After Viktor Hovland’s recent move, half of the world’s top 10 golfers live in the same county. Which one?

Hovland’s move gives this county half of the world’s top 10 golfers in the current ranking and 10 of the top 30.

Palm Beach County in Florida has added another top 10 golfer in the world among its residents.

Norway’s Viktor Hovland, ranked No. 4 in the Official World Golf Ranking, recently moved from Stillwater, Oklahoma, to Palm Beach Gardens, where he is living with a friend. Hovland is scouting the area for the best place to buy.

Hovland’s move gives Palm Beach County half of the world’s top 10 golfers in the current ranking and 10 of the top 30.

Hovland, 26, had lived in Stillwater since arriving at Oklahoma State University. When asked about the move after his pro-am Wednesday before the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill, he compared the weather in the Midwest to South Florida.

“The weather is a big one,” he said. “It’s just hard to beat it for golf, especially this time of year. This has kind of been a rough winter in Stillwater. Just not great for practicing. Even though I love Oklahoma. Summertime it’s great, and I certainly miss the people there.”

Stillwater’s average temperature from December through January is in the 50s. The city had three consecutive days in January when the low was below zero.

Hovland also was drawn by the proximity to international airports, especially Miami which has nonstop flights to Oslo.

“I do find it easier if I want to go back home to Norway, it’s a direct flight from Miami,” he said. “I can have family and friends come down and hang out. It’s a little bit harder for them to come to Stillwater, and, yeah, there’s not much to do there either. So at least in Florida, there’s a little bit more we can do.”

Hovland is the reigning FedEx Cup champion, which earned him $18 million, and has won six times on the PGA Tour. He joins fellow top 10 golfers Rory McIlroy (No. 2), Xander Schauffele (5), Patrick Cantlay (6) and Matthew Fitzpatrick (9) as residents of northern Palm Beach County. Hovland, McIlroy and Fitzpatrick were part of the victorious European Ryder Cup team, as were Jupiter residents Shane Lowry (54) and team captain Luke Donald.

Keegan Bradley (15), Cameron Young (21), Justin Thomas (23), Matthieu Pavon (24) and Brooks Koepka (30) round out top 30 county residents in the current ranking.

Others of note include Rickie Fowler, Daniel Berger, Gary Woodland, Eric Cole, Lucas Glover and Matt Kuchar.

Koepka leads a long list of LIV golfers in the area, among them Branden Grace, Dustin Johnson, Anirban Lahiri, Joaquin Niemann, Mito Pereira, Charl Schwartzel, Peter Uihlein and Matthew Wolff.

Bernhard Langer, Ernie Els and Justin Leonard are among those on the PGA Tour Champions living in the county.

Tom D’Angelo is a senior sports columnist and golf writer for The Palm Beach Post. He can be reached at tdangelo@gannett.com.

Scottie Scheffler’s wife, Meredith, is pregnant with couple’s first child

With a late April due date, it’s possible that Scheffler may play a limited schedule ahead of the PGA Championship.

ORLANDO — Scottie Scheffler and his wife, Meredith, are expecting the couple’s first child in late April. NBC’s Dan Hicks mentioned the pregnancy on the air on Sunday as cameras showed a very pregnant Meredith, who walked the Bay Hill Club & Lodge course during the final round along with Scottie’s parents.

The 27-year-old Scheffler, who won the Arnold Palmer Invitational for his seventh career PGA Tour title, tied the knot in 2020 and had this to say to PGA Tour Sirius/XM Radio about expecting their first child.

“It’s going to be pretty wild. I don’t think it’s hit either of us quite yet, maybe sometime when the baby is moving around in her stomach a bunch, but it’s an exciting time for us as a family,” he said. “It’s been a pretty exciting last seven months or so and we’re looking forward to hopefully getting the baby out of there nice and healthy and with a healthy momma and then we’ll go from there.”

Scheffler said he will play this week at the Players Championship and do his final pre-Masters prep in Houston and take the week off before the Masters, which begins April 11. With a late April due date, it’s possible that Scheffler may play a limited schedule ahead of the PGA Championship in Louisville  beginning May 12.

After Scheffler finished his radio interview, he headed back to the 18th green at Bay Hill for the award ceremony, where he received the red alpaca sweater that Palmer made famous. He turned to Meredith, who was some 50 feet behind him and said, “Hustle up.”

“I’m not exactly fast these days,” she replied.

Here’s wishing the Schefflers well in the final trimester.

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 category=1375]

Winner’s Bag: Scottie Scheffler, 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational

The list of the golf equipment Scottie Scheffler used to win for the seventh time on the PGA Tour.

[anyclip-media thumbnail=”https://cdn5.anyclip.com/jkut7owBn0dZxwaYX1N4/1704811734300_248x140_thumbnail.jpg” playlistId=”undefined” content=”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”][/anyclip-media]

A complete list of the golf equipment Scottie Scheffler used to win the PGA Tour’s 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational:

DRIVER: TaylorMade Qi10 (8 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black 7X shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Scottie Scheffler’s driver” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/R5q9k7″]

FAIRWAY WOOD: TaylorMade Qi10 (15 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black 8X shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Scottie Scheffler’s fairway wood” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/3eWNGv”]

IRONS: Srixon ZU85 (3-4), with Nippon Pro Modus3 Hybrid Tour X shaft, TaylorMade P-7TW (5-PW), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 shafts.

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM8 (50, 56, 60 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 shafts.

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Scottie Scheffler’s wedges” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/21zNAD”]

PUTTER: TaylorMade Spider Tour X L-Neck prototype

BALL: Titleist Pro V1

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Scottie Scheffler’s golf ball” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/vNka7A”]

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

2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour, especially in signature events.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour, especially in signature events. Just ask this week’s winner, Scottie Scheffler.

The 27-year-old won the 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill in Orlando after a bogey-free 6-under 66 to claim his seventh PGA Tour victory at 15 under. For his efforts, Scheffler will take home the top prize of $4 million. Wyndham Clark finished runner-up at 10 under and earned $2.2 million. Shane Lowry also cleared seven figures in third place at 9 under and banked $1.4 million.

With $20 million up for grabs, check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned this week at the 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational.

Prize money payouts

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Scottie Scheffler -15 $4,000,000
2 Wyndham Clark -10 $2,200,000
3 Shane Lowry -9 $1,400,000
T4 Will Zalatoris -7 $920,000
T4 Russell Henley -7 $920,000
T6 Sahith Theegala -5 $730,000
T6 Brendon Todd -5 $730,000
T8 Byeong Hun An -4 $579,000
T8 Andrew Putnam -4 $579,000
T8 Emiliano Grillo -4 $579,000
T8 Max Homa -4 $579,000
T12 Nick Taylor -3 $389,667
T12 Brian Harman -3 $389,667
T12 Lee Hodges -3 $389,667
T12 Tom Hoge -3 $389,667
T12 Justin Thomas -3 $389,667
T12 Hideki Matsuyama -3 $389,667
T18 Cam Davis -2 $289,000
T18 Corey Conners -2 $289,000
T18 Sungjae Im -2 $289,000
T21 Seamus Power -1 $224,750
T21 Eric Cole -1 $224,750
T21 Rory McIlroy -1 $224,750
T21 Harris English -1 $224,750
T25 Patrick Rodgers E $162,800
T25 Xander Schauffele E $162,800
T25 Erik van Rooyen E $162,800
T25 Ludvig Aberg E $162,800
T25 Grayson Murray E $162,800
T30 Jordan Spieth 1 $123,500
T30 Mackenzie Hughes 1 $123,500
T30 Lucas Glover 1 $123,500
T30 Si Woo Kim 1 $123,500
T30 Webb Simpson 1 $123,500
T30 Sam Burns 1 $123,500
T36 Rickie Fowler 2 $88,375
T36 Jason Day 2 $88,375
T36 Patrick Cantlay 2 $88,375
T36 Keegan Bradley 2 $88,375
T36 Austin Eckroat 2 $88,375
T36 Viktor Hovland 2 $88,375
T36 Cameron Young 2 $88,375
T36 Justin Lower 2 $88,375
T44 Christiaan Bezuidenhout 3 $64,000
T44 Min Woo Lee 3 $64,000
T44 Chris Kirk 3 $64,000
T44 Stephan Jaeger 3 $64,000
T48 Nick Dunlap 4 $54,000
T48 Denny McCarthy 4 $54,000
T48 Taylor Moore 4 $54,000
51 C.T. Pan 5 $51,000
T52 Adam Hadwin 6 $49,000
T52 Matthieu Pavon 6 $49,000
T52 Tom Kim 6 $49,000
55 J.T. Poston 8 $47,000
56 Luke List 10 $46,000
T57 Jake Knapp 12 $44,500
T57 Sepp Straka 12 $44,500

[fanpower_carousel id=”178″]

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 category=1375]

Scottie Scheffler rolls hot putter to 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational win

“It would be borderline unfair if he starts putting really good”

ORLANDO – Scottie Scheffler punched a short-iron from 150 yards that climbed over the water and to the back of the 18th green and stopped 16 feet past the flag. Cheers from the grandstands and along the ropes for the gift the world No. 1 had presented to the spectators this week at the Arnold Palmer Invitational reverberated throughout as a chorus of “Scott-ie! Scott-ie!” broke out. Basking in the late-afternoon sunshine, Scheffler made the champion’s walk on Sunday with an insurmountable lead and raised his putter, the new club in his bag that has been under great scrutiny, in triumph for the way it shined brightly for him this week.

“That was a heckuva round of golf,” said Ireland’s Shane Lowry, who played alongside him in the final pairing.

Scheffler, who switched from a blade to mallet putter this week, led the field in Strokes Gained: Putting in the final round, shooting a bogey-free 66 at Bay Hill Club & Lodge to win in a rout. It was shades of Tiger Woods, who won a record eight times at Arnie’s Place. Seeing Scheffler leading the field in SG: Off-the-Tee, SG: Tee-to-Green and SG: Around the Green has become old hat for the 27-year-old Texan, but when he ranks as one of the best putters it’s not a fair fight. In Tiger fashion, Scheffler cleaned up on the par-5s, combining to play those 16 holes in a total of 12 under and he played his final 25 holes without a bogey to claim a five-shot win over Wyndham Clark (70) with a 72-hole total of 15-under 273.

It was the largest margin of victory at Arnie’s Place since Woods won by five in 2012, and marked the second time Scheffler has won this tournament in the last three years. In doing so, he notched his seventh career Tour title and his first official win since the Players Championship nearly a year ago. (He did win the unofficial Hero World Challenge in December.)

“It would be borderline unfair if he starts putting really good,” said Clark. “I never want to wish ill on anybody, but if he starts putting positive each week it’s going to be really hard to beat (him).”

Lowry, who finished third, echoed the sentiment.

“There’s probably only a couple of players in the world that can live with him playing like that. Not sure I’m one of them,” said Lowry (72). “I was obviously just disappointed I didn’t put any pressure on him early.”

The big pre-tournament news of the week was that Scheffler inserted a TaylorMade Spider Tour X mallet putter into the bag. He’d ranked 144th in SG: Putting entering the week (after ranking 162nd last season), and the struggle continued in the opening round despite the club change. According to stats man Rick Gehman, Scheffler lost more than 1.5 strokes putting in a round for the seventh time in his first 20 rounds this season. When a reporter broached him about the putter change, Scheffler declined to offer an explanation.

“You know, man, I really need to go get some work in, if that’s all right,” he said.

Much was made about the emergency putting session that Rory McIlroy received after the first round from his putting coach Brad Faxon, which lifted his putting performance nearly from worst-to-first the next day. Scheffler’s post-round session on Thursday made a world of difference too.

“When I got to the practice range after, the discussion was not what are we going to fix. It was how well that I did,” Scheffler explained. “And that all goes back to the process that we’re working on and it’s not results-based.”

On Friday, Scheffler posted 5-under 67 to join a record-setting six-way tie at the top of the leaderboard after 36 holes. The lead group was whittled to two – Scheffler and Lowry, a sponsor invite – after 54 holes but after being a bunched board of big names, the final round wasn’t much of a contest as Scheffler rolled in a 13-foot birdie at the first and never relinquished the lead. He lobbed a pitch to 7 feet at No. 6 for another birdie and wedged to 8 feet at No. 10 and hit another short iron to 6 feet at No. 11 to open up a commanding lead. At 15 his early raise of the putter followed by fist-pumping after drilling a 35-foot birdie putt into the heart of the hole was Tigeresque. Scheffler recorded his best putting round on Tour since the second round of the 2021 Shriners Children’s Open.

“It’s super impressive, but we all knew that he had this in him,” McIlroy said. “His ball striking is, honestly, on another level compared to everyone else right now. We knew if he started to hole putts, then this sort of stuff would happen.”

The win was especially meaningful for Ted Scott, who has been on Scheffler’s bag for all of his victories and called it his favorite one after seeing what he termed too much emphasis on Scheffler’s shortcomings with the putter and not enough celebration of his other skills. Faxon, for one, noted on NBC that “We’re examining (Scheffler) like he’s going to the doctor’s office.”

“The noise gets so loud it can distract you,” Scott said.

In his previous caddie role, Scott worked for Bubba Watson and he recalled how after winning the Masters in 2012, Watson struggled to handle his new-found attention and his game suffered. “It was so noisy,” Scott said.

Then, Watson settled down and in 2014 won the Masters again.

“The key for Scottie being at the top of his game is how do you deal with all the noise and play with what’s inside his heart. He’s really special,” Scott said. “Maybe now we can talk about the best golfer in the world and enjoy his skills. He’s going to miss some more putts but this guy can putt and we saw it today.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 category=1375]

Wyndham Clark absolved of rules violation at Arnold Palmer Invitational, but not everyone agrees

“I don’t need to see video evidence. I saw it live and I knew the ball moved.”

ORLANDO – Wyndham Clark finds himself in the thick of the hunt for the Arnold Palmer Invitational title on Sunday and also in the thick of a rules controversy.

Clark was tied for the lead playing the 18th hole of the third round on Saturday at Bay Hill Club & Lodge when he fanned his tee shot into the right rough. Clark punched out to the fairway, but in doing so he forcefully placed his club behind the ball several times, even having his caddie clean the face of the club before hitting his shot. Video evidence brought into question whether the ball moved, which would have resulted in a one-stroke penalty.

“He needed to be more careful,” said Luke Donald, serving as an analyst this week on NBC’s broadcast.

The network didn’t waste time addressing the matter, calling in PGA Tour rules official Mark Dusbabek, who told NBC’s Dan Hicks, “That makes my heart flutter as well.” Dusbabek did an admirable job breaking down the Rules of Golf regarding ball movement, which say, “If the ball only wobbles (sometimes referred to as oscillating) and stays on or returns to its original spot, the ball has not moved.”

“When I watch the tape, it looks like it comes back,” Dusbabek said.

As for the whether Clark, the reigning U.S. Open champion, tried to improve his lie, Dusbabek argued there wasn’t enough evidence to suggest that Clark had changed the conditions of the shot.

“A player is allowed to ground his club with the weight of the club against the ground. That’s basically what he’s doing right there,” he said, concluding, “I feel his ball didn’t move and he did nothing to affect his stroke.”

According to Golf Channel’s Todd Lewis, Clark confirmed that he had a conversation after the round with API’s chief referee Ken Tackett and that Scottie Scheffler, who played in the same pairing and signed Clark’s card, was involved in that discussion. Tackett told Lewis that the rules committee voted unanimously that Clark’s actions didn’t deserve to be penalized. Clark, who went on to make a bogey at 18 that dropped him back to 8 under and one stroke back of the lead heading into the final round after a 1-under 71, wasn’t asked about the potential rules infraction during his post-round press conference but Euro Sport tracked him down later.

“I’m not cheating or anything like that or trying to improve my lie,” Clark said. “Obviously they zoom in, and it makes it look worse. We all talked about it and Scottie and the rules official didn’t think it moved, so fortunately that didn’t happen.”

While stating that he wasn’t claiming there was intent on Clark’s part, Golf Channel’s Brandel Chamblee disagreed with the ruling, and during the post-game show Golf Channel drew a circle around the the golf ball to indicate that it had in fact moved.

“By the way, I don’t need to see video evidence. I saw it live and I knew the ball moved,” Chamblee said. “Why was he putting his club into the ground so forcibly. Why he did that is beyond me?”

“Boy, that was a little sketchy, if you ask me,” Golf Channel’s Mark Rolfing concurred. 

“You begin to wonder, what does a Tour player have to do to get a penalty?” Chamblee added. “I think he should have been penalized.”

2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational Sunday tee times, how to watch PGA Tour at Bay Hill

Someone is taking home $3.6 million on Sunday.

There’s a familiar name on top of the leaderboard heading into the final round of the 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational, no matter how you look at it.

One of the two names tied on top is Scottie Scheffler, world No. 1 and winner at Bay Hill Club & Lodge in Orlando, Florida, back in 2022. The other name is Shane Lowry, who has held at least a share of the lead after each of the first three rounds this year.

The duo sits at 9 under while Wyndham Clark, winner of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am earlier this season, is solo third at 7 under. If Clark were to win, he would join Tiger Woods as the only player to win at Pebble Beach and Bay Hill in the same season.

Bay Hill, which has been the site of the Tour event since 1979, ranks No. 5 in Florida on Golfweek’s Best list of public-access layouts in each state. It also ties for No. 191 on Golfweek’s Best list of all modern courses in the U.S., and it ties for No. 58 on the list of all resort courses in the U.S.

The purse at the API is $20 million with $3.6 million going to the winner. The winner will also receive 700 FedEx Cup points.

Arnold Palmer: Best photos from Bay Hill

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the final round of the 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational. All times listed are ET.

Sunday tee times

1st tee

Tee time Players
8:40 a.m.
Nick Dunlap, Jake Knapp
8:50 a.m.
Jordan Spieth, Sepp Straka
9 a.m.
J.T. Poston, Adam Hadwin
9:10 a.m.
Luke List, C.T. Pan
9:20 a.m.
Xander Schauffele, Min Woo Lee
9:30 a.m.
Denny McCarthy, Matthieu Pavon
9:40 a.m.
Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Patrick Rodgers
9:50 a.m.
Lucas Glover, Rickie Fowler
10:05 a.m.
Erik van Rooyen, Jason Day
10:15 a.m.
Tom Kim, Mackenzie Hughes
10:25 a.m.
Cam Davis, Byeong Hun An
10:35 a.m.
Grayson Murray, Taylor Moore
10:45 a.m.
Patrick Cantlay, Si Woo Kim
10:55 a.m.
Ludvig Aberg, Keegan Bradley
11:05 a.m.
Sahith Theegala, Stephan Jaeger
11:15 a.m.
Austin Eckroat, Viktor Hovland
11:30 a.m.
Seamus Power, Chris Kirk
11:40 a.m.
Nick Taylor, Brian Harman
11:50 a.m.
Cameron Young, Andrew Putnam
12 p.m.
Emiliano Grillo, Webb Simpson
12:10 p.m.
Lee Hodges, Brendon Todd
12:20 p.m.
Justin Thomas, Eric Cole
12:30 p.m.
Corey Conners, Sungjae Im
12:40 p.m.
Justin Lower, Tom Hoge
12:55 p.m.
Sam Burns, Max Homa
1:05 p.m.
Harris English, Rory McIlroy
1:15 p.m.
Russell Henley, Hideki Matsuyama
1:25 p.m.
Wyndham Clark, Will Zalatoris
1:35 p.m.
Scottie Scheffler, Shane Lowry

How to watch, listen

ESPN+ is the exclusive home of PGA Tour Live. You can also watch the Arnold Palmer Invitational on Golf Channel free on Fubo. All times ET.

Sunday, March 10

Golf Channel/Peacock: 12:30-2:30 p.m.

NBC: 2:30-6 p.m.

Sirius XM: 1-6 p.m

ESPN+: 8 a.m.-6 p.m

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 category=1375]

Lynch: Rory McIlroy wants a more cutthroat PGA Tour. So, um, who’s gonna cut the GOAT’s throat?

“I’m all for making it more cutthroat, more competitive.”

On Friday evening, six men—five of them major champions—were tied for the lead at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, so it must have been sobering for them to see their impressive performances generate less buzz than news that Tiger Woods will be taking another week off work.

That coverage gap can’t be attributed only to the click-thirsty herd mentality of golf media. It’s a reminder of Woods’ transcendent stature—he’s more newsworthy on his couch than most guys are on the leaderboard. But the current and future status of Woods also spotlights the PGA Tour’s unresolved identity crisis: is it a ruthlessly competitive sports league, or is it an entertainment product?

Rory McIlroy was asked Friday whether he has misgivings about there being just 69 players in the field at the API. He does not. “I’m all for making it more cutthroat, more competitive,” he said. “Probably won’t be very popular for saying this, but I’m all for less players and less Tour cards, and the best of the best.”

It’s a defensible argument. The Tour has long operated with the sole objective of creating playing opportunities for members, which in practice means too many tournaments paying too much money to too many journeymen for too little impact. But a desire for a more competitively focused and streamlined Tour—a view McIlroy is far from alone in holding among top players—is incompatible with eligibility carve-outs for sentimental favorites. Like Woods. But who is going to cut the GOAT’s throat? Who will tell fans and sponsors that Tiger hasn’t earned a spot?

API: Rory McIlroy cuts corner, drives 401-yard par-4 10th green at Bay Hill

This is Woods’ last year of eligibility for the Players Championship, which he is skipping. He has no eligibility for signature events, including the Arnold Palmer Invitational, which he has won eight times. Had he signaled a desire to compete at Bay Hill, there’s no doubt he would have received one of the sponsor exemptions not already donated to Adam Scott (a Policy Board member who has had three straight free passes into lucrative events he wasn’t otherwise qualified for). And not a single player would have questioned that call, despite Woods being five years removed from his last victory, which was also his last top-10 finish.

So if the PGA Tour is to be cutthroat, to place more emphasis on competitive relevance, where is the line to be drawn by the blade? How long is the grace period before a struggling player is consigned to the lower decks and told to fight his way back up? Or is popularity sufficient to bypass any performance requirements?

Woods draws more attention to an event by WD’ing on Thursday than most players do by winning on Sunday. Yet in a cutthroat sport where form is the only metric that counts, he is yesterday’s man. In an entertainment product, however, he remains tomorrow’s hope. Woods is hardly the only player whose form is irrelevant when it comes to adding value to the Tour’s product. Jordan Spieth and Rickie Fowler had four-year win droughts, with only sporadic appearances on leaderboards, but both continued to enhance the tournaments they graced. If McIlroy were to experience a similar slump, he’d continue to be good for business, even if his scores aren’t good.

Which is to say there’s a balance to be struck: be cutthroat for players, be entertaining for fans who want their favorites, and be conscious of the many constituencies who have valid commercial concerns that might be impacted by reductions in the numbers of events or players (charitable beneficiaries, operators who need full fields to maximize the window for concession sales, broadcasters who need to show a lot of action, host communities that have goals untied to the global ambitions of players). Regardless of whether the PGA Tour thinks itself a cutthroat league or an entertainment product, it is first and foremost a business.

McIlroy’s comments will hit a nerve with rank and file Tour members who already feel marginalized—a culture shock for those accustomed to an organization run on creating opportunities to them to play. But if there’s a reckoning to be had on how much the top guys should be compensated, then it ought to extend all the way down the food chain. How much is too much for too little? The average prize money won on the PGA Tour last season was $2,361,908. The 100th best player on Tour by earnings was Nate Lashley. He made $1,749,031 from 32 starts with three top-10 finishes. By comparison, the 100th earning player on the ATP tennis tour made $735,698. That’s no rap on Lashley. He’s grinding and making a nice living, but he’s not making an impact to the Tour’s business, and there are dozens of other Lashleys doing the same.

Perhaps there are too many players in the field most weeks (but not this week), too many tournaments, too many players who are exempt on the circuit, but these aren’t simple issues for the Tour to resolve. Elite players want fewer snouts in the trough. Journeymen want to keep the jobs they’ve earned under established rules. Sponsors have wildly varying ideas of what constitutes an ideal event for them. And fans want to be entertained by stars (and uncompetitive legends), while leaving open the possibility of being charmed by a Cinderella story (or a shock comeback by the aforementioned uncompetitive legends). In navigating this, the Tour will need to wield the blade carefully to ensure that it doesn’t cut its own throat.

Watch: Rory McIlroy cuts corner, drives 401-yard par-4 10th green at Bay Hill

Send it, Rory.

Rory McIlroy with his driver is perhaps the most lethal combo in golf.

And on Saturday, we again got to witness the world No. 2 pull off an incredible shot with the big stick. McIlroy drove the par-4 10th green during the third round, the ball coming to rest on the front of the putting surface while the group in front was still finishing the hole.

How McIlroy did this? The hole is a dogleg right, but over the years as players have gotten longer, more and more have been cutting the corner and going over houses to get themselves closer to the elevated green, usually landing within 100 yards on the fairway or rough.

Well, McIlroy went further right than likely anyone ever has. And the result? Well, watch here:

McIlroy is the first player to drive the green in the ShotLink era (since 2003). And there’s a good chance he’s the first to drive the green ever.

He said he had never tried to drive it, either.

“No, but I wasn’t as long as I am now,” McIlroy said. “I’m definitely a good few yards longer over the last couple of years than I have been in the past. I thought if I got it in one of the two front traps that would be a good leave to hit something up the green, but, yeah, I wasn’t trying to hit it on the green, but it was nice to walk up and see it on there.”

The tee shot traveled 365 yards, landing on the front of the green. With a back right pin, he was able to two putt for birdie.

2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational
The line Rory McIlroy took on the par-4 10th hole. (Photo: PGA Tour)

What a shot.

The sixth hole at Bay Hill claimed another victim Saturday, this time Jake Knapp making 12

The par-5 sixth hole at Bay Hill spares no victims.

The par-5 sixth hole at Bay Hill Club & Lodge in Orlando, Florida, spares no victims.

On Friday, it was Tommy Fleetwood falling to the famous hole that wraps around a lake, carding a 10 and resulting in him missing a weekend tee time.

The hole claimed another player on Saturday: recent PGA Tour winner Jake Knapp.

The smooth-swinging Knapp stepped to the tee and blasted his first two balls in the water, and his third didn’t find the water but was still too far right and went out of bounds. On his fourth tee shot, he finally put one in play, but it took him three more shots to get on the green.

API: Best photos from Bay Hill

Two putts later, he was in for a 12. Yikes.

Jake Knapp’s shot tracer on the par-5 sixth hole at Bay Hill. (Photo: PGA Tour)

Knapp went from even on the day to 7 over in the span of one hole. Fortunately for Knapp, his 12 isn’t even close to the highest score on the hole. John Daly famously had an 18 in 1998.

Welcome to Bay Hill, rookie.