To borrow a phrase from Stuart Scott, Arnold Palmer was cooler than the other side of the pillow.
ORLANDO — To borrow a phrase from the late ESPN host Stuart Scott, Arnold Palmer was cooler than the other side of the pillow. So is the gear on sale at this year’s Arnold Palmer Invitational in the merchandise shop as well as the club’s permanent pro shop at Bay Hill Club & Lodge.
Palmer’s multi-color logo is ever-present and used to great effect. Kudos go to Puma, who have delivered another unique line for tournament week, from shirts to hats to shoes.
But there’s a great mix of Ahead and Imperial hats and the pro shop features everything from Peter Millar to Johnny-O and women’s favorite, Ibkul. High marks across the board but nothing tops the head covers in my book. Here’s some of the best stuff available at the API merchandise shop and Bay Hill pro shop.
Seeking his first PGA Tour victory, Kitayama couldn’t help wondering if, as he put it, “here we go again.”
Kurt Kitayama sensed his grip on the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard title slipping from his grasp. He had just hooked his tee shot out of bounds at the ninth hole at Bay Hill Lodge & Club in the final round on March 5, 2023, and suffered a triple bogey. The lead, which he had owned almost since the start, had evaporated and he suddenly trailed by a stroke.
“I thought I had lost it,” he recounted in late January.
Seeking his first PGA Tour victory, Kitayama couldn’t help wondering if, as he put it, “here we go again,” and in his head questioned, “Am I ever going to win out here?” But Kitayama silenced that negativity and righted the ship. He carded eight hard-earned pars and a clutch birdie at 17 on the back nine to shoot even-par 72 and outlast co-runner-ups Rory McIlroy and Harris English, among a star-studded leaderboard, by a single stroke to take home the biggest victory of his career.
“Look at him, look at his smile,” caddie Tim Tucker told reporters afterwards. “He got the monkey off his back, proving he can play with the big boys.”
A never-give-up attitude has been a key ingredient in Kitayama’s rise through the golf ranks. He first started playing golf at age 5, tagging along after his older brother, who would go on to play college golf at Hawaii-Hilo. “I just loved it,” he said, noting that what initially put him on the map was his success at the 2009 Junior Worlds at Torrey Pines in San Diego, where he shot 3 under in the third round to grab the lead.
“I got to the first tee for the final round and I looked around and saw all these college coaches watching me,” Kitayama recalled. “I was like, ‘Whoa.’ That was eye-opening.”
From Chico High in the northern Sacramento Valley, where he starred in both basketball and golf, Kitayama joined UNLV’s golf program. His game, however, was raw in comparison to his teammates when he showed up at UNLV in 2011, where they called Kitayama “The Project.”
“I don’t think he was very good at anything,” said J.C. Deacon, men’s golf coach at the University of Florida and Kitayama’s swing coach since 2017.
Back then, Deacon was an assistant at UNLV during Kitayama’s four years there and recalled that Kitayama could barely break 75 upon his arrival. Then-coach Dwaine Knight recognized his potential and loved his grit.
“He just worked so hard,” Deacon continued. “You tell him something to do and he’d be out there for 10 hours doing it. He always outworked whatever you asked of him.”
That tenacity and perseverance served Kitayama well when he struggled on the Korn Ferry Tour in 2017 and instead went seeking a place to play wherever that happened to take him. Fellow aspiring pro and current PGA Tour member David Lipsky suggested he give the Asian Tour a shot.
“I figured why not,” Kitayama said.
The 31-year-old Kitayama has taken the road less traveled to success in the professional ranks, playing tournaments on 14 different tours worldwide while steadily improving his game.
“Not finding success early here was, yeah, it’s disappointing, but it took me somewhere else to grow,” he said. “And it was growing more than just in golf, really. You get to experience the different cultures, travel. I mean, you find yourself in some interesting spots. Places that you probably wouldn’t ever go, so, I think just as a person I was able to grow.”
He won in far-flung locales such as an Asian Development Tour event in Malaysia and the AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open in December 2018 and the Oman Open in March 2019, becoming the fastest player to win twice in DP World Tour history (only 11 career starts). But the dream always was to get back to the PGA Tour. When Kitayama did, he finished second on three different occasions in 2022, getting pipped by three top-10 players in the world: Jon Rahm at the Mexico Open, Xander Schauffele at the Scottish Open and Rory McIlroy at the CJ Cup.
In the final round at Arnie’s Place, Kitayama buckled but refused to break.
He built a two-stroke lead with three birdies in his first seven holes, including rolling in a 46-footer at seven. But on the ninth hole, he tugged his tee shot left and it stopped out of bounds by six inches, leading to a triple bogey. That knocked him down to 8 under for the tournament, behind new co-leaders Jordan Spieth and Tyrrell Hatton at 9 under. On the long walk to the 10th tee, Kitayama told Tucker, who was working for him for just his third event, that he didn’t feel rattled.
“You look good, and we’re gonna just keep chugging along and we’ll get it back,” said Tucker, who had been on the bag for Bryson DeChambeau when he won the API in 2021.
Trailing Kitayama by four shots at the start of the day, Spieth birdied four of his first five holes. He claimed the lead at 10-under-par with a birdie putt at the par-4 13th from just inside 15 feet, giving him 120 feet of made putts. But then the magic disappeared, and Spieth missed four straight putts inside 8 feet from the 14th through the 17th holes and made three bogeys in that four-hole span. He ended up signing for 70 and a tie for fourth.
“I wouldn’t have hit any of the putts differently,” Spieth said.
Hatton, winner of the API in 2020, blamed his putter, too, for his demise.
“I just didn’t have it today on the greens in the end when I kind of needed it most,” he said.
Scheffler, the defending champion, was one back with wedge in his hand from the fairway at 18 but made bogey to finish at 7-under and share fourth with Spieth.
McIlroy, who won this tournament in 2018, had an inauspicious start with two early bogeys but rallied with birdies at Nos. 12 and 13 to take the lead at 9 under. However, he still thought he trailed and tried an aggressive line at the par-3 14th. It backfired and he made the first of consecutive bogeys to slip back.
“As I was walking to the 14th green, I looked behind me at the scoreboard, and I was leading by one. And if I had known that I wouldn’t have tried to play the shot that I played on 14, which was unfortunate,” said McIlroy, who shot 70 and missed a 10-foot birdie putt that could have forced a playoff.
When Kitayama arrived at 14 and eyed the leaderboard, he learned he was tied for the lead and had a very different response than McIlroy. “I’m still in this,” he thought. Galvanized, he stretched his par streak to seven in a row although the last of the bunch was a three-putt from 56 feet at the par-5 16th.
The API’s first year as a signature event lived up to the hype and seemed destined to be headed for a wild playoff with a five-way tie at the top with just three holes to play, until Kitayama took care of business. Tied for the lead, he stepped up at the 217-yard, par 3 17th and drilled a 6-iron to 14 feet like it was a Tuesday practice round.
“I just ripped it and it started leaking a little right, but I hit it good enough to cover and it was perfect,” said Kitayama, who finished with a 72-hole aggregate of 9-under 279.
He poured in the birdie putt and was tagged with his latest nickname, this time from TV analyst Paul Azinger, who described him as a junkyard dog feasting on a bone.
Kitayama had to grind out one more par at 18. As he walked off the tee after pulling his tee shot into the rough, he had the self-awareness to realize he was walking too fast.
“I was like, slow down,” he recalled. “J.C. was on the putting green earlier and he said, ‘You know, just relax and just make sure to take some deep breaths and walk slow.’ So I thought of that and I was able to recognize it, luckily, and just kind of calm down.”
From a jumper lie, Kitayama lofted an 8-iron safely on the left side of the green, 47 feet from the hole. On a day at Bay Hill where the greens became so baked that players complained of little friction, Kitayama needed two putts for the win and lagged his birdie effort inches short.
“I felt a huge relief because I couldn’t mess it up from there,” he said, cracking a smile.
Kitayama was a winner at last, slipping into the champion’s red cardigan sweater that he later framed and gave to his parents. As for the trophy?
Kitayama kept that for himself and has it positioned in his bedroom for maximum viewing.
“That way I can see it right before I go to bed and first thing in the morning,” he said.[lawrence-auto-related count=1 tag=1480]
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.
Thanks to Golfweek’s Best rankings, we break out the top courses around Orlando and Central Florida.
Looking for a break from the theme parks around Orlando? Whether you want to stay close or you’re willing to drive a bit, there are several courses available that appear on the Golfweek’s Best rankings of top public-access layouts in Florida.
But it’s not as easy as pulling up our state-by-state rankings, which lists Florida courses that might be a full day’s drive away from Central Florida. We wanted to focus on the eight top-ranked courses that, while they might require golfers spend up to 90 minutes in the car, are within reasonable driving distance.
For the purpose of this exercise, we limited driving time to within 90 minutes of Disney World. Why 90 minutes? Because it can take a while to get anywhere around Orlando, especially if you’re stuck on Interstate 4, so 90 minutes seemed like a reasonable amount of time in a car to reach great golf.
And why Walt Disney World Resort? Because chances are if you’re visiting Orlando, you will be bunking up not far from that entertainment giant’s theme parks or Universal Orlando nearby.
We used Google Maps for its drive times, keying in Walt Disney World Resort at a time with no significant traffic slowdowns. Take all drive times around Orlando and Central Florida with a grain of salt, of course, as backups frequently happen.
None of this is to say there aren’t plenty of other worthy places to play around Orlando. As a nearby resident, this author will attest to the simple pleasures to be found at Winter Park Golf Course – frequently called WP9 – just north of downtown Orlando. The short nine-holer is one of the most fun two hours you’re likely to spend on a golf course.
Included with this list is a general map of where to find all these courses. Each one on the list below is represented with a number on the map – keep scrolling to see the numbers.
Included with each course is its position in Florida on the Golfweek’s Best public-access list. For any course that appears on our other popular rankings lists, those positions are included as well.
A little background: The hundreds of members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them on 10 criteria on a points basis of 1 through 10. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings are averaged to produce all our Golfweek’s Best course rankings.
The courses on this list allow public access in some fashion, be it standard daily green fees, through a resort or by staying at an affiliated hotel. If there’s a will, there’s a tee time – no membership required.
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The 30-year-old earned his first PGA Tour win Sunday and held off a handful of professional golf’s best down the stretch at the 2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational. Kitayama finished at 9 under after an even-par 72 in the final round to take home the top prize of $3.6 million.
Rory McIlroy and Harris English finished T-2 at 8 under to earn a whopping $1.78 million each. Patrick Cantlay, Tyrrell Hatton, Scottie Scheffler and Jordan Spieth all finished T-4 at 7 under and will take home just south of seven figures with $800,000 in winnings.
Check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned this week at the 2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill Club & Lodge in Orlando.
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Everything you need to know for the final round at Bay Hill.
Three rounds are in the books from Arnie’s place.
The Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill Club & Lodge in Orlando is the third designated event in four weeks on the PGA Tour. And the leaderboard is filled with some of the top players in the world, but they’re all chasing Kurt Kitayama.
Kitayama birdied the 18th hole for the third straight day to get to 9 under and holds a one-shot lead over defending champion Scottie Scheffler and Viktor Hovland. Tyrrell Hatton is at 7 under, and Rory McIlroy is at 6 under with Harris English.
From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the final round of play at the 2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational.
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Tee times
Tee time
Players
7;15 a.m.
Shane Lowry, Will Gordon
7:25 a.m.
Greg Koch, Seamus Power
7:35 a.m.
David Lingmerth, Greyson Sigg
7:45 a.m.
Webb Simpson, Brendon Todd
7:55 a.m.
Cole Hammer, Davis Thompson
8:05 a.m.
Si Woo Kim, Mackenzie Hughes
8:15 a.m.
S.H. Kim, K.H. Lee
8:25 a.m.
Wyndham Clark, Tom Kim
8:35 a.m.
Matthew Ne Smith, Aaron Rai
8:50 a.m.
Robby Shelton, Tommy Fleetwood
9 a.m.
Jon Rahm, Zach Johnson
9:10 a.m.
Andrew Putnam, Luke Donald
9:20 a.m.
Aaron Baddeley, Emiliano Grillo
9:30 a.m.
Will Zalatoris, Ryan Palmer
9:40 a.m.
Davis Riley, Ryan Fox
9:50 a.m.
Keegan Bradley, Chris Kirk
10 a.m.
Russell Henley, Alex Noren
10:10 a.m.
Adam Scott, Matt Fitzpatrick
10:25 a.m.
Justin Suh, Taylor Montgomery
10:35 a.m.
Martin Laird, Padraig Harrington
10:45 a.m.
Taylor Moore, Adam Schenk
10:55 a.m.
Keith Mitchell, Ben Griffin
11:05 a.m.
Thomas Detry, Rickie Fowler
11:15 a.m.
Sungjae Im, Sahith Theelaga
11:25 a.m.
Ben Taylor, Danny Willett
11:35 a.m.
Kyle Westmoreland, FRanceaco Molinari
11:25 a.m.
David Lipsky, Adam Svensson
12 p.m.
Xander Schauffele, Corey Conners
12:10 p.m.
Ludvig Aberg, Patrick Cantlay
12:20 p.m.
Trey Mullinax, Tony Finau
12:30 p.m.
Cameron Young, Jason Day
12:40 p.m.
Jordan Spieth, Max Homa
12:50 p.m.
Pierceson Coody, Justin Thomas
1 p.m.
Rory McIlroy, Harris English
1:10 p.m.
Scottie Scheffler, Tyrrell Hatton
1:20 p.m.
Kurt Kitayama, Viktor Hovland
TV, streaming, radio information
You can watch Golf Channel for free on fuboTV. ESPN+ is the exclusive home for PGA Tour Live streaming. All times Eastern.
Sunday, March 5
TV
Golf Channel: 12:30-2:30 p.m. NBC: 2:30-6 p.m.
Radio
SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.
STREAM
ESPN+: 7:15 a.m.-6 p.m. Peacock: 12:30-6 p.m.
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More than a half-dozen years after his death, Arnold Palmer’s legacy remains ubiquitous at Bay Hill
ORLANDO, Fla. — More than a half-dozen years after his death, Arnold Palmer’s legacy remains ubiquitous at Bay Hill, and not simply because this week’s PGA Tour stop bears his name. The tournament logo is rendered with his distinctive signature, its wide, looping “A” and “P” conferring an identity that characters cut from a Linotype machine couldn’t hope to emulate.
During his life, that signature was given so often as to become valueless beyond the sentimental memories of the recipient. Palmer’s autograph is too commonplace to be priceless, in the trademark phrasing of his event’s longtime sponsor, Mastercard. His umbrella logo is no less prevalent, appended to everything from apparel to keychains. It’s been more than 60 years since the King saw a woman open a colorful umbrella on a rainy day in Pennsylvania, giving him inspiration for what remains the calling card of a commercial powerhouse, unrivaled by any golfer before or since.
Just behind the first tee at Bay Hill is a bronze statue of Palmer. It’s 13 feet tall but feels life-sized. Fans flock to it for photos, much as they did to the man it depicts. Images of the lost legend are everywhere too, some from his avuncular later years, others from his prime, eyes twinkling at some long-forgotten mischief. The Bay Hill Lodge itself is as worn and comfortable as its late owner’s cardigans, still the centerpiece of the community he built and surrounded by streets like Masters Boulevard and Harbour Town Court, on which America’s national plague of McMansions has been mostly held at bay.
That’s the ubiquity of the branding that made Palmer iconic. The personal touch that made him beloved is elsewhere, specifically in the breezeway that both connects the car park to the putting green and separates the locker room from the restaurant. On a glass-fronted notice board of the type that announces scramble results and shirt sales at courses nationwide, there are enlarged letters via which he dispatched congratulations and encouragement over the years.
There’s one from May 5, 2010, tipping a cap to Rory McIlroy on his first PGA Tour win at Quail Hollow. “You are certainly living up to your promise,” he wrote, ending with a gentle nudge to consider playing at Bay Hill the following year. It wouldn’t be until 2015 that McIlroy obliged.
Kevin Kisner earned a note on his first Tour victory, too, dated Dec. 1, 2015, and the same not-so-subtle reminder about his schedule the following spring.
You can read the note sent to Tiger Woods a day after his win at the Tour Championship in 2007, which left him just one shy of Palmer’s tally of 62 titles. “You will be winning for a long time to come,” the graceful superstar wrote to his successor.
Nor were Palmer’s many missives limited to PGA Tour successes. Tom Watson received one on July 20 that same year after his Senior British Open triumph, two years before coming achingly close to winning the real thing again.
“You sure do play particularly well in the British Isles,” Arnie noted. Inbee Park received one in 2015. “Five victories in a season makes for quite a year,” he wrote, too modest to mention that he’d logged four straight seasons with at least six wins himself.
Had he been spared, Palmer would now be 93 years old. Would he still be penning those letters? Probably. But to whom?
Surely Chris Kirk would have received praise for what he overcame on the way to winning last week’s Honda Classic. So too the man he beat in a playoff, Eric Cole, a close childhood friend of Palmer’s grandson, Sam Saunders. Those whose prominence came since Palmer’s death in September 2016 would have felt his touch too. Jon Rahm. Collin Morikawa. Jin Young Ko.
But what about Charl Schwartzel? Would he have received congratulations on his win at LIV Golf’s inaugural tournament in London last summer? Some praise for maintaining focus amid distractions, like when his CEO, Greg Norman, dismissed the bonesaw murder of a Washington Post writer (on the orders of his boss) by saying, “We all make mistakes.”
Palmer loved to encourage young players. Would that have extended to Eugenio Chacarra after his LIV win in Bangkok? Had he read in Sports Illustrated how it was a smart play by Norman to lure talent with guaranteed riches right out of college, Palmer might have even expressed a wish that the same opportunities had existed when he turned professional late in ’54, but there just weren’t any bloodthirsty autocrats around then who needed stooges in the game.
How about a kind note to Brooks Koepka after his victory in Jeddah? Perhaps with parenthetical praise about how nice it was to see his playoff rival, Peter Uihlein, finally find relevance after a decade spent bouncing around tours. He liked Dustin Johnson, so would he have been moved to commend his captaincy of 4 Aces in the team’s win at Trump Doral last fall alongside Messrs. Reed, Perez and Gooch, themselves leaders among men?
Palmer was spared the dilemma of whether to write those letters, but in a way he had already registered his feelings. Back in 1994, when Norman tried to launch a breakaway circuit, Palmer publicly spoke against him at a players’ meeting, pointing out that the ‘Big Three’ — himself, Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player — had ample opportunities to strike out in lucrative new directions but opted against narrow self-interest. He was 65 then, and brought to bear his considerable reputation against a man whose character has been laid pitifully bare in the years since.
Arnie liked money. He made a lot of it and famously wasn’t too fond of spending it. But he didn’t much talk about it. None of the letters pinned in the Bay Hill breezeway mention how much the recipients made for their wins. Now, with a $20 million purse his eponymous tournament has become another weapon in the cash arms race disfiguring professional golf. That’s one respect in which his legacy hasn’t quite endured at Bay Hill.
“Playing the cutline is one of the toughest things in golf. Fifty-four holes, no cut, that’s an easy life” — Padraig Harrington
ORLANDO —Padraig Harrington spends most of his time on the PGA Tour Champions these days, but it doesn’t mean he no longer appreciates what it takes to make the 36-hole cut.
Harrington made birdie on five of his first 14 holes on Friday to shoot 2-under 70 and make his 219th career cut on the PGA Tour.
“Playing the cutline is one of the toughest things in golf,” Harrington said. “Fifty-four holes, no cut, that’s an easy life.”
The 51-year-old is among the 72 golfers to survive difficult, windy conditions at Bay Hill Club and Lodge to play the weekend at the Arnold Palmer Invitational. It took a 36-hole total of 2-over 146 to be among the pros to be paid on Sunday. (Amateur Ludvig Aberg also made the cut.)
Finally made a cut at Bay Hill… Golf course is playing like a major. Bring on the weekend ☘️💪🏻
Play was suspended due to darkness on Friday with two golfers still on the course. PGA club pro Greg Koch, who teaches at the nearby Ritz-Carlton Golf Club, held the fate of six golfers in his hands. Needing to complete the ninth hole on Saturday morning, Koch could have moved the cut to 1-over had he made birdie but he and Justin Suh (-2) made pars to wrap up the second round at 7:08 a.m. ET. It’s Koch’s first made cut on Tour.
What a moment for @RC_ORLANDO teaching pro Greg Koch in the @APinv. Had to wait overnight to finish his final hole of the second round. Got up and down for par to make the cut for the first time in a @PGATOUR event. Look what it means. pic.twitter.com/K8Ag1sHEj7
With the announcement this week of no-cut, reduced field designated events beginning next season, this likely was the final 36-hole cut at Bay Hill and three players in the top 20 in the world didn’t make it. But Alex Noren took care of business on his final hole.
Needing a birdie on 18 to have a chance to make the cut, Alex Noren comes up clutch 🔥
Stars are everywhere on the leaderboard heading into the weekend at Bay Hill.
The weathermen got it (kinda) right Friday as winds did blow into Bay Hill Club & Lodge in Orlando on Day 2 of the Arnold Palmer Invitational, just not as bad as originally projected.
They were enough, however, to push Jon Rahm, the 18-hole leader, off course as the Spaniard shot a second-round 4-over 76.
Let the man himself tell you just how tough it was out there: “It’s f****ing hard.”
He’s 3 under and six back heading into the weekend.
The wind was no problem for Kurt Kitayama, however. He followed up his Thursday 67 with an impressive 4-under 68 with his lone bogey coming at the easiest hole on the golf course, the par-5 16th.
He closed out his day with a dart from 156 yards on the par-4 18th and a finishing circle.
“It’s always a fun challenge keeping yourself in the moment,” he said after his round. “I feel like when you get conditions like this it’s easy to kind of let things get away from you. For me it’s just keeping myself focused the entire way. There’s no, you can’t let up at all mentally.”
This is Kitayama’s third 36-hole lead this season. He’s yet to convert.
If you missed any of the action Friday, no worries, we have you covered. Here’s everything you need to know from the second round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational.
Note: Play was suspended Friday with two players left on the golf course. The cut line currently sits at 2 over.
Play was suspended due to darkness at 6:47 p.m. with two players left on No. 9: Justin Suh (-2) and Greg Koch (+2).
If Koch makes birdie, the cut will move to 1-over (as long as Suh stays at 1-over or better). Otherwise, it will be 2-over.
— PGA TOUR Communications (@PGATOURComms) March 3, 2023