Austin Eckroat torches Tiger’s track, shoots 63 to win for the second time this season at WWT Championship

Eckroat torched the Tiger Woods-designed course to the tune of nine birdies in his first 12 holes.

Austin Eckroat relaxed on Saturday night before the final round of the 2024 World Wide Technology Championship by playing video games at his hotel room. The new Call of Duty has been his latest obsession.

“That’s how I kind of take my mind off things,” he said. “You can’t think about anything else.”

Then he went out on Sunday and played video game. Eckroat reeled off nine birdies in his first 12 holes and shot 9-under 63 at El Cardonal at Diamante in Los Cabos, Mexico, to win by one stroke over Carson Young and Justin Lower and lift a trophy for the second time this season on the PGA Tour.

“Validation,” said Eckroat, who won the Cognizant Classic in March and became the seventh multi-time winner this season. “Winning twice is really special because it means you really can do it.”

Eckroat, a 25-year-old pro out of Oklahoma State, said he already had checked off the majority of his goals for this season with the exception of finishing in the top 30 and qualifying for the Tour Championship. He managed to make the top 50 to lock up his place in all of the signature events next season and had little to gain in terms of his Tour status. But unlike other pros who have been kicking back in the fall, Eckroat had the itch to keep playing.

WWTC: Leaderboard | Photos

“I can’t practice with a long-term goal in mind,” he explained. “Or I can, but it’s tough for me, I need short-term goals. I’m not a guy who can go and take a ton of time off and start working on things for next season. I need more short-term goals than taking three months off. I love to play tournament golf, that’s why I do it.”

Cabo has been good to him before. As a sophomore at Oklahoma State, he won the Cabo Collegiate in 2019 just down the road at Querencia. This week, his score improved by a stroke each of the first three days, beginning with a 68, which left him a stroke off the 54-hole lead set by Lower and Nico Echavarria, who was bidding for his second straight win. Eckroat did his best Tiger Woods imitation in the final round, making birdies at the first two holes to tie for the lead before a bogey at the third of the Woods-designed layout. But the dropped shot was a mere roadblock as Eckroat ripped off birdie on the next three holes and four in a span of five holes to turn in 5-under 31.

“Tiger definitely was my favorite player growing up, no doubt about it. Yeah, I got to watch him play at Southern Hills, I think it was the 2007 PGA Championship, so I was 8 years old. I remember watching him hit the putt at Torrey Pines. Actually, I didn’t watch that, I had my head tucked in the couch because I couldn’t watch it, I was so nervous,” Eckroat said. “To win at a place that he built, that’s just pretty cool. It’s awesome. He’s my idol, for sure.”

Eckroat kept his foot down on the pedal, notching birdies at the first three holes of the back nine and a beautiful chip to 5 feet after one of his few hiccups of the day left him under a tree at the par-5 14th.

His lead widened to as many as four strokes and he tacked on a birdie at 17.

“That’s probably some of the best golf I’ve ever played, just from the start putts were going in,” he said. “I was lights out today, I couldn’t miss.”

Eckroat rotates putters the way most people change socks and he slipped a Ping PLD DZB custom into the bag, and it did the trick. For the season, Eckroat ranked 132nd in Stokes Gained: Putting. This week? He was fourth in Putts per Green in Regulation.

“This is my first win since I was 13 years old with a different putter, which is kind of crazy,” said Eckroat, who had used a Ping Redwood D66 in all his previous victories.

A chunked chip at the last led to a bogey and meant Young, who set the course record with 61 on Friday, needed an eagle at the last to force a playoff but missed a 25-foot putt on the right.

“I played really good, just didn’t quite feel it with the putter today,” Young said.

He signed for 65 and recorded the best finish of his career, tying for second with Lower (65). Max Greyserman also closed in 65 to finish fourth and remained one of the hottest golfers on the planet, registering his fourth top-4 finish in his last six starts but still is seeking his first Tour title.

“Sunday 65s are not good enough unless you have like a four-shot lead going into the last day,” Greyserman said. “Hopefully that will come soon.”

It all came together for Eckroat, who signed for a 72-hole total of 24-under 264, earning a trip back to the Masters and claiming his second win in 70 career Tour starts.

“It’s just really special. You get that first win and you make the joke that maybe this will open the floodgates and they’re going to start flying,” he said. “You know, I think that second win kind of solidifies that you can win on the PGA Tour. You can’t just say it was luck this time, I’ve done it twice. Pretty cool.”

Justin Lower goes low, Nico Echavarria looks to go back-to-back and more from 2024 World Wide Technology Championship

Catch up on the action here.

We’re 18 holes away from crowning a winner of the 2024 World Wide Technology Championship in Mexico, and the top of the leaderboard is as congested as Los Angeles traffic.

Justin Lower, Nico Echavarria and Carson Young are tied for the lead at 16 under, but there are three players tied for fourth at 15 under and two more at 14 under. A large group is primed to pounce if the leaders hit a few speed bumps during their rounds Sunday.

Echavarria, a 30-year-old from Colombia, won the Zozo Championship in Japan two weeks ago, his second PGA Tour win in as many seasons (2023 Puerto Rico Open). Now he’s just one round away from winning in back-to-back starts and a career-changing year.

Some of the names hoping to make a charge over the last dozen-and-a-half holes are Austin Eckroat (15 under), Max Greyserman (15 under) and Maverick McNealy (14 under).

If you missed any of the action Saturday, no worries we have you covered. Here are a few things to know from the third round of the World Wide Technology Championship.

WWTCLeaderboard | Photo gallery

Echavarria’s in the zone

Nico Echavarria of Colombia walks from the fourth tee during the third round of the World Wide Technology Championship 2024 at El Cardonal at Diamante in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. (Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)

It’s tough to travel across the world and play consistent golf, but don’t tell Echavarria that. Two weeks ago he was in Japan hoisting hardware at the Zozo. Now, he’s more than 6,300 miles away, once again in position to earn a trophy.

He started with a birdie at the par-5 first on Saturday and added one more before making the turn with a 2-under 34. On his way home, Echavarria birdied Nos. 10 and 12, and made six straight pars to close his day.

“There’s going to be nerves (on Sunday), it’s normal,” he told the media after signing his card. “I’ve been in this position luckily, I’ve gotten it done. It’s just a matter of being calm, controlling the nerves because there are going to be nerves. Hopefully there’s wind because I like playing in wind. I think I can manage the wind pretty well out here. So we’ll see. I won’t change my strategy, but maybe good golf will be enough.”

The last player to win back-to-back starts on Tour was Rory McIlroy earlier this year at the Zurich Classic and Truist Championship (formally known as the Wells Fargo).

Justin Lower looks for No. 1

Justin Lower plays his shot from the second tee during the third round of the World Wide Technology Championship 2024 at El Cardonal at Diamante in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. (Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)

Lower is a name you’re probably not used to seeing on the leaderboard as he’s still looking for his first Tour win. He’s been in the mix a decent amount this year with six top-25 finishes and three top-10s. But through three rounds south of the border, he’s in position to finally put a tally in the win column.

The 35-year-old opened the WWTC with a ho-hum 2-under 70, but has reached another level with his game posting rounds of 67-63 over the last two days. He hit every fairway in regulation and missed just one green on Saturday, paving the way for his bogey-free 9-under gem.

“Everything,” Lower said when asked what a win would mean to him. “I don’t know. Yeah, I mean, there’s 18 holes tomorrow on a very scoreable golf course. I think the wind’s going to stay down again, so I have to go out and basically shoot probably somewhere between 5 and 9 under again. I mean, it’s just the way the scores are out here. If the wind’s down, scores are going to be low.

“Yeah, a win would mean everything. I still have a job to do.”

Is it Mav’s time?

Maverick McNealy plays his shot from the sixth tee during the third round of the World Wide Technology Championship 2024 at El Cardonal at Diamante in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. (Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)

Maverick McNealy has the game to be a four-, five-time winner on Tour, he’s just gotta get his first. McNealy, who withdrew from the Zozo Championship before the second round due to illness in his last start, has flirted with victory several times this year, including a T-3 finish at the 3M Open. However, he’s yet to get it over the finish line.

He’ll have a chance on Sunday thanks to rounds of 66-67 after opening the tournament with a 3-under 69 on Thursday.

The 28-year-old made the turn with a 1-under 35 on Day 3, and went on to add three birdies and a bogey on the back before finishing his third round with an eagle on the par-5 closer.

He’ll enter the final round two shots back of the lead.

Checking in with some familiar names

Daniel Berger of the United States plays a second shot on the 15th hole during the second round of the World Wide Technology Championship 2024 at El Cardonal at Diamante on November 08, 2024 in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. (Photo by Hector Vivas/Getty Images)
  • Daniel Berger, 12 under (T-9)
  • Wesley Bryan, 12 under (T-9)
  • Joel Dahmen, 11 under (T-14)
  • Matt Kuchar, 11 under (T-14)
  • Harris English, 9 under (T-30)
  • Harry Higgs, 7 under (T-38)

Top 10 and odds to win

Position Player Score Odds to win
T-1 Justin Lower 16 under (+500)
T-1 Nico Echavarria 16 under (+450)
T-1 Carson Young 16 under (+550)
T-4 Joe Highsmith 15 under (+850)
T-4 Austin Eckroat 15 under (+700)
T-4 Max Greyserman 15 under (+450)
T-7 Ben Griffin 14 under (+1200)
T-7 Maverick McNealy 14 under (+1100)
T-9 David Lipsky 12 under (+15000)
T-9 Daniel Berger 12 under (+7500)
T-9 Wesley Bryan 12 under (+11000)
T-9 Ryan McCormick 12 under (+17000)
T-9 Tom Hoge 12 under (+6500)

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European Ryder Cup captain Luke Donald withdraws from 2024 World Wide Technology Championship

Donald pulled out due to a back injury.

Luke Donald, the 2023 and 2025 European Ryder Cup captain, was forced to withdraw from the PGA Tour’s 2024 World Wide Technology Championship in Mexico on Saturday due to a back injury.

Donald shot rounds of 72-69 to turn in a two-day total of 3 under, a shot better than the 36-hole cut of 2 under. During the third round, the Englishman was even par through 13 holes — he started his day on hole No. 10 — with three birdies, a bogey and double bogey on the card before calling it a tournament.

In just six previous 2024 starts, Donald’s T-68 finish at the PGA Championship was his only made cut.

WWTCLeaderboard | Photo gallery

2024 World Wide Technology Championship Saturday tee times, PGA Tour pairings, how to watch

The winner this week gets $1.296 million.

They’re halfway through the 2024 World Wide Technology Championship and there are four golfers who have reached double digits under par.

Nico Echavarria leads the field at 12 under alongside Max Greyserman. A winner on the PGA Tour just two weeks ago at the Zozo Championship in Japan, Echavarria is in line for wins in consecutive starts. Greyserman is seeking his first victory.

A shot back is Carson Young. Then there’s Dylan Wu in solo fourth at 10 under.

On the wrong end of the leaderboard sits an interesting group of notables who missed the cut. Time is running out for those seeking to secure status in 2025 with just two events left after this one.

The WWTC has a total purse of $7.2 million with $1.296 million of that going into the winner’s bank account. This week’s champion will also receive 500 FedEx Cup points and a two-year PGA Tour exemption.

WWTCLeaderboard | Photo gallery

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s what you need to know for the third round of the 2024 World Wide Technology Championship.

Saturday third-round tee times

Time (ET) Tee Players
9:50 a.m. 1 Brandon Wu, Michael Kim, Tyson Alexander
9:50 a.m. 10 Charley Hoffman, Henrik Norlander, Garrick Higgo
10:01 a.m. 1 Sam Ryder, Luke List, Adam Svensson
10:01 a.m. 10 Aaron Baddeley, Erik van Rooyen, Beau Hossler
10:12 a.m. 1 Chandler Phillips, Martin Laird, David Lipsky
10:12 a.m. 10 Harry Higgs, Chesson Hadley, Kevin Chappell
10:23 a.m. 1 Alex Smalley, Patrick Rodgers, Justin Suh
10:23 a.m. 10 Harris English, Daniel Berger, Lucas Glover
10:34 a.m. 1 Patrick Fishburn, Jacob Bridgeman, Harry Hall
10:34 a.m. 10 Ryan Brehm, Wesley Bryan, Zach Bauchou
10:45 a.m. 1 Joel Dahmen, Matt Kuchar, Nate Lashley
10:45 a.m. 10 Josh Teater, Lanto Griffin, J.J. Spaun
10:56 a.m. 1 Kevin Streelman, Justin Lower, Nick Hardy
10:56 a.m. 10 Robby Shelton, Luke Donald, Trace Crowe
11:07 a.m. 1 Joe Highsmith, Tom Whitney, Rico Hoey
11:07 a.m. 10 Danny Willett, Chad Ramey, Blaine Hale, Jr.
11:18 a.m. 1 Ben Griffin, Ryan Gerard, Ryan McCormick
11:18 a.m. 10 Doug Ghim, Hayden Springer, David Skinns
11:29 a.m. 1 Kelly Kraft, Sam Stevens, Tom Hoge
11:29 a.m. 10 Zac Blair, Joseph Bramlett, Taylor Montgomery
11:40 a.m. 1 Dylan Wu, Austin Eckroat, Maverick McNealy
11:40 a.m. 10 Kevin Tway, S.Y. Noh, Vince Whaley
11:51 a.m. 1 Nico Echavarria, Max Greyserman, Carson Young

How to watch, listen

You can also watch the World Wide Technology Championship on Golf Channel free on Fubo. All times ET.

Saturday, Nov. 9

Golf Channel: 2-5 p.m.

Sirius XM: 12-5 p.m.

Sunday, Nov. 10

Golf Channel: 2-5 p.m.

Sirius XM: 12-5 p.m.We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

2024 World Wide Technology Championship Friday tee times, PGA Tour pairings and how to watch

The purse is $7.2 million with $1.296 million going to the winner.

Taylor Montgomery had a Hall of Famer caddie for half his round Thursday. With his dad needing to bow out after nine holes, former Major Leaguer Larry Walker picked up the bag and finished the day for Montgomery, who shot 4-under 68 and sits a shot off the lead after 18 holes.

There are three tied for the lead at 5 under: Tom Whitney, Rico Hoey and Kevin Streelman. Montgomery is tied with a slew of golfers for fourth, including tournament defending champion Erik van Rooyen.

The purse at the World Wide Technology Championship is $7.2 million with $1.296 million going to the winner. The winner will also receive 500 FedEx Cup points and a two-year PGA Tour exemption. It’s the third-to-last event in 2024.

WWTC: Leaderboard

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s what you need to know for the second round of the 2024 World Wide Technology Championship.

Friday second-round tee times

Time (ET) Tee Player
8:30 a.m. 1 Nate Lashley, Patrick Fishburn, Jacob Bridgeman
8:30 a.m. 10 Danny Willett, Tim Wilkinson, Rico Hoey
8:41 a.m. 1 Michael Kim, Sam Stevens, Will Gordon
8:41 a.m. 10 Kevin Streelman, Chesson Hadley, Cody Gribble
8:52 a.m. 1 Kevin Chappell, Justin Lower, Tyson Alexander
8:52 a.m. 10 Martin Trainer, Austin Cook, Charley Hoffman
9:03 a.m. 1 Trey Mullinax, K.H. Lee, Chad Ramey
9:03 a.m. 10 Harry Hall, Austin Eckroat, sean O’Hair
9:14 a.m. 1 Nick Hardy, Taylor Moore, Cameron Champ
9:14 a.m. 10 Tom Hoge, Harris English, Daniel Berger
9:25 a.m. 1 Maverick McNealy, Kelly Kraft, Alex Smalley
9:25 a.m. 10 Ryan Moore, Henrik Norlander, Ben Griffin
9:36 a.m. 1 Scott Piercy, Patrick Rodgers, Roger Sloan
9:36 a.m. 10 Matt NeSmith, Justin Suh, Callum Tarren
9:47 a.m. 1 Blaine Hale, Jr., Zach Bauchou, Ryan Gerard
9:47 a.m. 10 Joel Dahmen, Doug Ghim, S.H. Kim
9:58 a.m. 1 Paul Barjon, Ryan McCormick, William Moll
9:58 a.m. 10 Raul Pereda, Santiago de la Fuente, Omar Morales (a)
10:09 a.m. 1 Alejandro Tosti, Andrew Walker, Emilio Gonzalez
10:09 a.m. 10 Austin Smotherman, Joe Highsmith, Neal Shipley
1:05 p.m. 1 Garrick Higgo, Chandler Phillips, Hayden Springer
1:05 p.m. 10 Martin Laird, Carl Yuan, David Skinns
1:16 p.m. 1 Zac Blair, Josh Teater, Joseph Bramlett
1:16 p.m. 10 Aaron Baddeley, Taylor Montgomery, Carson Young
1:27 p.m. 1 Lanto Griffin, David Lipsky, Matti Schmid
1:27 p.m. 10 Kevin Tway, Sam Ryder, Pierceson Coody
1:38 p.m. 1 Nico Echavarria, Jhonattan Vegas, Erik van Rooyen
1:38 p.m. 10 Chez Reavie, J.J. Spaun, Adam Schenk
1:49 p.m. 1 Patton Kizzire, Lucas Glover, Max Greyserman
1:49 p.m. 10 Luke List, Ryan Brehm, Matt Kuchar
2:00 p.m. 1 Beau Hossler, Robby Shelton, Dylan Wu
2:00 p.m. 10 Camilo Villegas, Adam Svensson, Keith Mitchell
2:11 p.m. 1 Tyler Duncan, Hayden Buckley, Harry Higgs
2:11 p.m. 10 Troy Merritt, S.Y. Noh, Luke Donald
2:22 p.m. 1 Ryan Palmer, Wesley Bryan, Billy Andrade
2:22 p.m. 10 Brandon Wu, Vince Whaley, Ben Taylor
2:33 p.m. 1 Adrien Dumont de Chassart, Norman Xiong, Kevin Dougherty
2:33 p.m. 10 Rafael Campos, Trace Crowe, Isidro Benitez
2:44 p.m. 1 Erik Barnes, Mark Geddes, Austin Hitt
2:44 p.m. 10 Tom Whitney, Wilson Furr, Dylan Brack (a)

How to watch, listen

ESPN+ is the exclusive home of PGA Tour Live. You can also watch the World Wide Technology Championship on Golf Channel free on Fubo. All times ET.

Friday, Nov. 8

Golf Channel: 2-5 p.m.

Sirius XM: 11 a.m.-5 p.m.

Saturday, Nov. 9

Golf Channel: 2-5 p.m.

Sirius XM: 12-5 p.m.

Sunday, Nov. 10

Golf Channel: 2-5 p.m.

Sirius XM: 12-5 p.m.

We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

This Hall of Fame baseball player caddied for Taylor Montgomery at 2024 World Wide Technology Championship

Montgomery’s dad had to bow out after nine holes in Los Cabos, Mexico.

LOS CABOS, Mexico – Taylor Montgomery is desperate for a good week on the PGA Tour. Desperate enough that he asked his father, Monte, the director of golf at Shadow Creek in Las Vegas, to be his caddie at the 2024 World Wide Technology Championship. But it turned out to be a Hall of Fame outfielder who would lug his bag to the finish on Thursday as Montgomery’s dad had to bow out after his son got off to a hot start on a sunny but breezy day at El Cardonal at Diamante.

Montgomery made birdies on the first three holes and seven in all to shoot 4-under 68 at the golf course designed by Tiger Woods, and one stroke off the pace set by rookie Tom Whitney.

Montgomery had missed three cuts and withdrew after one round at the Sanderson Farms Championship during the FedEx Cup Fall and has slipped to No. 132 in the season-long points race. This week is one of three remaining events and Montgomery is running out of time to squeeze his way into the top 125. The 29-year-old Las Vegas resident asked his dad, who caddied for him here last year, to be by his side inside the ropes along with a sizable entourage this week that also includes his mom, sister, fiancée and a couple of former baseball stars.

WWTC: Photos | Leaderboard

“I love it here,” said Montgomery, a World Wide Technology ambassador, of Diamante. “It feels like a second home.”

Good thing one of the homeowners was out following him on Thursday morning because his dad wasn’t feeling up to par yesterday when Montgomery’s pro-am team included baseball great Roger Clemens. Monte rallied to the tee bright and early for the first round but he only made it nine holes. That’s when he tapped out and handed over the bag to another Major League Baseball star, Larry Walker, the 57-year-old former outfielder who enjoyed a 17-year career with the Montreal Expos, Colorado Rockies and St. Louis Cardinals. Walker visited Diamante one time and bought a house.

“I’m here half the year,” Walker said. “I’m not here because it’s a lousy place. The food, the weather, the people. That could be in a different order every day.”

2024 World Wide Technology Championship
The 11th green during the first round of the 2024 World Wide Technology Championship at El Cardonal at Diamante in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. (Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)

On this day, he carried Montgomery’s bag and they didn’t skip a beat as Montgomery added birdies at Nos. 10 and 11. “But then he made a double,” Walker said, his face slumping with disappointment as if it was all his fault.

Montgomery tacked on birdies at Nos. 15 and 18 to post 68, his fifth straight sub-70 course at Diamante.

“It kind of fits my eye, I guess. I’m just used to looking at the desert a lot,” Montgomery said.

When his family entered The Woods: Cabo, the clubhouse restaurant, Clemens congratulated them on Walker’s fine work in getting him to the house.

“You’re up next,” Montgomery’s mother said.

“We’ll just rotate,” Clemens responded.

Whatever works.

Best photos from the PGA Tour’s 2024 World Wide Technology Championship in Mexico

Here are the scenes from south of the border.

The 2024 World Wide Technology Championship — the first of three straight weeks of PGA Tour action before the league takes a break until 2025 — gets underway Thursday at El Cardonal at Diamante in Los Cabos, Mexico. This is the second year the Tiger Woods design will play host.

Cameron Young was the biggest name in the field entering the week, but he withdrew from the event on Wednesday. Some of the names teeing it up on Thursday are Lucas Glover, Keith Mitchell, Maverick McNealy, Beau Hossler and defending champion Erik van Rooyen.

This week’s winner will go home with $1.296 million of the $7.2 million purse, as well as 500 FedEx Cup points.

Here are some of the best photos from the World Wide Technology Championship in Mexico.

Erik van Rooyen continues to pay tribute to college teammate who died of cancer shortly after WWTC victory

“Yeah, that win last year meant so much.”

LOS CABOS, Mexico – Erik van Rooyen glanced at the oversized photo of him hanging in the back of the media center. There he is, clenching both fists and letting loose a guttural cry of celebration after holing a 20-foot eagle putt on the final hole to win the 2023 World Wide Technology Championship. Van Rooyen smiled and the memory of his heartwarming victory a year ago came rushing back.

“It’s pretty scary, man. Yeah, that’s a lot of emotion in a short space of time,” he said during his Tuesday press conference to kick off festivities at the PGA Tour FedEx Cup Fall event. “I think, you know, I pour my heart and soul into this sport like a lot of us do. Yeah, that win last year meant so much.”

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 for the second time on the PGA Tour and do it for his terminally-ill friend. Moments later, van Rooyen hugged his caddie and former college teammate Alex Gaugert and both men broke into tears. Only a few days earlier, their fellow teammate at the University of Minnesota, Jon Trasamar, had informed them his cancer had returned and spread throughout his body. It was only a matter of time before his cancer fight would be over. Van Rooyen and Trasamar were college roommates for three years, teaming to win the 2014 Big 10 Championship, and Trasamar was van Rooyen’s best man in his wedding.

“He was like a brother to me,” said van Rooyen, who scribbled the initials “JT” on his ball all week.

After the win, van Rooyen canceled their flight to the next tournament in Bermuda and he and Gaugert flew home the next day and visited with their pal one last time. Trasamar died just days later on Nov. 11 from stage 4 melanoma at age 33.

Asked what he learned from his remarkable back-nine run to the winner’s circle, van Rooyen said, “I think I learned that I’m never quite out of it. I was four back going into the back nine. I know for a fact my mom and dad went to sleep when that happened in South Africa. They didn’t have faith. Yeah, I think regardless of how many I’m back, I think I’m always within a shot, so that gives me a ton of confidence.”

He added: “I’ve spoken about Jon a lot, but another thing I learned was even though this game means so much to me, it doesn’t really matter at the end of the day. So there’s much bigger things in life and that’s a lesson I’ve carried with me these last 12 months.”

Van Rooyen and his friends have established a scholarship in his name at the University of Minnesota.

This marks the first time van Rooyen has been able to defend a tournament he has won as a professional. He noted he arrived back a better player than a year ago when he was struggling to maintain his Tour card. Van Rooyen entered the week at No. 125 in the point standings and on the cusp of losing his playing privileges as his two-year exemption from winning the Barracuda Championship was set to expire. Van Rooyen sits at No. 67 in the point standings this season and called it his most consistent season. His game has improved across the board since he started working with swing instructor Sean Foley last year, and he’s particularly proud of the strides he’s made with his short game, which always had been a weakness.

Can the stars align for a repeat victory? Following his win at the SAS Championship last month, PGA Tour Champions player Jerry Kelly paid tribute to Trasamar. (Kelly’s niece Ali is Trasamar’s widow.) Van Rooyen may face a stouter test, especially on Thursday when the wind is forecasted to gust to more than 20 miles per hour, but he’s confident he can win another for JT.

“It came down to putting,” van Rooyen said of his victory a year ago. “If we get a bit of wind, it might be a different story this week, but if not, I’m a great putter, so I think all in all the course sets up beautifully for me.”

Cameron Young withdraws from 2024 World Wide Technology Championship

A reason for Young’s withdrawal wasn’t listed, and he has been replaced in the field by  42-year-old Sean O’Hair.

Cameron Young, one of the few big names in this week’s rank-and-file field, has withdrawn from the 2024 World Wide Technology Championship at El Cardonal at Diamante Cabo San Lucas in Los Cabos, Mexico.

Young, 27, is still looking for his first PGA Tour win and was one of the betting favorites south of the border, listed at 22/1 (+2200). His last Tour start came at the BMW Championship during the FedEx Cup Playoffs in August. He finished in a tie for 43rd.

A reason for Young’s withdrawal wasn’t listed, and he has been replaced in the field by 42-year-old Sean O’Hair.

The first round gets underway on Thursday at 8:30 a.m. ET. This week’s winner will go home with $1.296 million of the $7.2 million purse and 500 FedEx Cup points.

WWTC: Picks to win, odds | Tournament hub

2024 World Wide Technology Championship Thursday tee times, PGA Tour pairings and how to watch

The purse at the World Wide Technology Championship is $7.2 million with $1.296 million going to the winner.

The final stretch of the 2024 PGA Tour season is here.

The last three events of the 2024 season will be contested over the next three weeks, and it begins Thursday at the World Wide Technology Championship in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. El Cardonal at Diamante, designed by Tiger Woods, is the host course, his first design to be used for a PGA Tour event.

Erik van Rooyen is the defending champion.

The purse at the World Wide Technology Championship is $7.2 million with $1.296 million going to the winner. The winner will also receive 500 FedEx Cup points.

WWTC: Leaderboard | Odds, picks

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the first round of the 2024 World Wide Technology Championship. All times listed are MT.

Thursday tee times

Time (ET) Tee Player
8:30 a.m. 1 Martin Laird, Carl Yuan, David Skinns
8:30 a.m. 10 Garrick Higgo, Chandler Phillips, Hayden Springer
8:41 a.m. 1 Aaron Baddeley, Taylor Montgomery, Carson Young
8:41 a.m. 10 Zac Blair, Josh Teater, Joseph Bramlett
8:52 a.m. 1 Kevin Tway, Sam Ryder, Pierceson Coody
8:52 a.m. 10 Lanto Griffin, David Lipsky, Matti Schmid
9:03 a.m. 1 Chez Reavie, J.J. Spaun, Adam Schenk
9:03 a.m. 10 Nico Echavarria, Jhonattan Vegas, Erik van Rooyen
9:14 a.m. 1 Luke List, Ryan Brehm, Matt Kuchar
9:14 a.m. 10 Patton Kizzire, Lucas Glover, Max Greyserman
9:25 a.m. 1 Camilo Villegas, Adam Svensson, Keith Mitchell
9:25 a.m. 10 Beau Hossler, Robby Shelton, Dylan Wu
9:36 a.m. 1 Troy Merritt, S.Y. Noh, Luke Donald
9:36 a.m. 10 Tyler Duncan, Hayden Buckley, Harry Higgs
9:47 a.m. 1 Brandon Wu, Vince Whaley, Ben Taylor
9:47 a.m. 10 Ryan Palmer, Wesley Bryan, Billy Andrade
9:58 a.m. 1 Rafael Campos, Trace Crowe, Isidro Benitez
9:58 a.m. 10 Adrien Dumont de Chassart, Norman Xiong, Kevin Dougherty
10:09 a.m. 1 Tom Whitney, Wilson Furr, Dylan Brack (a)
10:09 a.m. 10 Erik Barnes, Mark Geddes, Austin Hitt
1:05 p.m. 1 Danny Willett, Tim Wilkinson, Rico Hoey
1:05 p.m. 10 Nate Lashley, Patrick Fishburn, Jacob Bridgeman
1:16 p.m. 1 Kevin Streelman, Chesson Hadley, Cody Gribble
1:16 p.m. 10 Michael Kim, Sam Stevens, Will Gordon
1:27 p.m. 1 Martin Trainer, Austin Cook, Charley Hoffman
1:27 p.m. 10 Kevin Chappell, Justin Lower, Tyson Alexander
1:38 p.m. 1 Harry Hall, Austin Eckroat, Sean O’Hair
1:38 p.m. 10 Trey Mullinax, K.H. Lee, Chad Ramey
1:49 p.m. 1 Tom Hoge, Harris English, Daniel Berger
1:49 p.m. 10 Nick Hardy, Taylor Moore, Cameron Champ
2:00 p.m. 1 Ryan Moore, Henrik Norlander, Ben Griffin
2:00 p.m. 10 Maverick McNealy, Kelly Kraft, Alex Smalley
2:11 p.m. 1 Matt NeSmith, Justin Suh, Callum Tarren
2:11 p.m. 10 Scott Piercy, Patrick Rodgers, Roger Sloan
2:22 p.m. 1 Joel Dahmen, Doug Ghim, S.H. Kim
2:22 p.m. 10 Blaine Hale, Jr., Zach Bauchou, Ryan Gerard
2:33 p.m. 1 Raul Pereda, Santiago de la Fuente, Omar Morales (a)
2:33 p.m. 10 Paul Barjon, Ryan McCormick, William Moll
2:44 p.m. 1 Austin Smotherman, Joe Highsmith, Neal Shipley
2:44 p.m. 10 Alejandro Tosti, Andrew Walker, Emilio Gonzalez

How to watch, listen

ESPN+ is the exclusive home of PGA Tour Live. You can also watch the World Wide Technology Championship on Golf Channel free on Fubo. All times ET.

Thursday, Nov. 7

Golf Channel: 2-5 p.m.

Sirius XM: 11 a.m.-5 p.m

Friday, Nov. 8

Golf Channel: 2-5 p.m.

Sirius XM: 11 a.m.-5 p.m.

Saturday, Nov. 9

Golf Channel: 2-5 p.m.

Sirius XM: 12-5 p.m.

Sunday, Nov. 10

Golf Channel: 2-5 p.m.

Sirius XM: 12-5 p.m.

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