Watch: Viktor Hovland sinks a hole-in-one at the Arnold Palmer Invitational

Hovland stepped up to the tee at the par-3 No. 7 and sank one of the most beautiful aces you’ll ever see.

Drinks are most certainly on Viktor Hovland Friday night in Orlando, Florida, and this is becoming something of a yearly tradition for the 25-year-old.

During second-round play at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, Hovland stepped up to the tee at the par 3 No. 7 and sank one of the most beautiful aces you’ll ever see for the fourth hole-in-one of his career.

Perfect speed. Perfect bounce. Perfect line. Just perfection all the way around, really. Hovland made the 183-yard distance look like a simple chip shot.

Any player to hit a hole-in-one this weekend was -125 at BetMGM after “no hole-in-one” opened at -135. The API has seen nine aces over the last 10 tournaments— including three in 2021 — so the smart money was definitely on seeing some magic in Orlando.

Now the pressure is on Hovland to keep his ace-per-year streak alive on the PGA Tour. He had aces in both the 2022 BMW Championship and 2022 Players Championship as well. But he can worry about that after picking up the bar tab at Bay Hill on Friday.

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PGA Tour Champions has ‘freed up’ Padraig Harrington, but he says ‘it’s amazing how hard it is to play when you’re thinking about the cut’

Padraig Harrington says that “54-hole golf is not 72-hole golf. That’s very obvious.”

He won the last time he was in Arizona, but Padraig Harrington is skipping Tucson this week and heading to Orlando.

Harrington won the Charles Schwab Cup Championship in Phoenix last  November but he’s forgoing the Cologuard Classic on the PGA Tour Champions.

Instead, he’ll be among the 120 golfers in the field at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, the second full-field designated event on the PGA Tour.

The $20 million purse and $3.6 million first-place check up for grabs at Bay Hill vs. the $2.2 million total purse at Tucson National likely has something to do with it.

But for competitors like Harrington, testing your game against 44 of the top 50 players in the Official World Golf Ranking – the most at any event since the 2022 Open Championship – is a significant draw.

“My game had turned a corner coming into 50 years of age,” he said ahead of the Honda Classic last week. “At 49, I was starting to play well in regular events. Still a little bit hard on myself at those events.”

Harrington tied for 60th at the Honda, his first appearance in a PGA Tour event this season. Last season, the API was the only cut he made in six Tour outings. On the flip side, he’s already won four times on the senior circuit and knows life is pretty good on that tour.

“It’s a nice place to be. It’s nice to be a big fish in a small pond,” he said.

A major difference between the tours is the 72-hole PGA Tour events that cut the field in half after two days compared to the no-cut, 54-hole Champions events.

2022 Charles Schwab Cup Championship
Nov 10, 2022; Phoenix, AZ, USA; Padraig Harrington plays his tee shot on the first hole during round one of the Charles Schwab Cup at Phoenix Country Club. Mandatory Credit: Rob Schumacher-USA TODAY Sports

“It’s nice not to have the stress of a cut. Even the couple of events I played on the European Tour, even the first one where I finished fourth, at one stage on the Friday I’m like, ‘What’s the cut going to be, where am I?’ and when you start thinking like that you just hit a brick wall,” he said.

“It’s amazing how hard it is to play when you’re thinking about the cut and you’ve got to get that out of your mind, which the Champions Tour, again, we don’t have a cut; 54-hole golf is not 72-hole golf. That’s very obvious. It’s a big difference having a cut line. A lot of pressure, a lot of stress in that cut line, and it doesn’t matter how good, what you’ve done in your career.

“Professional golfers have this silly thing in our heads that we don’t want to miss cuts. We don’t want a weekend off. Who in the world doesn’t want to have a weekend off? Professional golfers, we just all get uptight when it comes to the cut line, much more so for me. I could be chasing down the lead and it wouldn’t bother me whatsoever, but if I’m on that cut line, I’m like, ‘Oh, you don’t want to mess that one up.'”

Playing with the 50-and-over set has led to a mental adjustment.

“It’s freed up my golf somewhat, and like hopefully I can take that to the regular tour. Physically I’m very capable.”

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10 PGA Tour stops you can play in 2022-23

You may not be able to hit it like the pros, but you can play at a number of the same courses.

The PGA Tour kicks off its 2022-23 season this week at the Fortinet Championship in Napa, California.

As the best players in the world prepare to begin another season, golf fans prepare to live vicariously through their heroes competing at courses around the U.S.

To help turn your TV daydream into a reality, Golfweek has compiled 10 courses from the PGA Tour schedule that anyone can play – if their pockets are deep enough.

Want to test your skill at the island green at TPC Sawgrass? No problem. Perhaps you want to feel the ocean breeze on your face as you escape a cliff’s edge at Pebble Beach? We’ve got you covered.

All 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. Golfweek’s Best offers many lists of course rankings, with the list of top public-access courses in each state among the most popular. Each of the courses below is public-access, although greens fees at several of them go above $500 per player.

The hundreds of members of the Golfweek’s Best ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on 10 criteria on a points basis of 1 through 10. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those averaged overall ratings are presented for each course below.

Arnold Palmer Invitational: It’s survival of the fittest with Bay Hill ‘on a knife’s edge’

Bay Hill bites back with dry greens, windy challenges as Talor Gooch, Billy Horschel share third-round lead.

ORLANDO – Graeme McDowell stiffed his approach at 18, tapped in for birdie and signed for 3-under 69 at Arnold Palmer’s Bay Hill and Lodge for one of just seven rounds in the 60s on the third day of the Arnold Palmer Invitational. But that doesn’t mean the former U.S. Open champ wasn’t spent after a trying day on the course.

“It’s a stressful golf course with a lot of shots that stress you out,” he said.

McDowell, who lives in the City Beautiful, planned to kick up his feet, check out the remainder of the broadcast, fire up the grill and watch the rest of the field get roasted by baked-out greens.

“I might have to drink a little less wine than I was going to,” said McDowell, who teed off more than three hours ahead of the leaders Saturday. “It’s very difficult out there and not getting any easier.”

By the end of the day, McDowell stood tied for sixth at 3 under. The wind blew and scores soared. Just ask rookie Hayden Buckley, who skied to an 84 and ditched his putter outside scoring and left his caddie to retrieve it. At least he finished the round with his short stick. Australian Matt Jones heaved his into a lake in frustration.

“It’s just on a knife edge,” said Rory McIlroy, who struggled to 76 and was tied with McDowell after three rounds. “The last few years, we sort of know what to expect coming here. It just seems to be this way over the weekend. It’s just hard. It’s hard not to get frustrated.”

APILeaderboard | Photos | PGA Tour Live on ESPN+

McDowell described the greens as icy and the rough as U.S. Open length. Add in the crosswinds and it was a recipe for disaster.

“If you don’t hit the fairway, it’s almost impossible to hit a green,” McIlroy said.

Billy Horschel was one of the few, the proud to shoot in red figures, sinking a 30-foot birdie putt from just off the green – after taking a fortunate free drop from the rough because of a sprinkler head – at 18 to post 1-under 71 and share the 54-hole lead at 7-under 209 with Talor Gooch. Those who embraced the challenge, such as Horschel, seemed to fare better.

“This is awesome golf. It’s testing and it wears you down,” he said. “I can’t even say we all enjoy it all the time, but we do enjoy because it does reward fairly good golf shots on a regular basis. It rewards people who think their way through a shot and how it needs to be played to really turn out properly.”

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“It was not fun, but it’s the right test,” said Max Homa, who made a hole-in-one at the 14th en route to a 73 and attested to Scottie Scheffler tying for low round of the day with 68. “I played with a guy who’s one of the best players in the world, and he played a really good round of golf and made it look pretty easy.

“If you’re out of position, you have no chance, but you put yourself out of position. So I think it’s quality that’s going to separate the field into who played really well, who played well, who played OK and who didn’t play well. I think that’s the way golf should be.”

To his point, only 16 of the 78 players that made the cut were in red figures after three rounds. For a time it looked as if Viktor Hovland might run away with the tournament. The 24-year-old Norwegian holed out for eagle from 38 yards in a greenside bunker at the par-5 sixth hole to offset a shaky bogey-bogey start to his third round.

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“I kind of thought I was in no-man’s-land, just try to chunk it out there and give myself a putt at it. Came out really soft and landed in the first cut and just died and went in,” he said. “That was really nice for at least the next few holes, and I was really in a good rhythm until some bad shots on the back nine.”

He was 10 under for the tournament and leading Gooch by four strokes at the turn after a birdie at No. 8. That happened to be his final birdie of the day, and he sprinkled four bogeys on his inward card including at the final two holes to shoot 75 and trail the co-leaders by a shot.

When asked if he enjoys playing a tournament where single digits could very well be enough to win Sunday and earn his first victory on U.S. soil, Hovland said, “To be honest, not really. I think now it’s maybe on the border where everything kind of becomes a scrambling competition. As I’ve said before, that’s not really the strength of my game. But what I think is cool at least is I’m able to be in contention in a tournament under these conditions that don’t really play into my hands.”

Horschel, who was born and raised in Grant-Valkaria, Florida, about 90 minutes from Bay Hill, said he expected Sunday to be an emotional day, especially if he were to slip into the winner’s red alpaca sweater.

“It would be very special. You said I grew up an hour from here, came here as a kid, caddied in the Pro-Am multiple times. A lot of family and friend support around here,” he said. “Then you add on Arnold Palmer’s name to it. It would be something very special that at the end of my career I could say that was a special victory.”

Sunday tee times for the PGA Tour’s 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill

Everything you need to know for the final round from Bay Hill.

The PGA Tour’s Florida Swing continues this weekend in Orlando as a loaded field of the game’s best are at Bay Hill Club and Lodge for the 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational.

Billy Horschel and Talor Gooch are tied for the lead after three rounds with Viktor Hovland a single stroke back heading into Sunday.

Horschel said there’s a ton of significance in playing at Bay Hill.

“I grew up an hour from here, came here as a kid, caddied in the Pro-Am multiple times. A lot of family and friend support around here,” Horschel said. “Then you add on Arnold Palmer’s name to it. It would be something very special that at the end of my career I could say that was a special victory.

“But I’ve got to do a really good job of controlling my emotions more and not getting ahead of myself.”

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the fourth round of the 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational. All times Eastern.

API: Leaderboard | Photos | PGA Tour Live on ESPN+

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Tee times

 

Time Players
6:55 a.m. Hayden Buckley
7 a.m. Keith Mitchell, Greyson Sigg
7:10 a.m. Chez Reavie, Danny Lee
7:20 a.m. Maverick McNealy, Lucas Glover
7:30 a.m. Sam Ryder, Matthew Wolff
7:40 a.m. Dylan Frittelli, Anirban Lahiri
7:50 a.m. Padraig Harrington, Pat Perez
8 a.m. Zach Johnson, John Pak
8:15 a.m. Alex Smalley, Marc Leishman
8:25 a.m. Hideki Matsuyama, Matt Jones
8:35 a.m. David Lipsky, Patrick Rodgers
8:45 a.m. Adam Schenk, Brendan Steele
8:55 a.m. Sergio Garcia, Lee Westwood
9:05 a.m. Lanto Griffin, Denny McCarthy
9:15 a.m. Davis Thompson, Rickie Fowler
9:25 a.m. Brendon Todd, Danny Willett
9:40 a.m. Vince Whaley, Cameron Champ
9:50 a.m. Adam Long, Thomas Pieters
10 a.m. Paul Casey, Nick Taylor
10:10 a.m. Stephan Jaeger, Ian Poulter
10:20 a.m. Adam Scott, Lucas Herbert
10:30 a.m. K.H. Lee, Si Woo Kim
10:40 a.m. Jason Kokrak, Taylor Moore
10:50 a.m. Cameron Young, Patton Kizzire
11:05 a.m. Taylor Pendrith, J.J. Spaun
11:15 a.m. Sebastián Muñoz, Troy Merritt
11:25 a.m. Beau Hossler, Tommy Fleetwood
11:35 p.m. Sam Burns, Martin Laird
11:45 p.m. Jon Rahm, Aaron Wise
11:55 p.m. Keegan Bradley, Max Homa
12:05 p.m. Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Tom Hoge
12:15 p.m. Charles Howell III, Tyrrell Hatton
12:30 p.m. Will Zalatoris, Sungjae Im
12:40 p.m. Russell Henley, Nick Watney
12:50 p.m. Corey Conners, Matt Fitzpatrick
1 p.m. Graeme McDowell, Rory McIlroy
1:10 p.m. Gary Woodland, Chris Kirk
1:20 p.m. Viktor Hovland, Scottie Scheffler
1:30 p.m. Billy Horschel, Talor Gooch

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How to watch/listen

You can watch Golf Channel for free on fuboTVESPN+ is the exclusive home for PGA Tour Live streaming. All times Eastern.

Sunday, March 6

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.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

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Friday tee times for the PGA Tour’s 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill

Everything you need to know for the second round at Bay Hill.

The PGA Tour’s Florida Swing continues outside Orlando this week as a loaded field of the game’s best are at Bay Hill Club and Lodge for the 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational.

Who else would be in the lead other than Rory McIlroy? The event’s 2018 champion has recorded five consecutive top-10s at Bay Hill, the longest active streak at the tournament (friendly reminder Tiger Woods won there eight times). Beau Hossler, J.J. Spaun and Billy Horschel are T-2 at 5 under, with a host of players in the mix at T-5.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the second round of the 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational. All times Eastern.

API: Leaderboard | Photos | PGA Tour Live on ESPN+

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Round 1

1st tee

Time Players
7:10 a.m. Peter Malnati, Patrick Rodgers, Beau Hossler
7:21 a.m. Anirban Lahiri, J.J. Spaun, Adam Schenk
7:32 a.m. Maverick McNealy, Lee Hodges, Hayden Buckley
7:43 a.m.
Seamus Power, Michael Thompson, Matthew Wolff
7:54 a.m.
Garrick Higgo, Matt Jones, Lanto Griffin
8:05 a.m. Dylan Frittelli, Charles Howell III, Danny Willett
8:16 a.m. Erik van Rooyen, Cameron Champ, Kevin Na
8:27 a.m. Jason Kokrak, Brendon Todd, Patton Kizzire
8:38 a.m. Adam Svensson, Takumi Kanaya, Nicolai Hojgaard
8:49 a.m. Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Davis Thompson, James Piot
11:40 a.m. Brendan Steele, Nick Watney, Aaron Rai
11:51 a.m. Scott Stallings, Cameron Tringale, Matt Fitzpatrick
12:02 p.m. Lee Westwood, Denny McCarthy, Thomas Pieters
12:13 p.m. Lucas Herbert, Branden Grace, Keith Mitchell
12:24 p.m. Graeme McDowell, Justin Rose, Zach Johnson
12:35 p.m. Luke List, Hideki Matsuyama, Max Homa
12:46 p.m. Scottie Scheffler, Sungjae Im, Will Zalatoris
12:57 p.m. Sepp Straka, Rory McIlroy, Adam Scott
1:08 p.m. Troy Merritt, Russell Henley, Sahith Theegala
1:19 p.m. Greyson Sigg, Davis Riley, Sam Bennett

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10th tee

Time Players
7:10 a.m. Scott Piercy, Padraig Harrington, Sam Ryder
7:21 a.m. Kevin Streelman, Tommy Fleetwood, Vince Whaley
7:32 a.m. Aaron Wise, Danny Lee, Rory Sabbatini
7:43 a.m.
Lucas Glover, Martin Laird, Corey Conners
7:54 a.m.
Patrick Reed, Paul Casey, Brandt Snedeker
8:05 a.m. Tom Hoge, Viktor Hovland, Billy Horschel
8:16 a.m. Marc Leishman, Tyrrell Hatton, David Lipsky
8:27 a.m. Sam Burns, Jon Rahm, Sergio Garcia
8:38 a.m. Andrew Putnam, Ian Poulter, Henrik Norlander
8:49 a.m. Alex Smalley, Min Woo Lee, John Pak
11:40 a.m. Keegan Bradley, Matt Wallace, Trey Mullinax
11:51 a.m. Charl Schwartzel, Sean O’Hair, Doug Ghim
12:02 p.m. Jonathan Byrd, Cameron Young, Taylor Pendrith
12:13 p.m. K.H. Lee, Chez Reavie, Gary Woodland
12:24 p.m. Hudson Swafford, Nick Taylor, Adam Long
12:35 p.m. Talor Gooch, Si Woo Kim, Kevin Tway
12:46 p.m. Cam Davis, Sebastián Muñoz, Henrik Stenson
12:57 p.m. Kevin Kisner, Carlos Ortiz, Rickie Fowler
1:08 p.m. Pat Perez, Chris Kirk, Stephan Jaeger
1:19 p.m. Taylor Moore, Paul Barjon, Greg Koch

How to watch/listen

You can watch Golf Channel for free on fuboTVESPN+ is the exclusive home for PGA Tour Live streaming. All times Eastern.

Friday, March 4

TV

Golf Channel: 2-6 p.m.

Radio

SiriusXM: 12-6 p.m.

STREAM

ESPN+: 7 a.m.-6 p.m.

Saturday, 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+: 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m.

Sunday, March 6

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.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

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After signing on with ball producer, Jason Day withdraws from Arnold Palmer Invitational

Day captured the title at this event in 2016 and has finished inside the top 35 thrice since.

For the first time in more than seven months, Jason Day tweeted on his official account Tuesday, excited to announce he had joined forces with Bridgestone Golf and will play the company’s TOUR B XS ball.

The good vibes didn’t last long, however, as the former Arnold Palmer Invitational champ was back in the news on Wednesday after the PGA Tour announced he had withdrawn from the event at Bay Hill.

Day captured the title at this event in 2016 and has finished inside the top 35 thrice since. But this marks the third time in four years the Aussie star has pulled out of the event, citing back issues as the reason for the previous two. There was no official word on why Day left this year.

If it is his back again, it marks a setback as the former World No. 1 played well in the first three rounds of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am before struggling Sunday and finishing T-24 two weeks ago. He also played well the week before at Torrey Pines, earning a place in the final group and eventually signing for T-3.

Day was scheduled as a featured player on PGA Tour Live’s coverage on ESPN+, as he was to be joined by Marc Leishman and Tyrrell Hatton. He’ll be replaced in the field by David Lipsky.

Previously, Bryson DeChambeau, the 2021 champion, announced that he will not defend his title. Citing injury, DeChambeau said he is not back to 100 percent after hurting his wrist in January. He hasn’t played on the PGA Tour since the Farmers Insurance Open on Jan. 26-29.

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Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play: Florida

TPC Sawgrass Players Stadium Course is No. 1 on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play in Florida, with Streamsong claiming Nos. 2, 3 and 4.

Sure, we all know about the 17th hole of the Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass. That island green soaks up much of the attention every year in the PGA Tour’s Players Championship.

As the No. 1 course in Florida on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access layouts, the Players Stadium is the epitome of golf in the Sunshine State. Built by Pete Dye – with plenty of inspiration from his wife, Alice Dye – on flat, swampy ground and opened in 1980, it is a perfect example of the challenges that often face course designers in golf-rich Florida and the creative ways in which architects attempt to address them.

Golfweek ranks courses by compiling the average ratings – on a points basis of 1 to 10 – of its more than 750 raters to create several industry-leading lists of courses. That includes the popular Best Courses You Can Play list for courses that allow non-member tee times. These generally are defined as layouts accessible to resort guests or regular daily-fee players.

The Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass is No. 1 on that list, and it can be a beast for amateurs in the 51 weeks a year the course does not host the Tour’s best. Water, long rough, plenty of length – there’s no shortage of challenges. But it’s the creativity of the shaping and the demands on shotmaking that set the layout apart from most courses in Florida.

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That famed 17th green is a perfect example of the Dyes’ creative thinking to handle the challenges architects often face when building in Florida. Designers frequently dig ponds all around a course, both to handle drainage from frequent heavy rains and to supply building material to lift fairways and greens above the water table. Dye’s island green certainly wasn’t the first in Florida – it wasn’t even the first on that stretch of A1A, as that honor goes to No. 9 at the nearby Ponte Vedra Inn and Club’s Ocean Course – but the 137-yarder he created faces players at a critical time in one of the Tour’s largest events.

For Pete and Alice Dye, No. 17 was a perfect opportunity to make something special instead of having just another pond – if you must have all that water, why not stick an island green in it? The results have had players shaking over their 9-irons ever since.

It’s all part of an experience that lifts the Players Stadium Course to No. 22 in the United States on Golfweek’s Best Modern Courses list for layouts built in or after 1960. It’s also No. 11 on Golfweek’s Best Resort Courses list for the whole U.S.

Streamsong Red in Florida (Courtesy of Streamsong/Laurence Lambrecht)

Water wasn’t nearly as big a part of the equation at the next four courses on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list in Florida. Streamsong Resort in Bowling Green and World Woods in Brooksville had something even better: sand. Lots and lots of it.

Within the past decade, Streamsong has opened three courses built on sand. The Red, designed by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw, ranks No. 2 on Golfweek’s Best list for public-access tracks in Florida. The Black by Gil Hanse is next at No. 3, followed by Tom Doak’s Blue at No. 4. Built largely on old phosphate-mining spoil, the layouts at Streamsong stand out because of their other-worldly topographies created by all that sand, which once was an ancient seabed – the place is littered with shark teeth – and that provides an ideal playing surface.

Streamsong Black (Courtesy of Streamsong Resort/Laurence Lambrecht)

On top of some of that sand sits new green surfaces for the nearly decade-old Red and Blue courses. Streamsong installed new Mach 1 putting surfaces on those two courses in 2020, ensuring its oldest layouts – dating to 2012 an hour southeast of Tampa or 90 minutes southwest of Orlando – remain fresh and provide world-class conditioning.

Streamsong’s threesome also has broken into Golfweek’s Best Modern Courses list. The Red is No. 39 on that listed, followed by the Black at No. 46 and the Blue at No. 57. The trio also made it into Golfweek’s Best Resort Courses list for the U.S., with the Red at No. 15, the Black at No. 18 and the Blue at No. 21, making Streamsong one of the premium three-course destinations in the world.

Streansong Resort
Streamsong Blue (Courtesy of Streamsong Resort/Laurence Lambrecht)

Tom Fazio’s Pine Barrens course at World Woods north of Tampa also utilized sand instead of water. Opened in 1993, Pine Barrens’ native, rolling terrain and large sandy waste areas offer a non-traditional Florida experience. Rolling Oaks, the second 18 at World Woods, ranks No. 20 in Florida on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can play.

So while the Players Stadium Course has made the most of its water, the next four public-access layouts in Florida on Golfweek’s Best rankings took advantage of their sandy environments. For a state that prides itself on beach life, these five layouts are a perfect meeting of water and sand.

Each year, we publish the three lists that are the foundation of our course-ratings program: Golfweek’s Best 2020: Top 200 Classic Courses, Golfweek’s Best 2020: Top 200 Modern Courses and Golfweek’s Best 2020: Best Courses You Can Play.

These are the best courses you can play in Florida.

  1. TPC Sawgrass (Players Stadium), Ponte Vedra Beach (No. 22 m)
  2. Streamsong (Red), Bowling Green (No. 39 m)
  3. Streamsong (Black), Bowling Green (No. 46 m)
  4. Streamsong (Blue), Bowling Green (No. 57 m)
  5. World Woods (Pine Barrens), Brooksville (No. 171 m)
  6. Trump National Doral Miami (Blue Monster), Doral (m)
  7. Black Diamond Ranch (Quarry), Lecanto (m)
  8. Bay Hill Club, Orlando (m)
  9. Innisbrook (Cooperhead), Tarpon Springs (m)
  10. Hammock Beach Resort (Ocean), Palm Coast (m)
  11. PGA National Resort & Spa (Champion), Palm Beach Gardens (m)
  12. Camp Creek, Panama City Beach (m)
  13. Turnberry Isle Resort (Soffer), Aventura (m)
  14. Hammock Beach Resort (Conservatory), Palm Coast (m)
  15. Sandestin Resort (Burnt Pine), Destin (m)
  16. Juliette Falls, Dunnellon (m)*
  1. PGA Golf Club (Wanamaker), Port St. Lucie (m)
  2. Crandon Park, Key Biscayne (m)
  3. Trump National Doral Miami (Gold), Doral (m)
  4. World Woods (Rolling Oaks), Brooksville (m)
  5. Hammock Bay, Naples (m)*
  1. Orange County National (Panther Lake), Winter Garden (m)
  2. Victoria Hills, Deland (m)
  3. Mission Inn Resort (El Campeon), Howey-in-the-Hills (c)
  4. PGA Golf Club (Dye), Port St. Lucie (m)
  5. Black Diamond Ranch (Ranch), Lecanto (m)
  6. Turnberry Isle Resort (Miller), Aventura (m)
  7. Gasparilla Inn & Club, Boca Grande (c)
  8. TPC Sawgrass (Dye’s Valley), Ponte Vedra Beach (m)*
  1. Reunion Resort (Watson), Kissimmee (m)

*New to the list in 2020

(m): modern
(c): classic

Golfweek’s Best 2020: Top 30 Campus Courses

The rankings below reflect where these courses fall among the top 30 Campus Courses in the United States.

24. Mark Bostick GC (Florida), 5.82

Gainesville, Fla.; Donald Ross, Bobby Weed, 1921

Golfweek’s Best 2020

How we rate them

The members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on our 10 criteria. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings on each course are averaged together to produce a final rating for each course. Then each course is ranked against other courses in its state, or nationally, to produce the final rankings.

Bryson DeChambeau holds off Lee Westwood, takes Arnold Palmer Invitational

The 2020 U.S. Open champ led the field in scoring on the par-3s and finished Sunday’s final round with a 71.

The storyline heading into the 2021 Arnold Palmer Invitational was bomber Bryson DeChambeau’s driver — and whether he’d use it to reach the green on the par-5 sixth hole.

But what set DeChambeau apart most of the week was his impressive work on the shortest holes at Bay Hill Club and Lodge.

The 2020 U.S. Open champ led the field in scoring on the par-3s and finished Sunday’s final round with a 71, capturing his eighth PGA Tour title by topping Lee Westwood, Corey Conners, Jordan Spieth and others.

DeChambeau finished the event at 11 under, a stroke ahead of Westwood and three up on Conners. Spieth, Andrew Putnam and Richy Weresnki all tied for fourth at 6 under.

Of course, DeChambeau still drew attention with his booming drives — in fact, he took two deep breaths and drilled a 377-yard drive on No. 6 on Sunday. His ball cleared the water at the double-dogleg easily and bounced through the fairway into a fairway bunker. He birdied the hole.

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Meanwhile, Westwood, who turns 48 next month, came into the final round as the oldest player to hold the 54-hole lead/co-lead on Tour since Phil Mickelson at the American Express in 2019. But he struggled to a 37 on the front nine and watched DeChambeau, who had two top-fives in four prior starts at Bay Hill, pass him.

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Did Bryson DeChambeau go for it on No. 6 at Arnold Palmer Invitational on Thursday?

Bryson DeChambeau has flirted with the idea of driving the par-5 6th hole at Bay Hill in the 2021 Arnold Palmer Invitational.

ORLANDO – Even for Bryson DeChambeau, the Paul Bunyan of the PGA Tour, the challenge looks unconquerable.

Trying to drive a par-5? Really, Bryson?

But that’s exactly what one of the biggest boppers on the PGA Tour said he intends to do this week at the Arnold Palmer Invitational at the 555-yard, par-5 sixth hole that is guarded by a lake on the hole’s entire left side.

Back in January, he told Golf.com he would “100 percent” try to drive the green.

“No. 6 at Bay Hill is one of those I’ve been eyeing,” DeChambeau told Golf.com. “I think I can do some pretty cool things on it.”

But conditions have to be favorable for DeChambeau to pull off the feat. While the scorecard reads 555 yards, the green can be reached by cutting across the water and carrying the ball 340-350 yards from the back tees.

Standing on the tee box during Thursday’s opening round, DeChambeau played with the crowd, initially pulling his 3 wood from the bag. The crowd moaned. He laughed. Then he took out his driver, and played an aggressively conservative line that found the fairway. At the time of the drive, the wind was slightly against DeChambeau, who was just one off the lead.

Bryson DeChambeau
The line Bryson DeChambeau took on the par-5 6th hole at Bay Hill during the first round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational. (Photo: Screenshot)

He bombed a 309-yard drive, safely hitting to a once-unthinkable part of the fairway, but not cutting the whole lake off.

He went on to make birdie and stood just one off the lead after the hole.

But the reigning U.S. Open champ gave it a go during Wednesday’s pro-am, even with the wind against him.

“Everybody wants to see this,” DeChambeau said as he walked to the tee that day.

And then he hit two balls into the water, coming up 20 yards short each time.

“If it’s not into the wind, I can get there,” he said.

Later on Twitter, he added: “Thought I would attempt to carry the 6th hole today (340 with the carry). Wind was brutal and I came up short (only gave it a few tries) but might be something I go for if the conditions are right.

“We’ll see.”

If he makes the cut, DeChambeau will have three more chances to clear the water and reach the green. So, yes, we’ll see.

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