring average in that span, trailing only No. 2 at Spyglass Hill (4.01).

Despite its challenges, the pros have figured out it’s better to take your chances with a blast toward the green or just left of it. Since the ShotLink era began in 2003, there have been 8,002 tee shots on No. 10 in the Genesis. Almost 59 percent of players have gone for the green off the tee in that span, and they are a combined 846 under par. The 41 percent of players who laid up are a combined 131 over par in that span.

Jordan Spieth hits from a greenside bunker on the 10th hole during the final round of the 2019 Genesis at Riviera Country Club. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

Some more breakdowns from the Tour: Of the players who hit the green off the tee since 2003, 72 percent of them made birdie or better – that means more than a quarter of them three-putted or worse.

Of those in the left portion of the fairway off the tee, 33 percent made birdie. From the left rough, that birdie-or-better percentage drops to 24 percent. From the right side of the fairway, 27 percent of players made birdie or better, and from the right rough only 14 percent  made birdie or eagle. Remember, these are Tour pros with wedges in their hands.

Also in that span, 62 percent of players managed to hit the green from the left rough – and that’s just a pitch shot. The odds are better from the left fairway, but still only 75 percent of the shots struck from Tour pros find the green on that pitch or chip. From the right side of the fairway, just 61 percent of players hit the green, and only 31 percent of balls found the green from the right rough.

In an age when so much emphasis is placed on swing speed and distance, it’s a blast to watch the Tour pros struggle with such a tricky hole. The green is almost over the top – and some pros certainly would make that assertion. But it’s fun, for one week, to see the pros struggle with such a short but dramatic challenge.

Check the yardage book: Riviera Country Club for the Genesis Invitational

StrackaLine’s heat maps for Riviera’s greens are intense.

Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California – site of this week’s Genesis Invitational on the PGA Tour – was designed by George C. Thomas and William P. Bell and opened in 1927.

Riviera ranks No. 4 in California on Golfweek’s Best list of private courses, and it is No. 18 on Golfweek’s Best list of all classic courses built in the U.S. before 1960.

This week will be the 59th time the club has hosted what has become the Genesis Invitational, and it also has hosted three major championships. Ben Hogan won the 1948 U.S. Open at Riviera, with Hal Sutton (1983) and Steve Elkington (1995) having won PGA Championships there. It is slated as the host site for the 2026 U.S. Women’s Open and the 2028 Olympics golf competition.

It will play at 7,322 yards with a par of 71 for the Genesis.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the pros face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below.

Tee times, TV info | ESPN+ PGA Tour Live streaming info

Another L.A. story? Patrick Cantlay hopes so as the PGA Tour stops at Riviera this week

Cantlay doesn’t even mind the Kikuyu grass, a spongy turf that has been called “Bermudagrass on steroids.”

PACIFIC PALISADES, Calif. – When Max Homa won the Genesis Invitational last year in a playoff, he was the hometown kid from nearby Valencia winning at Riviera Country Club. It was an ending — not to mention the missed 2-foot putt – that Hollywood moviemakers would have rejected. The local boy making good angle happens once every blue moon – John Merrick of Long Beach in 2013 was the last – but could we possibly be in story for another L.A. story?

Patrick Cantlay, another SoCal native from Long Beach, is on a serious heater. He’s won two of his last six starts dating to August and lost a playoff on the third extra hole Sunday at the WM Phoenix Open. Cantlay isn’t beating himself up over his latest close call.

“I try to do my best to understand and realize that seconds and thirds and playoff losses are going to happen while at the same time never being satisfied with all top-10 finishes this year,” he said. “The goal is to win tournaments and so far this year I’ve been shut out.”

Winless, perhaps, but playing some of the best golf of his life. Here are some more eye-popping numbers: Cantlay is 132-under par in his last 30 Tour rounds, with 28 of them in the 60s. Now he comes home to a course that he loves as much as any.

“It’s a tournament I went to growing up as a little kid with my dad and my grandpa and then played NCAAs here when I was in college at UCLA, my last year there,” he said ahead of the Genesis Invitational. “It’s a golf course that I think is one of the best if not the best on Tour, so I love being here this week.”

As a kid, he remembers standing by one of the greens – might have been the old 8th green, he said – and being no more than 10 paces from the hole location anll three balls stopping on a dime in front of him. He was amazed.

“Because in my head I was like, well, we might get hit standing here, we’re that close, and yet they all came in there, must have been a wedge, and they all had inside 10 feet for birdie,” he said.

Another time, it rained all day and he remembers how tough it was to get out.

“We sat in traffic for two, three hours leaving the golf tournament,” he said.

And then there was the time Justin Rose flipped him a golf glove.

“I thought that was pretty cool,” he said.

WM Phoenix Open 2022
Patrick Cantlay putts on the 16th hole green during the final round of the WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale on February 13, 2022, in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

But mostly, he loves Riviera, one of the best ballparks on the Tour schedule.

“I think it defends par without getting tricked up better than any golf course I’ve ever been to. They rarely grow any rough, there’s basically no rough out there, there’s no water, you only can really hit it out of bounds on the 12th hole and yet 13, 14, 15, 16 under wins pretty much every time. They could make it a lot harder if they wanted to and they give you the first hole as a par-5 with a 3-wood and a 7-iron. I think it’s an amazing test of golf,” he said.

Cantlay doesn’t even mind the Kikuyu grass, a spongy turf that has been called “Bermudagrass on steroids.” It makes for a nice fluffy fairway lie but as rough can grab at the club and has been known to injure a wrist.

“Most people’s problems with Kikuyu is they never play on Kikuyu. There aren’t very many places in the world where we see this grass; even the other L.A. courses don’t really have Kikuyu,” Cantlay said. “So anytime you have to play on a surface that you’ve never played on before or played very rarely, it’s difficult. I fortunately grew up a southern Californian so I like the Kikuyu grass and don’t think it’s that particularly difficult.”

Cantlay is making his seventh career start here this week and has recorded four consecutive top-25 finishes. If he were to win this week and Jon Rahm finishes worse than solo fourth, Cantlay would rise to World No. 1 for the first time. There would be no more fitting place for him to do so.

“I think this one would be special for a number of reasons – hometown on my favorite golf course on Tour,” he said. “I’m hoping that someday my day will be here at this golf course and I’ll be able to win.”

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2022 Genesis Invitational Thursday tee times, TV and ESPN+ streaming info

Everything you need to know for the first round at Riviera.

After a beer-soaked week in the desert the PGA Tour is back in California this week for the final event of the West Coast Swing.

A major championship-level field is bound for the beautiful Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California, for the 2022 Genesis Invitational. Tournament host Tiger Woods has attracted each of the top 10 players in the world setting up some must-see groups including: Hideki Matsuyama, Viktor Hovland, Rory McIlroy; Max Homa, Dustin Johnson, Adam Scott; Patrick Cantlay, Brooks Koepka, Patrick Reed; Scottie Scheffler, Jon Rahm, Jordan Spieth; Cameron Champ, Collin Morikawa, Xander Schauffele.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the first round of the 2022 Genesis Invitational.

Genesis: Betting odds, picks

Tee times

1st tee

Time Players
9:40 a.m. Aaron Beverly, Danny Lee, Doug Ghim
9:51 a.m. Emiliano Grillo, Henrik Norlander, Vince Whaley
10:02 a.m. Jhonattan Vegas, Nick Watney, Lee Hodges
10:13 a.m. Seamus Power, C.T. Pan, Kevin Tway
10:24 a.m. Tony Finau, Sergio Garcia, Rickie Fowler
10:35 a.m. Sungjae Im, J.T. Poston, Patton Kizzire
10:46 a.m. Luke List, Jason Kokrak, Andrew Landry
10:57 a.m. Joel Dahmen, Matt Jones, Kevin Na
11:08 a.m. James Hahn, Peter Malnati, Maverick McNealy
11:19 a.m. Aaron Wise, Chesson Hadley, Doc Redman
2:15 p.m. Brian Stuard, Charley Hoffman, Matt Wallace
2:26 p.m. Pat Perez, Russell Henley, Hank Lebioda
2:37 p.m. Charl Schwartzel, Cameron Young, Taylor Pendrith
2:48 p.m. Abraham Ancer, Sebastián Muñoz, Francesco Molinari
2:59 p.m. Hideki Matsuyama, Viktor Hovland, Rory McIlroy
3:10 p.m. Max Homa, Dustin Johnson, Adam Scott
3:21 p.m. Patrick Cantlay, Brooks Koepka, Patrick Reed
3:32 p.m. Cam Davis, Si Woo Kim, Dylan Frittelli
3:43 p.m.
Brendan Steele, Wyndham Clark, Brandon Hagy
3:54 p.m. Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Min Woo Lee, Robert MacIntyre

10th tee

Time Players
9:40 a.m. Keegan Bradley, Alex Noren, Matt Fitzpatrick
9:51 a.m. Adam Hadwin, Scott Stallings, Matthew NeSmith
10:02 a.m. Andrew Putnam, Harry Higgs, Thomas Pieters
10:13 a.m. Talor Gooch, Erik van Rooyen, Chez Reavie
10:24 a.m. Scottie Scheffler, Jon Rahm, Jordan Spieth
10:35 a.m. Cameron Champ, Collin Morikawa, Xander Schauffele
10:46 a.m. Cameron Smith, Sam Burns, Justin Thomas
10:57 a.m. Marc Leishman, Martin Laird, Bubba Watson
11:08 a.m. Harold Varner III, J.J. Spaun, Sahith Theegala
11:19 a.m. Cameron Tringale, Beau Hossler, Sam Ryder
2:15 p.m. Russell Knox, Adam Schenk, Taylor Moore
2:26 p.m. Kramer Hickok, Mito Pereira, Aaron Rai
2:37 p.m. Troy Merritt, Scott Piercy, Anirban Lahiri
2:48 p.m. Tom Hoge, Corey Conners, Matt Kuchar
2:59 p.m. Robert Streb, Joaquin Niemann, Adam Long
3:10 p.m. K.H. Lee, Branden Grace, Carlos Ortiz
3:21 p.m. Lanto Griffin, Ryan Palmer, Paul Casey
3:32 p.m. Mackenzie Hughes, Patrick Rodgers, Will Zalatoris
3:43 p.m. Kyle Stanley, Sepp Straka, Roger Sloan
3:54 p.m. David Lipsky, Jaekyeong Lee, Michael Brennan

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.

Thursday, Feb. 17

TV

Golf Channel: 4-8 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 2-8 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 9:30 a.m.-8 p.m.

Friday, Feb. 18

TV

Golf Channel: 4-8 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 2-8 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 9:30 a.m.-8 p.m.

Saturday, Feb. 19

TV

Golf Channel: 1-3 p.m.
CBS: 3-7 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 2-7 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 12-7 p.m.

Sunday, Feb. 20

TV

Golf Channel: 1-3 p.m.
CBS: 3-6:30 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 1-6:30 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 11:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m.

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How Scottie Scheffler convinced Ted Scott to caddie for him and why it paid quick dividends in Phoenix

Ted Scott was done caddying after his partnership with Bubba Watson ended, but that changed with a phone call from Scottie Scheffler.

PACIFIC PALISADES, Calif. – When Scottie Scheffler heard that Bubba Watson and caddie Ted Scott had parted ways in the fall, Scheffler figured it was worth a call to see what Scott, who had been on the bag for Watson’s two Masters victories and double-digit wins, planned to do next. After all, it’s not every day that a veteran caddie with Scott’s resume becomes available.

Scheffler, 25, and Scott had met in bible study a year earlier and Scheffler got to know him best during the Zurich Classic of New Orleans in late April when Scheffler partnered with Watson in the two-man team event.

“I already thought the world of him as a person,” Scheffler said.

Scott said he thought he was done with caddying, but that changed when his phone rang.

“He called me up and said, ‘I really want to work with a Christian.’ That’s how I try to live my life,” Scott said on Sunday. “The other thing he said was, ‘I really like competing.’ I said, ‘I like competing.’ Thought it could be a fun thing. We hashed out the details.”

Scottie Scheffler of the United States talks with his caddie Ted Scott on the 1st hole during the first round of The RSM Classic on the Seaside Course at Sea Island Resort on November 18, 2021 in St Simons Island, Georgia. (Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images)

They did a trial run at the RSM Classic in November. Scheffler shot 63 in the first round. Scheffler finished second at the Hero World Challenge in December. In just their fifth tournament together, Scott paid his biggest dividend last week at the WM Phoenix Open as Scheffler rallied on the back-nine and outlasted Patrick Cantlay to claim his first PGA Tour title.

That Scheffler, who at No. 9 moved into the top 10 in the Official World Golf Ranking for the first time this week, hadn’t won already was mystifying.

“I do think I was making it a little bit hard,” Scheffler conceded on Tuesday during his pre-tournament press conference ahead of the Genesis Invitational. “I think at certain points in some of those final rounds I’d make a few mistakes and maybe get down a little bit. I wouldn’t say I felt out of it last week, but I just kept telling myself there’s going to be bumps in the road and I gave myself on Sunday way too many bumps.”

Scott’s calming influence came in handy earlier in the week as Scheffler struggled to a 68-71 start that had him hovering around the cutline.

“I kept telling Teddy on Thursday and Friday I was scoring really poorly but I was playing fantastic golf, my swing felt great, short game felt good, putting felt good, everything felt really good and I was only 3 under,” he said. “I was really fighting the cut line on Friday afternoon. I had to make like a six- or seven-footer on 7 for par to stay at 2 under, which was the cut line. Then I ended up making like a 40-footer for birdie on 8 to get to 3 under, and got up and down on 9 because I thought the cut line was going to be at 3 under.”

Scott could tell that Scheffler didn’t require a big pep talk.

“There were a couple decent moments early in the week where he kept me loose,” Scheffler said of Scott. “He makes me laugh at moments when I definitely don’t want to.”

Feb 13, 2022; Scottsdale, Arizona, USA; Scottie Scheffler plays from the green side bunker on the third as caddy J.Tedd Scott looks on during the final round of the WM Phoenix Open golf tournament. (Allan Henry-USA TODAY Sports)

On Sunday, Scheffler didn’t let the bumps in the road slow him down.

“I always viewed it as I had to play kind of this perfect version of golf,” said Scheffler, who made four bogeys on Sunday, including three in a four-hole stretch on the front nine at TPC Scottsdale. “If you would have told me a year ago that I would be making those kind of mistakes and been able to still win the golf tournament, I would have been pretty surprised, but I guess I proved a little bit to myself that it doesn’t take perfect golf and it’s more about coming back from the mistakes than it is just kind of cruising the entire time.

“I think I made like four bogeys and they were all kind of bogeys where maybe I was trying to force a little something. Like I tried to force something on 8 after making a bogey on 7. I tried to force it close to the flag on 5 when I wasn’t comfortable with the yardage. Then on 12 I really tried to make a good swing, but once again I short-sided myself. I didn’t really let those bogeys bother me as much as I would have in the past,” Scheffler said.

On 14, Scheffler’s drive kicked into a funky lie, but he slashed it to 8 feet and made the birdie putt. “I can’t believe we still have a chance to win this golf tournament,” he said to Scott.

What impressed Scott most was the way Scheffler didn’t back down. On 15, Scheffler hit a low 5-iron into the green at the par 5 and Scott, said of it, “The way he’s attacking, I was like he’s ready to win this thing.”

After a celebratory dinner on Sunday with his wife, Meredith, and her brother and his fiancée and watching the end of the Super Bowl, Scheffler is ready to get back to work at a place where he won an exemption into the tournament in 2018 while competing for Texas in the Genesis Invitational Collegiate Showcase. The real victory party will wait until he gets home to Dallas.

“Meredith always, she asks me what I wanted to do after my first win and we’ve got a little something planned for at home,” Scheffler said. “There’s a really good meat market in town that I like and I’m going to go get a bunch of steaks and grill them for our friends and family and then just have a good time at our new house.”

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