Watch: This PGA Tour pro hit the flag with his third shot on a par-5. He made an 8

This is one of the worst bad breaks you can get.

Golf is often times a game of luck.

Sure, there’s plenty of skill involved, and the best golfers in the world amaze fans day after day with their ability to bomb drives, curve shots and stick it close from crazy angles. Yet there’s always fortunate bounces that can make a bad shot a good one, and in some cases, make a good one really, really bad.

Enter S.H. Kim, who was playing his third shot at the PGA West Stadium Course during the second round of The American Express in La Quinta, California. He had 83 yards to the flag on the par-5 16th hole, and his wedge shot was dialed in.

Just a bit too much, however.

He hit the flag, and the ball went sprinting backward. It hung on the edge of the fairway short of the green before tumbling down the infamous hill along the left side of the hole. It would have ended up in the infamous bunker, but the ball ended up jammed under the rake. Kim took relief, but his fourth, fifth and sixth shots ended up in the bunker. With his seventh, he was able to get it on the putting surface and drained the putt for the triple-bogey 8.

On a positive note, Kim bounced back in a big way, making birdie on the island 17th green. Talk about a tale of two holes.

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Davis Thompson settles for 62 and lead in his first The American Express

Thompson’s 62 matches the first-round lead from the golf course last year

The story is about as old as the 64-year-old American Express PGA Tour event.

Someone goes to La Quinta Country Club and tears apart the front nine, only to hit a wall on the back nine. Rounds that seem destined to sniff 59 suddenly turn into solid but somehow disappointing rounds in the low 60s.

The story was repeated again Thursday, with Davis Thompson providing the drama. A brilliant 8-under 28 on the front nine at La Quinta, including back-to-back eagles on the par-5s at the fifth and sixth holes, was followed by a pedestrian 2-under 34 on the tougher back nine. The result was a 10-under 62 that pushed Thompson into the first-round tournament lead but left Thompson wanting more.

“That was kind of like my biggest challenge today was staying present-minded and trying to put one foot in front of the other,” said the 23-year-old Thompson, playing in the tournament for the first time after spending 2021-22 on the Korn Ferry Tour. “Your mind definitely starts to wander a little bit. But I played enough rounds to where I try to teach myself over and over you can’t get ahead of yourself.”

Sam Burns seemed on the verge of catching Thompson most of the afternoon, going 7 under through nine holes at the tougher Pete Dye Stadium Course at PGA West. But Burns also cooled off on his final nine holes, bogeying the 18th for a 64. That left Burns in a five-way tie for second place with Jon Rahm who played at La Quinta, Tyler Duncan, who played the Nicklaus Tournament Course at PGA West, Matti Schmid, who played the Stadium Course, and Taylor Montgomery, who shot his 64 at La Quinta.

Nine players finished at 65, including Southern California PGA section representative and PGA of America player of the year Michael Block, and world No. 6 Xander Schauffele.

Thompson’s 62 at La Quinta in the first round was hardly unique for the low-scoring American Express. Patrick Cantlay and Lee Hodges shot 62 in the first round on the course last year, and Phil Mickelson fired a 60 in the first round in 2019. Rahm shot 62 at La Quinta Country Club to start the 2018 event that he won.

If there was a surprise in Thompson’s round, it was that he had never played the course in competition. But he made sure to learn something about desert layouts before coming to La Quinta.

“I was able to come out here early before I went to Hawaii (the Sony Open) and played out here on the Nicklaus Course. So I was a little familiar with it,” said Thompson, who played in eight PGA Tour events in 2020-21 and in three more in 2021-22. “But just got off to a hot start and just kind of coasted on my way in. But it’s always good to see some putts go in early and give you confidence to just keep it rolling.”

Fast start at La Quinta

Thompson birdied three of the first four holes at La Quinta before hitting the scoring holes of the fifth and sixth, consecutive par-5s that are reachable for all the PGA Tour pros. He rolled in a 12-foot putt for eagle on the fifth hole, then missed the green in two on the sixth hole but chipped in from 60 feet for his second consecutive eagle to reach 7 under through six holes.

“I had good numbers on both those holes. I actually missed the green on 6 and chipped in,” Thompson said. “I put two good swings on it and had a really nice chip and a really good putt.”

But Thompson added just one more birdie on the front nine at the ninth hole, then made birdies on the 13th and 18th holes on the back nine to cap the 62.

Rahm, ranked fourth in the world and coming off a win at the Sentry Tournament of Champions two weeks ago, didn’t have the red-hot nine like Thompson or Burns. Instead, he opened with five birdies on his front nine, including birdies on the two par-5s. He then bogeyed the 10th hole but added three consecutive birdies after that. A birdie at 17 pushed him to 64 on a course he knows he must play well.

“Give me enough time, I’ll be picky about a lot of things,” Rahm said after the round. “But it’s a great start to the tournament. You can’t really win it on this golf course, but you can sure fall off the pace. It’s a great start, solid round of golf, great putting out there. Hopefully, I can keep that going the whole week and feel a little bit better tee to green.”

Rahm was part of a field of five of the top seven players in the world in the desert tournament this week, and those players all fought into contention. Schauffele’s 66 at La Quinta left him tied for sixth. Scottie Scheffler and Patrick Cantlay each shot 68, while Will Zalatoris shot 69. In all, 123 of the 156 pros in the field broke par-72.

Rahm admits he’s playing golf as well as anyone in the world right now.

“Very confident. I think it showed out there. I didn’t have my best. I didn’t find myself in the fairway very often through the round, but was able to get birdies out of it. And that’s the beauty of that,” Rahm said. “I mean I would like people to think that it’s hard to beat me and almost impossible because, again, if I don’t have my A game and I’m shooting rounds like this it should be a pretty good year.”

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2023 American Express Friday tee times, TV and streaming info

Everything you need to know for the second round of the American Express.

After a two-week swing through the Hawaiian islands to kick off the 2023 calendar year, the PGA Tour is at PGA West and La Quinta, California, this week for the 2023 American Express.

Held across the Pete Dye Stadium Course, Nicklaus Tournament Course and La Quinta Country Club, the AmEx has once again produced a strong field with a handful of featured pairings worth keeping an eye on, including Tony Finau and Scottie Scheffler, as well as Jon Rahm and Rickie Fowler.

Davis Thompson, who started his round going 7 under on his first six holes, leads by two shots. He fired a 10-under 62 at La Quinta Country Club on Thursday. Rahm (La Quinta) and Sam Burns (Stadium Course) are in a pack at 8 under chasing.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for Friday’s second round of the 2023 American Express. All times listed are ET.

La Quinta Country Club — 1st tee

Tee time Players
11:30 a.m. Sam Ryder, Matthias Schwab
11:41 a.m. Cam Davis, Christiaan Bezuidenhout
11:52 a.m. Tano Goya, Augusto Nunez
12:03 p.m. Danny Lee, David Lingmerth
12:14 p.m. Rory Sabbatini, Ryan Moore
12:25 p.m. K.H. Lee, Erik van Rooyen
12:36 p.m. Harry Hall, Dylan Wu
12:47 p.m. Stephan Jaeger, David Lipsky
12:58 p.m. Robert Streb, Garrick Higgo
1:09 p.m. Michael Gligic, Erik Barnes
1:20 p.m. Kramer Hickok, Aaron Baddeley
1:31 p.m. Lucas Glover, Keith Mitchell
1:42 p.m. Nico Echavarria, Zecheng Dou

La Quinta Country Club — 10th tee

Tee time Players
11:30 a.m. Lee Hodges, Brandon Wu
11:41 a.m. Aaron Wise, Sebastian Munoz
11:52 a.m. Anders Albertson, Philip Knowles
12:03 p.m. Michael Kim, Andrew Putnam
12:14 p.m. Callum Tarren, Alex Smalley
12:25 p.m. Tom Hoge, Luke List
12:36 p.m. Matti Schmid, Vincent Norrman
12:47 p.m. Wyndham Clark, Harry Higgs
12:58 p.m. Sam Burns, Harris English
1:09 p.m. Ben Taylor, Robby Shelton
1:20 p.m. Troy Merritt, Chesson Hadley
1:31 p.m. Zach Johnson, Russell Knox
1:42 p.m. Harrison Endycott, John Pak

Nicklaus Tournament Course — 1st tee

Tee time Players
11:30 a.m. Dylan Frittelli, Sung Kang
11:41 a.m. Hank Lebioda, Andrew Landry
11:52 a.m. Kyle Westmoreland, Trevor Cone
12:03 p.m. Ryan Armour, Justin Lower
12:14 p.m. Scott Piercy, Taylor Moore
12:25 p.m. Justin Rose, Si Woo Kim
12:36 p.m. Brandon Matthews, Brent Grant
12:47 p.m. Doug Ghim, Max McGreevy
12:58 p.m. Nick Taylor, Martin Laird
1:09 p.m. Scott Harrington, Sam Stevens
1:20 p.m. Adam Schenk, Bill Haas
1:31 p.m. Adam Hadwin, Taylor Pendrith
1:42 p.m. MJ Daffue, Andrew Novak

Nicklaus Tournament Course — 10th tee

Tee time Players
11:30 a.m. Stewart Cink, Brendan Steele
11:41 a.m. Patrick Cantlay, Xander Schauffele
11:52 a.m. Davis Thompson, Will Gordon
12:03 p.m. Davis Riley, Beau Hossler
12:14 p.m. Tom Kim, Sahith Theegala
12:25 p.m. Matthew NeSmith, Patrick Rodgers
12:36 p.m. Charley Hoffman, Denny McCarthy
12:47 p.m. Chris Kirk, Patton Kizzire
12:58 p.m. Jon Rahm, Rickie Fowler
1:09 p.m. Thomas Detry, Austin Eckroat
1:20 p.m. Adam Long, Chez Reavie
1:31 p.m. Tony Finau, Scottie Scheffler
1:42 p.m. Taylor Montgomery, Justin Suh

Pete Dye Stadium Course — 1st tee

Tee time Players
11:30 a.m. Peter Malnati, Ben Martin
11:41 a.m. Wesley Bryan, Kevin Tway
11:52 a.m. Carl Yuan, Taiga Semikawa
12:03 p.m. Brian Stuard, Seung Yul Noh
12:14 p.m. Kevin Chappell, Byeong Hun An
12:25 p.m. J.T. Poston, Brian Harman
12:36 p.m. Carson Young, Caleb Surratt
12:47 p.m. Greyson Sigg, Danny Willett
12:58 p.m. Sungjae Im, Jason Day
1:09 p.m. Ben Griffin, Tyson Alexander
1:20 p.m. Emiliano Grillo, Nick Watney
1:31 p.m. Cameron Young, Will Zalatoris
1:42 p.m. Joseph Bramlett, Dean Burmester

Pete Dye Stadium Course — 10th tee

Tee time Players
11:30 a.m. Mark Hubbard, Zac Blair
11:41 a.m. Brendon Todd, Michael Thompson
11:52 a.m. S.H. Kim, Eric Cole
12:03 p.m. Aaron Rai, Satoshi Kodaira
12:14 p.m. Ryan Brehm, Jonathan Byrd
12:25 p.m. Brice Garnett, James Hahn
12:36 p.m. Michael Block, Trevor Werbylo
12:47 p.m. Nate Lashley, Martin Trainer
12:58 p.m. Jimmy Walker, Jhonattan Vegas
1:09 p.m. Kevin Roy, Gunner Wiebe
1:20 p.m. Austin Cook, Jason Dufner
1:31 p.m. Tyler Duncan, Richy Werenski
1:42 p.m. Paul Haley II, Kevin Yu

TV, streaming, radio information

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

Friday, Jan. 20

TV

Golf Channel: 3-7 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 1-7 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 11:30 a.m.-7 p.m.
Peacock: 3-7 p.m.

Saturday, Jan. 21

TV

Golf Channel: 3-7 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 2-7 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 11:30 a.m.-7 p.m.
Peacock: 3-7 p.m.

Sunday, Jan. 22

TV

Golf Channel: 3-7 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 2-7 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 11:30 a.m.-7 p.m.
Peacock: 3-7 p.m.

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This PGA Tour rookie went 7 under in first six holes, including back-to-back eagles at The American Express

Imagine going 7 under in your first 6 holes.

It’s hard to have a much better start to a round than Davis Thompson did Thursday during his first round of The American Express at La Quinta Country Club in California.

Thompson, a 23-year-old PGA Tour rookie, was 7 under after six holes, including a stretch of 6 under in four holes that featured consecutive eagles on the par-5 fifth and par-5 sixth.

Birdie. Par. Birdie. Eagle. Eagle. Birdie. That’s a lot of circles on the card to begin the day.

Thompson became the first player since Robert Streb at the 2021 CJ Cup to go 7 under in his first six holes. He’s also the first player with consecutive eagles in a round since Shane Lowry at the 2022 Open Championship at St. Andrews.

Thompson shot an 8-under 28 on the front nine.

In six starts this season, he has made five cuts and finished T-9 at the Fortinet Championship. However, his hot start had him out front early. Thompson shot 10-under 62.

Four golfers had three eagles in one round last season: Shane Lowry, Open Championship; Trey Mullinax, AT&T Byron Nelson; Stephan Jaeger, Mexico Open at Vidanta; Carlos Ortiz, WM Phoenix Open.

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What’s the secret to La Quinta Country Club’s pristine greens once compared to Augusta National’s?

What’s the secret to La Quinta Country Club’s pristine greens?

LA QUINTA, Calif. — Long lauded for sporting some of the best playing conditions on the PGA Tour, historic La Quinta Country Club doesn’t rest on its roll.

With PGA Tour pros Jon Rahm, Patrick Cantlay, Brendan Steele and this year’s Ryder Cup captain Zach Johnson offering annual superlatives on the quality and consistency of the club’s putting surfaces, the turf team at La Quinta begins its tourney and peak-season member prep long before the first American Express ball is ever struck.

“For me, getting the greens ready to be seeded in the first week of October is the most important thing,” said Tim Putnam, director of agronomy at La Quinta Country Club. “Everything we do to create that surface that we seed into, that’s what I spend the most time worrying about and ensuring we get exactly right.”

This year’s 64th version of The American Express is far from Putnam’s first rodeo. A desert-area superintendent since the late 1990s, he began his tenure as La Quinta Country Club’s agronomy frontman in 2002. With the club preparing to co-host the PGA Tour’s annual stop in the desert for a 51st time, Putnam’s “secret sauce” for the condition of his greens once earned quality comparisons to the game’s most extolled putting surfaces at Augusta National Golf Club from Rahm during his 2018 victory in the desert.

The Lawrence Hughes design at La Quinta that opened in 1959 is considered “classic” beyond its time-tested, six-plus decades of play. With a dearth of distance by today’s tour standards (7,060 yards), combined with skinny corridors and an onus on iron accuracy, the scoring lens for professionals is most often focused on the flatstick.

“They may be some of the best surfaces I’ve ever seen,” said Scottie Scheffler, who is ranked second in the world golf ranking. “They’re really, really good. That’s consistent. It’s been like that — I think this is my fourth time here at this event — and they have been like that every time I’ve been over there.

“It’s pretty amazing what that superintendent and the club can do with those greens,” Scheffler said. “If you’re rolling it good — there’s a little bit of a pull there that can be tough to read at times — but once you start making a few putts that hole can look really big because those greens are nice.”

Manning a maintenance crew of two dozen employees across a relatively small turf footprint of 113 acres, Putnam’s purview is set upon every blade and each grain.

The La Quinta Country Club greens roll with Tifdwarf hybrid bermudagrass and are overseeded in October with a combination of poa trivialis and perennial ryegrass.

“The ryegrass really helps early on,” says Putnam, “and helps the Poa get established, provides a bit of shade for the Poa and helps with traffic stress.”

Per his autumn focus, Putnam’s overseed preparation includes growth regulators and verticutters working at very shallow heights.

“The key to me is getting rid of enough Bermuda tissue, so you’re creating a good seed bed,” Putnam said. “And using the verticutters to help lift up the Bermuda and get it to peel off better. And then I like to use something I stumbled upon a long time ago, a brush, called a Grain Master, and it’s got really stiff poly-bristles on it. When I drag that around, it stands the Bermuda up and also works great in conjunction with using Scythe on the putting surfaces to kind off burn off the green tissue of the Bermuda.”

As the course reopens from overseed and the calendar enters the holiday season, Putnam plans ahead.

“In December, I’ll have them running at a 10 ½ or 11 (on the Stimpmeter) for member play, and then heading into the AMEX, I really watch the weather,” the director of agronomy said. “If it’s going to be cool like it is now, I’ve got to be sure that they’re not too fast going into the tournament, because they won’t grow that much. And over the course of rolling the greens for five or six straight days (during the tournament week), they can get too fast.”

Around the start of the calendar year and the impending return of The American Express, Putnam and staff work a delicate dance of manning the speed of the greens. For the tournament, La Quinta’s greens actually run a shade slower than the 11 ½ (or even 12) Putnam measures on the Stimpmeter for member play the rest of the season.

Considering that, for uniform layout, pin placements remain the same across all three tournament courses for the first three rounds until every golfer has played each of the holes, Putnam needs to be additionally mindful of not making the setup too challenging for the event’s amateur players and keeping pace-of-play intact.

For American Express week, Putnam works in tandem with the PGA Tour’s agronomy staff to ensure his putting surfaces roll at similar speeds as the other two tournament courses at PGA West — the Nicklaus Tournament and Pete Dye Stadium courses.

“The tour wants the three courses to be as comparable as possible to each other, and speeds of about 11 are where they’ve settled in,” Putnam said. “Maybe a little closer to 10 ½ at PGA West, with those greens having a few bigger slopes.”

In addition to the speed of the putting greens, the PGA Tour staff also pays close attention to mower heights for continuity and quality.

“We were once mowing greens at about 100 or 115-thousandths of an inch – which was the height we needed to not exceed that 10 ½ speed – but if you had a putt that was rolling across multiple mow lines, there was a tiny bit of grain-effect with ball movement,” Putnam said. “So I showed that to the PGA Tour agronomist, and told him we really needed to be at 105-thousandths of an inch to avoid that phenomenon.”

January has been cooler than average in the Coachella Valley with only two daytime high temperatures warmer than 70 degrees this month. Because of the cooler conditions, Putnam looks to return to the 110 mow height along with adding another dollop of that secret sauce.

“Poa trivialis is interesting in that it really grows upright, whereas most grasses grow a bit more laterally,” he said. “With Poa triv (ialis), you’ll actually get grain from the mower. As the mower goes over, it lays it in one direction and then as the mower comes back, it lays it in the other direction. We came up with a process of using these little brushes on the mowers, and now we’ll actually mow against the grain, or, against the previous line. We’re trying to make the grass stand up straight everywhere.”

During the tournament, Putnam and his staff will stimp the greens both morning and afternoon, to ensure they’re not getting too fast.

“But I do want to be able to roll the greens every day,” he said, “because with the pins staying in the same place, there’s a lot of foot-printing around the hole.”

While Putnam appreciates the yearly accolades from the PGA professionals, he’s fast to acknowledge that the pristine conditions aren’t unique to just La Quinta Country Club but to a number of the desert’s 120 courses.

“There are a half-dozen courses out here in the valley whose greens are as good as mine,” he said. “And, for an entire area, the courses out here in our desert are in as good or better shape than anywhere in the country.”

Of course, Putnam is equally aware that the eyes of the nation are annually affixed on his terrain, expecting to view the perfect roll.

“When you see a close-up of a putt on TV, and the ball starts to slow down, I want to see it tracking on that same arc,” Putnam said. “That’s when I know I’ve got these greens going really good.”

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American Express notebook: Jon Rahm’s past comments, top-10 machines and more

The action begins Thursday in California’s Coachella Valley.

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LA QUINTA, Calif. — For those who thought Jon Rahm’s on-course comments about The American Express might keep the Spanish star away from the event this year, Rahm says that definitely was never a consideration.

“For me it’s obviously a great event and it’s got a lot of history with Arnie’s legacy here as well,” Rahm said. “I’ve loved it every time I’ve come here, despite what I said on the golf course last year. That’s just a player letting out some frustration.”

Rahm was caught last year walking from one hole to the next saying that the tournament was a putting contest, adding a few choice words to his comments. He later explained that the pins in the tournament are in positions for the pro-am that don’t put more of a premium on strong iron play, one of Rahm’s strengths. Rahm won the tournament in 2018 on the same three courses used last year and this year.

Top-10 machines

Three golfers finished in the top 10 of The American Express in each of the last two years. You might have expected Patrick Cantlay in that group, but the other two are Brian Harman and Francesco Molinari. Harman is a two-time winner who most recently won the 2017 Wells Fargo Championship and has 26 top-10s on Tour since the start of the 2017-18 season, the most of any player without a win in that span. Molinari’s tie for sixth was his only top 10 on the PGA Tour last year. Cantlay won two times last season and had 12 top-10 finishes in the 2021-22 year. Si Woo Kim barely missed joining that group, winning the 2021 event and finishing 11th in 2022.

Deciding PGA Tour matters

Scottie Scheffler is on the PGA Tour’s Player Advisory Council this year, and after a tumultuous 2022, Scheffler is happy to have a say in tour matters.

“With LIV that’s kind of an obvious deal that we had to make a few changes in order to improve our tour in a different way,” Scheffler said. “So for me, having an opportunity to be on the PAC and talk with guys across all different levels of our tour, whether it’s a guy finishing 100th on the money list or first, it’s kind of nice to be in the room and have those conversations and figure out what is collectively going to work best for all of us so that this tour can succeed.

“I just want to be in a position to help,” he added. “So it should be a good year for us on the PAC and we got a good group of guys and hopefully just continue to improve our tour.”

Indian food for Finau

Tony Finau says he would probably be a chef if he wasn’t one of the top players on the PGA Tour. And he had some definite favorites when he does cook.

“I love cooking curry chicken. I love eating curry chicken and I love eating curry dishes,” Finau said. “I love Indian food. So I would say I’m pretty good at it, because I cook it a lot.

“I would say my kids love a good steak. I’m pretty good at grilling. I enjoy grilling as well. So those are probably my main dishes. A lot of meat,” Finau said with a laugh. “We love meat.”

Strength of field

The presence of five of the top 10 players in the Official World Golf Ranking is part of the story of how strong the field at The American Express is this year. But there are other ways to measure how strong the field is this week. For instance, of the 156 players in the tournament, 79 have won at least one PGA Tour event. Ten of the golfers have won at least one major championship. Jason Day and Zach Johnson have the most PGA Tour wins for players in the field at 12 each.

Back in the field

While part of the strength of the field at The American Express this year is players like Scottie Scheffler and Will Zalatoris returning to the tournament with higher rankings, at least one of the top players in the field has been missing from La Quinta recently. That’s Xander Schauffele, the No. 6 player and winner of the Olympic gold medal in men’s golf in 2021. Schauffele is a Southern California product from San Diego who played college golf at San Diego State. But he hasn’t played in The American Express since 2017, his rookie year on the tour. He missed the cut that year, as he did in 2016 when he played in the tournament on a sponsor’s exemption.

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Photos: 2023 The American Express at PGA West and La Quinta Country Club

Check out the best shots of the week from the Coachella Valley.

The PGA Tour is back in the Coachella Valley this week for the 2023 American Express

The tournament is being staged across three different golf courses in La Quinta, California: PGA West’s Stadium Course and Nicklaus Tournament Course, as well as La Quinta Country Club. La Quinta, the Stadium and Nicklaus courses will be used for the first three rounds, with the final round being staged on the Stadium Course.

Ten of the top-20 players in the world are teeing it up this week, including five of the top 10.

Take a scroll through some of the best photos of the week from the PGA Tour’s 2022 The American Express.

‘You want to beat the best’: Jon Rahm looks to continue hot start to 2023 against loaded field at The American Express

PGA Tour metrics say this year’s American Express has its strongest field of the century.

LA QUINTA, Calif. — The strength of The American Express field this week is not lost on one of the golfers who is making that field so strong.

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“You want to beat the best,” said Jon Rahm, the No. 4 player in the world ranking and one of five players in the top seven in the ranking teeing off in La Quinta this week. “And I’m glad people are coming. It’s good that more players are trying more events.”

PGA Tour metrics say this year’s The American Express has its strongest field this century. Rahm, a past champion of the desert event in 2018, is joined in the field by No. 2 and Masters champion Scottie Scheffler, No. 5 Patrick Cantlay, No. 6 Xander Schauffele and No. 7 Will Zalatoris. Four other players ranked from 10th to 19th are also in the field of the $8 million event.

Rahm said that rather than hurting some tournaments like The American Express, the new schedule of 17 designated tournaments which feature $20 million purses and required attendance from top players in order to qualify for Player Impact Program bonus money may have helped the La Quinta tournament.

“It’s due to some of the new events going on during the year,” Rahm said. “The fact that we have all those big events that we have to play if we want to earn that PIP reward. That opens up to all those three, let’s say lower events that you need to play. It opens peoples’ eyes to maybe some events they haven’t played in the past because your schedule changes a little bit.”

The American Express begins for the 64th time Thursday with 156 pros and 156 amateurs playing on three courses – the Pete Dye Stadium Course and the Nicklaus Tournament Course at PGA West and La Quinta Country Club.

Rahm is certainly one of the centerpieces of the tournament this year. Not only is he one of nine past champions in the field, he comes to the event off his eighth PGA Tour victory, a win at the Sentry Tournament of Champions in Hawaii two weeks ago.

It’s the start of a busy winter on Tour for Rahm, who will play the three designated events on the West Coast Swing at Sentry, WM Phoenix Open and the Genesis Invitational. After playing in this week’s The American Express, he also will play in next week’s Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines Golf Course in San Diego, where he has won both the 2021 U.S. Open and on Tour in 2017.

For Rahm, the La Quinta tournament isn’t just about great weather and what he calls great conditions on the three courses. It’s also a chance to get back to what he called “normal circumstances” as opposed to Hawaiian golf with stronger crosswinds, grainy and slower greens and more uneven lies on sloping fairways.

“You might get more or less wind on some days, but the golf courses are usually in absolute perfect condition. So you can basically make sure all your new equipment is proper,” Rahm said. “Make sure if you’ve been working on some changes in your swing you’re testing it under pressure with some easier conditions. So I think it’s a great tune-up for what the rest of the year could be.”

Rahm said scheduling with the new designed events has actually not been a problem for the Spanish star, comparing the designated events to the Rolex Series on the DP World Tour that require participation in designated events by members.

“How do I say it? In the past we’ve had a lot of freedom on what we wanted to play,” Rahm said. “And we still do. The only reason for us to want to play all of this is the PIP reward, let’s be honest. And the fact that they’re bigger events and bigger purses. We all want that.

“I chose to play only once in the fall so now I need to play 19 events this year,” Rahm added. “I’m playing all these elevated ones, I had to add two more. So it was a very simple way to decide. I think I’m going to get it done by playing here and Torrey Pines. Which, to think of Torrey Pines as a lesser event to me is mind blowing.”

As for his own game, Rahm said getting the victory at the Sentry tournament to start the year makes the rest of 2023 more comfortable.

“To start 2023 with a win, let’s just say it maximizes my opportunities to get as many wins as possible. It’s a great start,” he said. “I said it a few times too, I’ve seen a few players win that event and then go on a tear for a year. Like Cam Smith being the last one last year. So I’m hoping it’s one of those that can start properly and get a couple wins and hopefully a major in there.”

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Check the yardage book: PGA West’s Pete Dye Stadium Course for the PGA Tour’s 2023 The American Express

StrackaLine offers hole-by-hole maps for the PGA Tour’s 2023 The American Express in California.

PGA West’s Pete Dye Stadium Course in La Quinta, California – one of three courses used for the PGA Tour’s 2023 The American Express – opened in 1986 with a design by the legendary architect whose name appears in the layout’s title.

The 7,187-yard, par-72 Stadium Course is the main track for this week’s event, hosting each player for one of the first three rounds as well as Sunday’s final round. The other two courses used in the first three rounds are La Quinta Country Club (7,060 yards, par 72) and PGA West’s Nicklaus Tournament Course (7,147 yards, par 72). All the players have one round on each course before the cut is made for Sunday’s final round.

The Stadium Course ranks No. 11 in California on Golfweek’s Best list of top public-access courses, and the Nicklaus Tournament Course is No. 23 in the state on that list.

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 on the Stadium Course. Check out the maps of each hole below.

2023 American Express picks: Rickie Fowler (90/1), Jason Day (70/1) among long shots you should target at PGA West

Fowler already has T-2 and T-6 finishes this season. Can he grab his first Tour win since 2019 this week?

A loaded field consisting of 10 of the world’s top 19 players has made its way to the California desert for the American Express at PGA West.

World No. 2 Scottie Scheffler and No. 4 Jon Rahm are the two betting favorites while Patrick Cantlay, Xander Schauffele and Will Zalatoris are the other top 10 players set to tee it up Thursday.

With a three-course rotation used over the first three rounds, the cut will be made after 54 holes. Pete Dye’s Stadium Course will host the final round Sunday.

We already covered some of the best bets for the week, highlighted by Zalatoris and Tony Finau, but now it’s time to take a look at some long shots.