How much money each PGA Tour player won at the Corales Puntacana Resort and Club Championship

Check out how much money each PGA Tour player won at the 2021 Corales Puntacana Resort and Club Championship.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour, folks. Just ask Joel Dahmen.

Dahmen finished this week’s event in the Dominican Republic at 12 under, one shot clear of both Sam Ryder and Rafael Campos to earn his first win on Tour. The 33-year-old Scottsdale, Arizona resident and Clarkston, Washington native not only earned full status through the 2022-23 season, but is also taking home the top prize of $540,000 as well as 300 FedEx Cup points.

“Golf was really hard for me these last seven or eight weeks and to turn around, whatever, seven of eight missed cuts to this is pretty incredible,” said Dahmen, who had previously missed six of his last seven weekends on Tour.

Check out how much money each player earned this week at the Corales Puntacana Resort and Club Championship.

Corales: Leaderboard | Photos

Prize money

Position Player Score Earnings
1  Joel Dahmen -12 $540,000
T2  Sam Ryder -11 $267,000
T2  Rafael Campos -11 $267,000
T4  Graeme McDowell -10 $135,000
T4  Michael Gligic -10 $135,000
T6  Hudson Swafford -9 $105,000
T6  Emiliano Grillo -9 $105,000
8  Danny Willett -8 $93,750
T9  Brice Garnett -7 $78,750
T9  Ben Martin -7 $78,750
T9  Greyson Sigg -7 $78,750
T9 Sepp Straka -7 $78,750
T13  David Hearn -6 $55,350
T13  Joseph Bramlett -6 $55,350
T13  Chesson Hadley -6 $55,350
T13  Thomas Detry -6 $55,350
T13  Thomas Pieters -6 $55,350
T18  Jhonattan Vegas -5 $41,250
T18  Chase Seiffert -5 $41,250
T18  Tyler McCumber -5 $41,250
T18  Roberto Castro -5 $41,250
T22  Andrew Yun -4 $28,000
T22  Peter Uihlein -4 $28,000
T22  Roger Sloan -4 $28,000
T22  Alex Smalley -4 $28,000
T22  Eric Cole -4 $28,000
T22  Fabrizio Zanotti -4 $28,000
T28  David Lingmerth -3 $20,100
T28  Nate Lashley -3 $20,100
T28  Justin Suh -3 $20,100
T28  Vincent Whaley -3 $20,100
T28  Charles Howell III -3 $20,100
T28  Bronson Burgoon -3 $20,100
T34  Josh Teater -2 $14,350
T34  Ryan Brehm -2 $14,350
T34  Taylor Pendrith -2 $14,350
T34  Sebastian Cappelen -2 $14,350
T34  Wes Roach -2 $14,350
T34  Troy Merritt -2 $14,350
T34  Will Gordon -2 $14,350
T34 Tim Wilkinson -2 $14,350
T34  Charley Hoffman -2 $14,350
T43 Alex Cejka -1 $10,050
T43  Scott Brown -1 $10,050
T43  Robby Shelton -1 $10,050
T43  Mark D. Anderson -1 $10,050
T43  Patrick Rodgers -1 $10,050
T48 GermanyStephan Jaeger E $7,890
T48  liaAaron Baddeley E $7,890
T48  Tyler Duncan E $7,890
T48  Pat Perez E $7,890
T52  D.J. Trahan 1 $7,290
T52  Richard S. Johnson 1 $7,290
T54 IrelandSeamus Power 2 $7,080
T54  Ben Taylor 2 $7,080
T56  Fabian Gomez 3 $6,810
T56  Tom Lewis 3 $6,810
T56 Padraig Harrington 3 $6,810
T56  Bo Van Pelt 3 $6,810
T56  Martin Trainer 3 $6,810
T56  Adam Schenk 3 $6,810
T56 Retief Goosen 3 $6,810
T63  Jonathan Byrd 4 $6,480
T63  liaRhein Gibson 4 $6,480
T63  Lee Hodges 4 $6,480
T63  Scott Harrington 4 $6,480
T67 Sang-Moon Bae 5 $6,300
T67  J.J. Spaun 5 $6,300
T69  Grayson Murray 7 $6,180
T69  Brian Stuard 7 $6,180
71  Parker McLachlin 14 $6,090

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Joel Dahmen earns first PGA Tour win at Corales Puntacana Resort and Club Championship

Joel Dahmen earned his first PGA Tour victory at the Corales Puntacana Resort and Club Championship.

Joel Dahmen’s celebration on the 18th green said it all, but he couldn’t help but say it aloud: “It’s really hard to win golf tournaments.”

After missing six of his last seven cuts, the 33-year-old bounced back this week at the PGA Tour’s Puntacana Resort and Club Championship, claiming the trophy by one shot over Sam Ryder and Rafael Campos, who lipped out a birdie putt on the 18th green to miss a playoff by one stroke.

Dahmen rode a 2-under 70 in the final round to hold off late charges from runners-up Ryder and Campos, as well as Graeme McDowell and Michael Gligic, who finished T-4 at 10 under.

Corales: Leaderboard | Photos
Good advice: Joel Dahmen’s wife ‘gives me a hug and a kiss and tells me to go kick butt’

“I was on cruise control today. It’s really hard to win golf tournaments,” said Dahmen. “I knew it was hard, but I can’t believe how hard it actually is. I was in control, I felt like I was doing — my body was just doing other things. Thankfully I had a couple good up-and-downs there on 16 and 17, and I don’t know how I tapped in that two- or three-footer there, but thankfully it went in.”

The win is Dahmen’s first on Tour and third professionally after claiming the PC Finacial Open and Syncrude Boreal Open in 2014 on the PGA Tour Canada.

“Hopefully back home in Clarkston, Lewiston, you’re partying,” said Dahmen to his Washington friends. “Mesa Country Club (Arizona) boys open the tab, I’ll be home next week. This is unbelievable.”

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Joel Dahmen, co-leader at Corales Puntacana, says wife ‘gives me a hug and a kiss and tells me to go kick butt’

Joel Dahmen, who hasn’t won a professional event in nearly seven years, is tied with Rafael Campos at 10 under in the Dominican Republic.

Joel Dahmen hasn’t won a professional event since claiming two titles on the Mackenzie Tour-PGA Tour Canada nearly seven years ago. Positive vibes from his wife might help him breakthrough on the PGA Tour this week.

After 54 holes in the Dominican Republic, Dahmen is in position to win for the first time on golf’s big stage. His third-round 68 included four birdies on his back nine, getting him to 10 under. Rafael Campos would later birdie the 18th hole to tie him for the lead and those two will take a one-shot advantage into Sunday’s final round.

Dahmen credits his wife, Lona, describing how she’s long been a big part of his team.

“We’ve been together for nine years now, married for two, so she’s seen it all,” he said on Saturday. “She worked two jobs to pay rent when I was on the mini-tours, had no money. So she’s been through it all. She’s been really positive through all this.”

This being the six missed cuts in seven outings in 2021.

“Sounds like I’m just like on golf suicide watch, right? I just had a rough seven, eight weeks. It’s not that bad, but the way I play, super consistent, make a lot of cuts, you know, it seemed like it was pretty bad. So it’s never as bad as you think it is, it’s never as good as you think it is, but Lona’s been great for me. She still gives me a hug and a kiss and tells me to go kick butt, so it’s been good.”

Dahmen has only posted three bogeys and one double through three rounds at the windy Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship. He also credited his Saturday playing partner, Graeme McDowell, for providing some inspiration.

“Playing with Graeme today, he got off to kind of a good start and I was kind of behind the 8-ball. He kind of kicked my butt after the three-putt on 8,” he said. “I started being a little more aggressive with my putts just got to get them to the hole and they might actually go in, and they did thankfully on the back.”

Corales: Leaderboard | Photos | TV info

Typically, Dahmen hasn’t played this event, but he felt like missing out on this week’s World Golf Championships event stirred something.

“Normally I take this week off, but I was kind of inspired — I felt like I kind of should have been in that Match Play this year and not being there inspired me to come here and play well,” he said.

As for Campos, he’s only had two bogeys all week and has shot three rounds in the 60s so far, including a second straight 69 on Saturday.

Campos is also seeking his first Tour win. He has one win on the Korn Ferry Tour, the 2019 Bahamas Great Abaco Classic at The Abaco Club.

Danny Willett and Michael Gligic are tied for second, one shot back. Emiliano Grillo and  Thomas Pieters are tied for fifth, two back. Defending champion Hudson Swafford is in a six-way tie for seventh at 7 under.

The Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship, also held last September, is the first PGA Tour event to be staged twice in the same season in 70 years.

A win does not mean a trip to Augusta National for the Masters but a victory would gain the winner this week entry into the 2021 PGA Championship, the 2022 Sentry Tournament of Champions and the 2022 Players Championship.

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Three-way tie for lead after 36 holes at PGA Tour’s Puntacana Resort & Club Championship

Justin Suh, Fabrizio Zanotti and Rafael Campos all share the 36-hole lead in the Dominican Republic.

Justin Suh, Fabrizio Zanotti and Rafael Campos all share the 36-hole lead at the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship in the Dominican Republic.

Zanotti shot a 68 while Suh and Campos each fired 69s. All three are 7 under, one shot ahead of the field.

Suh, seeking his first PGA Tour win, knows there’s plenty of work still to do.

“We still have two more rounds, we still have the weekend and it’s not going to be easy just because the wind I think is going to keep coming in,” he said.

Suh finished tied for 14th last September in this event, his second-best finish on Tour.

“I’m excited for the opportunities ahead. We’ve got a good game plan going on, I’m hitting it great, I’ve just got to keep it going.”

Corales: Leaderboard | Photos | TV info

For Campos, this event is like a home game.

“I really do feel like I’m at home. This is my second home actually,” he said. “My family has had a house here for 20 years and anytime I come out here, play, whenever I’m in vacation mode, I actually come here to the Dominican Republic and stay here.”

Tyler Duncan and Joel Dahmen are tied for fourth, a shot back.

First-round leader Stephan Jaeger shot a 73, one day after he opened with a 66. He is among six golfers tied for sixth. Michael Gligic is in that group as well after he shot a 66, the low round of the day. Graeme McDowell is also in that group at 5 under.

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Stephan Jaeger makes an ace, leads Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship

Stephan Jaeger aced the second hole and closed his round with birdies on Nos. 4, 6 and 7 to post a 6-under 66 in the Dominican Republic.

On Thursday, the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship became the first PGA Tour event to be staged twice in the same season in 70 years.

It was just 179 days ago that Hudson Swafford hoisted the trophy in the Dominican Republic as tournament champion.

The Corales was supposed to be played in March of 2020 but the COVID-19 pandemic postponed the event just two weeks before it was to be played. Instead, it was pushed back to September.

On the first day of the Tour’s return, Stephan Jaeger parlayed a hole-in-one on his 11th hole to take the first-round lead. Jaeger aced the par-3 second hole and then closed out his round with birdies on Nos. 4, 6 and 7 to post a 6-under 66. He will start Friday’s round with a one-shot lead over Joel Dahmen and Andrew Yun.

Corales: Leaderboard | Photos | TV info

“Obviously 1’s don’t really add up too quickly, so that was a good start of the back nine,” he said.

Jaeger admits it’s been a while since he made an ace.

“I haven’t had a hole-in-one probably since college, it’s been a long time, especially in a tournament. I think my last tournament hole-in-one was, I think, junior year in college. So I’m not going to age myself, but it’s been a while, for sure.”

Dahmen has missed the cut in six of his last seven events. The one cut he made in that stretch ended in a T-60 finish at Pebble Beach.

“Been a long time,” he said after his first round 67 that included no bogeys. “Been getting my butt kicked out here since the start of the year, so it feels good to play well. Still have a long ways to go.”

Dahmen also attributed his lackluster play to some equipment issues.

“My clubs were maybe bent incorrectly so we got that fixed,” he said. “I played four weeks basically with maybe clubs that weren’t fit properly. That sucks, obviously. And just the last couple weeks had them kind of fixed and the ball’s been flying correctly again.”

Nate Lashley, Adam Schenk, Justin Suh, Sam Ryder, Rafael Campos and Mark Anderson all shot 68s and are tied for fourth.

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Hudson Swafford celebrates first victory in 3 ½ years with ‘one, two or 12 beers. No one was really counting’

JACKSON, Miss. – How did Hudson Swafford celebrate earning his first victory on Sunday in more than 3½ years? “Not hard enough,” he said of an impromptu gathering with his caddie, wife, and fellow pros at the Corales Puntacana Resort and Club …

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JACKSON, Miss. – How did Hudson Swafford celebrate earning his first victory on Sunday in more than 3½ years?

“Not hard enough,” he said of an impromptu gathering with his caddie, wife, and fellow pros at the Corales Puntacana Resort and Club Championship in the Dominican Republic. Caddie Benji Thompson, who was on the bag for cut-casualty Kevin Chappell, enjoyed some deep sea fishing earlier that day and caught a bunch of mahi mahi that the resort cooked up for a feast.

“We had one or two or 12 beers, no one was really counting, but we had a great time, and then my wife was in the middle of maybe 15 guys. I felt bad for her, but at the same time, she was enjoying it and having a good time, having a good laugh,” Swafford said.

He was the only player in the 144-man field to record four rounds in the 60s and overcame losing a three-stroke lead on the back nine before rallying over the final two holes to claim his second career Tour title.


Tee times, TV info | Fantasy | Odds, best bets


Swafford endured a few bumps in the road between his first victory at the 2017 American Express when he climbed as high as No. 75 in the world and beginning this year as No. 426. First, he suffered a rib injury and then just when that healed he required surgery to remove a small bone in the bottom of his right foot. He missed four months in the summer of 2019, during which time his wife gave birth to their son. Playing this season on a medical exemption, Swafford was down to two starts and needed to make something happen. The pressure was mounting, but he knew his game was sharp, as did his swing instructor, Scott Hamilton.

“He’s like, ‘I’ve got nothing for you, you’re playing great, you’re swinging it great. It’s just kind of mental,’ ” Swafford said.

Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship
Hudson Swafford celebrates with his caddie Kyle Bradley after winning the 2020 Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship on Sept. 27, 2020 in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic. Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images

Ah, the mental game. That can be even trickier to mend than removing a small bone in his foot. Swafford called on an old friend, sports psychologist Bhrett McCabe, who changed his mindset by downplaying the importance of retaining his Tour privileges.

“He’s like, man, honestly, you keep doing this, you’re not going to keep your card anyway, so you might as well just go have fun and enjoy playing golf again and try to just be like a junior golfer; just go have fun and you’re just playing for a trophy,” Swafford recounted.

McCabe added: “You’re going to play golf the rest of your career. You’ve got a long career, two tournaments aren’t going to define you. He’s like, you’re going to be playing on the PGA Tour for a long time regardless. He goes, you’re going to play other events this fall, you’re going to play other events in the spring, so let’s just go and have fun these last two events and get out of your own way because you know your golf is good.”

It sure was on Sunday at Corales Golf Club as Swafford shot 5-under 31 on the front nine to lead by as many as four strokes. He let the field, in particular Mackenzie Hughes who tied him, back into the trophy hunt with a two-chip double bogey on the par-4 13th and a bogey at the 15th. Swafford never panicked and he stiffed a 6-iron at the par-3 17th for the go-ahead birdie before making a clinching 8-foot par putt at the seaside 18th. Some more of his work with McCabe proved vital down the stretch.

“You’ve got to stay in the moment. Got to stay in the present. We’ve been working on that and kind of just focusing on that and a clear thought before I hit a golf shot,” Swafford said. “Bad thoughts are going to creep in your head, obviously, with anything that you do, but it’s how you handle it and how you react to it is the big thing.”

Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship
Hudson Swafford plays his third shot on the 15th hole during the final round of the 2020 Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic. Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images

Swafford closed with 3-under 69 for an 18-under 270 total and went from trying to satisfy his major medical to exempt on Tour through 2023. Healthy and wealthy and with grander ambitions, Swafford was asked whether his second victory was more meaningful to him given the injuries that had stalled his career.

“Your first one is your most special, I think,” he said. “I definitely didn’t want to be that guy who was like – that just had one PGA Tour win. I’m not saying you get lucky and just win once, but I want to win multiple times. That’s why I get up and grind and do what I do.”

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Winner’s Bag: Hudson Swafford, 2020 Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship

Hudson Swafford wins on the PGA Tour in the Dominican Republic with a mix of Ping, Titleist and TaylorMade golf clubs.

The gear Hudson Swafford used to win the PGA Tour’s 2020 Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship:

DRIVER: Ping G400 LST (8.5 degrees), with an Aldila NV 2KXV shaft

FAIRWAY WOODS: Ping i25 (3-wood), with an Aldila Rogue Silver 80 shaft; Ping i25 (5-wood), with an Aldila Tour Blue shaft

IRONS: Ping S55 (4-9), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 shafts

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM8 (46 degrees), Titleist Vokey Design SM7 (52 and 55 degrees), TaylorMade Milled Grind Hi-Toe (60 degrees), all with True Temper Dynamic Gold X100 shafts

PUTTER: TaylorMade Spider X Tour, with a SuperStroke Traxion 1.0P grip

BALL: Titleist Pro V1 

How much money each PGA Tour golfer won at the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship

Check out how much money each PGA Tour golfer won at the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship.

Hudson Swafford seemed to be cruising before a double bogey on 13 threw him off track. Mackenzie Hughes was four shots back through 13 holes. Tyler McCumber drained a huge putt on 18 for birdie to forge a three-way tie for the lead.

The final round of the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship on Sunday turned out some dramatics for sure.

In the end, it was Swafford draining a clutch par putt on the last to win by a shot and grab his first PGA Tour victory in more than three years.

McCumber came in second, a shot back. Mackenzie Hughes posted a solo third, two shots back.


Corales: LeaderboardPhotos


Prize money

Position Golfer Score Amount
1 Hudson Swafford -18 $720,000
2 Tyler McCumber -17 $436,000
3 Mackenzie Hughes -16 $276,000
4 Nate Lashley -15 $196,000
5 Adam Long -14 $164,000
T-6 James Hahn -13 $140,000
T-6 Anirban Lahiri -13 $140,000
T-8 Will Zalatoris -12 $117,000
T-8 Cameron Percy -12 $117,000
T-8 Luke List -12 $117,000
T-11 Sebastian Cappelen -11 $93,000
T-11 Patrick Rodgers -11 $93,000
T-11 Xinjun Zhang -11 $93,000
T-14 Matt Jones -10 $65,000
T-14 Alex Smalley -10 $65,000
T-14 Charley Hoffman -10 $65,000
T-14 Scott Harrington -10 $65,000
T-14 Kelly Kraft -10 $65,000
T-14 Justin Suh -10 $65,000
T-14 Sean O’Hair -10 $65,000
T-21 Hank Lebioda -9 $39,000
T-21 Pat Perez -9 $39,000
T-21 Robert Streb -9 $39,000
T-21 Kramer Hickok -9 $39,000
T-21 Henrik Stenson -9 $39,000
T-21 Rhein Gibson -9 $39,000
T-21 Emiliano Grillo -9 $39,000
T-28 Sam Burns -8 $27,400
T-28 Sangmoon Bae -8 $27,400
T-28 Kyle Stanley -8 $27,400
T-28 Vincent Whaley -8 $27,400
T-28 Jonathan Byrd -8 $27,400
T-33 Scott Stallings -7 $20,450
T-33 Brian Stuard -7 $20,450
T-33 David Hearn -7 $20,450
T-33 Thomas Detry -7 $20,450
T-33 Joohyung Kim -7 $20,450
T-33 Rob Oppenheim -7 $20,450
T-33 Ryan Brehm -7 $20,450
T-33 Sepp Straka -7 $20,450
T-41 George McNeill -6 $12,862
T-41 Kevin Tway -6 $12,862
T-41 Matthew NeSmith -6 $12,862
T-41 Joseph Bramlett -6 $12,862
T-41 Ricky Barnes -6 $12,862
T-41 Chase Seiffert -6 $12,862
T-41 Peter Malnati -6 $12,862
T-41 Denny McCarthy -6 $12,862
T-41 Patton Kizzire -6 $12,862
T-41 Fabian Gomez -6 $12,862
T-41 Beau Hossler -6 $12,862
T-52 Ben Martin -5 $9,580
T-52 Sam Ryder -5 $9,580
T-52 D.J. Trahan -5 $9,580
T-52 Kristoffer Ventura -5 $9,580
T-56 Matthias Schwab -4 $9,160
T-56 Alex Schenk -4 $9,160
T-56 J.J. Spaun -4 $9,160
T-56 Scott Brown -4 $9,160
T-56 Dominic Bozzelli -4 $9,160
T-61 Keith Mitchell -3 $8,800
T-61 Tim Wilkinson -3 $8,800
T-61 C.T. Pan -3 $8,800
T-61 Brice Garnett -3 $8,800
T-65 J.J. Henry -2 $8,440
T-65 Willy Pumarol -2 $8,440
T-65 Martin Laird -2 $8,440
T-65 Jamie Lovemark -2 $8,440
T-65 Mark Anderson -2 $8,440
T-70 Kiradech Aphibarnrat -1 $8,120
T-70 Zac Blair -1 $8,120
T-70 Arjun Atwal -1 $8,120
T-73 Roberto Diaz E $7,920
T-73 Tommy Gainey E $7,920

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Hudson Swafford holds it together down the stretch to win Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship

Ultimately, Hudson Swafford came out on top at Corales but he made it interesting down to the wire

Hudson Swafford looked like he might run away with his second PGA Tour title when he made the turn Sunday at the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship. The script flipped on the 33-year-old, however, when he made double-bogey at the Corales Club’s par-4 13th.

That opened to the door to his chasers. A group ahead, Canadian Mackenzie Hughes made birdie on No. 14 for a two-shot swing that left him right on Swafford’s heels and then, after he parred No. 15 and Swafford bogeyed, tied with him.

Ultimately, Swafford came out on top but he made it interesting down to the wire – leaving his birdie putt up a steep slope several feet short. He made the par to finish alone at 18 under.

Swafford seemingly couldn’t get anything else to go his way coming down the stretch in the Dominican Republic. He had gone 28 holes without a bogey before he botched the 13th.

He only made one more, at No. 17, coming into the clubhouse. That putt couldn’t have come at a better time, though. It gave him control heading to the final hole.

Tyler McCumber, who started the day six shots back, had added his name to the leading group when he holed a long putt for birdie on the final hole for a closing 66 to also become a threat. He ended up in solo second as Hughes ultimately finished alone in third after a bogey at No. 18.

The past two editions of the Puntacana event have been considerably more predictable. The 54-hole leader won each time. Adam Long, this year’s 54-hole leader, finished fifth after a closing 74.

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Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship: Sunday tee times, TV info

The PGA Tour’s Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship continues Sunday. Here are Round 4 tee times and TV info.

Adam Long has already proved he can handle the pressure-cooker for a final-round, final-group pairing on the PGA Tour. At the 2019 Desert Classic, he outlasted Phil Mickelson to win his first Tour title.

Now, Long will have a chance to add a second trophy to his collection. The 33-year-old takes a two-shot lead into the final round of the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship in the Dominican Republic.

Long is searching for his second Tour title, but so is Hudson Swafford, who will start the day two shots back. In fact, a host of up-and-coming PGA Tour talent lurks.

Take a look at

Corales Puntacana: Scores | Photo gallery

All times are listed in Eastern.

Tee times

1st tee

Tee time Players
7:30 a.m. Keith Mitchell, Kiradech Aphibarnrat
7:40 a.m. Tim Wilkinson, Matthias Schwab
7:50 a.m. Ben Martin, Sam Burns
8:00 a.m. George McNeill, Sangmoon Bae
8:10 a.m. J.J. Henry, C.T. Pan
8:20 a.m. Roberto Diaz, Sam Ryder
8:30 a.m. D.J. Trahan, Hank Lebioda
8:40 a.m. Kevin Tway, Kyle Stanley
8:50 a.m. Willy Pumarol, Matthew NeSmith
9:00 a.m. Stephen Stallings, Jr., Brice Garnett
9:10 a.m. Martin Laird, Joseph Bramlett
9:20 a.m. Tommy Gainey, Brian Stuard
9:30 a.m. Pat Perez, Matt Jones
9:40 a.m. Zac Blair, Vincent Whaley
9:50 a.m. Kristoffer Ventura, Will Zalatoris
10:00 a.m. Jamie Lovemark, Adam Schenk
10:10 a.m. J.J. Spaun, Scott Brown
10:20 a.m. Ricky Barnes, Mark Anderson
10:30 a.m. David Hearn, Arjun Atwal
10:40 a.m. Alex Smalley, Chase Seiffert
10:50 a.m. Thomas Detry, Cameron Percy
11:00 a.m. Sebastian Cappelen, Peter Malnati
11:10 a.m. Denny McCarthy, Patton Kizzire
11:20 a.m. Jonathan Byrd, Fabian Gomez
11:30 a.m. Beau Hossler, Robert Streb
11:40 a.m. Patrick Rodgers, Joohyung Kim
11:50 a.m. Dominic Bozzelli, Charley Hoffman
12:00 p.m. Rob Oppenheim, Scott Harrington
12:10 p.m. Kramer Hickok, Henrik Stenson
12:20 p.m. Ryan Brehm, Sepp Straka
12:30 p.m. Kelly Kraft, Rhein Gibson
12:40 p.m. Emiliano Grillo, James Hahn
12:50 p.m. Luke List, Justin Suh
1:00 p.m. Anirban Lahiri, Tyler McCumber
1:10 p.m. Nate Lashley, Sean O’Hair
1:20 p.m. Mackenzie Hughes, Xinjun Zhang
1:30 p.m. Adam Long, Hudson Swafford


All times are listed in Eastern.

TV, streaming information

Sunday, Sept. 27

TV

NBC: 3-6 p.m.

Radio

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

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