Cameron Smith’s jump to LIV Golf will leave a major void at the upcoming Players Championship

The Aussie will always be a Players champion. No one can take that away, and the Tour is not.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Contrary to chatter in 19th holes and bars along A1A, all vestiges of Cameron Smith’s victory in the 2022 Players Championship have not been washed clean at the TPC Sawgrass or the Players Stadium Course.

It’s true that the Jacksonville-area resident and Australian native lost his playing and practicing privileges at the home of the Players when he defected to the LIV Golf League last year after becoming the first man since Jack Nicklaus in 1978 to win the Players and the British Open in the same year.

But the Tour has acknowledged, with traditional gestures, Smith’s one-shot victory over Anirban Lahiri in the first Monday finish since 2005.

The flag of the previous champion’s home country flies between The Perch and the clubhouse, and Australia’s has been fluttering in the breeze every day since Smith’s 66 in the final round.

Unless another Aussie such as 2004 Players champion Adam Scott or 2016 winner Jason Day comes up big again this week at the Stadium Course, the flag will change to the new champion’s country sometime during the evening of March 12, the day of the final round.

There are also two ways past Players champions are honored within the clubhouse: a recap of their victory, with a caricature of the player, is made into a framed poster and hung in one hallway; and a display of clubs that each winner used during their triumphal week in another hallway.

Smith’s smiling visage, his long hair spilling from under his flat-brimmed hat, is in one hallway, and a pitching wedge he used last year is in the other.

He will always be a Players champion. No one can take that away, and the Tour is not.

But he’s still an absentee champion, only the fourth time in the 49-year history of the Players that a winner has not defended his title and the first since Tiger Woods missed the 2014 tournament with a back injury.

The other champions who didn’t defend were Jerry Pate in 1983 (shoulder injury) and Steve Elkington in 1998 (sinus infection), which means Smith is the first Players champion to miss the tournament the following year for non-injury reasons.

“He’s one of our champions and history speaks for itself,” said Players executive director Jared Rice. “The play of all of our past champions speaks for itself. But 2023 is about the players who will be here. We have our eyes forward on the product, which is the best field in golf again.”

Cameron Smith plays his shot from the 14th tee during the first round of The Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

Final round highs and lows

Smith’s victory in 2002 was remarkable for its highs and lows. He birdied his first four holes and five of his first six, weathered three bogeys in a row in the middle of his round, birdied another four in a row and five of eight, and escaped with a bogey at the last when he hit his second shot from the right trees into the water on the left of the 18th fairway.

Smith dropped, pitched onto the green and made a putt for bogey, then had to wait for Lahiri to finish before he knew he had won the Gold Man Trophy. Smith finished at 13-under 275.

And it was a week in which Smith worked magic with his wedges and putter. He was dead last in driving accuracy, hitting only 24 fairways, and tied for 52nd in greens in regulation.

But Smith was first in strokes gained putting and fourth in the total feet of putts made, more than making up for any issues with finding short grass.

The Players galleries took Smith to their embrace as the day wore on. The fact that he’s a world-class golfer, loves to fish (he participated in the Kingfish Tournament last July) and has a personality that exudes a beach vibe has made him one of the most popular players among First Coast golf fans.

“I’ve never been one to expect much of myself,” he said after the 2022 Players. “My expectations are that I wake up, go to the gym, practice as hard as I can for a couple of hours and then go have a good time.”

More evidence that Smith is an all-world good dude was in the aftermath of his victory at the Stadium Course. His caddie passed the word among other caddies: the party was at Smith’s home along the Intracoastal Waterway.

It was pure Cam: pizza and beer with his friends, a fitting end to a marvelous week.

A poster with the scorecard and artwork depicting Cameron Smith’s 2022 Players championship hangs in the TPC Sawgrass clubhouse along with those from other past champions. (Photo by Garry Smits/Florida Times-Union)

Smith’s game in good form

The Times-Union has made numerous attempts to contact Smith for recollections of his Players victory.

Multiple emails and social media messages were left with the LIV Golf League communications department. Nearly two weeks later, a one-line email from LIV Golf directed inquiries to Smith’s agent, Bud Martin, “since the interview is related to the Players Championship.”

In response to an email requesting an interview, Martin sent a three-word reply: “Pass for now.”

Two PGA Tour players who have remained friends with Smith were also sought out and asked if they could intercede, to no avail. One of them said the chance of an interview with Smith was “one in 100.”

A reporter for Golfweek attempted to interview Smith after a practice round at Mayakoba, Mexico, last week but didn’t get a response.

While Smith’s victory is still honored in three places at the TPC Sawgrass, LIV Golf seems to make a point of avoiding the mention of any PGA Tour titles in its players’ online biographies, citing only major championships, college and amateur accomplishments and other international victories.

Smith’s bio, for example, has 13 bullet-point career highlights, none of which mentions the 2022 Players.

Smith may not be playing golf at the TPC Sawgrass but he’s been spotted numerous times around the First Coast since he went to LIV Golf. He’s been seen playing at Glen Kernan and The Yards and his game appears in good form.

Smith tied for fifth in the first LIV event of the season at Mayakoba and won the Australian PGA for the third time in his career in November. He will play next in two weeks in the LIV event in Tucson.

He was ranked second in the world behind Scottie Scheffler after winning the British Open and despite receiving no rankings points for his LIV Golf starts, he’s now fifth, the highest-ranked LIV player.

After winning the British Open and announcing his move to LIV, Smith played five times, winning in Chicago and Doral and tying for fourth in Boston. He finished 10th on the League’s points list in 2023.

The Australian flag flies at the TPC Sawgrass in honor of Cameron Smith winning the 2022 Players Championship. Traditionally, the flag of the winner’s country is flown for one year after his victory.

Cam Flag

Again, no repeat champion

Smith’s absence also means there will not be a repeat champion, which has never happened in Players history – speaking to the depth of the field and difficulty of the course.

“That just goes to show you how hard it is come back and play this golf course,” Day said during Players week in 2017. “Because it does test every aspect of your game, not only the physical part, but the mental part as well.”

Scott said that same week that the nature of the course, which favors no style of player, doesn’t mean a defending champion will find it any easier.

“We have so many different styles of game, so I think the course is open to so many different guys to have a chance to win,” he said. “There’s more guys in the mix … leaves it open for anyone.”

For further context in how hard a task it would have been for Smith, or any defending Players champion to repeat, the Masters has had two repeat winners (Nick Faldo in 1989-90 and Woods in 2001-02), the U.S. Open two (Curtis Strange in 1988-89 and Brooks Koepka in 2017-18), the PGA Championship three (Woods in 1999-2000 and 2006-07 and Koepka in 2017-18) and the British Open three (Tom Watson in 1982-83, Woods in 2005-06 and Padraig Harrington in 2007-08).

No defending Players champion has finished higher than a tie for fifth (Tom Kite in 1990) or been closer than four shots to the winner (Mark McCumber in 1989).

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Cameron Smith shoots for rare Players Championship-Masters combo: ‘Pretty good time of year to be playing good golf’

The 2022 Players champion has a shot at “The Cam Slam” this week in Augusta.

AUGUSTA, Ga. – When Cameron Smith picked apart The Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass in March, making 11 birdies en route to winning the PGA Tour’s flagship event in his adopted hometown, course superintendent Jeff Plotts couldn’t have felt prouder.

“Since the Fed Ex Cup (in August), I’ve been saying he was primed to get it. I told him he needed to believe and go for it,” said Plotts of Smith, who practices at the club and has become a good friend.

“I felt like a family member had won the Players. I’ve been telling him all year that he was going to win it. It was pretty special to see that come to be.”

Smith celebrated that Monday night at TPC Sawgrass and didn’t get home until about 10:30 p.m., when he proceeded to light a bonfire and drink a few beers with his family and mates. Fellow Aussie and former PGA Tour pro Aron Price plays money games with Smith and his caddie, Sam Pinfold, all the time and could see this victory coming too, going so far as to stock Smith’s fridge with his beer of choice, Kona Longboard Lagers and Big Waves, for a potential victory party.

“I knew,” Price said shortly after Smith sealed the deal for a one-stroke win over Anirban Lahiri. “You know how there are people who are outwardly confident, but are really insecure? Cam’s the opposite. He won’t say it but he’s convinced that head-to-head that he can beat anyone in the world.”

The fire from the victory party after the Players may have gone out but the fire within still burns bright to add a major championship to his resume.

“I feel pretty hungry, mate,” Smith said when asked about the Masters during his pre-tournament press conference. “Pretty good time of year to be playing good golf.”

Indeed, it is. Smith is coming off an extended three-week break after he withdrew from a scheduled start at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play two weeks ago so he could spend more time with his mother and sister, who visited from Australia. A native of Brisbane, Smith hasn’t been able to get back to Australia since COVID-19 restrictions were implemented. His father visited last week and Smith played his first round at TPC Sawgrass on Friday since his brilliant final-round 66 alongside his father, Des, and 2013 Masters champion Adam Scott.

The 28-year-old Smith is making his sixth appearance at the Masters and has never missed the cut. In three of the last four years, he’s finished in the top 10, including 2020 when he tied for second and became the first player in tournament history to shoot four rounds in the 60s. When asked to explain his success around Augusta National, Smith said, “I think it’s just my creativity. I feel like I play my best golf when I’m creative.”

That creativity was born during his childhood when he used to love to take a sand wedge and make a golf ball spin to a stop on the makeshift backyard green designed by his father. These days, there are few tour pros, if any, more highly regarded for their short-game artistry than Smith.

“It’s almost like his shots are a little butterfly, they land so soft, and he’s got a little remote control on the ball,” Golf Australia’s high-performance director Brad James told the Sydney Morning Herald.

“I’m not afraid to hit different shots around here,” Smith said. “I feel really confident in my game. I feel like I can play any shot under any circumstance, and yeah, I’m ready to go out there.”

Smith is attempting to become the ninth winner of the Players to win a Green Jacket too, with only Tiger Woods having achieved that double in the same year. Plotts, for one, believes Augusta National is made for Smith.

“It’s hard to beat a great putter,” he said. “I’m rooting for the ‘The Cam Slam.’ ”

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2022 Players Championship prize money payout for each PGA Tour player at TPC Sawgrass

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour, folks. Just ask Cameron Smith.

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

The 28-year-old Aussie earned his fifth PGA Tour win at its flagship event, claiming the 2022 Players Championship at the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass at 13 under. The win is Smith’s second of the year following his record-setting victory at 34 under at January’s Sentry Tournament of Champions.

For his efforts, Smith will take home the $20 million event’s top prize of $3.6 million. Runner-up Anirban Lahiri will pocket $2.18 million, with third-place Paul Casey taking home $1.38 million.

Check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned this week at the 2022 Players Championship.

PlayersLeaderboard | Best photos

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Cameron Smith -13 $3,600,000
2 Anirban Lahiri -12 $2,180,000
3 Paul Casey -11 $1,380,000
4 Kevin Kisner -10 $980,000
5 Keegan Bradley -9 $820,000
T6 Harold Varner III -8 $675,000
T6 Russell Knox -8 $675,000
T6 Doug Ghim -8 $675,000
T9 Sepp Straka -7 $525,000
T9 Adam Hadwin -7 $525,000
T9 Viktor Hovland -7 $525,000
T9 Dustin Johnson -7 $525,000
T13 Russell Henley -6 $327,222
T13 Keith Mitchell -6 $327,222
T13 Taylor Pendrith -6 $327,222
T13 Erik van Rooyen -6 $327,222
T13 Daniel Berger -6 $327,222
T13 Max Homa -6 $327,222
T13 Tyrrell Hatton -6 $327,222
T13 Brendan Steele -6 $327,222
T13 Shane Lowry -6 $327,222
T22 Joaquin Niemann -5 $201,000
T22 Patton Kizzire -5 $201,000
T22 Tommy Fleetwood -5 $201,000
T22 Kevin Streelman -5 $201,000
T26 Corey Conners -4 $140,000
T26 Doc Redman -4 $140,000
T26 Sergio Garcia -4 $140,000
T26 Alex Noren -4 $140,000
T26 Patrick Reed -4 $140,000
T26 Will Zalatoris -4 $140,000
T26 Sam Burns -4 $140,000
T33 Abraham Ancer -3 $140,000
T33 Ian Poulter -3 $97,750
T33 Justin Thomas -3 $97,750
T33 Seamus Power -3 $97,750
T33 Joel Dahmen -3 $97,750
T33 Pat Perez -3 $97,750
T33 Tom Hoge -3 $97,750
T33 Rory McIlroy -3 $97,750
T33 Sebastián Muñoz -3 $97,750
T42 Kramer Hickok -2 $73,000
T42 Francesco Molinari -2 $73,000
T42 Scott Stallings -2 $73,000
T42 Louis Oosthuizen -2 $73,000
T46 Maverick McNealy -1 $57,700
T46 Troy Merritt -1 $57,700
T46 Adam Long -1 $57,700
T46 Peter Malnati -1 $57,700
T50 Brice Garnett E $50,200
T50 Dylan Frittelli E $50,200
T50 Aaron Wise E $50,200
T53 Jason Kokrak 1 $47,800
T53 Branden Grace 1 $47,800
T55 Jimmy Walker 2 $46,200
T55 Sungjae Im 2 $46,200
T55 Jon Rahm 2 $46,200
T55 Scottie Scheffler 2 $46,200
T55 K.H. Lee 2 $46,200
T60 Sam Ryder 3 $44,600
T60 Michael Thompson 3 $44,600
T60 Denny McCarthy 3 $44,600
T63 Hank Lebioda 4 $43,400
T63 Chesson Hadley 4 $43,400
T63 Brian Harman 4 $43,400
T66 Hayden Buckley 5 $42,400
T66 Nick Watney 5 $42,400
T68 Lucas Herbert 7 $41,600
T68 Bubba Watson 7 $41,600
70 Lee Hodges 9 $41,000

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Winner’s Bag: Cameron Smith, Players Championship

See all the clubs that got the job done at TPC Sawgrass.

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A complete list of the golf equipment Cameron Smith used to win the PGA Tour’s 2022 Players Championship:

DRIVER: Titleist TSi3 (10 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Blue 6X shaft
Titleist TSi3: $549.99 at GlobalGolf / PGA Tour Superstore

FAIRWAY WOOD: Titleist TSi2 (15 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Blue 8X shaft, TS2 (21 degrees), with UST Mamiya Elements Red 8F5 X shaft
Titleist TSi2: $299 at Global Golf / PGA Tour Superstore

IRONS: Mizuno Pro Fli-Hi (3), Titleist T100 (5-9), with KBS Tour 130 Custom Matte Black X shafts
Mizuno Pro Fli-Hi 3 iron: $224.99 at GlobalGolf
Titleist T100 irons$1,299 at GlobalGolf

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM9 (46, 52, 56, 60 degrees), with KBS Tour 130 Custom Matte Black X shafts
Titleist Vokey Design SM9: $179 at GlobalGolf / PGA Tour Superstore 

PUTTER: Scotty Cameron 009M Tour prototype

BALL: Titleist Pro V1x
Titleist Pro V1x$49.99 at GlobalGolfPGA Tour Superstore

GRIPS: Golf Pride Tour Velvet SuperTack

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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Cameron Smith wins 2022 Players Championship with Monday finish at TPC Sawgrass

An early ace, rules drama, rain shower and compelling golf all made the Players’ Monday finish worth the wait.

An early ace, rules drama, another rain shower and compelling golf all made the Monday finish at the 2022 Players Championship well worth the wait.

A field of the PGA Tour’s best finally put to bed a wild, weather-filled week at the Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, where Cameron Smith claimed the Tour’s flagship event at 13-under.

After finishing his third round in the morning, the 28-year-old shot a 6-under 66 in the final round to hold off Paul Casey and 54-hole leader Anirban Lahiri, Kevin Kisner and Keegan Bradley. For his efforts, Smith will take home the $20 million event’s top-prize of $3.6 million.

PlayersLeaderboard | Best photos

The win is Smith’s fifth on Tour and second of the year following his victory at January’s Sentry Tournament of Champions. The Aussie also has two DP World Tour titles under his belt with the 2017 and 2018 Australian PGA Championships.

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Paul Casey positioned to claim his signature win at Players Championship but will have to do so without ‘Johnny Long Socks’

John “Long Socks” McLaren is in the midst of what he termed “an indefinite mental health break from the game.”

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – If Paul Casey is going to claim the signature win of his 22-year career, he’ll have to do so without his former caddie John “Long Socks” McLaren.

Casey finished off his second straight round of 69 on Monday morning to improve to 8 under through 54 holes, and trails leader Anirban Lahiri by one stroke heading into the final round of the Players Championship.

But McLaren, 55, is in the midst of what he termed “an indefinite mental health break from the game,” so Casey has veteran caddie Shannon Wallis, who usually works for Jonas Blixt (not in the field this week at the Players) on the bag.

Casey and McLaren, known for his colorful socks rising nearly to his knees, won the PGA Tour’s Valspar Championship back-to-back in 2019-2020 and also teamed for multiple wins on the DP World Tour. Asked if he tried to talk his sidekick into sticking with him, Casey answered, “No, I didn’t. Johnny may come back. It was always a sabbatical. It was burnout. More time at home with the family. The stresses of flying back to London every weekend, and if he’s going to test positive for COVID and be in a hotel and all that stuff. It was just stressful for him. I’m sure I was stressful for him, too.”

Olympics: Golf-Mens
The shoes and socks worn by caddie John McLaren at the final round of the men’s competition at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games in Japan. Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images

Casey flashed a wry grin. Their partnership over the last six years started through friendship and grew into something much closer – bosom buddies perhaps. After he finished his post-round news conference Monday, Casey was asked to describe the bond.

“I miss him,” he said. “I miss the chat.”

PlayersLeaderboard | How to watch Monday | PGA Tour Live on ESPN+

Earlier he added, “Everybody knows that we finished our six years together better friends than when we started, which is saying a lot. In this industry that can’t always be said. We’ve seen a lot of people who are ‘mutual agreement’ or ‘taking a break,’ which we all know is code for somebody got fired. Just nobody ever says that, but Johnny and I can generally look anybody in the eye and say, ‘We’re great mates and he just wanted a break’, and I fully support that.”

It was McLaren who helped Casey, who between 2005-2015 missed the cut five times at the Players and withdrew twice in eight appearances at TPC Sawgrass, develop a game plan for Dye’s masterpiece.

“He guided me around this place really, really well, and a lot of that has just stayed. There’s a way of playing this golf course,” Casey said.

Asked for specifics on what McLaren shared, Casey said, “Top secret, you know that. Yeah, I don’t tend to give away too many secrets. Johnny and I, we had some stuff – we had almost secrets, things that we’d work on, the way we would play certain shots that we feel nobody else was aware of, and we wouldn’t give that away. So, it’s our IP. We tend not to talk about it.”

Casey, 44, said he had texted McLaren after Thursday’s round when he started with a triple bogey on his first hole of the tournament, No. 10. Casey responded by making birdie at 11, a bogey at 12 and went 45 holes without another dropped shot until No. 13 of his third round on Monday. In his younger days, Casey conceded that not even McLaren could have settled him down from a disastrous start.

“I probably would have lost the head very quickly and exited stage left,” he said.

With maturity comes wisdom and sometimes patience.

“It was fairways and greens and try to slowly claw back the shots I gave away so quickly,” Casey said.

There’s also no quick fix to finding a new caddie to fill the void left by McLaren.

“I’m still looking for the caddie. It’s weird. I miss him,” Casey said. “Shan is just helping out. Shan was working for Jonas Blixt, and he’s worked for me before at various events. I know him, I’m very comfortable with him. He’s one of the nicest guys you’ll ever meet. He’s funny. We’ll see, but I just have not decided what I’m going to do long-term yet.”

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Players Championship: Third round finally ends with Anirban Lahiri atop the leaderboard at sun-lit TPC Sawgrass

“I’m just trying to stay in the moment and just do what I need to do next,” said Lahiri.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – And on the fifth day, the final round of the Players Championship will begin.

With various storms pushing the PGA Tour’s flagship event into a Monday finish – we hope – the third round was completed at 10:55 a.m. ET, 19 hours and 39 minutes after it began.

At the top of the leaderboard was India’s Anirban Lahiri, who is ranked No. 322 in the world and looking for his first PGA Tour title. He completed a third-round, 5-under 67 to move to 9 under through 54 holes.

“I got off to a really good start yesterday, kept the momentum going, and came back out this morning,” he said. “I’m happy with the way I finished and just looking forward to the rest of the day.

“There’s not much to get too far ahead of yourself. I’m just trying to stay in the moment and just do what I need to do next.”

PlayersLeaderboard | How to watch MondayPGA Tour Live on ESPN+

The final round began at 11 a.m. ET, with the leaders scheduled to go off at 1:01 p.m. ET. Threesomes will go off both the first and 10th tees.

There were 14 players within three shots of the lead heading into the final round. A shot back in second place was Sebastian Munoz (65), Doug Ghim (68), Paul Casey (69) and Sam Burns (71).

Plenty of fireworks exploded across the sun-drenched Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass, the biggest was an ace from 219 yards on the 8th by Viktor Hovland, who hit 4-iron. He shot 68 to move to 4 under through 54 holes.

It was his second on the PGA Tour, the eighth on the hole since 1983. But there was little time for celebration.

“If I would have made the putt on 9 (on his last hole), as well, to get to 5, I would have felt a lot better,” he said. “But I’ve been playing really well the whole week. I just haven’t really been able to capitalize on any putts. Maybe if I get a few putts going early and maybe it starts blowing in the afternoon and gets a little shaky, then maybe (I can contend), but got a lot of work to do.”

Munoz polished off a bogey-free 65 with his seventh birdie of the round coming on the last. Kevin Streelman made six birdies in his last 11 holes over two days to get back into the tournament at 6 under with a 66.

“I could have made one more putt, but I mean, I’m really happy where I am,” Munoz said.

Said Streelman: “Clearly it’s soft right now, which allows the fairways to get a little wider. Also allows the greens obviously to get a little softer. We’re able to maybe fire at a few more pins than we would otherwise, and we’re all ready to get out of here, too, so the better you play, the quicker you play.”

The players are playing the ball down after being able to lift, clean and place in earlier rounds. While some players were expecting mud balls Monday morning, there were few and they were far between.

“The course is in fantastic shape for all it’s been through in the last five days,” said Kevin Kisner, who shot 68 to move to 6 under. “I think it’s totally fair to play the ball down these last two rounds. Greens are still super receptive. I don’t know if they’re going to be able to get out and do anything to them between rounds, which I doubt, but there will be some low scores this afternoon, I imagine.”

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Viktor Hovland makes hole-in-one early Monday morning at 2022 Players Championship

Another ace at TPC Sawgrass.

A lot of folks out at TPC Sawgrass for the Monday finish of the 2022 Players Championship will be saying, “It’s 5 o’clock somewhere,” after Viktor Hovland’s early-morning ace.

Drinks were on Shane Lowry last night after the former Champion Golfer of the Year aced the famed par-3 17th  at the Players Stadium Course in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, and today they’ll be on Hovland. The Norwegian took dead aim at the 219-yard par-3 8th hole, landed his ball just short of the pin and watched it trickle to the bottom of the cup. Hovland dished out hi-fives all around, including to fellow playing competitor Sungjae Im, and then smiled a goofy smile as he picked up the third man in his group, Kevin Streelman.

Eight holes-in-one have been made on No. 8, with the last two coming from Brendon Todd (2021) and Michael Thompson (2013).

PlayersLeaderboard | How to watch Monday finish

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Billy Horschel withdraws from 2022 Players Championship early Monday morning with illness

Eight players have now withdrawn from the Tour’s flagship event.

For the eighth time in its 48-year history the PGA Tour’s flagship event has spilled over to Monday.

Five minutes after the third round of the 2022 Players Championship resumed play Monday morning at the Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, Billy Horschel became the eighth player to withdraw from the event. The 35-year-old Ponte Vedra local, who finished T-2 at last week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational, was at even par for the Players after making birdie on two of his final three holes before play was suspended on Sunday night.

Henrik Stenson, Luke List, Tyler McCumber, Hideki Matsuyama, Aaron Rai, Kevin Na and Bryson DeChambeau withdrew from the Players earlier in the week.

PlayersLeaderboard | How to watch Monday finish

According to a report from Golf Channel’s Ryan Lavner, the six-time winner on Tour and defending champion at next week’s WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play has been battling a sinus infection and his “body just has had enough.”

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Hal Sutton was a master of Players Championship Monday finishes, including toppling Tiger Woods

Hal Sutton and Jack Nicklaus share a unique piece of golf history.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – When Hal Sutton held off Jack Nicklaus by one shot to win the 1983 PGA Championship at Riviera Country Club north of Los Angeles, the Golden Bear turned to his crystal ball.

“This will be one of many major championships for you,” Nicklaus told the 25-year-old Sutton that day, adding that he could be the “Next Jack” and become the game’s dominant force with the game he possessed.

While that never came to be – Sutton didn’t win another major – the two are linked in Players Championship history as the only players to win the PGA Tour’s flagship event twice – with all four titles captured on a Monday.

“That’s something. Monday finishes are rare, and we each did it twice,” Sutton said over the phone. “Not bad standing next to Jack in that way.”

This week’s storms have forced the Players Championship into a Monday finish for just the eighth time. Nicklaus won the inaugural Players in 1974 on Monday and the 1976 Players on Monday; the runner-up both years was J.C. Snead. Add his 1978 Players title – coming on a Sunday, mind you – Nicklaus is the only three-time winner of The Players.

Sutton won the 1983 championship in the second year it was played at TPC Sawgrass. Seventeen years later, he won the 2000 Players by holding off heavy favorite Tiger Woods by one shot with his “be the right club today,” on 18.

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“It’s hard enough to win a golf tournament when you have to play four days, but when you add the fifth day to it, it just makes it that much harder,” said Sutton, 63, a winner of 14 PGA Tour titles, a former Ryder Cup captain and the PGA of America’s Player of the Year in 1983.

Sutton said his mindset heading into the Mondays was different.

“I was chasing the lead in the first one and I was sitting on the lead in the second one,” Sutton said.

In 1983, Sutton came from four shots back with a final-round, 3-under-par 69 on Monday to win by one shot over Bob Eastwood.

“My mentality was to just string one good shot after another good shot and see what happens,” Sutton said. “It wasn’t blowing as hard as it was (on Saturday of this year), but it was blowing hard. A key shot was on 17 when I hit an 8-iron into the middle of the green and it rolled back to the hole to about six inches.

“Believe me, I wasn’t aiming at the flag.”

Seventeen years later, Sutton was ranked No. 11 in the world heading into the Players. Woods was No. 1 – by an astonishing 10 points. Woods, who had yet to play four full years on the PGA Tour, already had won 19 of his record-tying 82 PGA Tour titles, including three in 2000 heading into the Players. He had won two of his 15 majors; he would win three consecutive majors later in 2000.

But when play was halted on Sunday due to another storm, Sutton had a three-shot as the two were on the 12th hole.

“My mindset was, and I was pretty specific about this, I had to get to the 16th hole with a three-shot lead,” Sutton said. “Because I might not go for the green in two at 16 and he probably would, which means he might make eagle and I might make par. And that’s exactly what happened. He made eagle and I made par and I went to 17 with a one-shot lead.”

Both parred 17, setting up Sutton’s memorable call from the middle of the fairway on 18. He was 178 yards from the flag and pulled a 6-iron. As the ball flew toward the flag, Sutton emphatically said, “be the right club today.” It was, coming to rest 10 feet from the hole. Woods went over the green but chipped to less than a foot, forcing Sutton to two-putt. He did.

“It felt great. I had never said, ‘be the right club today’ in my life,” Sutton said. “But I knew I had the perfect yardage; I knew there was nothing that could take the tournament away from me after I hit it. The only thing that could hurt the shot was a puff of wind. That’s why I said what I said, I just didn’t want to be surprised.

“Playing alongside Tiger made it a lot different. He was beating everybody at the time. That week Colin Montgomerie said we were all playing for second. The week before Davis had a three-shot lead and Tiger ran him down and won.

“Tiger needed to be beat at the time. I felt the pressure of being the guy in charge and trying to beat him. It was added pressure and the win felt a little bit better.”

With his victory in 1983, Sutton won $126,000 – becoming the first six-figure winner in The Players. Seventeen years later, he won $1.08 million – becoming the first seven-figure winner in The Players.

“I think back to those tournaments all the time whether the PGA Tour is playing on Monday or not,” Sutton said. “When you’ve had success on a demanding course like the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass, against the best field in golf, you don’t forget you won there.”

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