The widow of Tom Weiskopf fought through tears as Black Desert Resort made its PGA Tour debut

His widow told Golfweek the 1973 British Open champion would have enjoyed the rave reviews.

Sitting in the recently completed and luxurious lobby of the Black Desert Resort near St. George, Utah, Laurie Weiskopf needed a minute to get control of her emotions. The widow of World Golf Hall of Famer Tom Weiskopf knew she might get choked up a little when seeing the finished project that was the last 18-hole golf course her late husband designed, but the grandeur of the red rocks, black lava flows and stunning resort proved too much for her to handle.

As players rushed to praise the new course, which was shoehorned into the FedEx Cup Fall schedule, Laurie Weiskopf fought through tears while talking with Golfweek about how the 1973 British Open champion would have enjoyed the rave reviews the course received.

The layout has quickly climbed the rankings and is No. 1 in Utah on Golfweek’s Best list of public-access courses, No. 26 among all resort courses in the U.S. and No. 81 among all modern courses in the country.

“He would have been just thrilled. Really thrilled,” Laurie Weiskopf said. “You know there was talk of a PGA Tour event potentially coming as he was building it, but Tom thought that was super aggressive thinking. It would be a surprise to him that it came in 2024. I’m not saying he’d be shocked, but this would have been a surprised to him.”

Opened in 2023, Black Desert was the last course designed by Weiskopf before died of pancreatic cancer. Phil Smith, Weiskopf’s partner in golf architecture, finished the job.

More: What are PGA Tour players saying about the stunning Black Desert Resort this week?

While Laurie admired how much love her husband had for each of the courses he designed, and he has over 70 to his name, she also knew his doggedness would make it difficult to slow down as he became more ill. In a famous story, Weiskopf tumbled into the black lava rocks at Black Desert while he was on there putting the project together. Laurie remembers her husband coming with bloodied hands, but he simply wouldn’t stop working on the project.

“The whole thing was scary for me,” she said. “He fell more than once. I sent him out with the best boots, but he came home with blood all over his hands and I had gloves for him the next day. But I knew he wasn’t going to stop. For him, this wasn’t work. Well, most of the projects weren’t work.”

Tom Weiskopf at Augusta National Golf Club during the 1982 Masters. (The Augusta Chronicle)

While Laurie was thrilled to see Tom’s legacy on display at this year’s Black Desert Championship, she wasn’t as thrilled that it took her husband’s death before he entered the Hall of Fame. The induction ceremony was held in June at Pinehurst. Weiskopf was part of a class that included Padraig Harrington, Sandra Palmer, Johnny Farrell and Beverly Hanson, who joined the remaining seven of the 13 LPGA Founders.

Laurie felt her husband should have gotten the call while he was living, rather than having to come to the family posthumously.

“That’s a hard one for me, to be honest,” she said. “That’s more bittersweet than joyful.

“It’s just frustrating when you know it’s just a popularity contest and you don’t like something about someone and you’re not just looking at what the person’s done. That’s the way I look at it.”

Up next for Black Desert: LPGA will host an event at the southern Utah resort in 2025

The LPGA said about a month before the course opened in 2023 that it would play there in 2025.

The PGA Tour made its first stop in Utah since 1963 over the weekend with the Black Desert Championship. The field lacked most of the tour’s big names but the course itself stepped in as the headliner, with stunning views of the red rocks serving as a magnificent backdrop to the black lava rock lined fairways.

In 2025, the LPGA will bring its tour to the scenic sights of southern Utah. The LPGA announced in May of 2023, about a month before the Tom Weiskopf-design officially opened, that it would stage an event there.

“We are thrilled to welcome Black Desert Resort into the LPGA family as a tournament partner and title sponsor,” Ricki Lasky, LPGA Chief Tour Business and Operations Officer, said at the time.

Neither a tournament name nor a title sponsor has been announced, and the LPGA has yet to officially schedule a date for the tournament but it’s certainly something for fans of the women’s game to look forward to in 2025.

Opened in 2023, Black Desert was the last course designed by Tom Weiskopf before his death caused by pancreatic cancer. Phil Smith, Weiskopf’s partner in golf architecture, finished the job.

The layout has quickly climbed the rankings and is No. 1 in Utah on Golfweek’s Best list of public-access courses, No. 26 among all resort courses in the U.S. and No. 81 among all modern courses in the country.

Black Desert Resort will have a 148-room hotel. A village of condos focused on golfers, another focused on families. A 3,000-foot boardwalk promenade of shops, restaurants and entertainment venues. There will be a PGA Tour event this fall, an LPGA event next year – both of those come on the heels of an Epson Tour event in 2023 in which players were feted with luxuries not normally reserved for that tour.

Golfweek’s Beth Ann Nichols and Jason Lusk contributed to this article.

After three-victory promotion from Korn Ferry Tour, Matt McCarty needs just two starts to win on PGA Tour at Black Desert Championship

Matt McCarty just keeps winning, no matter the tour.

Matt McCarty just keeps winning, no matter the tour.

The 26-year-old former Santa Clara University golfer smashed his drive within 3 feet of the hole at the drivable par-4, 14thgreen at Black Desert Resort to set up an eagle en route to posting a final-round 4-under 67 on Sunday and win the inaugural Black Desert Championship in Ivins, Utah.

“I knew if I played well this week after last week then I could maybe have a chance but to do it like this? I don’t know how you could expect this, to be honest,” he said.

McCarty won three times in a span of six events on the Korn Ferry Tour to earn a promotion to the PGA Tour and in just his second start in the big leagues, he returned to the winner’s circle with a 72-hole total of 23-under 261 and a three-shot victory over Stephan Jaeger.

“Winning sometimes just seems like it kind of happens, especially lately,” McCarty said. “When it rains it pours right now for me.”

McCarty, who opened with a bogey-free 62, grabbed the lead with a third-round 64 and entered the final round with a two-stroke advantage. All week long, the left-hander reminded himself that if he could win on the Kerry Ferry Tour, why couldn’t he do the same on the PGA Tour? On Sunday, he experienced nerves just as he had during his previous trips to the winner’s circle only this time they didn’t subside; they kept building, he said. It didn’t hurt that he added a birdie right out of the gate at the first and seventh before a bogey at No. 12 cut his lead to one stroke. But the eagle at 14 gave McCarty a three-stroke cushion and he tacked on two more birdies at Nos. 16 and 18, sandwiched between a three-putt bogey at 17 and cruised to his maiden title on the PGA Tour.

He became the first player since Jason Gore in 2005 to win three times on the Korn Ferry Tour and then on the PGA Tour in the same season. It was just his third career Tour start — he had previously played in the 2022 U.S. Open — and since 1970 only five players have won as quickly (or faster).

McCarty’s triumph at the Korn Ferry Tour’s Albertsons Boise Open in August secured him that circuit’s first Three-Victory Promotion in a year since Wesley Bryan in 2016, and just the 13th player to do so in the Tour’s 34-year history. Before his first start since his promotion last week at the Sanderson Farms Championship, he said, “it’s pretty surreal to be out here now. But at the same point, it’s very exciting. I’m ready for it.”

Indeed, he is. That’s a combined four victories in his last 10 starts.

“It’s just been a crazy last few months for me,” said McCarty, who also earned a spot in The Sentry, the Masters and the PGA Championship. “This is what I’ve wanted to do. To be able to do it this quickly, to be able to play in all these tournaments I’m going to be able to play in coming up is going to be really special.”

Jaeger, who held the 36-hole lead, failed to apply much heat on McCarty but did birdie three of the final six holes to shoot 68 and finished second.

“I didn’t drive it well enough to give myself shorter clubs in and ample opportunity for birdie,” Jaeger said. “To come back and birdie the last and end up finishing second is a big one for me.”

Lucas Glover made seven birdies in his first 10 holes and signed for 62 to post 19 under and tie with Kevin Streelman (69). Glover finish T-3 for the second straight week while Streelman recorded his first top-10 finish of the season.

“If I’d have putted better the first three days I would’ve been right there,” Glover said.

2024 Black Desert Championship Sunday tee times, PGA Tour pairings and how to watch

The purse at the 2024 Black Desert Championship is $7.5 million with $1.35 million going to the winner.

Through 54 holes of the 2024 Black Desert Championship at Black Desert Resort in Utah, Matt McCarty holds a two-shot lead at 19 under over Joe Highsmith, Harris English, Kevin Streelman and Stephan Jaeger.

The course is a par-71 layout measuring 7,371 yards. Black Desert Resort is No. 1 in Utah on Golfweek’s Best list of public-access courses, No. 26 among all resort courses in the U.S. and No. 81 among all modern courses in the country.

The purse at the 2024 Black Desert Championship is $7.5 million with $1.35 million going to the winner. The winner will also receive 500 FedEx Cup points

Black Desert: Leaderboard | Photos

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the final round of the 2024 Black Desert Championship. All times listed are MT.

Sunday tee times

How to watch, listen

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

Sunday, Oct. 13

Golf Channel: 5-8 p.m.

Sirius XM: 3-8 p.m.

We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

Matt McCarty’s chance at history and more from Saturday at the 2024 Black Desert Championship

Catch up on the third-round action here.

If you don’t know the name Matt McCarty, it’s time to get familiar.

In August, McCarty became the 13th player since 1997 to earn the Korn Ferry Tour’s Three-Victory Promotion, immediately making him eligible for the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup Fall. He won the Price Cutter Charity Championship in July and both the Pinnacle Bank Championship and Albertsons Boise Open in August. Following his T-63 finish at the Sanderson Farms Championship, McCarty is 19 under and the 54-hole leader at the 2024 Black Desert Championship in Utah.

The 26-year-old from Scottsdale, Arizona, bogeyed his first hole of the day but caught fire before the turn, birdieing Nos. 4-6 and 8 while adding an eagle at the par-5 seventh. The 5-under 31 put him a shot clear of Stephan Jaeger — winner of the Texas Children’s Houston Open earlier this season — at the time.

On his way back to the clubhouse, McCarty bogeyed the 10th but birdied three of his final five holes to solidify his position atop the leaderboard.

What did his tremendous season on the Korn Ferry Tour teach him?

“Simply just learn how to win,” he said. “The experience of being in contention out there, I think it’s very similar to kind of what I felt today, and honestly helped me just kind of feel a little bit calmer about it. But, yeah, it definitely all kind of builds upon itself. You know, the last three months have been great in order to kind of get to that spot. Really excited for tomorrow.”

The only player to earn the Three-Victory Promotion and win on Tour in the same season was Jason Gore in 2005 at the 84 Lumber Classic.

McCarty will start Sunday with a two-shot advantage.

Here are a few more notes from a busy day in the Beehive State.

Black Desert: Leaderboard

Big moves from The Bucket

Joe Highsmith of the United States plays his shot from the third tee during the third round of the Black Desert Championship 2024 at Black Desert Resort on October 12, 2024 in St George, Utah. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)

Joe Highsmith had a tough year. Before the FedEx Cup Fall, the bucket-hat-wearing 24-year-old missed 13 cuts across 20 starts and finished inside the top 25 just three times. However, he’s found his game a bit since the fall session kicked off last month.

The Pepperdine product tied for 13th at the Procore Championship and for 55th at the Sanderson Farm Championship. And through 54 holes of the Black Desert, Highsmith is firmly in the mix.

After rounds of 66-68, Highsmith turned it to another gear on Saturday, firing a third-round 9-under 62 to jump into a tie for second at 17 under.

“It was certainly probably one of the best rounds I’ve ever played in my entire life golfing,” he told the media after signing his card. “It got pretty hard on the back nine with some crosswinds. So, yeah, I mean, feeling great about it … I’m not really trying to analyze it too much. Just kind of stay there and hopefully keep it going tomorrow.”

Streelman looks for first win in 10 years

Kevin Streelman of the United States plays his shot from the 15th tee during the third round of the Black Desert Championship 2024 at Black Desert Resort on October 12, 2024 in St George, Utah. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

Kevin Streelman left TPC River Highlands in 2014 as a two-time Tour winner. When he arrived at Black Desert Resort, he was still a two-time Tour winner.

He’ll have a chance to end his 10-year drought on Sunday after a stellar 8-under 63 that included nine birdies, seven of which came on the back nine. Streelman’s 28 coming home vaulted him up the leaderboard into a tie for second and he will tee off Sunday two shots off the lead.

“I had a great warmup,” he said. “The putter felt great all week. Didn’t get off to the start I wanted to today. I was a little disappointed on what I did on 2 flipping it into the rocks and was fortunate to get out of there with a bogey. Man, starting on 7 I kind of made a decision. That’s a tee shot where you got to keep it very straight. You are rewarded if you can hit a nice drive or a 3-wood, and I just smashed a 3-wood down there and hit a great 5-wood just short, pitched it to six feet, and felt like I was off and running.”

Streelman ranked sixth in Strokes Gained: Putting on Saturday, gaining over 2.5 shots on the field. If that continues during the final round, the Duke product will be tough to beat.

Fun fact of the day

Top 10 and odds to win

Position Player Score Odds to win
1st Matt McCarthy 19 under (+160)
T-2 Joe Highsmith 17 under (+650)
T-2 Kevin Streelman 17 under (+750)
T-2 Harris English 17 under (+450)
T-2 Stephan Jaeger 17 under (+400)
6th Harry Hall 15 under (+1800)
T-7 Kurt Kitayama 14 under (+3000)
T-7 Chad Ramey 14 under (+5500)
T-7 Beau Hossler 14 under (+3000)

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Watch: Incredible drone show at the 2024 Black Desert Championship

This is unreal.

For the first time since 1963, the PGA Tour returned to Utah this week for the 2024 Black Desert Championship at Black Desert Resort. Although the biggest names in the sport are taking advantage of their off-season, the leaderboard was tightly packed after two rounds, setting up an exciting weekend.

Stephan Jaeger, winner of the Texas Children’s Houston Open earlier this season, led after 36 holes as he chases his second-career Tour win.

Black Desert is known for its breathtaking views, and the tournament took advantage of that backdrop this week and put on an incredible drone show to celebrate the Tour’s return to the Beehive State.

Watch the video below.

Black Desert: Leaderboard

2024 Black Desert Championship Friday tee times, PGA Tour pairings and how to watch

The purse is $7.5 million with $1.35 million going to the winner.

This week, the PGA Tour is in Utah for the 2024 Black Desert Championship at Black Desert Resort. It’s the first time the Tour has made its way to Utah since 1963.

The players in the field at the inaugural event are raving about the par-71 layout playing 7,371 yards that ranks No. 1 in Utah on Golfweek’s Best list of public-access courses, No. 26 among all resort courses in the U.S. and No. 81 among all modern courses in the country.

The merchandise tent is up and running and will only get better in years to come but for those on site, one of the best things there is the view of the course off the deck. Want a better look at the challenges the Tour pros are facing this week? Check out the yardage book.

The purse at the 2024 Black Desert Championship is $7.5 million with $1.35 million going to the winner. The winner will also receive 500 FedEx Cup points

Black Desert: Leaderboard | Photos

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s what you need to know for the second round of the 2024 Black Desert Championship. All times listed are MT.

Friday tee times

How to watch, listen

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

Friday, Oct. 11

Golf Channel: 5-8 p.m.

Sirius XM: 2-8 p.m.

ESPN+: 10 a.m.-8 p.m.

Saturday, Oct. 12

Golf Channel: 5-8 p.m.

Sirius XM: 3-8 p.m.

Sunday, Oct. 13

Golf Channel: 5-8 p.m.

Sirius XM: 3-8 p.m.

We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

Merchandise tent at PGA Tour’s Black Desert Championship is a bit generic, but give it time

Enjoy the stunning view, grab a hat and come back expecting more next October.

IVINS, Utah — Let’s cut the folks who organized the merchandise tent at the inaugural Black Desert Championship a little slack for perhaps lagging a tiny bit behind some of the other stores that dot the PGA Tour schedule.

To be fair, there’s an ample, if somewhat generic, series of offerings, from hats to a handful of T-shirt choices, to the typical assortments of flags and ball markers.

There are two things to consider when judging the tent, which sits near the fan village with a stunning view at the Black Desert Resort:

  • The view from the merch tent is perhaps the best on Tour
  • The group that got involved in supplying the merch tent is just getting started, with having had only a handful of months to plan for the 2024 event

So what should be expected in the future? The fact that shorts bearing Tom Weiskopf’s signature have quickly become among the most popular on-site will likely lead to a wider array of similar items next year. And the staff has already discussed a number of clever product drops for the tournament’s 2025 edition, including Weiskopf bobbleheads. Black Desert was Weiskopf’s final golf course design.

Black DesertLeaderboard | Photos

So enjoy the stunning view, grab a hat and come back expecting more next October.

Here’s a look at what’s available this year:

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Photos: 2024 Black Desert Championship at Black Desert Resort

Black Desert Resort sits atop the Golfweek’s Best public-access courses list in Utah.

The 2024 Black Desert Championship is being held at the brand new Black Desert Resort in Ivins, Utah, in the southwest corner of the state. It’s the first PGA Tour event in the Beehive State since September of 1963.

The Black Desert event is the third of eight over 11 weeks on the FedExCup Fall series which is a chance for golfers who have not yet secured status for the 2025 PGA Tour season to do so.

Winners of any of the fall events earn a two-year exemption on the PGA Tour and spots in the season-opening Sentry as well as the Players Championship, the Masters and the PGA.

Black Desert: Leaderboard

Black Desert Resort, meanwhile, has only been open about a year but has already rocketed to the top of Golfweek’s Best public-access courses in Utah.

Check out some photos of the tournament.

Utah feels like it’s having a moment at PGA Tour’s inaugural Black Desert Championship

You’ve got the makings of a Utah coup in a sports world that’s typically dominated by metropolitan regions along the coasts.

IVINS, Utah — It feels like the Beehive State, once known for Mormon temples, a bougie ski resort and the largest saltwater lake in the Western Hemisphere, is having something of a moment lately when it comes to the sports world.

Both BYU and Utah are snugly in the middle of the most recent US LBM Coaches Poll, with the Cougars at No. 15 and the Utes just two spots behind. The Utah Jazz recently locked down All-Star forward and former Most Improved Player winner Lauri Markkanen to a five-year deal worth $238 million and this season Salt Lake City will enjoy its first as a National Hockey League city with the Arizona Coyotes relocating to the mountain paradise.

Throw in the PGA Tour’s first return to this geographically diverse region in 60 years at this week’s inaugural Black Desert Championship and you’ve got the makings of a Utah coup in a sports world that’s typically dominated by metropolitan regions along the coasts.

Black Desert: Leaderboard | Photos

That might explain why pro golfers are puffing their chests out a little this week as the Tour’s FedEx Fall rolls through picturesque St. George, a southern municipality that’s closer to Las Vegas than it is Salt Lake City.

“It’s exciting. Utah is kind of the state of sport, so another big event coming to Utah is awesome. Utah fans, people get behind the Jazz and we got a new hockey team, you know, and BYU and Utah and all the colleges,” said Zac Blair, who’s seeking his first PGA Tour victory in the same state where he was reared.

Black Desert Resort Utah
The Tom Weiskopf/Phil Smith-designed Black Desert Resort Golf Course opened in May of 2023 in Ivins, Utah. (Courtesy of Black Desert Golf Club/Brian Oar)

“This is just another big event that I think we’ll get a lot of people coming out to. It’s exciting to have something in your home state. Growing up you dream of playing on the PGA Tour and stuff like that, but never really thought we would have a PGA event here in our home state. Going to be a cool opportunity.”

Although many of the game’s top names will not be on hand — including native son Tonu Finau, who had previous engagements — there won’t be a lack of made-for-TV moments as southern Utah’s red rock mountains will get their day in the sun, literally and figuratively. The par-72 Black Desert Golf Course designed by Phil Smith and the late Tom Weiskopf has been welcomed onto the Tour schedule with rave reviews, rocketing up lists of the nation’s top golf course, including Golfweek’s Best. The design marked the final project from World Golf Hall of Fame 2024 inductee Weiskopf, who died in 2022.

This isn’t the first time Utah has hosted professional golf. The PGA Tour first appeared in Utah in 1930 when World Golf Hall of Fame member Harry “Lighthorse” Cooper won the Salt Lake Open. Seven years later, the Tour returned to Salt Lake City in 1937, when Al Zimmerman won the first of back-to-back Utah Open titles.

The historic Western Open, now known as the BMW Championship, made a stop in the Beehive State a decade later, when seven-time Tour winner Johnny Palmer captured the 1947 tournament in Salt Lake City.

In 1948, the state hosted the Utah Open Invitational, where Lloyd Mangrum edged George Fazio in a playoff. The event was played three more times (1958, 1960, 1963), with the 1963 edition – won by Tommy Jacobs by a stroke over Don January – the last time the Tour played in the state.

While the PGA Tour returns to Utah for the first time since 1963, the Beehive State has been home to the Korn Ferry Tour’s Utah Championship presented by Zions Bank since the Tour’s inaugural season in 1990. Contested at Oakridge Country Club since 2017, past champions of the tournament include John Daly (1990), Zach Johnson (2003), Brendon Todd (2008) and Cameron Champ (2018).

But there is a different feel in this region, a mixture of Arizona heat and Colorado elevation that could give those from the area a distinct advantage, right?

“Of course,” said Patrick Fishburn, who has four top-10 finishes in 2024 and played his college golf at BYU. “Playing at altitude is definitely different for sure. I grew up in Ogden, playing Ogden Country Club, which is probably 4,000 feet elevation and we’re probably 3,000 here. The ball just does different things.

“With the heat this week, there is just a lot of different factors. If you’re maybe not used to that it’ll cause a few more calculations going on in the brain, which for me personally, less calculation is better.”

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak contributed to this report.