Photos: Inside the merchandise shop at the PGA Tour’s World Wide Technology Championship

The pro shop at Diamante’s El Cardonal is selling World Wide Technology Championship merchandise this week.

LOS CABOS, Mexico —The PGA Tour visits the southernmost tip of the Baja California Peninsula, where the Sea of Cortez meets the Pacific Ocean. The El Cardonal course at Diamante, site of this week’s World Wide Technology Championship, was designed by Tiger Woods, and it also is the site of The Woods: Cabo, his upscale, farm-to-table restaurant.

The pro shop at Diamante’s El Cardonal is selling World Wide Technology Championship merchandise this week. Surprisingly, no Sun Day Red gear in the shop but Straight Down, IBKUL, Fairway & Greens, Levelwear, Pukka and Kenny Powers provide options.

My favorite shirt from last year is back and after running out on Wednesday, I’m happy to report this time they were better prepared.

Here’s a look at some of the best merchandise at the 2024 World Wide Technology Championship.

Erik van Rooyen continues to pay tribute to college teammate who died of cancer shortly after WWTC victory

“Yeah, that win last year meant so much.”

LOS CABOS, Mexico – Erik van Rooyen glanced at the oversized photo of him hanging in the back of the media center. There he is, clenching both fists and letting loose a guttural cry of celebration after holing a 20-foot eagle putt on the final hole to win the 2023 World Wide Technology Championship. Van Rooyen smiled and the memory of his heartwarming victory a year ago came rushing back.

“It’s pretty scary, man. Yeah, that’s a lot of emotion in a short space of time,” he said during his Tuesday press conference to kick off festivities at the PGA Tour FedEx Cup Fall event. “I think, you know, I pour my heart and soul into this sport like a lot of us do. Yeah, that win last year meant so much.”

Van Rooyen stormed home in 8-under 28 at the course Tiger Woods designed and erased a two-stroke deficit with three holes to play to win for the second time on the PGA Tour and do it for his terminally-ill friend. Moments later, van Rooyen hugged his caddie and former college teammate Alex Gaugert and both men broke into tears. Only a few days earlier, their fellow teammate at the University of Minnesota, Jon Trasamar, had informed them his cancer had returned and spread throughout his body. It was only a matter of time before his cancer fight would be over. Van Rooyen and Trasamar were college roommates for three years, teaming to win the 2014 Big 10 Championship, and Trasamar was van Rooyen’s best man in his wedding.

“He was like a brother to me,” said van Rooyen, who scribbled the initials “JT” on his ball all week.

After the win, van Rooyen canceled their flight to the next tournament in Bermuda and he and Gaugert flew home the next day and visited with their pal one last time. Trasamar died just days later on Nov. 11 from stage 4 melanoma at age 33.

Asked what he learned from his remarkable back-nine run to the winner’s circle, van Rooyen said, “I think I learned that I’m never quite out of it. I was four back going into the back nine. I know for a fact my mom and dad went to sleep when that happened in South Africa. They didn’t have faith. Yeah, I think regardless of how many I’m back, I think I’m always within a shot, so that gives me a ton of confidence.”

He added: “I’ve spoken about Jon a lot, but another thing I learned was even though this game means so much to me, it doesn’t really matter at the end of the day. So there’s much bigger things in life and that’s a lesson I’ve carried with me these last 12 months.”

Van Rooyen and his friends have established a scholarship in his name at the University of Minnesota.

This marks the first time van Rooyen has been able to defend a tournament he has won as a professional. He noted he arrived back a better player than a year ago when he was struggling to maintain his Tour card. Van Rooyen entered the week at No. 125 in the point standings and on the cusp of losing his playing privileges as his two-year exemption from winning the Barracuda Championship was set to expire. Van Rooyen sits at No. 67 in the point standings this season and called it his most consistent season. His game has improved across the board since he started working with swing instructor Sean Foley last year, and he’s particularly proud of the strides he’s made with his short game, which always had been a weakness.

Can the stars align for a repeat victory? Following his win at the SAS Championship last month, PGA Tour Champions player Jerry Kelly paid tribute to Trasamar. (Kelly’s niece Ali is Trasamar’s widow.) Van Rooyen may face a stouter test, especially on Thursday when the wind is forecasted to gust to more than 20 miles per hour, but he’s confident he can win another for JT.

“It came down to putting,” van Rooyen said of his victory a year ago. “If we get a bit of wind, it might be a different story this week, but if not, I’m a great putter, so I think all in all the course sets up beautifully for me.”

Cameron Young withdraws from 2024 World Wide Technology Championship

A reason for Young’s withdrawal wasn’t listed, and he has been replaced in the field by  42-year-old Sean O’Hair.

Cameron Young, one of the few big names in this week’s rank-and-file field, has withdrawn from the 2024 World Wide Technology Championship at El Cardonal at Diamante Cabo San Lucas in Los Cabos, Mexico.

Young, 27, is still looking for his first PGA Tour win and was one of the betting favorites south of the border, listed at 22/1 (+2200). His last Tour start came at the BMW Championship during the FedEx Cup Playoffs in August. He finished in a tie for 43rd.

A reason for Young’s withdrawal wasn’t listed, and he has been replaced in the field by 42-year-old Sean O’Hair.

The first round gets underway on Thursday at 8:30 a.m. ET. This week’s winner will go home with $1.296 million of the $7.2 million purse and 500 FedEx Cup points.

WWTC: Picks to win, odds | Tournament hub

2024 World Wide Technology Championship Thursday tee times, PGA Tour pairings and how to watch

The purse at the World Wide Technology Championship is $7.2 million with $1.296 million going to the winner.

The final stretch of the 2024 PGA Tour season is here.

The last three events of the 2024 season will be contested over the next three weeks, and it begins Thursday at the World Wide Technology Championship in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. El Cardonal at Diamante, designed by Tiger Woods, is the host course, his first design to be used for a PGA Tour event.

Erik van Rooyen is the defending champion.

The purse at the World Wide Technology Championship is $7.2 million with $1.296 million going to the winner. The winner will also receive 500 FedEx Cup points.

WWTC: Leaderboard | Odds, picks

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the first round of the 2024 World Wide Technology Championship. All times listed are MT.

Thursday tee times

Time (ET) Tee Player
8:30 a.m. 1 Martin Laird, Carl Yuan, David Skinns
8:30 a.m. 10 Garrick Higgo, Chandler Phillips, Hayden Springer
8:41 a.m. 1 Aaron Baddeley, Taylor Montgomery, Carson Young
8:41 a.m. 10 Zac Blair, Josh Teater, Joseph Bramlett
8:52 a.m. 1 Kevin Tway, Sam Ryder, Pierceson Coody
8:52 a.m. 10 Lanto Griffin, David Lipsky, Matti Schmid
9:03 a.m. 1 Chez Reavie, J.J. Spaun, Adam Schenk
9:03 a.m. 10 Nico Echavarria, Jhonattan Vegas, Erik van Rooyen
9:14 a.m. 1 Luke List, Ryan Brehm, Matt Kuchar
9:14 a.m. 10 Patton Kizzire, Lucas Glover, Max Greyserman
9:25 a.m. 1 Camilo Villegas, Adam Svensson, Keith Mitchell
9:25 a.m. 10 Beau Hossler, Robby Shelton, Dylan Wu
9:36 a.m. 1 Troy Merritt, S.Y. Noh, Luke Donald
9:36 a.m. 10 Tyler Duncan, Hayden Buckley, Harry Higgs
9:47 a.m. 1 Brandon Wu, Vince Whaley, Ben Taylor
9:47 a.m. 10 Ryan Palmer, Wesley Bryan, Billy Andrade
9:58 a.m. 1 Rafael Campos, Trace Crowe, Isidro Benitez
9:58 a.m. 10 Adrien Dumont de Chassart, Norman Xiong, Kevin Dougherty
10:09 a.m. 1 Tom Whitney, Wilson Furr, Dylan Brack (a)
10:09 a.m. 10 Erik Barnes, Mark Geddes, Austin Hitt
1:05 p.m. 1 Danny Willett, Tim Wilkinson, Rico Hoey
1:05 p.m. 10 Nate Lashley, Patrick Fishburn, Jacob Bridgeman
1:16 p.m. 1 Kevin Streelman, Chesson Hadley, Cody Gribble
1:16 p.m. 10 Michael Kim, Sam Stevens, Will Gordon
1:27 p.m. 1 Martin Trainer, Austin Cook, Charley Hoffman
1:27 p.m. 10 Kevin Chappell, Justin Lower, Tyson Alexander
1:38 p.m. 1 Harry Hall, Austin Eckroat, Sean O’Hair
1:38 p.m. 10 Trey Mullinax, K.H. Lee, Chad Ramey
1:49 p.m. 1 Tom Hoge, Harris English, Daniel Berger
1:49 p.m. 10 Nick Hardy, Taylor Moore, Cameron Champ
2:00 p.m. 1 Ryan Moore, Henrik Norlander, Ben Griffin
2:00 p.m. 10 Maverick McNealy, Kelly Kraft, Alex Smalley
2:11 p.m. 1 Matt NeSmith, Justin Suh, Callum Tarren
2:11 p.m. 10 Scott Piercy, Patrick Rodgers, Roger Sloan
2:22 p.m. 1 Joel Dahmen, Doug Ghim, S.H. Kim
2:22 p.m. 10 Blaine Hale, Jr., Zach Bauchou, Ryan Gerard
2:33 p.m. 1 Raul Pereda, Santiago de la Fuente, Omar Morales (a)
2:33 p.m. 10 Paul Barjon, Ryan McCormick, William Moll
2:44 p.m. 1 Austin Smotherman, Joe Highsmith, Neal Shipley
2:44 p.m. 10 Alejandro Tosti, Andrew Walker, Emilio Gonzalez

How to watch, listen

ESPN+ is the exclusive home of PGA Tour Live. You can also watch the World Wide Technology Championship on Golf Channel free on Fubo. All times ET.

Thursday, Nov. 7

Golf Channel: 2-5 p.m.

Sirius XM: 11 a.m.-5 p.m

Friday, Nov. 8

Golf Channel: 2-5 p.m.

Sirius XM: 11 a.m.-5 p.m.

Saturday, Nov. 9

Golf Channel: 2-5 p.m.

Sirius XM: 12-5 p.m.

Sunday, Nov. 10

Golf Channel: 2-5 p.m.

Sirius XM: 12-5 p.m.

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World Wide Technology Championship 2024 odds, course history and picks to win

Let’s get a winner south of the border.

The PGA Tour is back in action this week for the World Wide Technology Championship south of the border. The Tiger Woods-designed El Cardonal at Diamante Cabo San Lucas in Los Cabos, Mexico, once again plays host after making its Tour debut in 2023.

Cameron Young — still looking for his first win — headlines the field and will be joined by defending champion Erik van Rooyen, Lucas Glover, Harris English, Keith Mitchell, Maverick McNealy and Beau Hossler, among others. Zozo Championship winner Nico Echavarria — finished T-31 at El Cardonal last year — will also tee it up Thursday.

This week’s winner will go home with $1.296 million of the $7.2 million purse, as well as 500 FedEx Cup points.

More: Enjoy golf on Cabo time at Cove Club, Diamante in Cabo San Lucas

Now, let’s jump into our betting preview for the World Wide Technology Championship.

Golf course

El Cardonal at Diamante Cabo San Lucas | Par 72 | 7,452 yards

2023 World Wide Technology Championship
The 11th green at El Cardonal for the 2023 World Wide Technology Championship in Cabo San Lucas, Baja California Sur, Mexico. (Photo: Hector Vivas/Getty Images)

Things to keep in mind

  • Fairways and greens are extremely easy to hit at this golf course. This tournament will come down to proximity to the hole and who has the hot flat-stick.
  • van Rooyen won at 27 under last year, and the weather for the week looks good. Expect a similar winning score and target players who make a lot of birdies.
  • Three stats we’ll prioritize: Birdie percentage, proximity from the fairway and Strokes Gained: Putting.

World Wide Technology Championship odds

Player Odds Player Odds
Max Greyserman (+1600) Lucas Glover (+2800)
Doug Ghim (+2200) Sam Stevens (+3000)
Cameron Young (+2200) Matt Kuchar (+3000)
Matti Schmid (+2200) Keith Mitchell (+3000)
Harris English (+2500) Jhonattan Vegas (+3000)
Beau Hossler (+2500) Erik van Rooyen (+3500)
J.J. Spaun (+2800) Tom Hoge (+3500)
Harry Hall (+2800) Taylor Moore (+3500)
Ben Griffin (+2800) Daniel Berger (+4000)
Maverick McNealy (+2800) Austin Eckroat (+4000)

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World Wide Technology Championship picks to win

Cameron Young (20/1)

2024 Rocket Mortgage Classic
Cameron Young of the United States plays a shot from the 14th tee during a practice round prior to the Rocket Mortgage Classic at Detroit Golf Club on June 26, 2024, in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Raj Mehta/Getty Images)

Analysis: Young has burned me more times than I’d like to remember, but this spot sets up so well for him. Not many players on Tour can make birdies in bunches as well as Young does, just look at the 59 he posted earlier this season at the Travelers. Plus, he’s the one big name in this rank-and-file field. Hopefully, he can take advantage of that and grab his first Tour win.

Update: Young has withdrawn from the event.

Keith Mitchell (30/1)

Keith Mitchell of the United States reacts to his putt on the 17th green during the third round of the Sanderson Farms Championship 2024 at the Country Club of Jackson on October 5, 2024, in Jackson, Mississippi. (Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images)

Analysis: This pick makes me a little nervous thanks to Mitchell’s case of the Sunday Scaries, but I’m rolling with him anyway. This season, Mitchell ranks T-4 in proximity from the fairway and second in birdie average, only behind world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler. And yes, he’s missed two cuts in a row. However, he played some great golf at the Sanderson Farms Championship in early October, where he finished T-3 after being the 54-hole leader.

Michael Kim (45/1)

2024 Shriners Children's Open
Michael Kim acknowledges the crowd on the 18th hole during the final round of the 2024 Shriners Children’s Open at TPC Summerlin. (David Becker/Getty Images)

Analysis: Kim is known by most fans for his Twitter/X presence, but I like this spot for the 31-year-old. He’s fresh off a T-5 finish at the Shriners Children’s Open, and he tied for 23rd at El Cardonal in 2023. This season, Kim ranks 12th in proximity from the fairway and sixth in birdie average. All signs point to the Cal product having a nice week in Mexico.

Patton Kizzire (60/1)

Patton Kizzire of the United States lines up his putt on the third hole during the third round of the Procore Championship 2024 at Silverado Resort on Sept. 14, 2024, in Napa, California. (Photo by Eakin Howard/Getty Images)

Analysis: Kizzire is coming off a missed cut at the Shriners Children’s Open in Las Vegas, but has played some great golf during the FedEx Cup Fall, including a win at the Procore Championship and a T-11 finish at the Sanderson Farms Championship. Like Mitchell, Kizzire thrives in two of our key categories for the week. He’s T-4 in proximity from the fairway and fifth in birdie average. Last season, Kizzire finished T-15 at this event.

Teen Monday qualifies into first PGA Tour event at course designed by his idol, Tiger Woods

Dylan Brack continues to do things to impress his childhood idol, Tiger Woods.

Dylan Brack continues to do things to impress his childhood idol, Tiger Woods.

Brack, an 18-year-old from Riverside, California, shot 8-under 64 at Palmilla Golf Club in San Jose del Cabo, Mexico, at the Monday qualifier for the World Wide Technology Championship. He’ll make his PGA Tour debut this week at El Cardonal at Diamante in Los Cabos, the first course designed by Woods to hold a Tour event.

Brack, who started swinging with a plastic toy set at 2 ½ and joined the First Tee – Greater Pasadena at age 4 ½, participated in the TGR Learning Lab’s Player Development Program from age 7 to 12. He also won the inaugural TGR JR Invitational in 2022.

On his personal web site, Brack explained at a young age his parents purchased a right-handed putter and clubs and cut them down since they were still too big for him. But his parents noticed he would regularly turn the clubs around to imitate the pros he’d see on TV. Much like Phil. Mickelson before him, he began playing left-handed even though he’s right-handed.

Brack, who is half-Japanese and half-English, also has some family history in the game. His great-grandfather Yutaka “James” Ihira was a champion golfer in Hawaii, and he counts Tadd Fujikawa as a distant relative.

For a young golfer who has had his share of ties to Tiger, Brack adds another to list as he makes his Tour debut as an amateur.

Ryan Gerard, who earned his Tour card for next season via the Korn Ferry Tour money list, shot 65 along with Zach Bauchou, and William Moll nailed down the final berth in the field by winning a 3-for-1 playoff after posting 66.

2024 World Wide Technology Championship: Prize money, TV coverage, who’s in the field and more

The PGA Tour is on to Mexico.

After a week off, the PGA Tour’s is back for a three-event stretch to conclude its 2024 season.

The 2024 World Wide Technology Championship gets underway Thursday in Mexico, and it’s the second year the event has been at Tiger Woods’ El Cardonal at Diamante in Cabo San Lucas. In a bunker on the first hole is a plaque to “commemorate” the inaugural tee shot hit by Woods in December of 2014.

The WWTC is the sixth PGA Tour event of eight in the fall slate. After this week, the Tour heads to Bermuda before the season-ending RSM Classic, the final chance for players to secure their spots in the top 125.

From TV coverage to field information and prize money, here’s everything you need to know about the 2024 World Wide Technology Championship.

World Wide Technology Championship course information

El Cardonal at Diamante in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico is a par-72 layout measuring 7,452 yards. Tiger Woods was the architect. This will be the second time the tournament is held at El Cardonal.

World Wide Technology Championship purse, prize money

The purse at the 2024 Zozo Championship is $7.2 million with a first-place prize of $1.296 million. Five of the eight Fall series events have smaller purses from a year ago, including the WWTC, which is down $1 million.

World Wide Technology Championship TV coverage

Thursday, Nov. 7: 2-5 p.m. ET (Golf Channel)
Friday, Nov. 8: 2-5 p.m. ET (Golf Channel)
Saturday, Nov. 9: 2-5 p.m. ET (Golf Channel)
Sunday, Nov. 10: 2-5 p.m. ET (Golf Channel)

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World Wide Technology Championship field

The inaugural tournament at the course a year ago saw Erik van Rooyen hoist the trophy. Luke Donald, Keith Mitchell and Cameron Young are amongst the notables teeing it up in Mexico.

Field set for 2024 World Wide Technology at Tiger Woods’ course in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico

The tournament is the third-to-last event on the FedEx Cup Fall series.

We may not see him there but we’ll see his handiwork on full display.

The Tiger Woods-designed El Cardonal at Diamante Cabo San Lucas will be the stage for the PGA Tour’s World Wide Technology for a second time.

The tournament, set for Nov. 7-10, is the third-to-last event on the FedEx Cup Fall series, as many golfers continue to chase status for 2025. El Cardonal is a par 72 that will play 7,452 yards. It ranks 26th on the Golfweek’s Best 2024 list of top golf courses in Mexico, the Caribbean, the Atlantic islands and Central America.

The inaugural tournament at the course a year ago saw Erik van Rooyen hoist the trophy. He hasn’t won since but a strong week could boost him from the No. 67 spot he’s currently in. Golfers who finish 51-60 qualify for the first two signature events in 2025, the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-am and the Genesis Invitational.

The field of 120:

  • Tyson Alexander
  • Billy Andrade
  • Aaron Baddeley
  • Paul Barjon
  • Erik Barnes
  • Isidro Benitez
  • Daniel Berger
  • Zac Blair
  • Joseph Bramlett
  • Ryan Brehm
  • Jacob Bridgeman
  • Wesley Bryan
  • Hayden Buckley
  • Rafael Campos
  • Bud Cauley
  • Cameron Champ
  • Kevin Chappell
  • Pierceson Coody
  • Trace Crowe
  • Joel Dahmen
  • Santiago de la Fuente
  • Luke Donald
  • Kevin Dougherty
  • Adrien Dumont de Chassart
  • Tyler Duncan
  • Nico Echavarria
  • Austin Eckroat
  • Harris English
  • Patrick Fishburn
  • Wilson Furr
  • Mark Geddes
  • Doug Ghim
  • Lucas Glover
  • Emilio Gonzalez
  • Will Gordon
  • Max Greyserman
  • Ben Griffin
  • Lanto Griffin
  • Chesson Hadley
  • Blaine Hale, Jr.
  • Harry Hall
  • Nick Hardy
  • Garrick Higgo
  • Harry Higgs
  • Joe Highsmith
  • Austin Hitt
  • Rico Hoey
  • Charley Hoffman
  • Tom Hoge
  • J.B. Holmes
  • Beau Hossler
  • Michael Kim
  • S.H. Kim
  • Patton Kizzire
  • Kelly Kraft
  • Matt Kuchar
  • Martin Laird
  • Nate Lashley
  • K.H. Lee
  • David Lipsky
  • Luke List
  • Justin Lower
  • Ryan McCormick
  • Maverick McNealy
  • Troy Merritt
  • Keith Mitchell
  • Taylor Montgomery
  • Ryan Moore
  • Taylor Moore
  • Omar Morales
  • Trey Mullinax
  • Matt NeSmith
  • Henrik Norlander
  • Ryan Palmer
  • Raul Pereda
  • Chandler Phillips
  • Scott Piercy
  • Chad Ramey
  • Chez Reavie
  • Patrick Rodgers
  • Sam Ryder
  • Adam Schenk
  • Matti Schmid
  • Robby Shelton
  • Neal Shipley
  • Greyson Sigg
  • David Skinns
  • Roger Sloan
  • Alex Smalley
  • Austin Smotherman
  • J.J. Spaun
  • Hayden Springer
  • Sam Stevens
  • Kevin Streelman
  • Justin Suh
  • Adam Svensson
  • Callum Tarren
  • Ben Taylor
  • Josh Teater
  • Alejandro Tosti
  • Martin Trainer
  • Kevin Tway
  • Erik van Rooyen
  • Jhonattan Vegas
  • Camilo Villegas
  • Andrew Walker
  • Vince Whaley
  • Tom Whitney
  • Tim Wilkinson
  • Danny Willett
  • Brandon Wu
  • Dylan Wu
  • Norman Xiong
  • Cameron Young
  • Carson Young
  • Carl Yuan

A total of 12 sponsor exemptions were doled out to Billy Andrade, Isidro Benitez, Santiago de la Fuente, Luke Donald, Emilio Gonzalez, Harry Higgs, Austin Hitt, Omar Morales, Ryan Palmer, Scott Piercy, Neal Shipley, and Andrew Walker.

Stanford’s Michael Thorbjornsen wins Cabo Collegiate, earns PGA Tour exemption

Thor is back.

Michael Thorbjornsen missed almost half a year because of a back injury, including not being able to compete in the U.S. Amateur and the Walker Cup last summer.

He returned this spring for Stanford, and it was a struggle in his first start, a T-71 at the Amer Ari. Then he looked more like the Thor college golf fans have come to know with a T-17 finish at The Prestige.

It’s his latest victory that’s proves he’s back.

Thorbjornsen won the Cabo Collegiate on Tuesday at Twin Dolphin Club in Mexico. He shot 10-under 203 for the victory, beating Ole Miss’ Michael La Sasso by a shot for the title. La Sasso shot 7 under in the final round, including a 5-under mark over his last five holes, to finish runner-up.

Stanford’s Michael Thorbjornsen at the 2024 Cabo Collegiate. (Photo: Stanford Athletics)

Meanwhile, for Thorbjornsen, the victory earned him a sponsor exemption into the PGA Tour’s World Wide Technology Championship, set for Nov. 7-10 at El Cardonal at Diamante in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico.

It’s also an important win in terms of the PGA Tour University standings. Last week, for the first time since the Class of 2024 rankings were released, Thorbjornsen lost his top position to Georgia Tech’s Christo Lamprecht. Now, it’s likely Thorbjornsen slides back into the top spot with only a couple of months left in the season.

The player atop the PGA Tour U standings at the end of the year will earn a PGA Tour card. Nos. 2-5 in the standings will get Korn Ferry Tour status.

Arizona State (19 under) won the team competition by nine shots, bouncing back from its 14th-place finish last week. Texas Tech (10 under) and Arkansas (2 under) were the only other teams to finish under par. Defending champion Vanderbilt placed fourth at 1 over.

ASU’s Preston Summerhays finished third at 8 under while Wenyi Ding and Josele Ballester tied for 10th at 3 under.