Dustin Johnson withdraws from Mayakoba Golf Classic

Dustin Johnson cited the need for rest as the reason for his withdrawal from Mayakoba Golf Classic.

Dustin Johnson has withdrawn from next week’s Mayakoba Golf Classic in Riviera Maya, Mexico.

The 2020 Masters champion said in a statement released by the tournament Friday that he needed to rest and apologized for missing the event held Dec. 3-6 at El Camaleón Golf Club.

“I have heard nothing but great things about the tournament, golf course and the Mayakoba resort, so I was excited to play. However, my mind and body are telling me it’s time for a break, so I look forward to spending some much-needed time at home with Paulina (Gretzky) and the boys.”

Johnson, 36, has three top-10 finishes in as many appearances this season, including his Masters win and a T-2 at the Vivint Houston Open. Last season, he had seven top-10 finishes out of 14 events including wins at the Travelers Championship, the Northern Trust and Tour Championship.

In October, the reigning FedEx Cup champion tested positive for COVID-19 and withdrew from the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek and the Zozo Championship at Sherwood.

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How much money each PGA Tour golfer won at the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek

Check out the prize money earned by each player this week at the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek in Las Vegas.

Jason Kokrak won a high-stakes shootout in Las Vegas on Sunday to claim his first PGA Tour victory at the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek.

Kokrak, making his 233rd start on the PGA Tour, shot a final-round 64 and outdueled Xander Schauffele in a Sunday showdown.

Kokrak has two wins on the Korn Ferry Tour but they both came back in 2011. He has three runners-up and three third-place finishes since reaching the big stage in 2012 but now finally has a PGA Tour win on his résumé.

Check out how much money each player earned this week at Shadow Creek.


CJ Cup: LeaderboardPhotos | Winner’s bag


Prize money

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Jason Kokrak -20 $1,755,000
2 Xander Schauffele -18 $1,053,000
T3 Tyrrell Hatton -17 $565,500
T3 Russell Henley -17 $565,500
5 Talor Gooch -16 $390,000
6 Joaquin Niemann -13 $351,000
T7 Bubba Watson -12 $314,438
T7 Lanto Griffin -12 $314,438
9 Sebastian Munoz -11 $282,750
10 Harris English -10 $263,250
11 Cameron Smith -9 $243,750
T12 Ian Poulter -8 $190,320
T12 Viktor Hovland -8 $190,320
T12 Matthew Fitzpatrick -8 $190,320
T12 Collin Morikawa -8 $190,320
T12 Justin Thomas -8 $190,320
T17 Si Woo Kim -7 $139,035
T17 Mark Hubbard -7 $139,035
T17 Ryan Palmer -7 $139,035
T17 Jon Rahm -7 $139,035
T21 Sergio Garcia -6 $91,956
T21 Robby Shelton -6 $91,956
T21 Danny Lee -6 $91,956
T21 Kevin Streelman -6 $91,956
T21 Harry Higgs -6 $91,956
T21 Hideki Matsuyama -6 $91,956
T21 Rory McIlroy -6 $91,956
T28 Brian Harman -5 $57,135
T28 Adam Hadwin -5 $57,135
T28 Billy Horschel -5 $57,135
T28 Richy Werenski -5 $57,135
T28 Abraham Ancer -5 $57,135
T28 Shane Lowry -5 $57,135
T28 Daniel Berger -5 $57,135
T28 Tyler Duncan -5 $57,135
T28 Rickie Fowler -5 $57,135
T28 Brooks Koepka -5 $57,135
T38 Joel Dahmen -4 $40,560
T38 Tom Hoge -4 $40,560
T38 Patrick Cantlay -4 $40,560
T38 Jordan Spieth -4 $40,560
T42 Byeong-Hun An -3 $33,735
T42 Keegan Bradley -3 $33,735
T42 Cameron Champ -3 $33,735
T45 Kevin Kisner -2 $27,885
T45 Kevin Na -2 $27,885
T45 Sungjae Im -2 $27,885
T48 Carlos Ortiz -1 $23,205
T48 Hanbyeol Kim -1 $23,205
T48 Louis Oosthuizen -1 $23,205
51 J.T. Poston E $21,645
T52 Marc Leishman 1 $20,169
T52 Justin Rose 1 $20,169
T52 Seonghyeon Kim 1 $20,169
T52 Matt Kuchar 1 $20,169
T52 Scottie Scheffler 1 $20,169
T52 Brendon Todd 1 $20,169
T52 Kyoung-Hoon Lee 1 $20,169
T59 Tommy Fleetwood 2 $19,208
T59 Jaekyeong Lee 2 $19,208
T61 Andrew Landry 3 $18,720
T61 Nick Taylor 3 $18,720
T61 Corey Conners 3 $18,720
64 Joohyung Kim 4 $18,330
T65 Mackenzie Hughes 6 $17,843
T65 Jim Herman 6 $17,843
T65 Brendan Steele 6 $17,843
T65 Michael Thompson 6 $17,843
T69 Paul Casey 7 $17,258
T69 Dylan Frittelli 7 $17,258
71 Jeongwoo Ham 8 $16,965
72 Gary Woodland 9 $16,770
73 Matthew Wolff 11 $16,575
74 Adam Long 12 $16,380
75 Sung Kang 13 $16,185
76 Alexander Noren 17 $15,990
77 Tae Hee Lee 18 $15,795

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Jason Kokrak claims CJ Cup at Shadow Creek for his first PGA Tour win

Jason Kokrak won a high-stakes shootout in Vegas to claim his first PGA Tour victory at the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek.

Jason Kokrak won a high-stakes shootout in Vegas to claim his first PGA Tour victory at the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek.

Kokrak, making his 233rd start on the PGA Tour, shot a final-round 64 and outdueled Xander Schauffele in a Sunday showdown.

Kokrak has two wins on the Korn Ferry Tour but they both came back in 2011. He has three runners-up and three third-place finishes since reaching the big stage in 2012 but now finally has a PGA Tour win on his résumé.

Kokrak had four straight birdies on Nos. 5 through 8 to charge into the lead on Sunday. He then birdied 10 and 11 to create a three-shot cushion.

But Schauffele had a birdie binge of his own, making three in a row on Nos. 11, 12 and 13, which forged a tie with Kokrak.

But on 16, some separation. Schauffele posted a bogey 6 on the par-5 hole, while Kokrak made a three-footer for par to take a one-shot lead with two to go.

On 17, both golfers made par, setting the stage for Kokrak on the 18th hole. Kokrak ripped a 342-yard drive, with his ball landing in the middle of the fairway, 161 yards out. He then hit a short iron to about 25 feet.

Schauffele parred the hole for a final-round 66 but it was not enough. He finished at 18 under. Kokrak two-putted for a 64 to get to 20 under and then had to wait out Russell Henley, who led after three rounds by three shots.

Henley’s last hope was to hole out from the fairway on 18 for eagle but he could not.

Kokrak is finally a winner on the PGA Tour.

CJ Cup: Leaderboard | Photo gallery | Winner’s bag

The PGA Tour made Shadow Creek a one-time stop on the schedule this year. The CJ Cup is usually held in Korea but was moved to the exclusive course in North Las Vegas in the wake of schedule changes brought on by the global coronavirus pandemic.

When it goes back overseas in 2021, the CJ Group has announced the tournament will be played at a new course, Haesley Nine Bridges. The event was at the Club @ Nine Bridges on Jeju Island for the first three years.

The PGA Tour heads to Sherwood Country Club next week for the Zozo Championship. Tiger Woods, the defending champion, and Phil Mickelson, who is now 2-for-2 on the PGA Tour Champions, are in the 78-man field.

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CJ Cup at Shadow Creek Sunday tee times, TV and streaming info

Check out tee times and viewing info for Sunday’s final round of the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek.

Russell Henley worked his way to the front of the pack on Saturday at the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek. The 31-year-old put up a bogey-free, 5-under 67 at Shadow Creek and will take a three-shot lead into the final round.

Henley is looking for his first PGA Tour title since winning the 2017 Houston Open.

Behind Henley, Lanto Griffin also climbed the leaderboard on Saturday with a 66. He joins Talor Gooch, Jason Kokrak and Xander Schauffele in a tie for second.

Check out tee times and viewing info for Sunday’s final round of the CJ Cup. All times are listed in eastern.

CJ Cup: Leaderboard | Photos

Tee times

1st tee

Tee time Players
12:15 p.m. Brian Harman, Marc Leishman, Justin Rose
12:26 p.m. Adam Hadwin, Keegan Bradley, Sergio Garcia
12:37 p.m. Ian Poulter, Billy Horschel, Robby Shelton
12:48 p.m. Si Woo Kim, Richy Werenski, Abraham Ancer
12:59 p.m. Cameron Smith, Mark Hubbard, Daniel Berger
1:10 p.m. Harris English, Kevin Streelman, Tyler Duncan
1:21 p.m. Brooks Koepka, Rickie Fowler, Viktor Hovland
1:32 p.m. Harry Higgs, Matthew Fitzpatrick, Ryan Palmer
1:43 p.m. Hideki Matsuyama, Joaquin Niemann, Jon Rahm
1:54 p.m. Bubba Watson, Rory McIlroy, Sebastian Munoz
2:05 p.m. Justin Thomas, Tyrrell Hatton, Collin Morikawa
2:16 p.m. Jason Kokrak, Xander Schauffele, Jason Day
2:27 p.m. Russell Henley, Lanto Griffin, Talor Gooch

10th tee

Tee time Players
12:15 p.m. Byeong Hun An, Andrew Landry, Carlos Ortiz
12:26 p.m.
Kevin Na, Kevin Kisner, Joel Dahmen
12:37 p.m. Hanbyeol Kim, Danny Lee, Tom Hoge
12:48 p.m. Shane Lowry, Seonghyeon Kim, Cameron Champ
12:59 p.m. Louis Oosthuizen, Patrick Cantlay, Nick Taylor
1:10 p.m. Mackenzie Hughes, Jordan Spieth, Matt Kuchar
1:21 p.m. Jim Herman, Sungjae Im, Corey Conners
1:32 p.m. J.T. Poston, Scottie Scheffler, Paul Casey
1:43 p.m. Dylan Frittelli, Joohyung Kim, Tommy Fleetwood
1:54 p.m. Brendon Todd, Jeongwoo Ham, Kyoung-Hoon Lee
2:05 p.m. Adam Long, Matthew Wolff, Jaekyeong Lee
2:16 p.m. Brendan Steele, Sung Kang, Gary Woodland
2:37 p.m. Michael Thompson, Alex Noren, Tae Hee Lee


TV, streaming information

Sunday, Oct. 18

TV

PGA Tour Live on NBC Sports Gold: 12:45-8 p.m. (featured groups, featured holes)

Golf Channel on fuboTV (watch for free): 5-8 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 3-8 p.m.

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

Russell Henley works his way to commanding lead in CJ Cup at Shadow Creek

Russell Henley leads the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek as he tries to win his fourth PGA Tour title and first since the 2017 Shell Houston Open.

NORTH LAS VEGAS – When the calendar hit September, Russell Henley started a five-week break away from the PGA Tour.

He wasn’t exactly on vacation.

“I practiced some, but I have a 2-year-old (Robert) and a 1-year-old (Ruth), so I try to give my wife, Teil, a break,” Henley said. “And they are a handful. It was work, it just wasn’t golf work.”

Henley got back to his day job last week and knocked some rust off and tied for 27th in the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. And on Saturday, with his game a bit tightened up and his putter lighting up the greens, he took the lead in the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek as he tries to win his fourth PGA Tour title and first since the 2017 Shell Houston Open.

Henley, who began the third round four shots behind 36-hole leader Xander Schauffele, shot a bogey-free, 5-under-par 67 that included three consecutive birdies after making the turn. He is three clear of the field.

“Left myself in some good spots to make some birdies and had some really nice par saves and scrambled well,” Henley said. “Did a lot of good things. I’ve got to just keep my head down and play a good round for me. There’s so much golf to be played, this is just a break we’re taking and I’m just going to try to keep doing it.”

Lanto Griffin (66), Jason Kokrak (68), Talor Gooch (69) and Schauffele (74) were at 12 under. Schauffele had set the course record Friday with a 64.

“The putter saved me,” Griffin said. “I hit it all right there in the middle of the round, hit some good shots, but kind of the start and the end I struggled a little bit off the tee. But the irons feel good and the putter feels great. It was a fun day.”

It wasn’t a fun day for Schauffele, who just couldn’t get going. A day after making eight birdies, he made just two and made four bogeys.

“I was trying to figure out what was worse, whether the pace of play or my quality of golf,” Schauffele said. “It was kind of a tie. It was just a lot of bad breaks kind of. Not to be like a sour person, but just one of those days. Today was my bad day for the week, got it out of the way before Sunday, which is nice.”

Major champions Jason Day (66) and Justin Thomas (68) and first-round leader Tyrrell Hatton (73), who won last week’s BMW Championship on the European Tour, were at 10 under.

PGA champion Collin Morikawa (71) was at 9 under. Two-time Masters champion Bubba Watson (65) and four-time major winner Rory McIlroy (66) led a group at 8 under. McIlroy birdied six of his last nine holes.

Henley, 31, is ranked No. 121 in the world and his confidence has been shaken since his last victory. He admitted earlier this week he hadn’t been in contention for quite some time but he definitely hasn’t looked out of place playing with his name on the first page of the leaderboard from the outset.

During his recent break, Henley did start to work on his putting, once the strongest part of his game and it looks to be again this week. He incorporated some drills and the work is paying off. He had 27 putts the first round, 26 the second and 26 again in the third, which included 10 one-putt greens. He leads the tournament in strokes gained: putting.

“I definitely lost confidence,” Henley said of his putting. “I lost confidence in everything. I had my moments where I would keep my card, which was just so great. I remember at one point I was 160‑something on the FedEx a couple years ago and had a good week at John Deere. Just trying to keep grinding even when you don’t feel good about it, that’s really the key out here.

“I’m starting to feel better. I’m working with Ramon Bescansa on my putting and he’s really helped me. He’s kept it really simple with me, which is what I need. I just feel like some putts this week are going in. I’m thankful.”

Tyrrell Hatton (perfectly?) tosses club in disgust after wayward shot at CJ Cup at Shadow Creek

Tyrrell Hatton had an epic club toss after a wayward shot during Saturday’s third round of the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek.

Tyrrell Hatton is the gift that keeps on giving all year long.

The 29-year-old Englishman is well-known for his on-course antics (and no, we’re not talking about wearing a hoodie, that’s a discussion for another time).

For example, way back in March before the PGA Tour’s 13-week COVID-19 hiatus, Hatton hilariously blew up on the 11th hole at Bay Hill on Sunday of the Arnold Palmer Invitational with an outburst Happy Gilmore would’ve certainly applauded. After making a double bogey, Hatton used his putter as a pretend gun, fired off a pretend shot at the pond that consumed his drive, then flipped it off for good measure.

The five-time winner on the European Tour – including last week’s BMW PGA Championship – was at it again on Saturday at the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek in Las Vegas with a club flip that would leave Major League Baseball players in awe.

CJ Cup: Leaderboard | Photos

Don’t you just love the way he held his form? Textbook release.

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Watch: Brooks Koepka makes birdie at CJ Cup at Shadow Creek after search party finds ball in rough

Watch as Brooks Koepka makes one wild and comical birdie at the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek after a search party finds his ball in the rough.

There are many ways to make a birdie.

During Saturday’s third round of the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek in Las Vegas, Brooks Koepka had to employ the search firm of McIlroy, Na and Associates to find his ball on the 11th hole before making a bizarre birdie.

Making his return to PGA Tour competition this week for the first time in two months, Koepka went for the green on the driveable par 4. Playing 293 yards on Saturday, his tee shot came up short and was buried in the thick rough separating the top of the bunker and the green.

The result was a team of about 10 people – including playing partners Rory McIlroy, Kevin Na and their caddies – were all on their hands and knees patting the ground in an attempt to find Koepka’s ball.

CJ Cup: Leaderboard | Photos

After the search party found his ball, Koepka took his drop and proceeded to get up-and-down for quite the comical birdie.

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CJ Cup at Shadow Creek Saturday tee times, TV and streaming info

Check out tee times and viewing info for Saturday’s third round of the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek.

Xander Schauffele authored some start at the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek. The No. 8 player in the Official World Golf Ranking had seven birdies on the back nine, where he started, before making the turn and cooling off.

Schauffele only had a single birdie on his closing nine, but it was good enough for a second-round 64 which gave him the lead at 14 under entering the weekend. From here, Schauffele will try to hold on for a fifth PGA Tour title.

Tyrrell Hatton might have something to do with that outcome. He sits at 11 under, three shots behind Schauffele. Russell Henley is another shot back in third. Both men had 68 on Friday.

Check out tee times and viewing info for Saturday’s third round of the CJ Cup. All times are listed in eastern.

CJ Cup: Leaderboard | Photos

Tee times

1st tee

Tee time Players
12:25 p.m. Cameron Champ, Joel Dahmen, Cameron Smith
12:36 p.m. Carlos Ortiz, Patrick Cantlay, Hanbyeol Kim
12:47 p.m. Richy Werenski, Abraham Ancer, Tom Hoge
12:58 p.m. Kevin Na, Brooks Koepka, Rory McIlroy
1:09 p.m. Sergio Garcia, Brian Harman, Rickie Fowler
1:20 p.m. Mark Hubbard, Daniel Berger, Sebastian Munoz
1:31 p.m. Joaquin Niemann, Viktor Hovland, Harris English
1:42 p.m. Andrew Landry, Jason Day, Jon Rahm
1:53 p.m. Harry Higgs, Ian Poulter, Billy Horschel
2:04 p.m. Kevin Streelman, Tyler Duncan, Hideki Matsuyama
2:15 p.m. Matthew Fitzpatrick, Lanto Griffin, Justin Thomas
2:26 p.m. Talor Gooch, Jason Kokrak, Collin Morikawa
2:37 p.m. Xander Schauffele, Tyrrell Hatton, Russell Henley

10th tee

Tee time Players
12:25 p.m. Louis Oosthuizen, Bubba Watson, Si Woo Kim
12:36 p.m.
Danny Lee, Robby Shelton, Ryan Palmer
12:47 p.m. Adam Hadwin, Marc Leishman, Sung Kang
12:58 p.m. Matt Kuchar, Keegan Bradley, Nick Taylor
1:09 p.m. Dylan Frittelli, Shane Lowry, Justin Rose
1:20 p.m. Byeong Hun An, Joohyung Kim, Jim Herman
1:31 p.m. Sungjae Im, Seonghyeon Kim, Corey Conners
1:42 p.m. Gary Woodland, Kevin Kisner, J.T. Poston
1:53 p.m. Mackenzie Hughes, Scottie Scheffler, Tommy Fleetwood
2:04 p.m. Jordan Spieth, Tae Hee Lee, Alex Noren
2:15 p.m. Adam Long, Brendon Todd, Jeongwoo Ham
2:26 p.m. Kyoung-Hoon Lee, Paul Casey, Michael Thompson
2:37 p.m. Brendan Steele, Jaekyeong Lee, Matthew Wolff


TV, streaming information

Saturday, Oct. 17

TV

PGA Tour Live on NBC Sports Gold: 12:45-8 p.m. (featured groups, featured holes)

Golf Channel on fuboTV (watch for free): 5-8 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 3-8 p.m.

Sunday, Oct. 18

TV

PGA Tour Live on NBC Sports Gold: 12:45-8 p.m. (featured groups, featured holes)

Golf Channel on fuboTV (watch for free): 5-8 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 3-8 p.m.

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

Xander Schauffele runs hot, cold in Las Vegas but grabs lead in CJ Cup

Xander Schauffele’s Friday round included a 59 watch as he shot 7-under 29 on the back that included birdies on seven of the nine holes.

NORTH LAS VEGAS – After nearly running the table and scorching the back nine of magical Shadow Creek Golf Course on Friday in the second round of the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek, Xander Schauffele ran into a very large cooler.

In gambling parlance, a cooler is an unlucky sort whose presence at the tables sends bad luck to all other players. For Schauffele, making the turn turned his fortune around as the front nine cooled him off with a combination of slow play, a hot day, a couple bad bounces and a few putts that just decided not to drop.

Still, Schauffele was far from wiped out as he turned in an 8-under-par 64 to assume command of the CJ Cup at 14 under through 36 holes. His round included a 59 watch as he shot 7-under 29 on the back that included birdies on seven of the nine holes, including on the last six.

But on the front, he made a lone birdie on the seventh.

“Got a little bit stale there,” Schauffele said of the front nine. “Pace of play slowed down a lot, kind of hot, easy to let the mind wander. Upset I didn’t make more birdies but pleased I didn’t make any bogeys.

CJ Cup: Tee times, TV info | Leaderboard | Photos

“When you shoot 29, things are flowing, things are easy, you’re not really thinking much at all. Someone asked me if I’m rusty at all (after a three-week break). I thought about it today and I think the most rusted thing is sort of my mentality. When it comes to when I play at home with my buddies, we’ll play a five‑ball in three hours, three and a half hours. So walking in a three‑ball and playing in five and a half hours, it’s a different mentality, it’s a different pace.

“So I got off to a hot start and kind of slowed down, but like I said, just happy I made that par putt on the last (from 11 feet).”

Schauffele stood three clear of the field, with first-round leader Tyrrell Hatton (68) sitting at 11 under. Russell Henley (68) was at 10 under. At 9 under was Talor Gooch (65). At 8 under were Jason Kokrak (66) and reigning PGA Championship winner Collin Morikawa (65), who was in the group with Schauffele and Viktor Hovland, who shot 66. Defending champion Justin Thomas (66) was at 6 under.

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“All of us just kept making birdies,” said Morikawa, who made seven. Schauffele made eight and Hovland made five and added an eagle. Hovland’s lone bogey was the only blemish on the three scorecards.

“It was nice,” Schauffele said of back-nine run where he made three birdies from inside seven feet, knocked in others from 13, 27 and 37 feet and chipped in from 20 feet on the par-3 17th. “Some of those holes you’re not really trying to birdie them, you are kind of just trying to leave yourself an uphill 35‑footer.

“And fortunately I made a couple of them.”

Schauffele, 26, is now in prime position to win his fifth PGA Tour title and first since the 2019 Sentry Tournament of Champions. He’s usually in prime position to add to his victory total. He’s No. 8 in the world and his wins have come on some big stages – the 2017 Tour Championship, the 2018 World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions and the 2019 Sentry Tournament of Champions. He’s also finished runner-up seven times since the start of 2017, including in the 2018 Players and Open Championship and the 2019 Masters.

In his last start before heading to Las Vegas he finished fifth in the U.S. Open. Before that he had the lowest 72-hole total in the Tour Championship won by Dustin Johnson in the staggered scoring system as part of the FedEx Cup Playoffs format.

After the U.S. Open, Schauffele was in no rush to get back to the course. He didn’t touch a club for 10 days at the start of his three-week break and slowly practiced and played his way back. He wasn’t concerned about rust when he got here.

“You can do most of your homework at home. This is my fourth year, so you start to learn your own tendencies. I used to be scared to take 10 days off and in the last two years I’ve kind of started to enjoy taking some time off so when I come back I’m kind of ready and fresh to push,” he said. “I played golf with Austin (Kaiser) a few times back at home, that was kind of my only ask of him, my caddie. We played a few times and it was kind of nice to knock the rust off that way.”

Good plan.

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Phil Mickelson trolls Tiger, CJ Cup field, as only he can

Phil Mickelson explained why he’s playing this week on PGA Tour Champions rather than PGA Tour; Tiger Woods isn’t going to like his answer.

In addition to being a scratch golfer, Phil Mickelson is a scratch needler and he trolled Tiger Woods and the 78-man field at the PGA Tour’s CJ Cup @ Shadow Creek on Thursday in classic Phil fashion.

During his pre-tournament press conference at this week’s PGA Tour Champions event, the Dominion Energy Charity Classic, Mickelson was asked why he didn’t seek a sponsor’s exemption into the junior circuit’s limited-field, no-cut $9.5 million event in Las Vegas.

“I felt like it would be better for me to play here,” he said. “I think last time I played at Shadow Creek, even if I beat all 78 guys, it would still be a letdown. I made so much more last time I played, that I just didn’t see the benefit. Sorry.”

That was more than a subtle jab at Woods, who Mickelson defeated at Shadow Creek in the original playing of The Match on Thanksgiving weekend in 2018, and took home a cool $9 million.

Phil’s gonna Phil, and in his world when last time you won nearly as much as this week’s tournament purse, you might as well just go try to beat up on some guys your own age.

Mickelson is making his first start in the state of Virginia since 1993, and second start on the PGA Tour Champions this week. Having captured the Charles Schwab Series in September, Mickelson is trying to match Jim Furyk, who won his first two starts since turning 50. Mickelson had this to say on the difference between playing the PGA Tour and the senior circuit: “The courses we play are really long. We have 520 par 4s out on the regular tour, we have 520 par 5s out here, so it’s a different beast.”

Mickelson also praised PGA Tour Champions as a good preparation ground for playing against the younger pros, where he will continue to keep his focus for the time being.

“I think that this tour helps me quite a bit, more so than I realized when I played at Ozark. It helps me free up, work on the areas that I need to work on in my game,” he said. “It’s very difficult to be competitive on the regular tour. I’ve had a couple good finishes, but it’s hard to be competitive week in and week out unless you drive the ball incredibly long and straight. The long part I’m OK with, it’s the straight part that I struggle with. This tour is a little bit more forgiving, the rough isn’t quite as long, the fairways aren’t quite as tight. It’s still very challenging, but it’s not as penalizing as the regular tour’s been.

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“So it gives me a chance to work on a few things and compete. I mean, you have to be in the thick of it and feel those nerves and compete for a championship to really be able to get better, and I’m able to compete out here and get my skills a little bit sharper.”

Mickelson said he plans to play the Zozo Championship next week and the Houston Open in the lead up to the Masters.

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