Tiger Tracker: Woods’ Saturday at the BMW Championship featured a promising start, miserable end

Golfweek’s JuliaKate E. Culpepper recaps Tiger’s third round of play at Olympia Fields Country Club for the BMW Championship.

Golfweek’s JuliaKate E. Culpepper recaps Tiger’s third round of play at Olympia Fields Country Club for the BMW Championship.

Jon Rahm rebounds from penalty, remains in contention at BMW Championship

Jon Rahm had one of those forgetful moments in Saturday’s third round of the BMW Championship at Olympia Fields.

OLYMPIA FIELDS, Ill. – Oops.

Jon Rahm had one of those forgetful moments in Saturday’s third round of the BMW Championship at Olympia Fields.

On the fifth hole, Rahm hit a solid drive on the 421-yard par-4 and then found the green with his second from 129 and had 44 feet for birdie. Walking to the green, he was jiggling his ball marker – an Arizona State poker chip – in his right pocket.

And then he bent over and picked up his ball.

But the ball marker was still in his pocket.

“For some reason I just picked up the ball thinking I marked it already,” Rahm said. “I was thinking of somebody else and something else and I just picked up the ball without marking it, simple as that.

“Took the penalty and moved on.”


BMW Championship: Leaderboard | Photos | Tee times, TV info


Rahm was penalized one stroke under Rule 9.4b/1 for touching his ball while it was in play without putting a marker down first.

“I really can’t give you an explanation,” Rahm said. “It’s one of those things that happen in golf. Never thought it would happen in my professional career, but here we are.”

Despite the miscue, Rahm is still in contention in the second event of the FedEx Cup Playoffs as he went on to card a 4-under-par 66 to move to 2 over through 54 holes. His 66 at the time was tied for the lowest round of the week.

Rahm did convert from 6 feet on the fifth for bogey – a turning point for him, he said – and made birdies on the third, fourth, eighth, 11th and 15th.

“I’m proud of being able to maintain my composure afterwards,” Rahm said. “I think the most important shot of the round was that second putt, the six-footer for bogey on five.

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“It’s a really tough golf course out there. It’s really, really demanding. Even if you’re in the fairway you need to hit really, really good shots and I was able to hit more accurate iron shots out there today and have a couple tap-ins like I did on 3 and on 8, which the one on 8 I still don’t know how I hit it that close.

“Hopefully I can carry on with this ball-striking into tomorrow. Hopefully, I’m not too far off where I am right now. I do anticipate somebody playing good today and maybe getting to 3-, 4-under. Five would be a stretch, but I can see 3-, 4-under, and there will still be a lot of shots to make up, but it’s doable.

“I just hope I don’t lose by one. I’m just going to say that. I just hope. And if I do, well, very well my fault. It’s as simple as that.”

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Tiger Woods grinds to best start of BMW Championship, implodes on back nine

Tiger Woods had his best showing of the week Saturday at the BMW Championship at Olympia Fields, but faded on the back nine.

Weekend Tiger came out to play at Olympia Fields, but he didn’t stick around for long.

It doesn’t look like he’ll stick around for the Tour Championship either.

Tiger Woods had his best start of the week at the BMW Championship, finishing the front nine 2 under after back-to-back birdies on Nos. 3 and 4 and no bogeys for the first time this week. But the optimism surrounding his game dissipated at the turn as the 15-time major champion finished the round with a 2-over 72 after a disastrous trip through No. 17.

On the back nine, Woods struggled to find a fairway and spent most of his time after the turn in the rough, but that was just the appetizer ahead of his descent on the par-4 17th, which he birdied on Friday. Woods was forced to take a drop after his tee shot landed in a small creek surrounded by tall grass to the right of the fairway. His ensuing shots landed him in the far left rough, right greenside rough and then finally on the green where he two-putted for the 10th time on the day. He finished the hole with a triple-bogey 7. He finished with one final par at 18.


BMW Championship: Leaderboard | Photos | Tee times, TV info


He finished the day with 11 two-putts.

After rounds of 73 and 75, respectively, it was obvious Woods’ competitive juices were flowing Saturday morning on the par-5 first. He found the fairway bunker on his first shot and the greenside bunker with his third, but conjured up some heroics to chip the ball over the bunker and leave himself a 5-footer for par.

Woods carded his first bogey of the day on 10 after finding the rough on his first shot and the front, greenside bunker with his second. He missed a 13-foot, 6-inch downhill putt for par resulting in his first bogey of the week on the par-4 hole.

There is no cut at the BMW Championship so Woods will play Sunday at Olympia Fields in what will most likely be his last showing of the 2019-20 season.

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Tiger Woods’ BMW Championship third round, shot by shot

Follow Tiger Woods’ Saturdayround at the BMW Championship with shot-by-shot updates from Olympia Fields.

Tiger Woods is probably glad the BMW Championship is a no-cut event.

After shooting rounds of 73 and 75 respectively at Olympia Fields, Woods sits T-55 at 8 over on the event entering Saturday, nine shots behind 36-hole leaders Patrick Cantlay and Rory McIlroy. Woods is currently projected to need at least a tie for third to advance to the Tour Championship.

Woods finished Friday 5-over 75. He was 3 over on the front nine followed by a rollercoaster back nine with two birdies and a string of four bogeys in a five-hole stretch from Nos. 12-16.

The 15-time major champion will tee off his third round at 9:05 a.m. ET alongside reigning PGA Championship winner Collin Morikawa.

Follow Woods’ third round with shot-by-shot updates below.


BMW Championship: Leaderboard | Photos | Tee times, TV info


Hole 1 – Par 5

The round will begin shortly.

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BMW Championship tee times, TV info for Saturday’s third round

It’s moving day at the BMW Championship, the second leg of the 2020 FedEx Cup Playoffs. There is no cut this week at Olympia Fields Country Club outside Chicago. The 69-man field heads to the third round on Saturday. This second playoff event is …

It’s moving day at the BMW Championship, the second leg of the 2020 FedEx Cup Playoffs.

There is no cut this week at Olympia Fields Country Club outside Chicago. The 69-man field heads to the third round on Saturday.

This second playoff event is playing akin to a U.S. Open, a very difficult U.S. Open, mind you, as thick rough, lightning fairways, firm, sloping greens and heat from above have combined to deliver one of the most difficult exams these players have ever faced.

There’s no cut this week but after 36 holes, the projected FedEx Cup standings are sorting some things out. Namely, we’re getting a sense of who needs to do what over the weekend if he wants to advance.

At the conclusion of the tournament, the top 30 golfers in the points standings advance.

From tee times to TV info, here’s what you need to know for the second round of the BMW Championship.


BMW Championship: Leaderboard | Photos


All times listed below are Eastern.

1st tee

Time Players
8:10 a.m. Marc Leishman
8:15 a.m. Talor Gooch, Kevin Streelman
8:25 a.m. Sungjae Im, Andrew Landry
8:35 a.m. Cameron Champ, Matt Kuchar
8:45 a.m. Jason Day, Charles Howell III
8:55 a.m. Adam Long J.T. Poston
9:05 a.m. Tiger Woods, Collin Morikawa
9:15 a.m. Joel Dahmen, Cameron Smith
9:25 a.m. Dylen Frittelli, Robby Shelton
9:35 a.m. Scottie Scheffler, Maverick McNealy
9:45 a.m. Daniel Berger, Ryan Palmer
9:55 a.m. Mark Hubbard, Justin Thomas
10:10 a.m. Nick Taylor, Byeong Hun An
10:20 a.m. Jon Rahm, Kevin Na
10:30 a.m. Max Homa, Richy Werenski
10:40 a.m. Harris English, Adam Hadwin
10:50 a.m. Matthew Fitzpatrick, Paul Casey
11 a.m. Sebastian Munoz, Jason Kokrak
11:10 a.m. Michael Thompson, Brian Harman
11:20 a.m. Gary Woodland, Corey Conners
11:30 a.m. Carlos Ortiz, Danny Lee
11:40 a.m. Harry Higgs, Patrick Reed
11:50 a.m. Viktor Hovland, Abraham Ancer
Noon Tom Hoge, Tyler Duncan
12:15 p.m. Russell Henley, Jim Herman
12:25 p.m. Brendan Steele, Lanto Griffin
12:35 p.m. Alex Noren, Joaquin Nieman
12:45 p.m. Tyrrell Hatton, Bryson DeChambeau
12:55 p.m. Matthew Wolff, Xander Schauffele
1:05 p.m. Kevin Kisner, Bubba Watson
1:15 p.m. Billy Horschel, Mackenzie Hughes
1:25 p.m. Louis Oosthuizen, Tony Finau
1:35 p.m. Adam Scott, Brendon Todd
1:45 p.m. Hideki Matsuayama, Dustin Johnson
1:55 p.m. Patrick Cantlay, Rory McIlroy

How to watch, listen

Saturday, Aug. 29

PGA Tour Live on NBC Sports Gold: 8:15 a.m.-3 p.m. (featured groups) PGA Tour Live on ESPN+: 3-6 p.m. (featured holes)
PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.
Golf Channel (watch for free on fuboTV): 12-3 p.m.
NBC: 3-6 p.m.

Sunday, Aug. 30

PGA Tour Live on NBC Sports Gold: 9:15 a.m.-3 p.m. (featured groups) PGA Tour Live on ESPN+: 3-7 p.m. (featured holes)
PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 2-7 p.m.
Golf Channel (watch for free on fuboTV): 1-3 p.m.
NBC: 3-7 p.m.

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No cut at BMW Championship, but after 36 holes these players have work to do

After 36 holes, we’re getting a sense of who needs to do what over the weekend if they want to advance to the Tour Championship next week.

There’s no cut this week at the BMW Championship, the second leg of the 2020 FedEx Cup Playoffs.

But after 36 holes, the projected FedEx Cup standings are sorting some things out. Namely, we’re getting a sense of who needs to do what over the weekend if he wants to advance to the season finale at the Tour Championship.

One player who’s in great shape is Rory McIlroy. He’s tied for the lead and has moved up 10 spots to No. 2 behind Dustin Johnson in the points. He’s attempting to become the first to win back-to-back FedEx Cups and the first to win three times.

BMW Championship: Leaderboard | Photos

Only the top 30 players in the points move on to East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta.

Top 5 before the BMW

  1. Dustin Johnson
  2. Justin Thomas
  3. Webb Simpson
  4. Daniel Berger
  5. Collin Morikawa

Top 5 after 36 holes

  1. Dustin Johnson
  2. Rory McIlroy
  3. Justin Thomas
  4. Patrick Cantlay
  5. Webb Simpson

Biggest move up

Cantlay shot a 2-under 68 on Friday, one of only two players – along with Brendon Todd – to go 2 under for the day. Olympia Fields is proving to be one tough track this week, with Hideki Matsuyama’s first-round 67 the low score of the week so far. Cantlay had four birdies and an eagle but also a double bogey but is tied for the BMW lead with McIlroy at 1 under. They are the only two players under par so far.

In the top 30… for now

Mackenzie Hughes checks in at No. 30, up six spots, while Adam Scott is up nine spots to 29. Joaquinn Niemann is sitting at No. 28 after moving up three spots. Viktor Hovland has dropped three spots but is still at No. 27.

On the other hand, Cameron Champ and Cameron Smith both dropped six spots and are both currently on the outside looking in, with Champ at No. 31 and Smith at No. 32. Adam Long and Kevin Streelman also dropped six spots and sit at No. 33 and 34, respectively.

Other big movers

Louis Oosthuizen, who birded the 18th hole at the Northern Trust last Sunday to nab the No. 70 spot in the BMW, has moved up 28 more slots after his second-round 69. It’s the second biggest jump behind Cantlay’s. Oosthuizen is up to No. 42.

Bubba Watson, who played with Tiger Woods the first two days, shot up 20 spots to No. 38, still on the outside but heading the right direction.

Has work to do

Speaking of Tiger, he entered the BMW at No. 57. According to the PGA Tour, in a tweet posted before the first round, Woods “likely needs a solo-fourth or better to advance to the Tour Championship.” Woods shot a second-round 75 and couple that with his first-round 73 and he is ahead of just 12 players this week. He is now No. 63 in the points. Atlanta is looking like a long shot for Woods.

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U.S. Open continues at Olympia Fields in BMW Championship

The second FedEx Cup playoff event is playing akin to a difficult U.S. Open, with thick rough, lightning fairways and firm, sloping greens.

OLYMPIA FIELDS, Ill. – Kevin Kisner hit a 350-yard 3-wood on the 17th hole in Friday’s second round of the BMW Championship, which, to be kind, is rather unusual for the player who lacks power and relies on grit and a solid putter.

“I still made bogey, though,” said Kisner, who wedged his second shot just over the green, chipped down the slope to 6 feet and missed the par putt.

That’s what Olympia Fields is dialing up this week for the 69 players remaining in the FedEx Cup Playoffs. This second playoff event is playing akin to a U.S. Open, a very difficult U.S. Open, mind you, as thick rough, lightning fairways, firm, sloping greens and heat from above have combined to deliver one of the most difficult exams these players have ever faced.

Exams that have everyone on edge.


BMW Championship: Leaderboard | Photos


“You’ve got to hit really quality golf shots and get lucky,” Kisner said. “That’s basically the tune to it. You’ve got to try to hit your number and then hope it does what you’re praying it does when it hits the ground.

“I think even par wins the golf tournament.”

Well, 1 under is leading the BMW Championship after 36 holes.

And only two players are at that red number – Rory McIlroy, who switched putters to his delight, and Patrick Cantlay, who chipped in twice to his delight. McIlroy added a 1-under-par 69 to his first round 70 while Cantlay came home with a 68 – tied for the lowest score on the day – to go with his 71 in the opening round.

“The golf course is really, really good, but it’s very, very difficult,” Cantlay said. “It’s about as stiff of a test as you would want. You have to play from the fairway, and you have to play from below the hole, frankly. The greens have so much slope on them that you really need to be putting uphill, and so if you’re in the rough, it gets exponentially harder to do that.”

You want hard? The last time 1 under led after 36 holes on the PGA Tour was in the 2014 World Golf Championships-Cadillac Championship at Doral (Patrick Reed went on to win with a score of 4 under).

You want harder? The last non-major won with an over-par score was the 1981 AT&T Byron Nelson by Bruce Lietzke at 1 over at Preston Trail in Texas. The last major won by an over-par score was the 2018 U.S. Open as Brooks Koepka won at Shinnicock Hills at 1 over.

At Olympia Fields, only eight players broke 70 in the second round – five more than broke 70 in the first round. Hideki Matsuyama is the only player to reach 4 under during the tournament.

Matsuyama and world No. 1 and FedEx Cup champion Dustin Johnson, who won last week with a score of 30 under in the Northern Trust, are at even par; Matsuyama shot 73, Johnson 69.

Five players are at 1 over – Adam Scott (69), Brendon Todd (68), Louis Oosthuizen (69), Tony Finau (71) and Billy Horschel (71). Three players are at 2 over – Kisner (70), Bubba Watson (70) and Mackenzie Hughes (73).

Tiger Woods (73-75) is nine shots back.

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“We’re not used to it on the PGA Tour, but I love these courses,” Horschel said. “What makes this course even tougher, though, is when you add this 15- to 20-mile-per-hour wind and you get these firm greens, when you’re coming in downwind it’s tough to stop the ball near the hole.

“I’ve always been a fan of 8- to 12-under par being a winning score of a tournament, and then with 1 under leading, some people might say, well, it’s not fair. It’s very fair, you’ve just got to execute the golf shots perfectly every time.”

McIlroy has been in a funk since the PGA Tour returned after a 13-week break due to COVID-19. After beginning his season with top-5 finishes in seven consecutive tournaments, including a victory in the World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions, he has posted zero top-10s in his last seven starts.

Last week at the Northern Trust, who talked openly and honestly about lacking motivation and focus and basically going through the motions.

Not a problem this week.

“I think the test is what’s helped me focus and concentrate because if you lose focus out there for one second it can really cost you around here,” McIlroy said. “One of the big keys this week is just not making big numbers. I’ve been making big numbers for the last few weeks, so if you hit it out of position, get it back in position, make sure that your worst score is a bogey and move on.

“Honestly bogeys aren’t that bad out here.”

And his driver – his No. 1 weapon – has been pretty good.

“I’ve driven the ball much better over the last couple of days, so that’s a huge key to my game. If I can drive the ball well, everything seems a bit easier from there,” McIlroy said. “And I felt a bit better with the putter. I put my old putter back in the bag. I felt a little more comfortable over the sort of inside 10-feet range, so that felt better. But overall everything was pretty good.”

Cantlay said the same of his present form. And he said patience is the 15th club in the bag that players have to rely on.

“You’ve got to realize that you’re going to make mistakes,” Cantlay said. “You’re going to make some bogeys just because of how hard the golf course is, and always having a forward mindset as opposed to thinking about what’s happened or what the mistakes you’ve made is really important.

“It’s just very, very difficult.”

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Tiger Woods falters again Friday at BMW Championship, jeopardizing FedEx Cup chances

Tiger Woods was out of sorts all round on Friday at the BMW Championship, potentially putting his FedEx Cup dreams to bed.

If Tiger Woods is going to advance to East Lake in Atlanta for next week’s Tour Championship it’ll take a Herculean effort this weekend.

Woods suffered another disappointing day on Friday in the second round of the BMW Championship, making his way around Olympia Fields Country Club to the tune of 5-over 75. The 44-year-old walked off the course 8 over for the tournament tied for 56th place out of 69 players.

Woods’ round got off to a slow but steady start with four straight pars before the first of many dropped shots on the 5th. A double bogey on the 7th had the 15-time major champion 3 over at the turn and it didn’t get any better.

BMW Championship: Leaderboard | Photos

A lone birdie on the par-4 11th was immediately returned with a bogey on the 12th. Woods’ round ended with three straight bogeys on Nos. 14-16, including a third three-putt of the week, a consolation prize of a birdie on the 17th and a par on the 18th.

The second of three events in the PGA Tour’s season-ending FedEx Cup Playoffs, the BMW Championship is a no-cut event, meaning Woods will have two more rounds to try to right the ship before heading to next month’s U.S. Open at Winged Foot.

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Tiger Tracker: Follow Tiger Woods’ Friday round at the BMW Championship, shot by shot

Follow Tiger Woods’ Friday round at the BMW Championship with shot-by-shot updates from Olympia Fields in Chicago.

Tiger Woods’ road to a record third FedEx Cup title passes through the suburbs of Chicago this week.

The 15-time major champion is back in action at Olympia Fields Country Club at the BMW Championship, the second of three events in the PGA Tour’s season-ending FedEx Cup Playoffs. A slow round went south fast down the stretch as Woods made bogey on his final three holes to card a 3-over 73 in Thursday’s opening round.

Woods tees off at 2:09 p.m. ET Friday once again alongside Carlos Ortiz and Bubba Watson off the 1st tee. Follow his second round with shot-by-shot updates below.

BMW Championship: Leaderboard | Photos

Hole 3 – Par 4

Less than driver here for the Big Cat and this is pure down the fairway.

Hole 2 – Par 4

Hit this one real straight but with the way the hole is set up, this one runs through the fairway and into the left rough. Actually had a pretty decent lie and does well to keep this one on the green, coming to rest about 20 feet beyond the hole. Good shot, lets up a birdie chance. Low and left here with the putt, no harm, par.

TIGER ON THE DAY: Even thru 2 (3 over overall)

Hole 1 – Par 5

Driver here off the first and he points right as this one flies into the rough. Nope, finds the bunker actually, and its right up against the edge. All he could do from there is chip sideways back into the fairway. Tugs this one left and goes in a bunker guarding the green. Does well to splash this one out to five feet, pretty standard bunker shot there. Converts the par putt and we’re scrambling again early.

TIGER ON THE DAY: Even thru 1 (3 over overall)

A U.S. Open breaks out at Olympia Fields in the BMW Championship

It felt like one. It looked like one. It hurt like one. “That felt like Saturday at the U.S. Open out there,” said Rory McIlroy.

OLYMPIA FIELDS, Ill. – It felt like one.

It looked like one.

It hurt like one.

While the official U.S. Open is next month at Winged Foot, 69 exhausted and battered players would tell you the annual toughest test in golf had nothing on Thursday’s first round of the BMW Championship at Olympia Fields.

“That felt like Saturday at the U.S. Open out there rather than Thursday at a PGA Tour event,” Rory McIlroy said after an even-par 70 that he hopes leads him out of a slump. “But this is proper golf. You’ve really got to think about stuff, you’ve got to land it on your numbers, you’ve got to put it in play. Those sort of five-, six-footers for pars to sort of keep the momentum going are huge.

“The harder it is the more you have to focus. My concentration today was much better because it needed to be. I was happy with how I played out there.”


BMW Championship: Leaderboard | Tee times, TV info


Only three players broke par on an unyielding course featuring grim rough, fast fairways, firm, sloping greens and enough wind to take one’s breath away. And it was in the 90s, so heat was an unrelenting force.

Of the 69 players, 56 didn’t break par. The field averaged 72.83 – the highest field average for a first round in the 2019-2020 PGA Tour season.

“I knew coming in playing my practice rounds here that it was going to be difficult, and it is,” world No. 1 and FedEx Cup leader Dustin Johnson said after his 73. Last week, Johnson shot 30 under to win the Northern Trust.

“It’s a fair test of golf, but it’s just hard,” Johnson said. “There’s nothing tricky really about it, it’s just hard. If you want a golf course to play tough, grow a little rough, make it firm and fast. Every week, every golf course this firm and fast with a little bit of rough plays difficult.

“I’m happy with the score. I’m right there. It’s going to be difficult every day.”

Hideki Matsuyama ended his day by sinking a 67-foot putt for birdie on his last hole to take a 1-shot lead with his 67. The only others under par were Tyler Duncan at 68 and Mackenzie Hughes at 69.

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McIlroy was one of 10 players at 70. Everyone else was over-par, including Tiger Woods, who finished bogey-bogey-bogey to shoot 73.

“I’m not sure really what I had going today, but that last putt, that long putt that went in, very happy with that one, so we’ll remember that one,” Matsuyama said.

Players took a little extra to the tee to begin their rounds – a U.S. Open mentality, where pars and patience are as important as the driver and putter.

Tony Finau said after finishing with a 70 that the course delivered as expected.

“I was preparing for a major championship, namely the U.S. Open,” he said of his practice rounds. “I love the way the golf course is playing, extremely tough. You’re not going to hack it around here and score.

“My putter saved me on quite a few holes. Man, the golf course is playing tough right now. You’ve got to hit the fairways and it doesn’t end there. You’ve got to hit the greens and it doesn’t end there with the wind and the amount of slope on these greens and the speed. It keeps you on your heels it seems like all day.

“I was happy to just finish at even par after the first round.”

Adam Scott had it going in the right direction before he reached the 14th hole. He was 1 under until he bogeyed 14 and then finished with bogeys on his last two holes.

“It was a tough day,” said Scott, who signed for 72. “The greens were really firm. If you’re out of position, you’re out of control. Really key to hit fairways to give yourself a chance of kind of creating an opportunity for birdie.

“They’re hard to come by out there.”

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