FedEx Cup Fall standings update: Wesley Bryan moves into final spot at 125

Only one event is left to secure a PGA Tour card.

Only one event is left in the PGA Tour season.

Rafael Campos won the 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship on Sunday, a move that vaulted him from No. 147 in the FedEx Cup standings to 80th. And he wasn’t the only player to move inside the number with only one chance left for players to secure their cards for the 2025 season.

Any golfer who finishes Nos. 51-60 in the FedEx Cup standings will earn entry into the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and Genesis Invitational, the first two signature events of 2025. Those who finished inside of the top 125 will earn their PGA Tour cards for 2025. This week, Nico Echavarria has joined the group, moving up two spots from 61 to 59.

Bermuda: Prize money

Here’s a look at the standings after the Butterfield Bermuda:

Aon Next 10 standings

Name Position Previous
Mazkenzie Hughes 51 51
Maverick McNealy 52 53
Patrick Rodgers 53 55
Harris English 54 52
Seamus Power 55 54
Ben Griffin 56 58
Tom Kim 57 56
Nick Taylor 58 57
Nico Echavarria 59 61
Justin Rose 60 59
Kevin Yu 61 60
Lucas Glover 62 62
Mark Hubbard 63 71
Jake Knapp 64 63
Min Woo Lee 65 64

FedEx Cup top 125 standings

Name Position Previous
Sami Valimaki 121 117
Sam Ryder 122 135
Zac Blair 123 118
Joel Dahmen 124 121
Wesley Bryan 125 128
Henrik Norlander 126 122
Daniel Berger 127 124
Hayden Springer 128 125
Pierceson Coody 129 132
S.H. Kim 130 127

 

2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player

With the win, Campos will take home $1.242 million.

A life-changing victory for Rafael Campos.

The 36-year-old from Puerto Rico won the 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship for his first PGA Tour victory at Port Royal Golf Club. He had missed the cut in 13 of his previous 15 starts, but Sunday he broke through for what he called the best week of his life.

Campos became the second golfer from Puerto Rico to win on the PGA Tour, joining Chi Chi Rodriguez.

With the win, Campos will take home $1.242 million.

ButterfieldLeaderboard | Photos

Check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned this week at the 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship.

Butterfield Bermuda Championship prize money payouts

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Rafael Campos -19 $1,242,000
2 Andrew Novak -16 $752,100
T3 Adrien Dumont de Chassart -15 $407,100
T3 Mark Hubbard -15 $407,100
T5 Vince Whaley -14 $255,300
T5 Sam Ryder -14 $255,300
T5 Justin Lower -14 $255,300
8 Ben Griffin -13 $215,625
T9 Greyson Sigg -12 $188,025
T9 Patrick Rodgers -12 $188,025
T9 David Lipsky -12 $188,025
T12 Michael Kim -11 $136,965
T12 Jacob Bridgeman -11 $136,965
T12 Pierceson Coody -11 $136,965
T12 Lanto Griffin -11 $136,965
T12 Troy Merritt -11 $136,965
T17 Maverick McNealy -10 $94,875
T17 Rico Hoey -10 $94,875
T17 Garrick Higgo -10 $94,875
T17 Francesco Molinari -10 $94,875
T17 Robby Shelton -10 $94,875
T17 Wesley Bryan -10 $94,875
T23 Seamus Power -9 $60,030
T23 Christo Lamprecht -9 $60,030
T23 Nick Watney -9 $60,030
T23 Tom Whitney -9 $60,030
T23 Brandon Wu -9 $60,030
T23 Ryan Moore -9 $60,030
T29 Ryo Hisatsune -8 $42,349
T29 Nico Echavarria -8 $42,349
T29 Joseph Bramlett -8 $42,349
T29 Tyler Duncan -8 $42,349
T29 Carl Yuan -8 $42,349
T29 Kevin Kisner -8 $42,349
T29 Chad Ramey -8 $42,349
T29 Alex Smalley -8 $42,349
T37 Trace Crowe -7 $31,395
T37 Callum Tarren -7 $31,395
T37 William McGirt -7 $31,395
T37 Martin Laird -7 $31,395
T37 Hayden Springer -7 $31,395
T42 Kevin Dougherty -6 $24,495
T42 David Skinns -6 $24,495
T42 S.H. Kim -6 $24,495
T42 Richy Werenski -6 $24,495
T42 Lucas Glover -6 $24,495
T47 Ben Taylor -5 $17,854
T47 Dylan Wu -5 $17,854
T47 Norman Xiong -5 $17,854
T47 Camilo Villegas -5 $17,854
T47 Kevin Chappell -5 $17,854
T47 Tyson Alexander -5 $17,854
T47 Chez Reavie -5 $17,854
T47 Will Gordon -5 $17,854
T55 Russell Knox -4 $16,077
T55 Austin Smotherman -4 $16,077
T57 Brendon Todd -3 $15,732
T57 Henrik Norlander -3 $15,732
T57 Ben Kohles -3 $15,732
T57 Jhonattan Vegas -3 $15,732
61 Matti Schmid -2 $15,387
T62 Daniel Berger -1 $15,111
T62 Carson Young -1 $15,111
T62 S.Y. Noh -1 $15,111
T65 Connor Jones E $14,766
T65 Hayden Buckley E $14,766
T67 Blaine Hale, Jr. 1 $14,421
T67 Sam Stevens 1 $14,421
T67 Mackenzie Hughes 1 $14,421
T70 Chris Baker 2 $14,007
T70 Aaron Baddeley 2 $14,007
T70 Robert Streb 2 $14,007
T73 Ben Crane 5 $13,662
T73 Cody Gribble 5 $13,662
75 Egor Eroshenko 9 $13,455

 

On verge of losing PGA Tour card, Rafael Campos gets first win at 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship

A life-changing victory for Rafael Campos.

It’s a good thing Rafael Campos’ flight wasn’t delayed.

He didn’t get to Port Royal Golf Course until 11:30 a.m. local time Thursday, about an hour an a half before his tee time at the PGA Tour’s 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship. He was at home with his wife, Stephanie, who gave birth to the couple’s first child on Monday.

Campos stayed at home as long as he could, then took an early flight Thursday and got to the course. Now, he’s a PGA Tour winner.

Campos earned his first PGA Tour victory Sunday, winning the Butterfield Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Course during a breezy final round. He started the week at 147th in the FedEx Cup standings but will move to 80th after the win, on top of numerous other accolades that come with winning a PGA Tour event.

Butterfield: Leaderboard | Photos

A $1,242,000 winner’s check. A 2025 Masters invitation. Job security for 2025 and beyond. All thanks to a brilliant performance in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean over 72 holes.

“I just can’t believe this is actually happening to me after such a year,” Campos said while struggling to talk through tears in his post-round TV interview. “I’m just grateful to be able to call myself a PGA Tour champion. It’s something I’ve dreamt about all my life.

“It’s been an unbelievable week, best week of my life.”

It’s somewhat of a surprising win, as Campos had missed 13 cuts in his past 15 starts, including all five of the events he had played previously in the FedEx Cup Fall.

It’s also a lesson in patience that he learned in the past and was reminded of his week.

During the round, Campos said his mind wandered back to a time about 12 years ago when he would write down his goals and aspirations. He recently found one of those notes, and he had achieved everything on the list.

“I’ve been praying every day the last year, you know, hoping to get a good week, hoping to just give myself some security and today or this week, I just knew he was with me, I knew my family was with me,” Campos said.

Campos shot 3-under 68 in the final round, including an eagle on the par-5 seventh that gave him the lead for good. He topped Andrew Novak by three shots for his maiden victory, with Campos finishing at 19-under 265.

Campos is the 14th first-time winner on the PGA Tour this season and the third during the FedEx Cup Fall. He’s also the second Puerto Rican to win on Tour, joining Chi Chi Rodriguez.

“I’m just extremely happy to be a champion and not have to worry about where I’m going to be playing the next couple of years,” Campos said. “That was something that was bothering me for the last like six months and ironic how everything just flipped and fortunately I can just go out and enjoy and play golf.”

There’s a world where Campos wasn’t even in the Bermuda, regardless of the birth of his first child.

Last year, he finished 30th in the Korn Ferry Tour points standings to earn his PGA Tour card, and that came only after a penalty dropped Shad Tuten from the 30th spot, allowing Campos to slide up and earn the final PGA Tour card available.

Fast forward 13 months, Campos was on the outside looking in of the FedEx Cup top 125, needing to do something special to keep his PGA Tour card for the 2025 season in one of the season’s last events.

He’s now 80th in the standings and has a job through the 2026 season.

“For me, honestly, like I said before, the most important thing for me was job security,” he said. “That’s something we struggle here on the PGA Tour with because it’s so hard to get up here and it’s so easy to lose everything.”

As has been the case with numerous PGA Tour stars in recent months, Campos joins the latest group of recent dads finding the winner’s circle.

This week in Bermuda, his perspective was off the charts.

“It’s funny, my game got really bad as soon as I found out I was going to be a father, like extremely bad,” Campos said. “Thinking I remember that’s something I spoke to my psychologist about and we were trying to figure out why everything has gone so bad the last like six months.

“I remember she asked me like, ‘hey, when did it start?’ I’m like, ‘ironically it started as soon as my wife told me we’re pregnant after the Puerto Rico Open.’ She said, ‘what do you think changed?’ I said I just know that — I remember since that day, I’m like now I really want to play well, I want to make money so I can save so I can give her the life — my mind just completely shifted. I just started focusing on like, man, I want to do as well as I can just to provide for her, which is a great way to think about it, but it completely took me off target. I missed, what, 14 out of the last 15 cuts or something like that.

“Stories like that do come true apparently. I just can’t believe I’m here sitting with you guys and being able to say I’m a PGA Tour champion.”

Even on the PGA Tour’s slowest greens, pros are missing plenty of short putts at the windy Butterfield Bermuda Championship

The Port Royal Golf Course can be a dicey proposition.

The Port Royal Golf Course can be a dicey proposition.

It’s the shortest golf course used on PGA Tour in 2024 and when the wind picks up, hoo-boy it can be fun to watch, if not exactly fun to play.

After Saturday’s round, Justin Lower had opinions on the conditions everyone had to deal with.

“I don’t think that’s golf if you ask me,” he said about the 15th, 16th, 17th and 18th holes. “Balls were going backwards in the air and I just, I realize that a lot of people had to play in it, but I don’t think it’s fair if that makes sense. I think if a top-10 or top-15 player in the world was here and they wanted to stop, I think the rules officials would have said ‘Yeah, we’ll stop.’ When anyone else in the field, if we would have said ‘I don’t feel comfortable playing in this’ we would have been told ‘tough’ and to proceed with the round. So that’s how I feel about it.”

On Sunday, Golf Channel announcers pointed out the greens were the slowest on Tour and that’s largely due to how much wind can affect golfers, and putting was indeed an adventure.

Justin Lower had this look but missed:

Then there was Rafael Campos:

Andrew Novak unwittingly got in on it:

And then Campos got bit by the bug again, this time lipping out a shortie from about 18 inches.

 

Butterfield Bermuda Championship 2024 Sunday final round tee times, PGA Tour pairings, how to watch

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s what you you need to know.

Andrew Novak and Rafael Campos are tied for the lead after 54 holes of the Butterfield Bermuda Championship in Southampton thanks to matching 9-under 62s around Port Royal Golf Course.

Wesley Bryan tied the course record Saturday with a 10-under 61. Justin Lower, the 36-hole leader, is one back heading into Sunday.

Port Royal, a Robert Trent Jones Sr. design that opened in Southampton, Bermuda, in 1970, ranks 28th on Golfweek’s Best Top 50 courses in Mexico, Caribbean, Atlantic islands and Central America.

The 16th hole, a 235-yard par-3, is a doozie, with the entire left side seemingly hanging on the edge of an ocean-side cliff.

The purse at the Butterfield Bermuda Championship is $6.9 million with $1.242 million going to the winner. The winner will also receive 500 FedEx Cup points and a two-year PGA Tour exemption.

Butterfield: Leaderboard | Photos

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s what you need to know for the final round of the 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship.

Sunday tee times

Time (ET) Tee Players
6:43 a.m. 1 Rico Hoey, Richy Werenski, Nick Watney
6:43 a.m. 10 Tyson Alexander, S.H. Kim, S.Y. Noh
6:54 a.m. 1 Joseph Bramlett, Trace Crowe, William McGirt
6:54 a.m. 10 Jhonattan Vegas, Kevin Chappell, Camilo Villegas
7:05 a.m. 1 Lanto Griffin, Francesco Molinari, Callum Tarren
7:05 a.m. 10 Hayden Buckley, Christo Lamprecht, Maverick McNealy
7:16 a.m. 1 Tom Whitney, Pierceson Coody, Martin Laird
7:16 a.m. 10 Austin Smotherman, Nico Echavarria, Michael Kim
7:27 a.m. 1 Chez Reavie, Jacob Bridgeman, Tyler Duncan
7:27 a.m. 10 Ben Kohles, Matti Schmid, Mackenzie Hughes
7:38 a.m. 1 Robby Shelton, Brandon Wu, Garrick Higgo
7:38 a.m. 10 Ryo Hisatsune, David Skinns, Cody Gribble
7:49 a.m. 1 Adrien Dumont de Chassart, Greyson Sigg, Kevin Kisner
7:49 a.m. 10 Kevin Dougherty, Norman Xiong, Ben Crane
8:00 a.m. 1 Ben Griffin, Carl Yuan, Mark Hubbard
8:00 a.m. 10 Dylan Wu, Seamus Power, Daniel Berger
8:11 a.m. 1 David Lipsky, Ryan Moore, Will Gordon
8:11 a.m. 10 Carson Young, Henrik Norlander, Russell Knox
8:22 a.m. 1 Chad Ramey, Vince Whaley, Hayden Springer
8:22 a.m. 10 Ben Taylor, Sam Stevens, Robert Streb
8:33 a.m. 1 Sam Ryder, Patrick Rodgers, Alex Smalley
8:33 a.m. 10 Connor Jones, Aaron Baddeley, Egor Eroshenko
8:44 a.m. 1 Wesley Bryan, Lucas Glover, Troy Merritt
8:44 a.m. 10 Brendon Todd, Chris Baker, Blaine Hale, Jr.
8:55 a.m. 1 Andrew Novak, Rafael Campos, Justin Lower

How to watch, listen

You can also watch the Butterfield Bermuda Championship on Golf Channel free on Fubo. All times ET.

Sunday, Nov. 17

Golf Channel: 11 a.m.-2 p.m.

Sirius XM: 9 a.m.-2 p.m.

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Leaders shoot 62, Wesley Bryan ties course record and more from third round of 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship

Catch up on the action here.

There are two new names atop the leaderboard after the third round of the 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Course in Southampton. American Andrew Novak and Puerto Rican Rafael Campos shot a pair of 9-under 62s to earn themselves a share of the 54-hole lead and a final-group tee time.

Justin Lower, who posted back-to-back rounds of 65 to earn the 36-hole lead, stumbled on his way to the clubhouse on Saturday, playing the back nine in 1-over 36. Still, he’ll enter the final round one back of the lead at 15 under, alone in third.

Wesley Bryan made the biggest move of the day, tying the course record at Port Royal, a 10-under 61. He had a chance to break the existing record on No. 9 — his 18th hole of the day — but couldn’t convert the putt.

If you missed any of the action on Saturday, no worries, we have you covered.

Here are a few notes from the third round in Bermuda.

Bermuda: Notables to miss cut | Leaderboard | Photos

Butterfield Bermuda Championship third-round takeaways

Novak, Campos overtake lead with 9-under 62s

Andrew Novak of the United States walks from the 11th hole during the third round of the Butterfield Bermuda Championship 2024 at Port Royal Golf Course on November 16, 2024, in Southampton, Bermuda. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

Sure, they weren’t as good as Bryan’s 61 — we’ll get to that in a minute — but Andrew Novak and Rafael Campos crawled their way to the top of the leaderboard with matching 9-under 62s.

Novak did most of his damage early in the round, making seven birdies on the front nine to make the turn with a 7-under 29. On the second half, he added two more on Nos. 12 and 15 to finish his day.

“I missed a lot of putts the first two rounds and hit a good shot into 1,” he said, “made probably a 12-footer or so, that just kind of got it going, seeing ’em go in, kind of kept it rolling and just got hot.”

Campos, on the other hand, did most of his work around the turn and at the end of his round. He birdied five straight from Nos. 6-10 and three straight from Nos. 15-17.

“I really am happy about the last couple days, especially today,” he said. “Yesterday was no wind but today was a real test on some of the holes into the wind.

“I was really fortunate the short game was really on point today. It’s been quite some time I haven’t felt as comfortable chipping, but I had a couple chip-ins today and the putter rolled really well.”

Wesley Bryan storms up the leaderboard

2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship
Wesley Bryan of the United States checks his yardage book on the tenth green during the third round of the Butterfield Bermuda Championship 2024 at Port Royal Golf Course on November 16, 2024, in Southhampton, Bermuda. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images)

The vibes have been high all week for Wesley Bryan. He played the first two rounds of the tournament alongside his brother, George, and although he missed the cut, the younger Bryan is now in position to win on Tour for the second time (2017 RBC Heritage).

Bryan opened with a 67 on Thursday but made too many late-round mistakes Friday, shooting a 1-over 72. Saturday, however, was a different story.

Starting on the back nine, Bryan birdied 10, 11, 14 and 16 before making a big bird at the par-5 17th to make the turn with a 6-under 29. On the way home, the 34-year-old added two more birdies to his card on Nos. 2 and 6, plus another eagle at the par-5 seventh.

Needing a birdie-birdie finish to card a 59, Bryan settled for two pars to finish his 10-under effort that tied the Port Royal course record.

“I’ve been hitting the ball really nice and been hitting it solid and been putting pretty well,” he said. “I felt like these type of conditions really for my entire golfing career, I’ve really enjoyed wind. It just brings out a little bit more creativity, so I do enjoy the wind.

“Then today, I mean, nobody knows a 61 or what, when a 61’s going to come. That’s just kind of a career day. Hopefully, we can shoot — I mean, get in the mix tomorrow on the back nine. That would be the ultimate goal.”

He’ll tee off Sunday three shots back.

More: How did Wesley Bryan prepare to shoot a course record at the 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship? Watching Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson

Top 10 and odds to win

Position Player Score Odds to win
T-1 Andrew Novak 16 under (+160)
T-1 Rafael Campos 16 under (+330)
3rd Justin Lower 15 under (+320)
4th Wesley Bryan 13 under (+1200)
T-5 Lucas Glover 12 under (+2200)
T-5 Troy Merritt 12 under (+6000)
T-5 Sam Ryder 12 under (+4000)
T-8 Patrick Rodgers 11 under (+5000)
T-8 Alex Smalley 11 under (+6000)
T-8 Chad Ramey 11 under (+8000)
T-8 Vince Whaley 11 under (+7000)
T-8 Hayden Springer 11 under (+7500)
T-8 David Lipsky 11 under (+8000)
T-8 Ryan Moore 11 under (+8000)

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How did Wesley Bryan prepare to shoot a course record at the 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship? Watching Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson

“It was one of those spectacle events that I just felt I needed to watch.”

The boxing match between Jake Paul and Mike Tyson took over social media last night, with millions tuning in to watch the YouTube-star-turned-boxer take on one of the sport’s GOATs. That included Wesley Bryan.

On Saturday, Bryan shot a course-record-tying 10-under 61 during the third round of the 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Course. The 34-year-old was up well into Saturday morning to watch the Netflix-run exhibition.

Bermuda: Notables to miss cut | Leaderboard | Photos

“I’ll be honest, woke up this morning on very, very little sleep,” he said after signing his card. “Stayed up for the Jake Paul-Mike Tyson match and that didn’t finish until about, shoot, 2:00 in the morning. It was one of those spectacle events that I just felt I needed to watch.”

Limited sleep had no impact on Bryan’s game, as he made six birdies and two eagles on his way to a bogey-free 61.

He’ll have a chance to earn his first PGA Tour win since the 2017 RBC Heritage on Sunday.

Watch: Nick Hardy hoops an albatross at 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship

The only thing better than an albatross is hooping an albatross.

The only thing better than an albatross is hooping an albatross.

You gotta see this video.

Nick Hardy sized up his second shot on the par-5 17th just perfect during Friday’s second round of the 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship.

“Dangerous front-right hole location,” Johnson Wagner said on the Golf Channel telecast.

No problem for Hardy, who took any danger out of the shot by dunking his ball with a 7-iron from 180 yards.

The PGA Tour reports that it’s the first albatross in tournament history and the fifth on Tour this season.

There’s been a Francesco Molinari sighting at the 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship

To say 2024 has not been a great year for Molinari would be an understatement.

To say 2024 has not been a great year for Francesco Molinari would be an understatement.

He’s playing in just his 14th event on the PGA Tour this year but he missed eight cuts in the first 13. His finishes when he did make the cut: T-73, T-54, T-64, T-46, T-59. He was 207th in the FedEx Cup points heading into this week’s stop at Port Royal in Bermuda.

But six birdies in each of the first two days have resulted in scores of 68 and 66 for the Italian at the 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship. When he walked off the course Friday morning after his second round, he was tied for third.

All in all, a nice bounce-back week for the 2018 Open Championship winner.

Butterfield: Leaderboard | Photos

“It was very consistent. I think iron play in general was very good, I gave myself lots of chances,” he said, describing his second round. “Hit a really good 4-iron on 13 I think it is, yeah, the downhill par 3, to about five feet. It was probably the best shot of the day.”

The last time most golf fans saw Molinari, he was acing the final hole of his round at the U.S. Open, an amazing shot that put him on the cutline to play the weekend at Pinehurst.

This week, Molinari may not need any aces, just more fairways and greens.

2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship Friday tee times, PGA Tour pairings and how to watch

The purse in Bermuda is $6.9 million with $1.242 million going to the winner.

Thursday at the 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship is in the books.

Justin Lower, who finished top five last week in Mexico, opened with a bogey-free 6-under 65 and is tied for the lead with Hayden Springer, who at the John Deere Classic earlier this year opened with a 59. The duo is a shot in front of Patrick Rodgers and Joseph Bramlett.

Camilo Villegas is the defending champion of the Butterfield Bermuda. Port Royal, a Robert Trent Jones Sr. design that opened in Southampton, Bermuda, in 1970, ranks 28th on the Golfweek’s Best Top 50 courses in Mexico, Caribbean, Atlantic islands and Central America.

The 16th hole, a 235-yard, par-3, is a doozie, with the entire left side seemingly hanging on the edge of an ocean-side cliff.

The purse at the Butterfield Bermuda Championship is $6.9 million with $1.242 million going to the winner. The winner will also receive 500 FedEx Cup points.

Butterfield: Leaderboard | Odds, picks

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

Friday tee times

Time Tee Players
6:00 a.m. 1 Austin Cook, Ryo Hisatsune, David Skinns
6:00 a.m. 10 Bill Haas, Brandon Wu, Pierceson Coody
6:11 a.m. 1 David Lipsky, Roger Sloan, Rico Hoey
6:11 a.m. 10 Andrew Putnam, Russell Knox, Matti Schmid
6:22 a.m. 1 Troy Merritt, Sam Ryder, Ben Kohles
6:22 a.m. 10 Kevin Tway, Robby Shelton, Hayden Springer
6:33 a.m. 1 Chad Ramey, Ryan Brehm, Francesco Molinari
6:33 a.m. 10 Seamus Power, Mackenzie Hughes, Daniel Berger
6:44 a.m. 1 Tyler Duncan, Nick Watney, Tyson Alexander
6:44 a.m. 10 Jhonattan Vegas, Camilo Villegas, Maverick McNealy
6:55 a.m. 1 Aaron Baddeley, James Hahn, Matt NeSmith
6:55 a.m. 10 Lanto Griffin, Nate Lashley, Zac Blair
7:06 a.m. 1 D.A. Points, Ben Crane, Carson Young
7:06 a.m. 10 Hayden Buckley, Justin Suh, Carl Yuan
7:17 a.m. 1 Wesley Bryan, George Bryan, IV, Camiko Smith
7:17 a.m. 10 Trace Crowe, Kevin Dougherty, Christo Lamprecht
7:28 a.m. 1 Erik Barnes, Tom Whitney, Nick Jones
7:28 a.m. 10 Rafael Campos, Adrien Dumont de Chassart, Luke Schniederjans
7:39 a.m. 1 Norman Xiong, Eric West, Graeme Robertson
7:39 a.m. 10 Austin Smotherman, Egor Eroshenko, Miles Russell
10:30 a.m. 1 S.Y. Noh, Patrick Rodgers, Justin Lower
10:30 a.m. 10 Ryan Moore, Doug Ghim, Will Gordon
10:41 a.m. 1 Martin Laird, Vince Whaley, Jacob Bridgeman
10:41 a.m. 10 S.H. Kim, Andrew Novak, Ben Taylor
10:52 a.m. 1 Henrik Norlander, Sam Stevens, Dylan Wu
10:52 a.m. 10 Garrick Higgo, Scott Piercy, Sean O’Hair
11:03 a.m. 1 Kevin Yu, Peter Malnati, Nick Taylor
11:03 a.m. 10 Nick Hardy, Chez Reavie, Kevin Kisner
11:14 a.m. 1 Nico Echavarria, Lucas Glover, Brendon Todd
11:14 a.m. 10 K.H. Lee, Cameron Champ, Brandt Snedeker
11:25 a.m. 1 Robert Streb, Kelly Kraft, Joseph Bramlett
11:25 a.m. 10 Richy Werenski, Cody Gribble, William McGirt
11:36 a.m. 1 Kevin Chappell, Ben Griffin, Callum Tarren
11:36 a.m. 10 Michael Kim, Alex Smalley, Alejandro Tosti
11:47 a.m. 1 Joel Dahmen, Martin Trainer, Chris Baker
11:47 a.m. 10 Kevin Streelman, Mark Hubbard, Ethan Cairns
11:58 a.m. 1 Josh Teater, Ryan McCormick, Michael Herrera
11:58 a.m. 10 Greyson Sigg, Wilson Furr, Tyler Collet
12:09 p.m. 1 MJ Daffue, Blaine Hale, Jr., Connor Jones
12:09 p.m. 10 Paul Barjon, Raul Pereda, Greg Koch

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Let me know if you need any further adjustments!

How to watch, listen

You can also watch the Butterfield Bermuda Championship on Golf Channel free on Fubo. All times ET.

Friday, Nov. 15

Golf Channel: 1-4 p.m.

Sirius XM: 10 a.m.-4 p.m.

Saturday, Nov. 16

Golf Channel: 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.

Sirius XM: 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m.

Sunday, Nov. 17

Golf Channel: 11 a.m.-2 p.m.

Sirius XM: 9 a.m.-2 p.m.

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