Watch: Jordan Spieth mimics ‘Lion King’, raises son Sammy to Presidents Cup crowd

Sammy Spieth is our new leader.

If the scene that unfolded Sunday on the first tee at Quail Hollow Club is any indication, Sammy Spieth is the next heir to the throne.

Shortly before beginning his Sunday singles match in the 2022 Presidents Cup against Cam Davis, Jordan Spieth walked out to big cheers from the home crowd as he walked over to his wife, Annie Spieth, and their son, Sammy.

Jordan grabbed his son and then turned him around and hoisted him to the crowd engulfing the first tee, bringing a loud cheer from the fans. Many quickly made the comparison to the movie “Lion King”, when Rafiki took Simba to the top of Pride Rock and held him up for all to see.

Presidents Cup: Singles matches and predictions

It was an adorable moment for the Spieth family.

“It was fun to see him on the first tee,” Spieth told Golf Channel’s Steve Sands after his match. “That was super cool. He’s finally old enough to just be looking around and taking it all in and being interested in everything. He loves the ear muffs luckily because it has been loud out here.”

Spieth beat Cam Davis 4 and 3 in singles, becoming the first U.S. player to go 5-0-0 in Presidents Cup play since Jim Furyk in 2011.

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Photos: Best (and worst) Presidents Cup team uniforms over the years

Take a scroll through the Presidents Cup team uniforms of the past and present.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Since the event’s debut in 1994, golf fans have seen an array of Presidents Cup.

The Americans are usually donning some display of Red, White and Blue. The Internationals now have a set logo with black and gold colors thanks to Ernie Els’ efforts to create an identity for the team in 2019, but over the years the squad has been a bit more diverse and bold with its uniforms.

As the 2022 Presidents Cup continues on at Quail Hollow Club, take a scroll through some of the best (and worst) team uniforms in the competition’s 28-year history.

Presidents Cup: Can the International team pull off a Quail Mary and upset the Americans?

The Internationals need to win 8½ of the 12 points up for grabs on Sunday to complete the comeback.

CHARLOTTE – The fat lady was warming up and it was only Friday evening of the 2022 Presidents Cup.

That is until 20-year-old Tom Kim, doing his best Ian Poulter imitation, led a spirited charge as the International team outscored the Americans in a two-session day for the first time since 1998.

“We were in a deep hole,” International team Captain Trevor Immelman said, “and we dug deep.”

The putts started to drop for the International side, none bigger than the 10-foot birdie putt on 18 at Quail Hollow Club by Kim to beat the U.S. team of Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay, and cut the deficit to 11-7 going into Sunday’s singles session.

“We got to refocus, and we’ve got a lot of pissed off guys that want to come out really strong tomorrow,” said Jordan Spieth.

“Guess I’d be one of those pissed off guys,” Schauffele, who was seated next to Spieth said.

Spieth and Thomas won the lone four-ball match of the afternoon session to stretch the U.S. lead to 11-4 before the International side captured the final three points up for grabs. It was shades of the 2012 Ryder Cup when Europe staged a furious rally on Saturday to set up a comeback dubbed the Miracle at Medinah – from four points behind. As if that isn’t enough of a coincidence, the U.S. captain that year was none other than Love.

“Four points is four points. It’s been a big number,” Love said. “I’ve been four behind before too, you know. We’ve been four ahead, four behind. We’ve watched the Solheim Cup be four ahead. So it’s a magical number.”

If the Internationals are to complete the biggest comeback in the event’s 28-year history and win on American soil for the first time, they’ll need to claim 8½ of the 12 points up for grabs.

Love has stacked his Sunday singles lineup with big names going out early: Justin Thomas in the leadoff spot followed by Jordan Spieth, Sam Burns, Patrick Cantlay and World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler.

Speaking on Golf Channel’s Live From, Paul McGinley said, “it’s very important that they don’t leak any more oil. Then the pressure flips onto America in front of the home crowd. Every one of us thought here thought this was over yesterday.”

Despite playing on foreign soil and being outmanned and missing the likes of Cameron Smith, Immelman has molded a team that took his mantra of playing with freedom to heart. Immelman’s lineup is a bit more eclectic and surprisingly left the team’s Energizer Bunny, Kim, to the 10th match rather than send him out early to provide another spark.

“We have our system, and we try and run it,” Immelman explained. “If we’re 10 up or 10 down, we run our system, and we see what happens.”

Australian Adam Scott, who is competing in his 10th Presidents Cup, liked what he saw on Saturday. It was the future of a team that even if it doesn’t pull off an unlikely upset could be the core for years to come, including someday when he’ll be calling the shots. Saturday’s rally is a day that he’ll not soon forget.

“I think over the course of my career in this, there hasn’t been many times I’ve felt momentum going our way,” he said. “And today, we had the momentum. We certainly have it finishing this evening, and it will be great if we could keep it rolling tomorrow.”

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Budding International star Tom Kim steals the show on Saturday at the Presidents Cup

Tom Kim is a budding star.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Two months ago, Tom Kim joined the PGA Tour as a special temporary member in a quest to earn his card for the 2022-23 season.

Last month, he claimed his first win on Tour at the 2022 Wyndham Championship and started to grow in popularity in the golf world, largely due to the origin of his name stemming from the TV show, Thomas the Tank Engine.

This week, the 20-year-old South Korean is hitting pure 2-irons under immense pressure, walking in clutch putts and providing some much-needed juice to an International team looking to make Presidents Cup history.

And you thought you had a good summer.

Kim has been praised all week long by his International teammates and captains for his youthful exuberance and talent, and on Saturday he was the catalyst for the change in momentum at Quail Hollow Club that saw the worldwide all-stars split the morning foursomes and earn their first win of the week in afternoon four-ball to bring the overall score to 11-7 in favor of the U.S.

Presidents Cup: Sunday pairings, tee times

“But when it comes to Tom Kim, you know, this young kid has burst onto the scene in the last six months, and it has been such a tremendous — he’s been such a tremendous gift to our sport,” captain Trevor Immelman said of his rising star. “He has an ability to be a global superstar, this kid. I know he has the game. We’ve seen he has the game. But what I’ve learned about personality and his heart and what he stands for this week, man, I am a huge fan.”

Kim was victorious in both sessions, first taking down the struggling American pairing of Scottie Scheffler and Sam Burns in foursomes, 2 and 1, alongside K.H. Lee. He then teamed up with Si Woo Kim in the first match of the afternoon and took down the previously undefeated pairing of Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele after stuffing a 2-iron to 10 feet and burying the birdie putt on the final hole to win, 1 up.

Kim not only wanted that moment on the 18th green, but he was ready for it, celebration and all.

“I was already thinking in the back of my mind, ‘If this goes in, what am I going to do? How am I going to celebrate?'” he said with a smile. It’s a miracle he didn’t have a wardrobe malfunction, seeing as he’s already split his pants not once, but twice this week.

“I mean, in tournaments, I would never, ever shout this loud or go this crazy,” Kim explained. “But I’m just trying to bring some good energy to the team. You know, that’s all I can do. We’re behind a little bit. So I’m just trying to bring positive vibes and try to get the team going and just give momentum to the team.

“To beat a team like (Cantlay-Schauffele) today, I feel like tomorrow we’re going to have a lot of momentum going in.”

And the Internationals will need every bit of that momentum if they are to win on American soil for the first time and complete the comeback, which would be the largest in the event’s 28-year history.

“Job’s not done. We’ve got a job to do tomorrow,” Kim said of Sunday. “We’ve got a great group of guys, and we believe. I think that’s the biggest thing. No one really believed in us, but we believe in ourselves.

Kim takes the stage once again at 1:50 p.m. ET Sunday for his singles match against fan-favorite Max Homa. Talk about an encore.

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Presidents Cup 2022 Sunday singles matches, tee times as U.S. leads Internationals, 11-7

The Americans lead 11-7 and need just 4½ points to win the cup.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — It’s advantage Americans in the race to 15½ points on Sunday at the 2022 Presidents Cup, but the Internationals gained some ground on Saturday.

Trevor Immelman’s squad dug themselves into a hole with a pair of 4-1 losses on Thursday and Friday but put the shovel down on Saturday. The Internationals split the morning foursomes at Quail Hollow Club then proceeded to win their first session of the week in afternoon four-ball after flipping a pair of matches over the final three holes to bring the overall score to 11-7.

The largest final-session comeback in Presidents Cup history came in 2003 when the Americans overcame a three-point deficit to tie the match at Royal Melbourne in Australia, the lone tie in the event’s history. If the Internationals are to win on American soil for the first time, they’ll need to claim 8½ of the 12 points up for grabs on Sunday and complete the biggest comeback, and upset, in the event’s 28-year history

Here’s are the 12 singles matches for the final day of the 2022 Presidents Cup. All times Eastern.

Sunday singles matches, tee times

Time Match
12:02 p.m. Si Woo Kim (Intl.) vs. Justin Thomas (U.S.)
12:14 p.m. Cam Davis (Intl.) vs. Jordan Spieth (U.S.)
12:26 p.m. Hideki Matsuyama (Intl.) vs. Sam Burns (U.S.)
12:38 p.m. Adam Scott (Intl.) vs. Patrick Cantlay (U.S.)
12:50 p.m. Sebastian Munoz (Intl.) vs. Scottie Scheffler (U.S.)
1:02 p.m. Taylor Pendrith (Intl.) vs. Tony Finau (U.S.)
1:14 p.m. Corey Conners (Intl.) vs. Xander Schauffele (U.S.)
1:26 p.m. Sungjae Im (Intl.) vs. Cameron Young (U.S.)
1:38 p.m. K.H. Lee (Intl.) vs. Billy Horschel (U.S.)
1:50 p.m. Tom Kim (Intl.) vs. Max Homa (U.S.)
2:02 p.m. Mito Pereira (Intl.) vs. Collin Morikawa (U.S.)
2:14 p.m. Christiaan Bezuidenhout (Intl.) vs. Kevin Kisner (U.S.)

How to watch, stream, listen

Sunday, Sept. 25

NBC/Peacock: 12-6 p.m. ET
PGA Tour Radio: 12-6 p.m. ET

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Presidents Cup: Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas remain unbeaten while Internationals win first session of the week in Saturday four-ball

The Internationals defeated the Americans, 3-1, after flipping two matches over the last three holes.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The momentum swayed back toward the Internationals on Saturday at the 2022 Presidents Cup, but Trevor Immelman’s squad still has a steep hill to climb.

After splitting the morning foursomes session at Quail Hollow Club, the worldwide all-stars won their first session of the week in the afternoon, mounting a pair of late comebacks in the first and last matches to swipe a 3-1 win and bring the overall score to 11-7.

Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas, the lone American winners in the afternoon, remained unbeaten on the week after another impressive performance that failed to reach the 18th tee.

Here’s a breakdown of each Saturday four-ball match on Day 3 at the 2022 Presidents Cup.

Lynch: Why America’s Presidents Cup team should toast Greg Norman, LIV Golf

LIV Golf decontaminated the U.S. team room dynamics that have undermined it for decades.

No matter how lopsided scores get at the Presidents Cup, Davis Love III is probably too sporting to get a head start on jotting down the thanks due in his victory speech. It promises to be a lengthy list since every member of his team will have contributed points to the ledger by Sunday, not to mention the caddies, host club officials, backroom assistants, and the phalanx of EVPs, SVPs and lowly VPs who’ll descend from PGA Tour HQ for the closing ceremony. Yet it would be remiss of Love not to single out for faint praise Greg Norman, a one-man Superfund clean-up crew who has done for the U.S. what successive captains and a task force couldn’t: decontaminate the team room dynamics that have undermined it for decades.

Postmortems of this Presidents Cup will rightly note that the International side was depleted by the moves to LIV Golf of players like Cameron Smith, Joaquin Niemann and Louis Oosthuizen. While that’s indisputable, it remains debatable what impact those losses really had since the Internationals weren’t exactly riding a hot streak before the defectors signed on to work for a Saudi regime more accustomed to deploying teams of hitmen than of golfers.

Fairness to Trevor Immelman demands acknowledging that things would likely be more competitive had he been able to call on those missing stars. But it’s clear that LIV’s most significant impact at the 14th Presidents Cup isn’t a negative one on the Internationals, but a positive one on the Americans. The U.S. team is obviously enjoying itself at Quail Hollow, but that doesn’t owe solely to the score. Sure, a romp breeds good humor, but this is a group flush with genuine camaraderie and wholly at ease with each other.

It’s easy to overlook just how long interpersonal toxicity has been an accepted part of the U.S. team room. The chill (and occasional distaste) between Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson loomed large during Europe’s Ryder Cup dominance in first dozen years of this century. Mickelson’s role in hobbling U.S. squads came to a head like a pustule in 2014 at Gleneagles, culminating in a press conference during which he piloted a Greyhound over Tom Watson’s back while posturing as a well-intentioned onlooker.

Four years later in Paris, eleven members of the Stars and Stripes found themselves asking ‘Pourquoi, Patrick?’ after Reed publicly blamed the team’s drubbing—and his own losing record—on skipper Jim Furyk and Jordan Spieth. Not content to be a scourge on one team, Reed then put the ’19 Presidents Cup side in the defensive position of having to make light of his highly questionable behavior in a Bahamas bunker days earlier. Cobbling together the appearance of cohesion can be a compromising process.

The atmosphere in the Ryder Cup locker room last year at Whistling Straits was perhaps less toxic but no less a distraction owing to the callow feud between Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka, about which captain Steve Stricker and his entire roster fielded constant questions.

For veterans of those experiences, this week in Charlotte must feel like the dawning of a new era in which problem kids have been banished to the sin bin and jerks have been jettisoned. It will bring no comfort to Luke Donald, who will captain Europe against these guys a year hence at the Ryder Cup in Italy.

In the spirt of finding a cloud to go with every silver lining: golf fans might not be well served by Team USA’s newly-forged collegiality. It removes the engaging frisson of recent contests in which the U.S. focus often seemed to be on an enemy within. Comity doesn’t usually lend itself to compelling team competition, so there will be golf industry executives secretly hoping that Europe is somehow forced to field a Garcia, Westwood or Poulter in Rome to maintain the tradition of back room dysfunction as a fun storyline for fans. But while golf in general—and team golf in particular—has undeniably benefited from polarizing figures, any definition of acceptable polarizing behavior should stop this side of normalizing a tyrant while lying about being a force for good.

As the U.S. team stands on the cusp of a halcyon era, it’s two competitors—Europe and the Internationals—appear headed for a period of rebuilding and, in the case of the Presidents Cup itself, a long overdue reimagining. What won’t change are the most dependable sources of edginess and angst in the respective Cups: hard-fought competition and the occasional overstepping induced by patriotic fervor. Both are preferable to the scheming by the selfish that has become the distorted norm.

During the celebrations on Sunday evening, members of the U.S. team should chip in for a bottle of Greg Norman’s eponymous wine (at $17, it’s a mere buck-forty each) and toast him for ensuring that they’ll be among the precious few to emerge successful and with enhanced reputations from his new world order.

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Presidents Cup Saturday four-ball picks, predictions: Can Internationals cut into American lead?

The usual suspects are out early for the Americans.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The Internationals earned two major points on Saturday morning after splitting the foursomes session on Day 3 of the 2022 Presidents Cup. That said, they still trail by six.

The Americans hold a commanding 10-4 lead entering Saturday afternoon’s four-ball session and have their best two pairings in the first two slots with Patrick Cantlay-Xander Schauffele and Jordan Spieth-Justin Thomas leading the charge.

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak and Adam Woodard are on the scene this week at Quail Hollow Club and made picks for Saturday afternoon’s matches (after calling it pretty close on both Thursday and Friday but admittedly whiffed on Saturday morning).

Presidents Cup: Yardage book | Results over the years

12:10 p.m. ET: Si Woo Kim-Tom Kim (Intl.) vs. Patrick Cantlay-Xander Schauffele (U.S.)

AS: Tom Kim has more energy than the Energizer Bunny but Cantlay-Schauffele duo is electric and rested after the morning session off and will continue to light it up for Team USA.

AW: Tom Kim walking in putts and screaming his way to a morning win was exactly the kind of juice the Internationals needed this morning. That said, Cantlay and Schauffele are given us no reason to believe they won’t win. It pains me to say this, but the Americans roll.

12:25 p.m. ET: Hideki Matsuyama-Taylor Pendrith (Intl.) vs. Justin Thomas-Jordan Spieth (U.S.)

AS: Intriguing pairing for the International side but JT and Jordan look unbeatable.

AW: Thomas is a perfect 5-0-0 in his Presidents Cup four-ball career and there’s nothing this International pairing can do to stop that. The pairing of American pals will remain undefeated this week and earn a fourth point.

12:40 p.m. ET: Sungjae Im-Sebastian Munoz (Intl.) vs. Tony Finau-Kevin Kisner (U.S.)

AS: Im got saddled with Conners, who has had a cold putter all week, in a morning defeat but otherwise he’s been a bright spot for the International side. Munoz is capable of making plenty of birdies and he and Im eked out a half point together on Friday. This time, I’m marking them down for a full point.

AW: Kisner didn’t look great yesterday when paired with Cameron Young in Friday’s four-ball session, but the 38-year-old didn’t come to Quail Hollow to lose. That said, he’ll have to wait till his Sunday singles match because Im and Munoz make up for their tie yesterday and win today.

12:55 p.m. ET: Adam Scott-Cam Davis (Intl.) vs. Billy Horschel-Sam Burns (U.S.)

AS: Well, the Burns-Scheffler pairing looked to be deadly on paper but it didn’t produce the goods, so it’s time to move on and see if Billy Ho and Burns can work some of their Zurich Classic magic together. I like the pairing a lot and am backing them to win big.

AW: Scott got off the schneid with a big win alongside Matsuyama Saturday morning, and I expect the man in tan to pair well with his Aussie teammate Davis. Sure, they lost 2-and-1 on Friday together, but they went against the American buzzsaw of Spieth and Thomas. Gimme the Aussies.

Schupak: USA wins, 3-1 | Woodard: USA and Internationals tie, 2-2-

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Presidents Cup: What you missed from Saturday morning foursomes as Internationals split the session

The Internationals fended off a Saturday finish with two big points from the morning foursomes.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — After losing the first two sessions on Thursday and Friday the International squad stopped the bleeding Saturday morning at the 2022 Presidents Cup.

The worldwide all-stars split the morning foursomes session, 2-2, with big wins from veterans Adam Scott and Hideki Matsuyama, who both have struggled this week at Quail Hollow Club. Speaking of struggling, Americans Scottie Scheffler and Sam Burns lost yet again in foursomes, just as they did on Thursday, while the prosperous pairing of Tony Finau and Max Homa earned another win in the alternate-shot format.

Here’s a breakdown of each match on Day 3 at the 2022 Presidents Cup.

Presidents Cup: Best photos | Must-see merch

Jordan Spieth-Justin Thomas (U.S.) def. Sungjae Im-Corey Conners (Intl.), 4 and 3

Did you really think this pair of pals would lose? Spieth improved to 7-0-0 in Presidents Cup foursomes and has yet to lose with Thomas yet this week (3-0-0). After losing the second hole to fall behind 1-down, the Americans took control and never trailed again in the match thanks to wins on Nos. 3, 4 and 7. The only other win for the Internationals came with birdie on the par-4 8th. The U.S. put the first point on the board with wins on Nos. 9, 13 and 15 to win, 4 and 3.

Adam Scott-Hideki Matsuyama (Intl.) def. Cameron Young-Collin Morikawa (U.S.), 3 and 2

Scott and Matsuyama were blown out in foursomes on Thursday, had new partners on Friday and fared no better separately. But International team captain Trevor Immelman had faith in reuniting them for Saturday’s foursomes and the pair of former Masters champions delivered.

Matsuyama and Scott defeated Americans Morikawa and Young, 3 and 2.

“We had to, you know,” Scott said. “It was kind of story of the week. Slow starts, at least for me, and they’ve been tough. But we played a few good holes, and they had a bit of a battle for a couple of holes, and we managed to hang on and we got on top of them and held on.”

It was a tale of two nines on Saturday morning with the U.S. taking the early lead thanks to bogeys at the second and fifth by the Internationals. Scott and Matsuyama turned it on starting at the ninth, erasing the 2-down deficit with a par at nine followed by three consecutive birdies. Scott rolled in putts of 13 feet at 10, 15 feet at 11, and just over a foot at 12. When the U.S. went from bunker to bunker at 13 and made double bogey, the Internationals had opened a 3-up lead. Pars at 13-15 and the match was over, a much-needed point for Team International.

K.H. Lee-Tom Kim (Intl.) def. Scottie Scheffler-Sam Burns (U.S.), 2 and 1

Kim walked in a 15-foot birdie putt at 10, then dropped in a 36-foot eagle putt at 11 and dropped his putter, screamed, “Come on! Let’s go! Woo!” and walked off to the next tee, leaving his caddie to collect his ball and putter. Ladies and gentleman, a star is born.

“Tom’s like the Energizer bunny, just keeps going,” said foursomes partner K.H. Lee.

Kim and his fellow Korean Lee secured a full point with a 2-and-1 victory over the American team of Burns and Scheffler.

Before the matches got underway, American Kevin Kisner told Captain Davis Love III that he’d be crazy if he didn’t play Sam Burns and Scottie Scheffler together in all four sessions of team play. But the partnership of good friends didn’t produce the goods – they went 0-2-1 – and world No. 1 Scheffler, who shanked a tee shot at a par 3 on Saturday, is riding the pine as Burns hooks up with Billy Horschel for an afternoon four-ball match.

It was a back-and-forth affair through 14 holes with neither side gaining more than a 1-up lead. Kim broke the deadlock with a 14-foot birdie putt at 15 – clenching his fist while holding onto his putter in celebration – and when the U.S. made bogey at 16, the International team grabbed the first 2-up lead of the match and held on for the win.

It meant the morning foursomes session was split and the score heading into the afternoon session of four-ball stood at 10-4 in favor of Team USA.

Tony Finau-Max Homa (U.S.) def. Si Woo Kim-Cam Davis (Intl.), 4 and 3

Like the first match, the last of the morning was another 4-and-3 win for the Americans. Finau and Homa never trailed against the Internationals and lost just two holes consecutively on Nos. 5 and 6. The Red, White and Blue then won Nos. 8-10 to take a 3-up lead and ended the match on the 15th with a par for the win.

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Presidents Cup: Americans look to extend lead, roll out two best pairings for Saturday afternoon four-ball

If history repeats itself, the Americans are guaranteed two points from the afternoon session.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Davis Love III has no interest in resting his best pairings.

When he and assistant captain Zach Johnson gathered Saturday morning to make their selections for the afternoon four-ball session, they rolled out their best two pairings first in Patrick Cantlay-Xander Schauffele and Jordan Spieth-Justin Thomas. The latter will play all five matches this week and have yet to lose at Quail Hollow Club (3-0-0).

On the flip side, Trevor Immelman and assistant Geoff Ogilvy decided to play veterans Adam Scott and Hideki Matsuyama for all five matches, but the winning pair from Saturday morning’s foursomes matches will be split for four-ball.

With the Americans holding a 10-4 lead after splitting the morning session of foursomes, 2-2, here’s how the pairings shake out for the afternoon of Day 3 at the 2022 Presidents Cup.

Saturday four-ball pairings

12:10 p.m. ET: Si Woo Kim-Tom Kim (Intl.) vs. Patrick Cantlay-Xander Schauffele (U.S.)

12:25 p.m. ET: Hideki Matsuyama-Taylor Pendrith (Intl.) vs. Justin Thomas-Jordan Spieth (U.S.)

12:40 p.m. ET: Sungjae Im-Sebastian Munoz (Intl.) vs. Tony Finau-Kevin Kisner (U.S.)

12:55 p.m. ET: Adam Scott-Cam Davis (Intl.) vs. Billy Horschel-Sam Burns (U.S.)

On the bench

Americans: Max Homa, Collin Morikawa, Scottie Scheffler, Cameron Young.

Internationals: Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Corey Conners, K.H. Lee, Mito Pereira.

How to watch, stream, listen

Saturday, Sept. 24

NBC/Peacock: 8 a.m.-6 p.m. ET
PGA Tour Radio: 9 a.m-6 p.m. ET

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