PGA Tour announces 16 names for the 2024 Player Advisory Council

The PAC advises and consults with the PGA Tour Policy Board.

Voting ended on Jan. 12 and on Sunday, the 2024 Player Advisory Council was announced.

There are 16 members of the PGA Tour who will serve on the PAC, with eight elected and eight more appointed by the player directors.

In alphabetical order, the 16 are:

Sam Burns

Lanto Griffin

Nick Hardy

Brian Harman

Max Homa

Mackenzie Hughes

Keith Mitchell

Grayson Murray

Seamus Power

Scottie Scheffler

Adam Schenk

Kevin Streelman

Nick Taylor

Josh Teater

Justin Thomas

Camilo Villegas

Streelman and Villegas were selected by the Player Directors to run for PAC Chairman via election on Feb. 27. The leading vote-getter there will replace Jordan Spieth on Jan. 1, 2025, as a Player Director on the PGA Tour Policy Board.

Those are three-year terms (2025-27). The other Player Directors and they terms are Patrick Cantlay (2024-26), Peter Malnati (2023-25), Adam Scott (2024-26), Webb Simpson (2023-25) and Tiger Woods.

The PAC advises and consults with the PGA Tour Policy Board (Board of Directors) and Commissioner Jay Monahan on issues affecting the Tour. The PAC also serves as a feeder system for future board members, with the PAC Chairman being elected to fill future openings on the board as player directors complete their term.

Sahith Theegala’s birdie binge, Collin Morikawa’s emotional opening tee shot among 5 things to know from first round of The Sentry

Catch up on the action here.

Sahith Theegala is back for the second time at The Sentry. One year after he shot 10 under for 72 holes, he opened with 10 birdies on Thursday and shot 9-under 64 at Kapalua Resort’s Plantation Course to take a one-stroke lead over a bunched-up leaderboard on a low-scoring day thanks to calm conditions.

“I saw something about first timers not doing great here and I believe it,” he said.

Theegala, 26, proved to be a quick learner. He recorded the most birdies in a PGA Tour round in what was his 250th career round on Tour, including six in a row to start his back nine. Asked to name his favorite of the bunch, he picked the one at No. 12, saying, “Had a really gnarly 8- or 9-footer that I didn’t know which way it was going to break, grain was going all over the place. I just aimed it dead center and tried to hit it hard and hearted that putt, and that settled me down a little bit more.”

Theegala, who notched his first Tour title at the Fortinet Championship in September, has the lead after 18 holes for the second time in his career over a handful of players.

The scoring average was almost 4-under as the wind laid down.

Here’s four more things to know about the first round of The Sentry.

The Sentry: Photos | Friday tee times, how to watch

‘Life is a journey and it goes up and down’: Deep thoughts with Camilo Villegas after his first win in nine years

Villegas said he received more than 900 messages and he plans to answer them all at some point.

ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. – Camilo Villegas admits it was growing old to ask for sponsor exemptions into PGA Tournament fields but it wasn’t hard to phone World Wide Technology Championship tournament director Joe Mazzeo and tell him, “Joe, seriously, no B.S., I’m close.”

Heading into the tournament, Villegas was ranked No. 223 in the FedEx Cup standings, had missed the cut in seven of 10 starts and hadn’t recorded a top-10 finish since the 2021 Honda Classic. But the 41-year-old Colombian’s self-belief remained intact.

The World Wide Technology Championship  gave him a spot in the field and Villegas finished T-2, earning him a place in the Butterfield Bermuda Championship, where he won for the fifth time in his career and for the first time in nine years.

What a difference a few weeks make. Villegas had made a similar call to RSM Classic tournament director Todd Thompson asking for a spot in this week’s event.

“I was supposed to tee it up in second stage of Q-School, so I wasn’t going to be able to be here, but my wife was going to be here Monday night. She was going to do a little event. She was going to speak about our foundation and she was going to tell the story of how RSM Birdies Fore Love has impacted and benefited our foundation and the people that we help,” Villegas recounted. “Things changed in Mexico after I moved up to 147 in the FedExCup points list, I didn’t have to go to second stage of Q-School.”

Of the phone call to Thompson, Villegas said, “No bullshit, I’m calling you because I don’t want to be there, I need to be there. So I don’t know how your sponsor exemptions are looking, but I don’t know what you’re going to do, but I need to be there.”

Villegas went from thinking he was going to play second stage of Q-School to begging for a sponsor invite to being in the field as a Tour winner of the past two years.

“That’s pretty cool,” he said.

Indeed, it is. He said he received more than 900 messages on his phone and he plans to answer them all at some point.

The last two weeks for Villegas have been a microcosm of his journey from the golfer nicknamed Spider-Man that won some big events quickly to the player who dealt with injuries and had to return to the Korn Ferry Tour, and most of all, suffered the loss of his 22-month-old daughter, Mia, who had tumors in her brain.

“Life is a journey and it goes up and down,” he said. “Sort of kind of go back to that Colombian kid that came here with a dream, played college golf at the University of Florida, played the Korn Ferry in 2005 and then everything gets started on Tour so great, playing Augusta my second year on Tour, winning a couple FedEx Cup Playoffs in 2008. Yeah, you would think that that kid was on top of the world. And I was.

“I was feeling pretty good from a performance point of view,” he continued. “But I look at where I am right now and everything that has happened, I truly believe I’m a better person. Maybe the results haven’t been there, but this journey has been pretty interesting. To lose my card, to go through an injury, to lose my daughter, to create Mia’s Miracles, to go back to the Korn Ferry, to keep grinding, to have doubts, to have fears, to have tears, have smiles, all of the above. You just never know where life goes.”

Life is full of twists and turns for all of us and professional golfers are no different. For Villegas, golf is not just a job but what he loves to do.

“I never stopped waking up early, 5:00, 5:30 in the morning, to do what I like to do because in all honesty, the really cool thing about the last two weeks is not so much the results of the last two weeks, but the process and what’s been behind those results,” he said.

Villegas has taken the time to reflect on his journey and a turning point for him was accepting that it did no good for him to live in the past.

“When I finally accepted that, that Camilo Villegas was not the 27-something-year-old that won two FedEx Cup Playoffs in 2008 but he’s the Camilo Villegas of 38, 40, 41 years old and he’s dealing with the information and the experiences he has, that’s when I decided not to look back so much but just to stay in the present and see what I could work with. It’s been very helpful,” he said. “Of course we’re different, just look at the picture from 2008, long hair, 20-something-year-old wearing pink pants. Now my outfits are completely different. I’m a dad. So many bumps, but so many great things.

“Yes, I wish my little one was here with us, but she’s not and she’s truly in a better place after a long battle that she wasn’t going to win. So I accepted that, too. And we keep going. We turned that tragedy into something very positive. I mean, my wife reads me messages from people we help on Mia’s Miracles every week. I go, man, if Mia was here, we wouldn’t be able to do this. You turn it around and my life has been great with the ups, with the downs, I accept it.”

Every week there’s just one player who goes home as the winner. It was Villegas’s turn in Bermuda and it was the feel-good story of the year.

“All my peers just come and gave me a hug, telling me how they were watching, how they were pulling for me,” Villegas said. “We’ll do it all over again starting tomorrow.”

The journey continues and Villegas is ready for whatever comes next.

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2023 Butterfield Bermuda Championship prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour. Just ask this week’s winner, Camilo Villegas.

The 41-year-old won the 2023 Butterfield Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Club in Southampton, Bermuda, on Sunday for his fifth PGA Tour win and first since the 2014 Wyndham Championship.

For his efforts, Villegas will take home the top prize of $1,170,000 while runner-up Alex Noren, who finished two shots behind Villegas at 22 under, earned $708,500. Third-place Matti Schmid earned $448,500 at 21 under.

Check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned at the 2023 Butterfield Bermuda Championship, the penultimate event of the season.

Prize money payouts

Position Player Score Earnings
1  Camilo Villegas -24 $1,170,000
2  Alex Noren -22 $708,500
3 Matti Schmid -21 $448,500
4  Carl Yuan -20 $318,500
T5  Adam Scott -19 $251,063
T5  Ryan Moore -19 $251,063
7  Stewart Cink -18 $219,375
T8  Tyson Alexander -17 $177,125
T8  Kevin Roy -17 $177,125
T8  Ryan Palmer -17 $177,125
T8 Taylor Pendrith -17 $177,125
T8  Vince Whaley -17 $177,125
T13  Fred Biondi -16 $113,054
T13  Austin Cook -16 $113,054
T13  Doc Redman -16 $113,054
T13  David Lipsky -16 $113,054
T13  Adam Long -16 $113,054
T13  Kramer Hickok -16 $113,054
T13  Satoshi Kodaira -16 $113,054
T20  Luke List -15 $68,482
T20  Justin Lower -15 $68,482
T20  Mark Hubbard -15 $68,482
T20  Brendon Todd -15 $68,482
T20  Akshay Bhatia -15 $68,482
T20  D.A. Points -15 $68,482
T20  Ryan Brehm -15 $68,482
T27  Robert Garrigus -14 $48,425
T27  Scott Piercy -14 $48,425
T27  Ben Martin -14 $48,425
T30  Alex Smalley -13 $38,954
T30 Kevin Yu -13 $38,954
T30  Brice Garnett -13 $38,954
T30  Kyle Stanley -13 $38,954
T30  Brandon Wu -13 $38,954
T30  Lucas Herbert -13 $38,954
T30  Dylan Wu -13 $38,954
T37  Wesley Bryan -12 $27,625
T37  Brian Stuard -12 $27,625
T37  Ben Griffin -12 $27,625
T37  Kyle Westmoreland -12 $27,625
T37  Sean O’Hair -12 $27,625
T37  Brian Gay -12 $27,625
T37  Peter Malnati -12 $27,625
T37  Patton Kizzire -12 $27,625
T45  Lucas Glover -11 $18,216
T45  Nick Hardy -11 $18,216
T45  Kevin Chappell -11 $18,216
T45  Andrew Landry -11 $18,216
T45  Andrew Novak -11 $18,216
T45  Charley Hoffman -11 $18,216
T45  Cody Gribble -11 $18,216
T45  Davis Riley -11 $18,216
T53  Peter Kuest -10 $15,232
T53  Lanto Griffin -10 $15,232
T53  Ryan Armour -10 $15,232
T53  Max McGreevy -10 $15,232
T53  Matthias Schwab -10 $15,232
T53  Kelly Kraft -10 $15,232
T59  William McGirt -9 $14,560
T59  Martin Laird -9 $14,560
T59  D.J. Trahan -9 $14,560
T59  Austin Smotherman -9 $14,560
T63  Greg Koch -8 $14,170
T63  Augusto Núñez -8 $14,170
T65  Ted Potter Jr. -7 $13,780
T65  Martin Contini -7 $13,780
T65  Zecheng Dou -7 $13,780
T65  Robert Streb -7 $13,780
T69  Ryan Gerard -6 $13,325
T69  George Bryan, IV -6 $13,325
T69  Richy Werenski -6 $13,325
T72  Jim Herman -5 $12,870
T72  Cameron Percy -5 $12,870
T72  Troy Merritt -5 $12,870
T72  S.Y. Noh -5 $12,870
T76  David Lingmerth -4 $12,350
T76  Nico Echavarria -4 $12,350
T76  Kevin Stadler -4 $12,350
T76  Russell Knox -4 $12,350
80  Nick Watney -2 $12,025
81  Martin Trainer -1 $11,895

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Winner’s Bag: Camilo Villegas, 2023 Butterfield Bermuda Championship

Check out the clubs that got the job done in Bermuda.

[mm-video type=video id=01h7hc0sxygbbtdnmrnk playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01h7hc0sxygbbtdnmrnk/01h7hc0sxygbbtdnmrnk-9660fd322990a753c5eb48b4bb621b43.jpg]

A complete list of the golf equipment Camilo Villegas used to win the PGA Tour’s 2023 Butterfield Bermuda Championship.

DRIVER: Titleist TSi3 (11 degrees), with Project X HZRDUS Yellow 6.0 65 X shaft

FAIRWAY WOODS: TaylorMade M4 (16.5 degrees), with Project X HZRDUS Smoke Red RDX 6.0 75 shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Camilo Villegas’ fairway wood” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/LXE4LL”]

HYBRID: Titleist TSi2 (24 degrees), with Project X HZRDUS Black 85 Hybrid 6.5 shaft

IRONS: Srixon ZU85 (4), Srixon ZX5 Mk II (4, 5), Srixon ZX7 Mk II (6-PW), with Rifle 6.5 shafts

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Camilo Villegas’ irons” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/QyE49M”]

WEDGES: Vokey Design SM9 (54, 60 degrees), with Rifle 6.5 shafts

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Camilo Villegas’ wedge” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/rQWOK5″]

PUTTER: L.A.B. Golf Mezz.1 Max

BALL: Titleist Pro V1x

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Camilo Villegas’ golf ball” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/5gzYd9″]

GRIPS: Golf Pride MCC (full swing) / SuperStroke 3.0 17 (putter)

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Spider-Man returns: Camilo Villegas victorious at 2023 Butterfield Bermuda Championship, first win as a father and first PGA Tour win since 2014

The win is the fifth of his PGA Tour career and first since the 2014 Wyndham Championship.

Just over three years after his 22-month-old daughter died from cancer, Camilo Villegas won for the first time on the PGA Tour in more than nine years.

“My little one up there, she’s watching,” he said during a post-round interview on Golf Channel. “She’s where she needs to be after a long fight.”

The 41-year-old native of Colombia closed in 6-under 65 at Port Royal Golf Course on Sunday to clip Sweden’s Alex Noren by two strokes and win the Butterfield Bermuda Championship in Southampton, Bermuda, his first victory in 3,374 days at the 2014 Wyndham Championship.

Villegas, who once reached as high as No. 7 in the world and had dipped to No. 752 at the beginning of this month, had not recorded a top-10 finish since the 2021 Honda Classic before receiving a sponsor exemption into the World Wide Technology Championship in Mexico and finishing T-2 to earn his way into this week’s event.

Prior to last week, he had planned to compete at second stage of Q-School, a tournament he hadn’t needed to play since 2004. Villegas had struggled with injuries, including shoulder surgeries, in recent years and ranked 223rd in the FedEx Cup standings before his strong performance in Mexico. In August, he did a tryout as a TV commentator on the Golf Channel.

“As a competitor, as a golfer, you never want to be done,” he told Golfweek ahead of his debut.

In February, he began working with instructor Jose Campra, who also caddies for pro Sebastian Munoz, on a major swing overhaul and Villegas had seen signs of progress.

“He told me when we started, you know what, I think you’re going to win again on the PGA Tour,” Villegas recalled. “I’m not sure I believed him, to be honest, but here we are.”

He added: “Nine years, where you kind of stop believing at times, but I never stopped waking up early and putting in the work.”

Of all the adversity he faced, nothing compared to dealing with the death of young Mia, who was diagnosed with cancer in 2020.

“She was always a little monkey around the gym, and I noticed she wasn’t being the little monkey she always was,” he said in June 2020. “I don’t know why, I just kind of got a bad feeling…You don’t need 10 doctors to tell you the good news.”

Since Mia’s death, he and wife Maria have devoted their energy into Mia’s Miracles, a foundation they formed to help other families dealing with pediatric cancer.

“My wife has been so busy with Mia’s Miracles – it’s become her mission in life – doing all this great stuff to change our kind of sad story to a positive to help others,” Villegas said last week.

The Villegas’s welcomed son Mateo in late 2021. Father and son dressed up for Halloween as police officers and mom was a bank robber. Young Mateo also wore a Spider-Man costume to a Halloween party, an homage to his father who frequently stretched out on all fours to study his putts near grass-level and earned the Spider-Man nickname.

https://www.instagram.com/p/Cy8wjPxuGOS/?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==

Despite his prolonged slump, Villegas enjoyed the challenge of Spider-Man’s return, tattooing the words ‘positive energy’ on his right wrist and ‘attitude’ on his left.

“There’s a lot of things you can’t control in life, but I guess these two you can,” he said. “The game comes and bites you, so, I’ve been trying to let the game be the game and let my mind be calm and at peace. It’s been pretty good the last couple weeks, so let’s keep it going.”

On Sunday, the wind, which is the main defense at Port Royal, shifted directions and blew the hardest it had all week out of the west but it didn’t bother Villegas. He reeled off three birdies in a row starting at the third, including a 25-footer at No. 4. Noren, the overnight leader, kept pace with a birdie at No. 6 but made bogeys at nine and 10, his first since the fifth hole of the first round on Thursday and just his second and third bogeys all week. He shot 68 and finished second for the third time on Tour. Villegas clung to the lead, answering with birdies at 15 and 17, to finish with a 72-hole total of 24-under 260. It marked his fifth career Tour title and his ninth consecutive round in the 60s, the most in his career. He had played a total of 8,496 holes since his previous victory.

“I felt the energy building up,” he said. “To everyone who has supported me on my journey, I just want to say thanks.”

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Alex Noren leads, Camilo Villegas back in the mix and more from Saturday at 2023 Butterfield Bermuda Championship

Catch up on Saturday’s action here.

Alex Noren has 11 international wins, he has played in the Ryder Cup and he has represented Sweden at the Olympics. But come Sunday, he’ll have a chance to do something he has never done before — win on the PGA Tour.

After rounds of 61-66 over the first two days, Noren shot a 4-under 67 around Port Royal Golf Course on Saturday and holds a one-shot lead at the 2023 Butterfield Bermuda Championship with 18 holes to play.

The Swede, who tied for third at the Shriners Children’s Open a month ago in Las Vegas, kept the bogeys off the card during his third round. Despite only hitting eight fairways (T-43 in the field), Noren was crisp with his irons, missing just four greens (T-12).

In 27 previous starts this season, Noren has six top-25 finishes and three top-10s. His last worldwide win came at the 2018 HNA Open de France.

If you missed any of the action on Saturday, no worries, we have you covered. Here are some takeaways from the third round of the 2023 Butterfield Bermuda Championship at Port Royal.

‘Meant to be’: Erik van Rooyen wins 2023 World Wide Technology Championship for terminally-ill friend

“He used to play to not get embarrassed. It’s gonna take a little bit to let the predator out.” The predator came out on Sunday.

LOS CABOS, Mexico – As soon as Erik van Rooyen struck his 2-iron into the fairway at the par-5 finishing hole, he turned to his caddie Alex Gaugert and said, “One more of those,” implying he planned to use the same club again for his next shot.

Van Rooyen was tied for the lead on Sunday at El Cardonal at Diamante and when he heard he had 272 yards to the front and 304 yards to the hole, he said, “Perfect for the 2-iron.”

Gaugert had another idea.

“I’m like, Dude, I don’t mind something landing front edge and getting back there,” he said.

He started to run through a series of reasons why van Rooyen would be better off using a 17-degree 3-hybrid. He reminded him of the beauty he hit with the same club at 14 just a few holes earlier and the one at the first hole on Friday that set up an eagle.

“Oh, hell yeah,” van Rooyen said with a glint in his eye.

“Clear and committed,” Gaugert said.

Then as he had done on every shot all day, van Rooyen thought of their college teammate at Minnesota, Jon Trasamar, who had texted them on Tuesday with the news that he had about six weeks to live due to stage 4 melanoma.

“Then I flushed it,” van Rooyen said.

“Be as good as you look,” Gaugert barked at the ball and it more than obliged.

It stopped 20 feet past the hole and van Rooyen removed any doubt by rolling in his third straight putt of that length for a birdie-birdie-eagle finish.

“There’s nothing quite like it in life,” Van Rooyen said of his clutch 3-hybrid to the 18th green. “Yeah, that shot will be with me forever.”

Van Rooyen stormed home in 8-under 28 at the course Tiger Woods designed and erased a two-stroke deficit with three holes to play to win the World Wide Technology Championship.

How did he pull off an improbable two-stroke victory over Matt Kuchar and Camilo Villegas? To Gaugert it was simply meant to be.

“That should be the headline of every news article that’s written because there’s no reason he should have won this golf tournament. There’s no way to describe it other than it was it was meant to be,” Gaugert said.

It was meant to be even after van Rooyen opened with a bogey on a par 5 after dumping his approach in the front bunker and failing to extricate himself on his first attempt.

“The start we got off to today made you want to puke,” Gaugert said.

But then van Rooyen rolled in a 35-foot birdie at the second and thought to himself, “this is a silly game so just keep playing.”

But by the seventh hole, van Rooyen turned to Gaugert in the fairway and said it was time to press. Gaugert, who remains a good enough player that he was a Monday qualifier for the 3M Open in July, talked him out of it and advised him to stay patient, “let it happen,” as he put it, and stay disciplined. Van Rooyen listened, agreeing it was too soon to hit the panic button.

“And then I sprayed (my next shot) right of the green. So it’s funny how that works. Hit a really good chip,” he said.

Meanwhile, Villegas made birdies on four of the first six holes and Kuchar reeled off five in his first 12 holes to assume the lead.

This was a big week for van Rooyen. The 33-year-old South African native entered the week ranked No. 131 in the FedEx Cup standings and his two-year exemption for winning the 2021 Barracuda Championship was expiring in a few weeks if he didn’t have a good finish. He suffered through a stretch of seven missed cuts in a row from early May to early June and in 27 previous starts on the season had more missed cuts (14) than he had made (13). He began working with instructor Sean Foley, who helped him more with the mental game than the golf swing during their hour-long conversations. Van Rooyen’s final-round 63 marked his 13th consecutive round of par or better. Gaugert went so far as to send Foley a text six weeks ago thanking him for his efforts.

Foley’s response speaks volumes: “He used to play to not get embarrassed, and it’s gonna take a little bit to let the predator out,” Gaugert recalled Foley wrote.

The predator came out on Sunday. Van Rooyen birdied four of the first five holes on the back nine and then came to the difficult par-4 15th, where one day earlier Kuchar had a five-stroke lead before making a quadruple-bogey 8 there.

Van Rooyen aimed his 9-iron about 10 yards right of the flag and tugged it five yards left of it. “It was a putrid shot,” Gaugert said. Yet it defied gravity and stayed on the fringe.

“I have no clue how other than our buddy Jon was with us,” Gaugert said. “Erik’s ball should have never ever stayed up there.”

“We both kind of looked at the sky and we were like, maybe it’s written in the stars,” van Rooyen said. “When that happened, I was like, ooh, we might have a chance.”

That wasn’t Gaugert’s only thought. He told van Rooyen that etiquette be damned, they needed to play their next shot before the ball rolled down the slope. Van Rooyen sheepishly asked Kuchar if he could play out of turn.

“He was very nervous to do so. And I go, ‘Ask him now.’ The wind was picking up, if the wind gives us any sort of gust his ball is going down,” Gaugert said.

They left the green with a par and then van Rooyen rolled in back-to-back 20-foot birdie putts to tie for the lead. On his ball, van Rooyen had written the initials “JT,” for Trasamar, the first person he met when he arrived from South Africa to attend Minnesota, his roommate of three years and his best man at his wedding nine years ago. Despite job security for next season being shaky at best coming into this week, van Rooyen and Gaugert had booked a flight on Saturday afternoon to fly home to Minnesota on Monday morning to go see their ill friend Tuesday. Depending on how the final round played out, they had a reservation to Bermuda that would arrive at 11pm on Wednesday and they would tee it up on Thursday without seeing the course in advance.

“We ain’t playing Bermuda now,” said Gaugert.

It was meant to be that the win will allow them to spend more precious time with JT.

After van Rooyen sank the winning eagle putt for a 72-hole aggregate of 27-under 261, he and Gaugert embraced in one of the longest bro-hugs ever on the 18th green. Van Rooyen said that Gaugert, usually the stoic one who keeps the more volatile van Rooyen in line and helps balance him out, simply cried. But Gaugert also had a memory flash through his head. During his senior season in 2013, their pal Trasamar earned Big Ten Golfer of the week honors after placing second at the Barnabas Health Intercollegiate. It included a career-low 66 in the second round.

“He beat me by a stroke with a back-nine 28, just like Erik,” Gaugert said.

It turned out Gaugert’s memory was off by a stroke. Trasamar had shot a back-nine 29, but that only made Gaugert smile.

“He just wanted to give Erik an extra stroke,” he joked.

Sometimes it’s just meant to be.

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Camilo Villegas turns into birdie machine, Matt Kuchar hearts Mexico among World Wide Technology Championship second-round takeaways

At 41, Camilo Villegas says his memory isn’t what it used to be.

LOS CABOS, Mexico — At 41, Camilo Villegas says his memory isn’t what it used to be.

“Don’t ask me my birdies because I don’t remember them,” he joked after the round with a member of the media.

It’s doubly hard for Villegas because he’s made so many birdies, shooting his second straight 64 on Friday at El Cardonal at Diamante, a course designed by Tiger Woods and the host of the PGA Tour’s World Wide Technology Championship.

Competing on a sponsor exemption, Villegas began his second round on Friday with an eagle-birdie-birdie start and finished with three birdies to boot. In doing so, he set his career-low 36-hole score on the Tour with a total of 128, two strokes better than Matt Kuchar and three better than Justin Suh, who made a career-high nine birdies in the second round, and Stephan Jaeger, who aced the 11th hole in the first round.

Villegas also was two strokes better than his previous best start to a Tour event at the 2020 RSM Classic. It marks Villegas’s eighth 36-hole lead and first since the 2010 Honda Classic.

Asked to recall the last time he had such a hot start to a tournament, Villegas showed his memory isn’t totally shot, recalling a Hooters Tour event in Orlando in 2004 that he won by 10 strokes shortly after flaming out of second stage of Q-School.

“I shot 61 first day, 62 the second day,” he said. “It was like a bittersweet win.”

It’s been more than nine years since Villegas, a four-time winner on Tour, has claimed victory and being in the hunt for another title couldn’t come at a better time. He entered the week ranked 223 in the FedEx Cup standings and had missed the cut in his last three starts.

But that was then — this week he’s made so many birdies it’s hard to keep track of them all.

The second round was suspended due to darkness at 5:52 p.m. local time (8:52 p.m. ET) with three players still on the course. There were 74 players who made the cut at 5-under 139. The field started with 132, including three amateurs, none of whom made the weekend.

Here are four more thing to know about the second round of the World Wide Technology Championship.

Camilo Villegas to make broadcasting debut at 2023 Wyndham Championship for Golf Channel

“This is the perfect event for Camilo to provide his expertise to Golf Channel’s viewers.”

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Former Wyndham Championship winner Camilo Villegas will make his broadcast debut this week on Golf Channel’s coverage of the PGA Tour event in Greensboro, North Carolina. Villegas, a 41-year-old four-time Tour winner who ranks 223rd in the FedEx Cup standings, will work in the booth as the main analyst alongside host Steve Sands.

Last year, Sands served as emcee at Villegas’s charity golf tournament, a fundraiser for Mia’s Miracles, when Sands told him he thought he could have a bright future doing golf commentary on TV. Sands wondered, “Would you like to do a week and see how it goes?”

Villegas looked Sands straight in the eyes and told him in no uncertain terms that he wasn’t interested.

“As a competitor, as a golfer, you never want to be done. When you start looking somewhere else and you’re 41 and you haven’t been performing, that was my first reaction,” Villegas explained.

But after giving it some thought, the former University of Florida golfer and Colombia native called Sands back and apologized for his knee-jerk reaction.

“For him to think I could do a good job on TV was actually an honor,” he said.

Asked to explain why he thought Villegas would excel as a broadcaster, Sands said, “He has always been accessible and a terrific communicator.”

Villegas wasn’t quite ready to jump into the booth but after talking with his agent, he determined he didn’t want to close a door on a great opportunity without exploring whether he liked the job or could determine if he was any good at it. He agreed to do a one-week trial this year, and it made sense to do so alongside Sands, who pitched him on the concept, and at a tournament where he has not only competed regularly but has tasted great success.

“This is the perfect event for Camilo to provide his expertise to Golf Channel’s viewers,” Sands said.

Villegas has struggled with injuries since winning the 2014 Wyndham Championship with bookend rounds of 63, and then dealt with the death of his 2-year-old daughter, Mia, in 2020. This season, he made just nine starts on the PGA Tour and hasn’t recorded a top-10 finish since the 2021 Honda Classic. But Villegas says he’s not hanging up his spikes just yet. He began working with instructor Jose Campra, who also caddies for Sebastian Munoz, on a major swing overhaul and Villegas says he’s seeing signs that he is making progress.

As for prepping for his TV try-out, Villegas shadowed Sands and analyst John Cook when they were in the booth during the first round of the RBC Canadian Open in June. He said he’s been watching more television than he’s used to and conceded he’s a little nervous about his TV debut.

“I just want to be myself,” he said.

Asked if that would include being comfortable enough to criticize players that he still competes against regularly, Villegas said, “I guess we will find out soon. I’m going to call it like I see it. I’m a very analytical guy. I have a very structured approach to the game of golf. I want to share with the viewer a little of what I’d be feeling, thinking while someone is hitting a shot…I don’t have a problem disagreeing with players’ decision or approaches or strategy.”

Villegas doesn’t have any TV plans beyond the Wyndham Championship but he sounded open to the possibility of doing more TV work in the future.

“I don’t want to get ahead of myself. I need to find out if I like it,” he said. “I’m going to continue to play golf. If I really like it and they think I have potential, could there be weeks where I hop into the booth and fill in? We’ll see. I don’t know. Too many moving parts to know where this thing will go.”

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