Nick Hardy and Davis Riley withdraw from Mexico Open at Vidanta after win in New Orleans

Earning their first PGA Tour wins means status plus entry in the next major on the schedule in 2023.

After making the 2023 Zurich Classic of New Orleans their first PGA Tour wins, Nick Hardy and Davis Riley were on the set of CBS Sports chatting with Amanda Renner about their win Sunday evening.

Towards the end of the interview, Renner referenced how we’d all see them again this week at the next Tour stop, the Mexico Open at Vidanta.

Well, plans can always change, and they did on Monday, when the PGA Tour confirmed that Hardy and Riley had withdrawn from the event at Vidanta Vallarta in Vallarta, Mexico.

Hardy was replaced by Ted Potter, Jr., while Riley was subbed by Richard S. Johnson. No reason was given for the WD. Players are not required to offer a reason if they need to withdraw before an event starts.

This marks the first time in 2023, and the first since Tony Finau at the Houston Open last November, that a winner on the PGA Tour who was scheduled to tee it up the very next week withdrew from that event.

In the case of Hardy and Riley, nabbing that first Tour win gives each status on Tour they hadn’t previously enjoyed, plus, they earned spots in the PGA Championship and the Memorial.

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2023 Zurich Classic of New Orleans prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player at TPC Louisiana

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour, folks. Just ask this week’s winners, Nick Hardy and Davis Riley.

The American duo split the top prize of $2,485,400 ($1,242,700 each) after storming up the leaderboard in the final round to win the 2023 Zurich Classic of New Orleans. The pair went on a 7-under 65 bogey-free birdie fest that included four circles on the scorecard over their last six holes. Hardy/Riley set a tournament record at 30 under, two shots clear of Adam Hadwin and Nick Taylor, who took home $1,014,800 ($507,400 each).

Check out the prize money payouts for each team at the 2023 Zurich Classic of New Orleans at TPC Louisiana in Avondale, Louisiana.

Zurich Classic: Winner’s bags | Best photos

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Zurich Classic prize money payouts

Position Players Score Earnings
1 Nick Hardy / Davis Riley -30 $2,485,400
2 Nick Taylor / Adam Hadwin -28 $1,014,800
3 Beau Hossler / Wyndham Clark -27 $664,350
T4 Patrick Cantlay / Xander Schauffele -26 $522,450
T4 Matthew NeSmith / Taylor Moore -26 $522,450
6 Keith Mitchell / Sungjae Im -25 $417,100
T7 Si Woo Kim / Tom Kim -23 $326,800
T7 Sean O’Hair / Brandon Matthews -23 $326,800
T9 Martin Trainer / Chad Ramey -22 $253,700
T9 Matthias Schwab / Vincent Norrman -22 $253,700
T11 Joel Dahmen / Denny McCarthy -21 $187,265
T11 Billy Horschel / Sam Burns -21 $187,265
T13 David Lipsky / Aaron Rai -20 $115,555
T13 Thomas Detry / Victor Perez -20 $115,555
T13 Michael Gligic / Taylor Pendrith -20 $115,555
T13 Byeong Hun An / S.H. Kim -20 $115,555
T13 Troy Merritt / Robert Streb -20 $115,555
T13 Harris English / Tom Hoge -20 $115,555
T19 Charley Hoffman / Nick Watney -19 $72,240
T19 Seung-yul Noh / Michael Kim -19 $72,240
T19 Kurt Kitayama / Taylor Montgomery -19 $72,240
T19 Matthew Fitzpatrick / Andrew Fitzpatrick -19 $72,240
T23 Luke List / Henrik Norlander -18 $49,192
T23 Luke Donald / Edoardo Molinari -18 $49,192
T23 Justin Suh / Sahith Theegala -18 $49,192
T26 Sam Ryder / Doc Redman -17 $39,245
T26 Joseph Bramlett / Dylan Wu -17 $39,245
T26 Dylan Frittelli / Matti Schmid -17 $39,245
T26 Brendon Todd / Patton Kizzire -17 $39,245
T26 J.J. Spaun / Hayden Buckley -17 $39,245
T26 MJ Daffue / Erik van Rooyen -17 $39,245
32 Thorbjorn Olesen / Nicolai Hojgaard -16 $36,636
33 Grayson Murray / Wesley Bryan -14 $35,948
34 Tyler Duncan / Hank Lebioda -13 $35,260
35 Fabian Gomez / Augusto Nunez -12 $34,572

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Winners’ Bags: Nick Hardy and Davis Riley, 2023 Zurich Classic of New Orleans

Check out the clubs that got the job done in New Orleans.

A complete list of the golf equipment Nick Hardy and Davis Riley used to win the PGA Tour’s 2023 Zurich Classic of New Orleans:

Nick Hardy

DRIVER: Titleist TSi2 (8 degrees), with Aldila Tour Green Graphene 70 TX shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Nick Hardy’s driver” link=”https://pga-tour-superstore.pxf.io/21aKPA”]

FAIRWAY WOOD: Titleist TSi2 (15 degrees), with Aldila Tour Green Graphene 85 TX shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Nick Hardy’s fairway wood” link=”https://pga-tour-superstore.pxf.io/Ore1NP”]

IRONS: Callaway X Forged UT 2018 (18 degrees), Titleist T100 (4), 620 MB (5-PW), with True Temper Dynamic Gold X100 shafts

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Nick Hardy’s irons” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/zNxjQG”]

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM9 (50, 56, 60 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Gold S400 shafts

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Nick Hardy’s wedges” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/oq4n2W”]

PUTTER: Swag prototype

BALL: Titleist Pro V1x

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Nick Hardy’s golf ball” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/baO7ZM”]

GRIPS: Golf Pride Tour Velvet

Davis Riley

DRIVER: Titleist TSR3 (8 degrees), with Project X HZRDUS Smoke Green RDX 65 TX shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Davis Riley’s driver” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/EKEqnD”]

FAIRWAY WOODS: Titleist TSR3 (15 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black TR 8 X shaft, TSR2 (18 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black TR 9 X shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Davis Riley’s fairway wood” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/WqyYje”]

IRONS: Titleist T100 (4), 620 CB (5-6), 620 MB (7-9), with KBS C-Taper S+ shafts

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Davis Riley’s irons” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/zNxjQG”]

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM9 (46, 50, 56, 60 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Gold S400 shafts

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Davis Riley’s wedges” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/oq4n2W”]

PUTTER: Scotty Cameron Phantom X 7.2 prototype

BALL: Titleist Pro V1

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Davis Riley’s golf ball” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/XYm1P3″]

GRIPS: Golf Pride Tour Velvet Cord (full swing) / SuperStroke Pistol Tour (putter)

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Nick Hardy, Davis Riley team up to win 2023 Zurich Classic of New Orleans for first PGA Tour wins

Hardy and Riley set a tournament record and earned their first wins on Tour.

What a difference a year makes for Nick Hardy at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

A year ago in the final round at TPC Louisiana, Hardy’s rookie season on the PGA Tour took a turn for the worse when he hit a hard gap wedge on the fourth hole and heard a pop in his left wrist and it swelled overnight.

“I was actually in the hospital probably at this point last year,” he said.

Hardy was sidelined for two months and had to earn back his playing privileges earlier this season through a major medical extension.

On Sunday, in Avondale, Louisiana, Hardy partnered with Davis Riley in the two-man team competition to shoot a bogey-free 7-under 65 and win the Zurich Classic by two strokes over the Canadian team of Adam Hadwin and Nick Taylor. Hardy, 27, and Riley, 26, combined to make four birdies in a span of five holes on the back nine in the foursomes, or alternate-shot format, to both claim their first PGA Tour title.

“To be able to do that together, kind of rub off each other’s confidence and sort of attitude. It was definitely special to have a partner for the first one,” Hardy said.

Six teams were in the mix down the stretch, including defending champions Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele, but Hardy and Riley’s birdie binge down the stretch helped them set a tournament record at 30-under 258.

“Being golfers, you always want to be in control,” Riley said. “It’s pretty nerve-racking kind of watching somebody when you’re not in control. Luckily I’ve got a really good partner, so I wasn’t worried about too much.”

Beginning the day three strokes back of the lead, they did most of their damage in the final round on the back nine. Riley wedged to six feet at No. 13 and Hardy rolled in the birdie putt. One hole later, Riley nearly made an ace at the par-3 14th setting up a kick-in birdie.

“It was the purest 5-iron I’ve ever heard,” Hardy said.

At 16, Hardy stuck the landing on a wedge to 6 feet and they took the outright lead at 29 under. Riley had one more trick up his sleeve, holing a 33-foot putt from off the green at 17.

A par on the 18th sealed the deal on a 65, the second-best round of the day after runners-up Hadwin and Taylor, who started the day seven strokes back, fired a 9-under 63 to finish at 28 under.

“I knew we had to shoot a really good round to even sniff the lead,” Taylor said.

Riley, who finished T-4 last year in New Orleans as a rookie with Will Zalatoris, was on the fence about even playing in the team event this year. Hardy, for that matter, originally planned to play with Thomas Detry, his Illinois University teammate, but European Ryder Cup Captain Luke Donald asked the Belgian Detry to play with Frenchman Victor Perez as a potential Ryder Cup pairing later this fall.

“So the Illini pairing vanished after that,” Hardy said. “I think only a couple weeks, three weeks ago we texted each other, and we got hooked up then.”

Riley, who grew up just across the border in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, where he lived on the ninth fairway of Canebrake Country Club, just 200 yards from the driving range, jumped at the opportunity to pair up with one of his best friends, who he’s been playing with since they were 14 or 15 years old and partners at the 2014 AJGA Wyndham Cup.

“We just have very similar games. I feel like we’re both solid ball strikers,” he said. “We’re going to create a lot of opportunity.”

That they most certainly did and as a result they are now exempt into the PGA Championship next month as well as the Sentry Tournament of Champions in January. (Winners of the Zurich Classic team event don’t get an invite to the Masters, which is given to individual winners of regular-season FedEx Cup tournaments, excluding opposite-field events, and official fall events.)

For a while, it looked like a different pair of old friends, the ones from Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, might be wearing the champions belts. Hadwin and Taylor reeled off seven straight birdies beginning at No. 7 and held sole possession of the lead after Hadwin canned a 9-foot birdie putt at 13.

“My goodness,” said PGA Tour Radio Network’s Dennis Paulson. “In my wildest dreams I wouldn’t think in alternate shot you could make this kind of run of birdies.”

“I had a great feel for the greens,” Hadwin said. “I rolled in a lot of putts there, especially on that middle stretch when we went on a run.”

But when the streak ended, the birdies dried up. Hadwin and Taylor finished with five straight pars, including when Taylor’s six-foot birdie putt at the last lipped out on the left. Still, their 63 in the tougher of the two formats tied the tournament 18-hole record in foursomes, which had been set only two days ago by Cantlay and Schauffele.

“That’s the most amount of birdies we made all week, and we did it in alternate shot,” Hadwin said.

The team of Wyndham Clark and Beau Hossler held the 54-hole lead but removed themselves from contention with bogeys on Nos. 16 and 17, and finished third after a 71.

Cantlay and Schauffele put up a respectable title defense, tying for fourth with Taylor Moore and Matthew NeSmith after shooting a final-round 66.

“We didn’t have our best stuff throughout the course of the tournament,” Schauffele said.

Despite feeling as nervous as he’s ever felt before a round, Hardy and Riley had the best stuff when it mattered most — six of their seven birdies came from inside 7 feet — and they’re already talking about defending their title next year.

“It’s on the schedule for me. I hope my partner commits with me now,” Hardy said.

“That’s right,” Riley said. “We’ll definitely be back to defend.”

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Zurich Classic of New Orleans has beignets, etouffee and all that jazz, but will it have a PGA Tour designated event?

The Zurich Classic of New Orleans saved itself once, and it’ll need to do so again.

AVONDALE, La. – The two-man team format saved the Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

Six of the top 10 players in the Official World Golf Ranking and 13 of the top 25 signed up to play in 2017, the inaugural year of the concept. In 2018, the Zurich landed 11 of the top 15 and last year nine of the top 13. That’s strong considering it is traditionally slated during the post-Masters hangover.

Tournament director Steve Worthy boasts that the last three winning teams included four of the top six players in the world.

This year, however, the deck was stacked against him. Four of the top eight in the world and nine of the top 20 are here – but Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas and Rickie Fowler opted to take their spring break this week and Masters champ Jon Rahm, who is defending another title next week at the Mexico Open, took a much-needed rest. Once you get past the likes of defending champion Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele and a handful of Zurich ambassadors such as Collin Morikawa, the field falls off fast.

When the schedule for this season was announced, Worthy knew he was in a tough spot – seven out of 10 designated events came before the Zurich this year, including two in a row the weeks prior.

“I’m an LSU football fan,” Worthy said, “you can recruit as hard as you want, but at a certain point you’re going to get some guys and not get others.”

“Truth be known, our field probably exceeded my expectations,” Worthy said, noting reigning U.S. Open champion Matt Fitzpatrick and Presidents Cup star Tom Kim among the blue-chip players they landed.

LYNCH: Bad invites risk turning Zurich Classic from fun week to joke

This year always was meant to be a bridge year as the PGA Tour responds to the existential threat of LIV Golf. The Tour laid out its plan for eight designated events with limited fields, no cuts and super-sized purses. Beginning next season, there will be the varsity and the J.V. or call it the Power Five conferences and Boise State fighting the good fight. Worthy said he’s still hopeful that the Zurich Classic can be elevated.

“We’re certainly having conversations about it,” Worthy said. “They feel like it’s probably three or four months from getting there. The Tour is talking to all the sponsors who are interested, what all the options are, see how it fits the schedule and how they can make it work.

“We’d like to be elevated. A lot of tournaments would like to be. If we can continue to do the right things as that process is ongoing over the next several months, hopefully we’re putting ourselves in the right position to end up where we want to be,” Worthy said.

There’s more tournaments that would like to host a designated event than windows for such events to be played, which is a good problem for the Tour to have. In a perfect world, Worthy would like to continue the team format and all the momentum that it’s created. But it seems unlikely a tournament that doesn’t give out world ranking points or earn a ticket to the Masters, and where players hit half the shots will get approved for one of the elite events.

The PGA Tour in New Orleans dates to 1938 and has been played in the Big Easy every year since 1958. It’s not going away —title sponsor Zurich is signed through 2026 — but it likely will have to continue to play up its niche as a break from the monotony of 72-hole stroke-play competition, attract the foodies and pamper the wives, who have a say in these matters.

“I think the non-designated events are going to hold their own,” said Billy Horschel, a Zurich ambassador and two-time tournament champion. “I think this one’s a great example. This one’s a great field. You’ve got players always wanting to play together. It’s unique.

“How this is all going to play out? It’s still sort of a wait-and-see game. It’s going to be two, three, four years of us doing this to see if it was the best thing for the PGA Tour and the product going forward.”

Expect the Tour’s lone team event in the FedEx Cup season to be just that — a good team player. It will have to fight for every thing it has, but then again, the Zurich Classic wouldn’t have it any other way.

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Lynch: Dubious invitations risk turning the Zurich Classic from a fun week into a joke

Perhaps fans imperiled by wayward shots enjoyed seeing those on exemptions, but fellow Tour players likely did not.

The criteria by which fields are assembled on the PGA Tour is considerably more byzantine than over on LIV Golf, where competitors require only the blessing of Greg Norman and amoral ambivalence about the abuses and butchery of their princely benefactor.

The Tour’s official list has 39 exemption categories, ranging from the obvious (winners of majors and the FedEx Cup) to the arcane (PGA Section champions, players with 300 career made cuts). They’re ranked by priority and not every classification is used at every event. The Zurich Classic, for example, used 20 categories to compile its field, a trickier construct than usual since the tournament is comprised of 80 two-man teams.

The most opaque criterion has always been sponsor invites, in which those who write the checks are granted tremendous latitude in deciding who gets the call for a handful of spots. As a general rule, that’s fair. Sponsors ought to have a say in drawing attention to their tournaments and not be hostage to filling tee times from a pre-determined pecking order of pedestrian pros, even if the basis for extending invitations appears parochial.

In February, Ricky Barnes was gifted a spot in the WM Phoenix Open — a designated event with a $25 million purse — for no apparent reason other than that he lives locally and is popular with the event organizers.

But an exemption category intended to benefit a tournament can also be a detriment when improperly applied.

When two-time PGA Tour winner Michael Thompson was added to the field at the Zurich Classic, he chose as his team partner Paresh Amin, a 43-year-old military veteran with a beggarly record on mini-tours, and who shot 42-over-par in Q-School for the Mackenzie Tour.

“He’s become my really good friend,” Thompson explained to my colleague, Adam Schupak. “I haven’t had any success with a partner in the team format. If I was going to play a team event, I wanted to be with someone I really liked. He’s trying to play professionally and I wanted to give him a chance to experience a PGA Tour event, meet the equipment reps, meet the caddies.”

In the opening round of best ball, when scores are typically lower, the pair managed only a 71 that placed them 77th among the 80 teams. A 75 in Friday’s alternate shot format dropped them another two spots.

“These guys out here obviously have an advantage over me,” Amin told the Times-Picayune, the local paper in New Orleans. “They’ve been doing it their whole life. I’m just trying to crack the code and make it full-time out here.”

Somewhere, the ghost of Maurice Flitcroft laughs.

Thompson and Amin were spared the indignity of last place only thanks to another pair of sponsor invites: David Duval and John Daly. Zurich presumably hoped the name recognition of these former major winners would draw eyeballs to an event that sits in no man’s land on the calendar, wedged amid majors and designated stops. The tournament could boast some quality names — Cantlay, Schauffele, Fitzpatrick, Morikawa, Homa — but too many others who would be recognized only by job-seeking caddies or alert process servers.

The problem is that Duval and Daly are woefully uncompetitive even on the PGA Tour Champions, much less a more demanding stage. Duval is 0-for-25 in cracking the top 10 in his senior career, while Daly has done so just once in his last 33 attempts. Predictably, their performance was execrable: rounds of 75-83 secured last place by 12 shots. Perhaps the few spectators who were imperiled by the team’s wayward shots enjoyed seeing the old timers, but there are ample reasons why some of their fellow Tour players might not.

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Each member of the winning team in New Orleans earns more than mere cash: fully exempt status through 2025, 400 FedEx Cup points, spots in the upcoming PGA Championship, Charles Schwab Challenge and Memorial Tournament, plus entry to the 2024 Sentry Tournament and Players Championship. It’s a heck of a return for only hitting half of the shots in half of the rounds.

FedEx Cup points are the currency of the PGA Tour, and have never been more valuable. Only the top 50 in points will guarantee access to all of 2024’s lucrative designated events. Only the top 70 will secure playing privileges for next season, down from 125 in years past. Fewer players have guaranteed status as more fields are reduced in size. Points are precious, and so too is the opportunity to earn them. There is less room than ever for veterans who fancy a couple of days in the Big Easy and friends Michael Thompson wants to introduce to equipment reps.

Doubtless, there will be locker room grumbling if Alex Fitzpatrick — an invited non-member of the Tour — earns status by partnering his brother, Matt, to victory in the Zurich Classic on Sunday. Family ties isn’t one of the 39 official exemption categories either. That will at least be a debate about an invitee who proved competitively relevant and earned those rewards, rather than the no-hopers whose presence only served to exclude others more deserving of a shot.

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2023 Zurich Classic of New Orleans: Team of Max Homa, Collin Morikawa headline missed cut list

It took an aggregate of 10-under 134 at TPC Louisiana to book a tee time for the weekend.

AVONDALE, La. – Misery loves company.

It doesn’t get much more frustrating than missing a cut and having to clean out your locker and pack your clubs in your travel bag Friday. But it may hurt a little more when you feel as though you let your partner down.

The Zurich Classic of New Orleans started the week with 80 teams but only 35 will have a chance to wear the champion’s belts and lift the trophy Sunday after the 36-hole cut. After playing four-ball, or best-ball, during the first round and foursomes, or alternate-shot, during the second round, it took an aggregate of 10-under 134 to book a tee time for the weekend.

Here’s a look at some of the big names who were sent packing.

Zurich: LeaderboardPhotos

2023 Zurich Classic: Tiger Woods is out but Joe LaCava is subbing this week for Steve Stricker

.Stricker’s wife, Nikki, who has caddied for him off and on through the years, kept pushing for LaCava

AVONDALE, La. – While Tiger Woods may be sidelined for an extended period of time after undergoing surgery today, his caddie Joe LaCava has a bag this week at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, looping for Steve Stricker.

“It’s a little bit longer story than what it needs to be probably,” Stricker said. “I asked his son first.”

LaCava Jr., who has caddied for Charlie Woods at the PNC Championship the last few years in a group with his dad, worked for Stricker earlier this year at the Cologuard Classic on PGA Tour Champions.

“Delightful kid, Joe Jr.,” Stricker said.

Unfortunately, Joe Jr. was already spoken for; he’s working on the Korn Ferry Tour for Brandon Hagy and already had committed to the job for the next couple of weeks.

2023 Zurich Classic at TPC Louisiana
Steve Stricker reacts during the pro-am prior to the Zurich Classic of New Orleans at TPC Louisiana on April 19, 2023, in Avondale, Louisiana. (Photo by Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images)

“I literally said, I can ask Joe, but I don’t think he’s going to want to come. ‘Fifty-five-year-old guy, washed-up Tour player. Do I really want to come all the way from (Connecticut) down to New Orleans?’ So my thinking went away from Joe Sr. right away. I’m like, he’s not going to want to come here,” Stricker recalled. “I asked a bunch of other guys and nobody could make it.”

However, Stricker’s wife, Nikki, who has caddied for him off and on through the years, kept pushing for Joe Sr.

Finally, Stricker caved and LaCava said, “Oh, heck, yeah, I’ll come.”

“Now he’s upset I asked his kid first,” Stricker said. “He’s such a great guy, fun to be with, easy to be with. Obviously is very good at what he does. We’ve been having fun with him so far. But that’s — short story made long, that’s how it ended up being.”

Stricker, the victorious captain of the 2020 U.S. Ryder Cup team and an assistant for this year’s match in Italy later this year, is teaming with Zach Johnson, his successor as U.S. Ryder Cup captain. Team Stricker-Johnson with LaCava Sr., on the bag, tee off on Thursday at 1:31 p.m. ET.

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Check the yardage book: TPC Louisiana for the 2023 Zurich Classic of New Orleans on the PGA Tour

StrackaLine offers hole-by-hole maps for TPC Louisiana, which was designed by Pete Dye.

TPC Louisiana – site of the 2023 Zurich Classic of New Orleans on the PGA Tour – was designed by Pete Dye and opened in 2004 in Avondale. It was built with consultation from PGA Tour players Steve Elkington and Kelly Gibson.

The course ranks No. 2 in Louisiana on Golfweek’s Best ranking of top public-access layouts in each state. It underwent a $2 million enhancement project in 2019 intended in large part to provide better playing conditions. It will play to 7,425 yards with a par of 72 for the Zurich Classic.

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 in Louisiana.

Oh, brother! Matt Fitzpatrick and Alex Fitzpatrick team up at 2023 Zurich Classic

“You don’t know how many of those you’re going to get,” Matt said of his chance to tee it up alongside Alex.

AVONDALE, La. – Late on Sunday afternoon, Alex Fitzpatrick was on a flight from North Carolina to New Orleans when his older brother, Matt, the reigning U.S. Open champion, was in the thick of a back-nine battle with Jordan Spieth and Patrick Cantlay at the PGA Tour’s RBC Heritage.

“He made me pay $16 to watch that final round and the playoff,” Alex said on Tuesday.

Brotherly love, indeed.

At least it was worth it. Matt lofted a 9-iron within inches of the hole at the third extra hole to beat Spieth in a sudden-death playoff and claim his second Tour title in as many years. He’ll try to hoist trophies in back-to-back weeks at the 2023 Zurich Classic, teaming with his younger brother of four years for the first time in the two-man team event. How exactly did the partnership of Matt, who rose to a career-best eighth in the world this week, and Alex, 697 spots removed bit having recorded his first top-10 finish as a pro his last time out on the Challenge Tour, come together?

“Everyone was pestering me,” Matt said.

“That’s basically what it was. His coach, my mom and dad,” Alex said. “He was kind of forced into it a little bit. I can’t remember what I was doing but I received a text and it was like, ‘What are you doing on these dates?’ And half of me knew what it was after all the pestering. I thought we finally got through to him. I was like, ‘Nothing,’ because I knew what days they were, and he’s like, ‘Do you want to play? I was like, ‘Yeah, sure, I’ll check my busy schedule and make sure I can make it.’ ”

Matt described he and Alex, who played at Wake Forest University and was a two-time member of the Great Britain & Ireland Walker Cup team, as close despite being polar opposites.

“I’m organized, he’s unorganized. He’s happy, I’m miserable,” Matt said. “Yeah, that’s probably a good way to put it really.”

Alex first made an impression on the golf scene as his big brother’s caddie at the 2013 U.S. Amateur at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts, which Matt went on to win at age 16. This year marks a decade from that launching pad for Matt’s career. Last summer, Matt returned and won the U.S. Open there in storybook fashion, with Alex in his gallery.

One of the benefits of being a major winner is being sought after to tee it up in tournaments around the globe, and to entice Matt to play this week the Zurich Classic wisely extended a sponsor’s invite to Alex, who is cutting his teeth on the DP World Tour and the Challenge Tour. The Fitzpatricks become the second brother duo to pair up since the tournament switched to a team format six years ago, following in the footsteps of Brooks and Chase Koepka, who finished T-5 in 2017 and T-22 in 2019.

“You don’t know how many of those you’re going to get,” Matt said, referring to opportunities to tee it up alongside his brother. “For me, obviously I’m going to have to admit it now in front of everyone, but yeah, it was a no-brainer for me. It was always one I was looking to try and play.”

What’s the Team Fitzpatrick game plan for this week?

“Hopefully I kind of piggy-back off him this week, and yeah, we kind of ham-and-egg it and hopefully a good result at the end of the week,” Alex said.

“Ham-and-egg it,” said Matt, who lasted all of three months at Northwestern. “Wow, you turned very American in your four years at college.”

Matt said his brother knows how to make birdies in bunches, which should serve them well in both four-ball and alternate shot formats being used this week. “If I can kind of just steady the ship, I’ll just let him loose at trying to make some birdies,” Matt said. “I’m really proud of where his game is at and how much he’s improved. I do believe that he’s got a lot of talent, and hopefully soon he’ll start showing that.”

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