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

The purse at the API is $20 million with $3.6 million going to the winner.

It’s time for the latest signature event on the PGA Tour schedule.

The 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational gets underway Thursday at Bay Hill in Orlando. Kurt Kitayama is the defending champion, but he’ll have to defend his title against most of the top players in the world, like No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, No. 2 Rory McIlroy and numerous others.

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: Odds, picks

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

Thursday tee times

1st tee

Tee time Players
7:45 a.m. Nick Dunlap
7:55 a.m.
C.T. Pan, Stephan Jaeger
8:05 a.m.
Luke List, Justin Lower
8:15 a.m.
Will Zalatoris, Min Woo Lee
8:25 a.m.
Mackenzie Hughes, Adam Schenk
8:35 a.m.
Nick Taylor, Sepp Straka
8:45 a.m.
Keegan Bradley, Justin Rose
8:55 a.m.
Jason Day, Tom Hoge
9:05 a.m.
Taylor Moore, Patrick Rodgers
9:20 a.m.
Hideki Matsuyama, Russell Henley
9:30 a.m.
Brendon Todd, Andrew Putnam
9:40 a.m.
Chris Kirk, Lee Hodges
9:50 a.m.
Brian Harman, J.T. Poston
10 a.m.
Wyndham Clark, Tom Kim
10:10 a.m.
Sam Burns, Scottie Scheffler
10:20 a.m.
Viktor Hovland, Rickie Fowler
10:30 a.m.
Austin Eckroat, Matthieu Pavon
10:40 a.m.
Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Nicolai Hojgaard
10:55 a.m.
David Ford, Webb Simpson
11:05 a.m.
Grayson Murray, Erik van Rooyen
11:15 a.m.
Jake Knapp, Justin Thomas
11:25 a.m.
Corey Conners, Eric Cole
11:35 a.m.
Cam Davis, Denny McCarthy
11:45 a.m.
Patrick Cantlay, Matt Fitzpatrick
11:55 a.m.
Emiliano Grillo, Byeong Hun An
12:05 p.m.
Sahith Theegala, Sungjae Im
12:15 p.m.
Si Woo Kim, Adam Hadwin
12:30 p.m.
Adam Svensson, Harris English
12:40 p.m.
Seamus Power, Tommy Fleetwood
12:50 p.m.
Cameron Young, Lucas Glover
1 p.m.
Kurt Kitayama, Max Homa
1:10 p.m.
Xander Schauffele, Jordan Spieth
1:20 p.m.
Collin Morikawa, Rory McIlroy
1:30 p.m.
Ludvig Aberg, Shane Lowry
1:40 p.m.
Sami Valimaki, Adam Scott

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.

Thursday, March 7

Golf Channel/Peacock: 2-6 p.m.

Sirius XM: 12-6 p.m

ESPN+: 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m

Friday, March 8

Golf Channel/Peacock: 2-6 p.m

Sirius XM: 12-6 p.m

ESPN+: 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m

Saturday, March 9

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

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]

Will Zalatoris on the Official World Golf Ranking’s viability: ‘It kind of is what it is’

“Once we get to the majors, it will be really fun to have us all back together.”

Will Zalatoris is slowly gaining his form back.

The 27-year-old made his return to the golf world in December at the Hero World Challenge after missing most of back year following back surgery. In his latest start at the Genesis Invitational, he finished T-2, and he has slowly been trending in the right direction in all four starts this year.

He has gone MC, T-34. T-13 and T-2. He heads into the Arnold Palmer Invitational with plenty of momentum to take on Bay Hill in Orlando, and the tournament means a bit more to him with his connections to The King.

“Even though I never got to meet (Arnold Palmer), the guy’s meant a lot to me personally and my career and led me to Wake Forest,” Zalatoris said. “And even though it’s been a lot of — the guy’s meant a lot to my career — I met my wife at Wake Forest. So it’s just kind of a fun week to come here and spend some time with Amy (Saunders) and the family.”

In three starts at the API, Zalatoris’ best finish is a T-10 in 2021, his debut at the event.

As far as finding his form, Zalatoris said he thinks his body is ahead of schedule, and he’s slowly seeing his speed come back.

But the most interesting thing he said Tuesday in his pre-tournament press conference was in regard to the Official World Golf Ranking. Zalatoris was asked about the competition on the PGA Tour this season since the average ranking of winners (not including Nick Dunlap) is 73.

“Yeah, the competition is obviously very stiff, there’s no question about it,” Zalatoris said. “We’ve had quite a few first-time winners on Tour this year. You’ve got some tenured guys that are contending week in, week out. The official World Golf Ranking is what it is right now.”

And quickly, a follow-up was asked after Zalatoris’ answer regarding the OWGR. How viable is the ranking system, which Tuesday made further headlines after LIV Golf withdrew its application for points.

“You know, it kind of is what it is,” Zalatoris said. “You see what Joaquin (Niemann)’s done this year, and he’s 73rd in the world. I’m not a guy who is on the policy board or involved with those rankings, but the guy’s played some really good golf. I think, you know, having to get a special exemption from Augusta, you know, it’s just, there’s some really good players, and there’s some guys that have gone around the world and played really good golf and I think that’s something that, once we get to the majors, it will be really fun to have us all back together. But, I know that that’s kind of the utopian goal for all of us right now is to have the best players in the world play week in, week out.”

In the discourse between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf, plenty of conversation has revolved around world ranking points. Only four LIV players are ranked in the top 50, with three of those having won majors in the past two years. Niemann, who has won two of the first three LIV events of the year, is in two of the four majors (Masters and PGA Championship) in 2024 thanks to special exemptions and a third (Open Championship) thanks to a win on the DP World Tour.

However, Zalatoris wants the best players to play together every week again, even if he believes most of them still play for the PGA Tour.

“We’ll see what happens going forward,” Zalatoris said. “I don’t have the fix for it. I know some guys have voiced their opinions on it. I like staying out of that stuff. Right now, it’s in an interesting position, I’ll leave it at that.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=1 tag=451189051]

Check the yardage book: Bay Hill for the 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational on the PGA Tour

StrackaLine offers a hole-by-hole course guide to Bay Hill and the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard.

Bay Hill Club & Lodge in Orlando, site of the 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational Presented by Mastercard on the PGA Tour, opened in 1961 with a design by Dick Wilson. Arnold Palmer took over the property on lease in 1970, bought it in 1975 and made adjustments to the course multiple times over the following decades.

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.

Bay Hill will play to 7,466 yards with a par of 72. The layout is one of the toughest on the PGA Tour each year.

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 at Bay Hill.

PGA Tour stars galore at next week’s signature event, the 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational

Here’s the field for The King’s place.

The field is nearly set for the PGA Tour’s fourth signature event of the season, the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill Club and Lodge in Orlando.

Countless stars will tee off Thursday in the Tour’s second stop of the Florida Swing, including world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, No. 2 Rory McIlroy, No. 4 Viktor Hovland, No. 5 Xander Schauffele, No. 6 Patrick Cantlay, No. 7 Wyndham Clark, No. 8 Max Homa, No. 9 Matt Fitzpatrick and No. 10 Brian Harman.

Defending champion Kurt Kitayama has made the weekend in all five of his starts this year, highlighted by a tie for eighth at the WM Phoenix Open.

Fifty-four of the 55 eligible players are committed, with Tony Finau being the exception. The field will have a minimum of 69 players.

Bay Hill, the home of The King, Arnold Palmer, is a par-72 track that measures 7,466 yards.

Unlike most signature events, there will be a cut made after 36 holes.

Ryder Cup captain Luke Donald joins NBC’s broadcasting team for Cognizant Classic, Arnold Palmer Invitational

The European Ryder Cup captain will get plenty of air time.

In its continued search for a replacement in the broadcast booth, NBC has tabbed Luke Donald for the role of lead analyst for the next two PGA Tour events, the Cognizant Classic in the Palm Beaches and Arnold Palmer Invitational.

Sports Business Journal was first to report the news and a source confirmed to Golfweek soon after that Donald would join the broadcast.

The official announcement came as expected on Sunday.

Donald, the victorious 2023 European Ryder Cup captain who again will lead the team in 2025 at Bethpage Black, is the latest in a line of current golfers or commentators to serve as lead analyst on NBC’s coverage of the PGA Tour, as the network continues to look for a full-time replacement for Paul Azinger.

Kevin Kisner called the season-opening The Sentry in Hawaii and was on the broadcast at the WM Phoenix Open. Brandel Chamblee commentated at The American Express last month, and Paul McGinley and Curt Byrum also have been in the booth. Jim “Bones” Mackay, Justin Thomas’ caddie, is getting a turn this week at the Mexico Open at Vidanta.

SBJ reported Donald is expected to appear Thursday of the Cognizant Classic broadcast on Golf Channel and then join Dan Hicks over the weekend on NBC.

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak contributed to this story.

Where might we see Tiger Woods play next? Here’s his career history during the Florida Swing

Tiger Woods said he’d like to play once a month — where will he play in March?

Tiger Woods made his first PGA Tour start since the 2023 Masters at last week’s Genesis Invitational, the site of his first career Tour appearance. However, he was forced to withdraw during the second round due to illness.

At the Hero World Challenge, Woods set a goal to play once a month this season. That got us thinking, if he is going to tee it up in March before he heads to Augusta, Georgia, for the year’s first major, what is the most likely spot we see him play next?

The first four events in March take place in Florida, starting with the Cognizant Classic — formally known as the Honda Classic.

Here’s a look at the Tour’s Florida Swing and Woods’ history at each event.

Sam Saunders has a pretty good idea how grandfather Arnold Palmer would feel about the state of the pro game

“I can’t imagine he wouldn’t be disappointed because I know I am.”

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Growing up as the grandson of Arnold Palmer, Sam Saunders brings a perspective on one of the all-time legends of the game. It was Palmer who was his guiding light in the game and whose words of wisdom still serve as the foundation he goes back to.

So, when asked to comment on how he thinks his grandfather, who died in 2016, would have felt about the friction in the game since the launch of LIV Golf, Saunders is quick to say he can’t speak for “The King,” but that doesn’t mean he can’t offer an educated guess.

“It’s not fair to ever assume what anyone would think, period,” he said. “I can’t tell you I think he would think this, but based on my relationship with him and how I feel about the game of golf and how important it is to keep it accessible and fun, I can’t imagine he wouldn’t be disappointed because I know I am.”

Saunders is 36 and after playing in 158 career events on the PGA Tour has dealt with a myriad of injuries the past few years – cyst on his wrist, broken collarbone, broken left leg, just to name a few – but is healthy again and spent the past season on the Korn Ferry Tour trying to work his way back to the Tour that his grandfather helped build. (The players broke away from the PGA of America in 1968.)

“I don’t judge anyone for decisions they make because I’m not walking in their shoes but no one can buy the game of golf, nobody owns the game of golf. It’s a game that should be available for anyone to play. It’s important that everyone remembers that it should be a game that brings people together, not push them apart,” Saunders said. “Personally, I’d love to see the PGA Tour go back to its roots and stick to a little bit more of the tradition of the game. I won’t candy-coat it at all, I’m not a fan of limited-field, no-cut events. That’s not what the game is about. What makes it unique is there is no guaranteed money, it’s a performance-based sport. I felt like we had it pretty solid for a lot of years. I know that the years I played out there I never could have imagined we were playing for that much money. Purses have gone up to a point that I personally don’t feel are sustainable nor necessary.

“How much money does an individual need to make playing a sport? I think it should be performance-based. I hope that all of this will end in a positive way. Right now, I’ll be honest with you, I’m concerned. I know that 90 percent of players and those involved in the game are quite concerned and it’s justified to feel a little confused as to what’s going on. All I can do is hope that something good will prevail.”

Arnold Palmer and Sam Saunders pose for a Golfweek print story. (Photo by Allan Henry)

Saunders said he wasn’t pleased last year when it was initially proposed that the Arnold Palmer Invitational would become a small-field, no-cut signature event. (Later, the Tour reversed the decision and API, the Genesis Invitational and Memorial will all have a small cut.) Saunders, who grew up at the host course, Bay Hill Club & Lodge, and has played in the tournament 10 times, said he met with PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan over lunch during the tournament in March and voiced his concerns, while noting, “I didn’t have anything to do in that decision.”

“That was something my grandfather would have been very passionate about, I think he would’ve always wanted to have a competitive event with a cut in it. Personally, I’m disappointed that it is as small a field as it is but I’m glad there is a cut,” Saunders said.

While he needs to take care of business this week at PGA Tour Q-School, which begins Thursday at TPC Sawgrass Dye’s Valley Course and Sawgrass Country Club with five Tour cards available, Saunders already is targeting getting back into the Arnold Palmer Invitational, which he last played in March 2020.

Sam Saunders tees off at the 2015 Arnold Palmer Invitational.

“I don’t want to play in it because it’s a limited field, I want to play in it because it’s a great event,” he said. “I don’t like that we are identifying events as good ones and bad ones. They should all be great events. Every single event on the PGA Tour should be recognized as the best players in the world competing. It really upsets me when they’re limiting fields and not having cuts because we’re no longer identifying the best player, we’re identifying the best player in a limited circumstance, basically.

“I want to get back and play in the API and I’m very pleased that we’re going to have a cut there this year. I’d love to see all of the non-majors on a more equal level. Whether it’s Tiger’s event at the Genesis or Mr. Nicklaus’s event at Muirfield or my granddad’s event or the Colonial, obviously those events hold certain value on Tour but in no way did I think the Arnold Palmer Invitational was better or more important than any other Tour event. It has a certain history to it, it has my granddad’s name to it, which holds value. I wanted our golf course to be as good as it could possibly be and have it be the best test of golf for the players. That’s the only competitive nature I felt with my involvement in the tournament.”

Spoken like the grandson of one of the all-time greats.

[lawrence-auto-related count=1 tag=352707029]

These are the 16 signature events on the PGA Tour’s 2024 schedule

Find the dates, course and defending champion of each event here.

On Thursday, Golfweek released an exclusive unveiling of the 2024 PGA Tour schedule. It includes 16 “signature” events including the four major championships.

Many of the signature events will not have a 36-hole cut, but the Genesis Invitational, Arnold Palmer Invitational, the Players Championship and the Memorial will feature a Friday afternoon slim down.

While the high-level events are evenly spread throughout the schedule, there is a point where players will have an opportunity to play three in a row: the Memorial, U.S. Open and Travelers Championship. Of course, the three playoff events will be played three weeks in a row, as well.

Here are the 16 signature events on the 2024 Tour schedule, including their dates, host venue and defending champion.

Nick Hardy reacts to Kamaiu Johnson scorecard DQ: ‘It looks like there may have been a cheating situation’

Did Kamaiu Johnson commit one of the unforgivable sins in golf and deliberately sign for a lower score?

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Did Kamaiu Johnson commit one of the unforgivable sins in golf and deliberately sign for a lower score than he made on a hole? It depends on who you ask.

Johnson, 29, violated Rule 3.3b for signing an incorrect scorecard after the second round of the 2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational, and was disqualified. Johnson, a multiple-time winner on the APGA Tour, was playing on a sponsor exemption. He would have missed the cut anyway, but that is beside the point to Nick Hardy, who was in the group with Johnson along with Kyle Westmoreland, who kept his scorecard.

In Johnson’s account of things, he made a double-bogey six at the par-4 ninth hole, not a seven, en route to shooting 5-over 77 on Friday at Arnold Palmer’s Bay Hill Club & Lodge, missing the cut by six strokes. ShotLink data shows Johnson had a 22½ par putt from the fringe and took four putts, missing putts of three and four feet for bogey and double bogey before tapping in a 20-inch putt for his 7.

“The amount of chances that he had to say he made a six is unfortunate because it looks like there may have been a cheating situation,” Hardy told Golfweek on Wednesday, ahead of his debut in the Players Championship. “I know that especially when I’m in a tournament atmosphere, that whenever I’m playing golf there is never a time where I forget what I shot.”

[pickup_prop id=”32352″]

Westmoreland told Golfweek on Sunday that he didn’t see Johnson finish the hole because the group had been put on the clock.

“We were on the clock, so I walked off,” Westmoreland said after his third round on Saturday. “I assumed he made the one after he missed.”

Hardy echoed that sentiment.

“We were warned (for slow play) the day before and warned when we came off the tee box on nine (Friday). It was very fresh,” Hardy said. “When you get a warning, you get penalized as a member but there’s no penalty for non-members for pace of play. I have an issue when I get penalized for pace of play and I believe it isn’t me. I’ve been paired with non-members the last three weeks and I’ve gotten five or six warnings. When you get 25 warnings, you get fined $50,000. That’s a lot of money for anybody.”

In short, Hardy, who wasn’t keeping Johnson’s score, had a legitimate reason for walking ahead before Johnson finished in an effort to catch up.

“I’m going to get penalized even though I know I didn’t do anything wrong,” Hardy said. “If we hadn’t been warned, I wouldn’t have walked off the green and the situation would have been different and Kamaiu might have known I’d seen it. There was good reason for me not to be there.”

After the round, the group’s walking scorer confirmed that Johnson made a triple-bogey 7. A ShotLink official used video taken at the hole that showed the four putts, including the first from the fringe.

“I’ll say this, they gave him many opportunities after the round, even after he signed his card, a couple more opportunities to maybe say he made a 7. I think they knew they had video evidence from the running camera on 9. ShotLink said he had a 7, the walking scorer said he had a 7 and he insisted he had a 6. They hinted to him that, hey, we just want to make sure you’ve got this right, and he still said he made a 6. That was the troubling issue I had,” Hardy said. “The Tour gave him multiple chances to come to grips with it. I know this for a fact because I was getting calls from the scoring officials for the next hour after we signed the card inside. I saw Montana [Thompson] and Casey Jones outside the locker room when they were talking to Kamaiu. It’s definitely concerning.”

“It happens, I guess,” Westmoreland told Golfweek. “At the end of the day, it doesn’t matter. He missed the cut. It doesn’t look great, I guess, for some people, but I don’t have much to comment on. It was a non-factor. I think the Tour handled it well.”

But Hardy disagreed with Westmoreland’s assessment that “it doesn’t matter; he missed the cut.”

“That’s unfair because when he played that hole he was right on the cut line. If he had gotten away with a 6, he only needed to shoot 2 under. It mattered, it mattered big time,” Hardy said. “I think you should be responsible. For people who think a player should get away with making a mistake like that because of a caddie’s fault or because the walking scorer should be in charge is wrong. The player should be 100 percent in charge of their score. The game is amazing because it taught me so many things about life. It’s like a true meritocracy in the sense that in life you need to be honest, you need to take responsibility, take ownership, have integrity for others; that’s the name of the game and to violate that is very concerning.”

On Saturday, Johnson took to social media to issue an apology, tweeting, “I take the integrity of the game very seriously and I’m sorry this happened. I got a little overwhelmed in the moment with the group on the clock and lost count of my missed putts from 3 feet. I’ll do better.”

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=]

Why Kurt Kitayama fired his caddie of more than 4 years and how he hired former Bryson DeChambeau caddie Tim Tucker

Spoiler alert: It has to do with Bandon Dunes.

ORLANDO – It can be hard to measure a caddie’s role in victory. Some simply carry the bag, while others seem to perform an endless array of duties just short of hitting the shot. For Kurt Kitayama, who won his first PGA Tour title at the Arnold Palmer Invitational on Sunday, veteran looper Tim Tucker was the calming influence when Kitayama needed him most.

But let’s first rewind to last month, at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, where Kitayama said he fumed inside. In the final round at Pebble Beach Golf Links, his caddie at the time, Bryan Martin, misclubbed him on the second hole and his shot airmailed the green, leading to a double bogey. He subsequently tumbled 27 spots on payday after shooting 76 (T-29). Another legitimate shot at winning for the first time fell by the wayside.

“That one was very disappointing,” Kitayama said in his winner’s press conference on Sunday. “I felt like I was comfortable enough in that situation and that things just didn’t go my way early and I was more probably mad than anything. It just happens. Just try not to think about it too much.”

Did Kitayama punch a wall or kick his golf bag? He laughed at the thought. “Like, internally, you kind of, you’re fuming,” Kitayama said.

Arnold Palmer Invitational: Winner’s bag | Prize money

But Kitayama did make one drastic decision while he was fuming. He fired Martin, his caddie of four years.

When asked to confirm the reason for the dismissal, Kitayama didn’t want to throw someone he still counts as a friend under the bus, but he didn’t refute the story either. “I just felt like it was time, a couple of bad things had happened and tough situations I feel like,” Kitayama said in explaining his caddie change. “We had a really good run.”

Kurt Kitayama fired his caddie of four years Bryan Martin after the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and replaced him with veteran Tim Tucker. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)

Seeking a replacement, Kitayama reached out to his brother, Danny, a longtime caddie at Bandon Dunes in Oregon, who had built a relationship with Tucker. Best known in golf circles as Bryson DeChambeau’s bagman for eight Tour victories, including the 2020 U.S. Open at Winged Foot and the 2021 Arnold Palmer Invitational, Tucker has caddied at Bandon and runs a transportation business at the golf resort.

“They have always stayed in contact, and this was just an opportunity that happened to arise,” Kitayama said.

After parting ways with his caddie at Pebble, Kitayama played the following week at the WM Phoenix Open and Tucker happened to be there for some work associated with the ballmarker he has designed and markets. They decided to work together that week.

Tucker made headlines in July 2021 when he fired DeChambeau on the eve of the Rocket Mortgage Classic. He’s not the first caddie to fire a player but it’s not often a caddie gives up a bag that had made him a rich man with a player seemingly just reaching the prime of his career. Tucker had filled in on occasion for Tour pros Adam Svensson and Chesson Hadley, but this time would be different.

“I just thought he was world class,’’ Tucker told a cloud of reporters on Sunday after claiming the caddie trophy, the flag at 18. “I told him you’re world class in three areas. Clean up the driver and you can beat these guys. He’s elite chipping the ball and striking it.”

Kitayama tied for first in driving accuracy at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, but on Sunday the driver let him down on the ninth hole when he pulled his ball out of bounds and he made a triple bogey to drop out of the lead. On the long walk from the ninth green to the 10th tee at Bay Hill, Tucker provided a master class in how to keep a player from spiraling out of control.

[afflinkbutton text=”Book your trip to Bay Hill today” link=”https://www.golfbreaks.com/en-us/vacations/orlando/arnold-palmers-bay-hill-club-lodge/arnold-palmer-bay-hill-course/?cid=999740052&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=golfweek&utm_campaign=pgat_tournament_courses_q3_22_gw”]

“I still felt comfortable. I didn’t feel out of place. It was just one bad swing,” Kitayama said. “He kind of backed me up. He said that, he goes, ‘I know, you look fine.’ And that helped.”

Just three tournaments into the job, Tucker helped guide the 30-year-old Kitayama to the winner’s circle. Asked earlier in the week how much having Tucker on the bag has helped him, Kitayama said, “he’s got a lot of knowledge, a lot of experience. I think that’s definitely helped a lot. It’s been great just kind of seeing his side and how he works and just kind of getting used to it, really.”

With his right knee in a brace and a noticeable limp, Tucker had helped lift another player to victory at Arnie’s Place and would only say of DeChambeau that they are still friends and he’d bought him a Christmas present he still needed to deliver. He was reluctant to speak to the press all week and preferred to shine the light on his current boss.

“Look at him, look at his smile,” Tucker told reporters afterwards. “He got the monkey off his back, proving he can play with the big boys.”

[pickup_prop id=”32247″]

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1375]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01f5k5vfbhv59szck1 image=]