Patrick Cantlay’s lead shrinks, here comes Will Zalatoris and more from 2024 Genesis Invitational

Catch up on all of Saturday’s action here.

A Tiger Woods-less Genesis Invitational continued Saturday at Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California.

Woods withdrew Friday afternoon and revealed Saturday via his Twitter/X account that he came down with the flu.

As for the players still on property, Patrick Cantlay holds a two-shot 54-hole lead after a third-round 1-under 70. Three birdies and two bogeys were good enough to keep a charging group at an arm’s distance, a pack that includes his best buddy Xander Schauffele.

Schauffele, after a 6-under 65 on Day 3, is two shots back at 12 under and tied for second alongside Will Zalatoris (who we’ll get to in a bit).

If you missed Saturday’s action, here are five things to know from the third round of the Genesis Invitational.

Genesis Invitational: Photos | Fans react to Jordan Spieth DQ

Patrick Cantlay lights up Riviera, Gary Woodland’s day off in a dark room, Luke List’s putter is lit among 5 takeaways at Genesis Invitational

Cantlay shot 64 while Luke List poured in 224 feet of putts on Thursday at Riviera.

PACIFIC PALISADES, Calif. — Waiting to do a post-round interview with PGA Tour Live, Patrick Cantlay was asked to name his best finish at the Genesis Invitational. He shrugged his shoulders as if he had no idea.

One of the writers overheard this exchange and provided the answer: “He finished third last year.”

Cantlay smiled and said, “Oh, yeah.” Indeed, his record at Riviera Country Club is pretty stellar – four top-20 finishes in the last five years, including a T-4 in 2018 in which if he made any putts on the weekend he’d already be a tournament champion here.

That could be in Cantlay’s not-too-distant future if he can keep putting like he did on Thursday. He poured in more than 127 feet of putts en route to shooting a career-best 7-under 64 at Riviera in his 29th career Tour round here and claiming a one-stroke lead over the trio of Jason Day, Cameron Davis and Luke List.

“Made every putt I should have and a couple longer ones,” said Cantlay, who gain just over 4 strokes on the field for the day on the greens and ranked second in SG: Putting. “It was a good start.”

Cantlay grew up not too far away – depending on 405 traffic – in Long Beach, California, and attended UCLA before turning pro, logging many more rounds at Riviera during his tenure there.

“It’s a place I’m comfortable,” he said. “It feels like a home game.”

FRIDAY: Tee times and TV/streaming info

He birdied eight of his first 14 holes in the opening round to vault to the top of the leaderboard, including holing birdie putts of 15 feet at No. 6, 26 feet at No. 8 and 28 feet at 14.

His lone blemish of the day happened at the par-3 166-yard 16th, where his tee shot caught a sycamore tree and left him in the rough 58 yards from the hole.

“Obviously a spot I’ve never been,” he said. “I’ve been on most places on this golf course.”

He didn’t bother to have caddie Joe LaCava pace it off, chunking his next into the bunker but scrambled for bogey.

“It was a good up-and-down,” he said.

And another good start: Cantlay has three 64s in his last four starts and entered the week leading the Tour with a first-round scoring average of 64.75 and went even lower.

Asked a few weeks ago whether he’d rather win at Pebble Beach or Riviera, two of his favorite places on the planet, he took the fifth, pleading that “I don’t like that question,” but something suggests that winning this close to home and just down the road from Westwood would be the former Bruin’s personal fifth major.

MORE: Tiger battles back spasms in return to PGA Tour

Here are four more things to know from the first round of the Genesis Invitational.

Tiger Woods battles back spasms in average return to PGA Tour action at 2024 Genesis Invitational

Woods shot a 1-over 72 in the first round at Riviera Country Club.

PACIFIC PALISADES, Calif. – Three members of golf’s walking wounded returned to the PGA Tour on Thursday with varying degrees of success.

Genesis Invitational tournament host and 82-time Tour winner Tiger Woods headlined a trio of pros who had been sidelined of late. Woods, 48, made his first official start since withdrawing from the Masters in April after making the 36-hole cut and then undergoing surgery to fuse his right ankle two weeks later. Woods gave himself a sponsor invite into the signature event with a $20 million purse as well as to Will Zalatoris, who withdrew before the start of the last Masters and required back surgery at the tender age of 26. A third sponsor invite was doled out to Gary Woodland, the former U.S. Open champion, who had brain surgery in September and hasn’t made a cut in three starts since his return to action.

On a delightfully sunny day near the city of angels, Woods, 48, attracted a typically large following that was hungry to see what his game looked like. It was a tale of signs of brilliance and moments of rust, carding five birdies against six bogeys for a 1-over-par 72 in the opening round at Riviera Country Club.

“A lot of good and a lot of indifferent. It was one or the other. I don’t know how many pars I had, wasn’t many. I was either making birdies or bogeys and just never really got anything consistent going today,” Woods said. “It was one of those days, just never really got anything consistently going and hopefully tomorrow I can clean it up.”

GENESIS: Friday tee times, TV info

With their son, world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, not teeing off until two hours later, Scott and Diane Scheffler were among the masses that watched Woods open with an easy two-putt birdie at the par-5 first but overcook his chip at the second and make a sloppy bogey from the middle of the fairway. Woods dropped another shot at the third, the first of four times he failed to get up and down from the sand. Even the 15-time major champion said he deals with nerves and he also struggled to adjust to the adrenaline rush of being back in the heat of competition.

“It is impossible to prepare for. I rely so much on experience and having done this a long time, but still having the adrenaline dump in the system, ball goes further, speed goes up, just the yardages are a little bit different than they are at home,” he explained. “It’s just different and that’s just a part of playing competitive golf.”

He struck a couple of pretty irons at Nos. 4 and 6, a pair of par 3s, to make birdies and get into red figures for the first time. He turned in 1-under 34 but after he made the turn the winds picked up and so did his score. He would sprinkle in four bogeys and just two birdies at the par 5s – Nos. 11 and 17—on the card. He was 6-over on the par 4s, which included a bogey at the last after his ugliest shot of the day, an 8-iron from 170 yards in the fairway that hit the hosel and flew off to the right.

A reporter tried to dance around the subject, saying, “I’m not going to say the word, but on 18 … ”

“Oh, definitely, I shanked it,” Woods said, interrupting. “Well, my back was spasming the last couple holes and it was locking up. I came down and it didn’t move and I presented hosel first and shanked it.”

Woods’s short game showed the most rust and it would be put to the test because he managed to hit just 10 greens in regulation. Woods was 2 for 8 in scrambling, which ranked T-67 in a field of 70. He also ranked 52nd in Strokes Gained: Putting, losing nearly a stroke to the field on the greens.

“I struggled with the speed of the greens,” he said. “I couldn’t believe how fast they were today even though I made a couple.”

For Woods, the biggest question remains how his body holds up and Mark McCumber, the 10-time PGA Tour winner and analyst for PGA Tour Radio, said that will be judged almost day-to-day.

“Can he last 18 holes without his body getting to where he can’t hold the angle because his body is getting tired or fatigued. That’s what we have to look for as the week goes on,” McCumber said. “If he has his health, I’m not worried about his golf game; that hasn’t gone anywhere.”

Woods showed no signs of discomfort until late in the round when he complained of back spasms and blamed the shank on his back locking up. That’s a discouraging sign after all the work he’s put in to mount yet another comeback this season.

“Foot’s good. Leg’s a little bit sore, things are a little bit sore, but that’s to be expected. That’s nothing that we weren’t prepared for and we’ve got some work to do tonight and tomorrow,” Woods said.

Woods will enter the second round with work to do to make the weekend. The Genesis Invitational is the first of three player-hosted invitationals along with the Arnold Palmer Invitational and Jack Nicklaus’ Memorial Tournament this season, which will have a 36-hole cut to the top 50 or any player within 10 strokes of the lead.

Woods played alongside Woodland, who birdied the first three holes and stood at 4 under through 11 holes before losing his way a bit coming home. He signed for 1-under 70.

“What he’s been through is scary,” Woods said of Woodland dealing with lesions on his brain. “I haven’t seen Wood at all. To be out there with him and just share the moment with him, it was a lot of fun.”

Zalatoris was the best of the sponsor invites on the comeback trail. He raced to six birdies in his first eight holes and posted a front-nine 29 en route to signing for 66. He trailed Patrick Cantlay, by two strokes after the former UCLA golfer and Southern California native made eight birdies and one bogey to post 7-under 64 and claim the clubhouse lead during the first round.

Woods will return to the course on Friday afternoon at 2:54 p.m. ET once again alongside Woodland and Justin Thomas.

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Shot-by-shot: Tiger Woods shoots 1-over 72 Thursday at 2024 Genesis Invitational

Everything you need to know from Tiger’s return to the PGA Tour at Riviera Country Club.

The Big Cat is back.

Tiger Woods returned to PGA Tour action on Thursday as the 15-time major champion made his 2024 debut at the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club just outside of Los Angeles. Woods will do double duty as the tournament host of the $20 million signature event, which his TGR Foundation organizes.

The 82-time PGA Tour winner played both the Hero World Challenge and PNC Championship in the winter, but fans hadn’t seen Woods on the course in an official event since he withdrew from the 2023 Masters. In 14 previous starts at Riv, Tiger has one runner-up finish (1999) and just three top 10s. He finished T-45 last year.

Check out shot-by-shot analysis of Woods’ opening round 1-over 72 below.

Rickie Fowler, Max Homa among notables who missed the cut at the 2024 WM Phoenix Open

The cut at TPC Scottsdale didn’t happen until nearly 2 p.m. local time Saturday.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Rain delays, frost delays, 4:30 a.m. alarm clocks, playing as many as 30 holes in one day and 20,000 drunk, screaming and often booing fans – and that’s just at 16 – this is a week where PGA Tour pros earned their paycheck at the WM Phoenix Open. Yet the 132-man field still must be whittled down, even if the 36-hole cut day extended to nearly 2 p.m. local time on Saturday thanks to multiple suspensions of play.

When it was all said and done, 73 players moved on for 36 more holes at TPC Scottsdale and a chance to take home the trophy as champion and more than seven figures in prize money. The total purse this week is $8.8 million, with $1.584 million going to the winner.

It took a score of 2-under 140 to make all that hard work and effort pay off into a paycheck in the Valley of the Sun.

Among those to sneak through on the number included Tom Kim, who rallied to shoot 5-under 66, Garrick High (67), Adam Scott (68), Brian Harman (69), Sungjae Im (70) and Zach Johnson (70).

Two of the three Monday qualifiers made it through in Jim Knous (66, T-34) — read his story here — and former Arizona State golfer Nicolo Galetti (67, T-34) as did Bud Cauley (-5, T-23), who made his first start since the 2020 Fortinet Championship. Kevin Chappell (68) made a 12-foot birdie putt at nine, his last hole of the day, to make the cut on the number.

But not everyone was so fortunate — Adam Svensson, for one, missed a birdie putt from 44 feet. Here’s a closer look at the notables who were sent packing at the WM Phoenix Open.

Rickie Fowler, Gary Woodland and Justin Suh detail why they’ve switched to Cobra Darkspeed driver

“The benefit for me of going to more loft is more control, but at the same time I didn’t sacrifice any speed or spin”

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Cobra ambassadors Rickie Fowler, Gary Woodland and Justin Suh played a version of speed-dating on Wednesday evening with members of the media at Continental Golf Club before taking part in some after-hours glow golf.

All three players have transitioned into the club maker’s newest driver, the Darkspeed, which comes in three models (X, LS and MAX) and features a forged titanium face with carbon fiber crown and sole panels, moveable weights and adjustable hosel. Golfweek’s equipment expert David Dusek says, “it’s designed for golfers who want an aerodynamic driver that delivers more ball speed and trajectory control.” The pros all have opted for the LS, which stands for low spin, but according to Cobra’s Ben Schomin, former major winner and gearhead Jason Dufner is looking to use the Darkspeed Max.

Not surprisingly, all three players at the Cobra media event gushed about the new club but they were refreshingly honest about the process to find the right specs and shaft combination to maximize performance. And to hear them tell it, that search isn’t necessarily over. Here’s what we learned about how Fowler, Woodland and Suh made the move to Cobra Darkspeed LS.

Longest active cut streak extends, Europeans invade leaderboard and more from Thursday at the 2024 Farmers Insurance Open

Get caught up on what you missed from the second round in San Diego.

SAN DIEGO — After a cloudy and soggy start to the 2024 Farmers Insurance Open the sun came out Thursday and the winds picked up along the southern California coast. The scores picked up, too.

The South Course at Torrey Pines was even more challenging during the second round of the PGA Tour’s annual stop in San Diego, but on the flip side, the often gettable North Course played a little bit easier.

From a European invasion at the top of the leaderboard to a first-ever ace and the extension of the longest active cut streak on Tour, here’s what you may have missed – including notables who missed the cut – from Thursday’s second round of the 2024 Farmers Insurance Open.

FARMERS: Friday third round tee times | Photos

Lynch: Disgusted fans aren’t deserting golf, and still have guys worth rooting for amid the greed and grumbling

There’s a tendency to overstate the importance of individual golfers while underestimating the resiliency of golf.

These days it’s almost impossible to scroll by insipid influencers without crashing into some pearl-clutcher’s pieties about how golf fans are being driven from the sport. Apparently, the masses are angrily rending polo shirts as they mourn a once-noble game that has been lost to the relentless rise of dollars, division and douchebaggery.

Perhaps there is a more palpable air of melancholy surrounding golf — or at least the men’s professional corner of it — but as with most assertions peddled on social media, the notion that fans are drifting away in droves seems more anecdotal than evidential. Many of those who claim to have disengaged continue to comment on golf’s every storyline in the manner of those who are, well, enthusiastically engaged. There are plenty of folks who find the current state of affairs disheartening and are eager to scold those they hold responsible — chiefly greedy players, incompetent executives, shilling media and, occasionally, moneyed human rights abusers.

But leavin’ they ain’t.

Take last week’s Sentry tournament in Maui. The full event broadcast of Chris Kirk’s victory averaged only 4,000 viewers fewer than Jon Rahm’s in ’23 despite the obvious disparity in star power atop the leaderboard. Ratings were the second-best since 2017 while weekend network coverage was a tiny notch higher than last year. Viewership of last fall’s slate of PGA Tour events — presumed doomed by the general absence of stars — showed negligible difference year on year. Small samples for sure, but it makes one ponder a point made Tuesday by Tour veteran Paul Goydos on Golf Today, that there’s a tendency to overstate the importance of individual golfers while underestimating the resiliency of the collective golf product. Or, in layman’s terms, everyone is replaceable, and often forgotten.

Still, the PGA Tour’s product has been undeniably weakened by the defection of a handful of meaningful players, and even loyal fans might be ambivalent on the subsequent contortions the Tour made to maintain the loyalty of others. The myriad issues roiling the sport will get messier yet, but the opening fortnight of the ’24 season has at least proved to even the most disgruntled fans that there are guys worth rooting for. One of them leaves Hawaii with a trophy, the other with something much more precious.

Chris Kirk’s lows are well documented — battles with alcoholism and depression that forced him to take a leave of absence in 2019 — and earn a rote retelling with his every high, including wins at last year’s Honda Classic and this month’s Sentry. He’s fine with that, knowing his successes might offer an example that turnarounds are possible to others struggling with similar problems. Kirk’s commendable openness about his journey has made the personal parabolic.

2024 The Sentry
Chris Kirk celebrates with the trophy after winning the 2024 Sentry at Plantation Course at Kapalua Golf Club in Kapalua, Hawaii. (Photo: Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

The same holds true for Gary Woodland, who returned to the Tour this week at the Sony Open after undergoing surgery in September to remove a lesion from his brain. In his media comments, Woodland provided a glimpse of just how dark those days were. He spoke of a leaden fear of death that shadowed his every waking moment, of being too scared to travel without his wife because he was afraid the end lurked around every corner. That he was able to function, much less compete, after the diagnosis is impressive, and his willingness to detail the oppressive emotional trauma even moreso.

Woodland is widely regarded as one of the more amiable, everyday guys in a sport where self-absorption and entitlement have run amok. He’s still fiercely competitive, so he’ll pour over statistics from Hawaii to analyze what needs work. But the metric that mattered most won’t be found on a spreadsheet accounting for his week at Waialae Country Club. Woodland’s candor in revealing what he went through — not so much physically as psychologically — made him the undisputed winner of the week, regardless of who gets the trophy. “It’s been a hard time for me and I was able to overcome it,” he said after missing the cut, his voice catching with emotion. “I’ll be back. There was a time when I didn’t know if this was going to be possible.”

Coverage of professional golf has tended toward mawkish sentimentality since Young Tom Morris lost his wife while playing an event in 1875 and shortly thereafter died himself at age 24, of a broken heart, it’s often said (it was actually a pulmonary hemorrhage). The penchant for narratives that tug heartstrings notwithstanding, the last few months have gifted fans numerous opportunities to celebrate examples of character that seem less apparent than ever in this sport.

Kirk and Woodland are two. Camilo Villegas is another, long absent from the winner’s circle but improbably back now three years after losing his daughter Mia to brain cancer. And Erik van Rooyen, who won and on the final green wept openly for an ailing friend, who died a few days later. The themes common in these stories — adversity, resilience, loss, triumph — are the very DNA of sport, of life itself.

‘Perspective’ has become the cheapest word in golf’s lexicon, too often deployed in the context of an inconvenient break between the ropes. When we see the real thing, in real life, it ought to be acknowledged and applauded. Golf fans might justifiably feel that chances to do so are fewer when so much of the conversation is marred by money and selfishness. As the Tour leaves Hawaii, Kirk and Woodland have illustrated the truth in author Brené Brown’s oft-shared maxim, that what separates privilege from entitlement is gratitude. May we see more of their kind.

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Cameron Davis goes low, Gary Woodland and Tyler McCumber return among 5 things to know at Sony Open

Cam Davis didn’t envision a 62 at Waialae Country Club in his future Thursday.

HONOLULU – Cam Davis didn’t envision an 8-under 62 at Waialae Country Club in his future Thursday. But he didn’t mind signing for one to take a two-stroke lead when play was suspended due to darkness with 19 players left to complete the first round of the Sony Open in Hawaii.

“I think when I was standing on the first tee staring into a 30-mile-an-hour wind on a 500-yard, par-4 I was thinking, well, pars are good today,” he said.

On a windswept afternoon, the 28-year-old Aussie birdied five of the last six holes to card a career low and build off a final-round 8-under 65 at Kapalua Resort’s Plantation Course at The Sentry.

“I thought, well, as long as I can build off that round and continue that on to this week and next week, that is the sort of momentum I was looking for,” he said. “It was very cool to back it up with a really good round.”

Davis made nine birdies in all – his lone bogey came at the fifth, which played the toughest on the day – and his putter heated up even as the temperature dipped below 70 (and felt like 50) on this island paradise.

“I was seeing the green reads pretty well for some reason today. Sometimes they don’t come too clearly, but today I felt like I was seeing them well and putting decent speed and just hitting good putts on top of that,” said Davis, who canned a 37-footer on No. 13 and a 21-footer at 15. Yet he was proudest of the 5-foot par putt he sank at 17.

“Made a lot of really good putts today,” he said. “That one on 17 just to keep the score moving forward was really nice.”

All round long, he had his wife’s family visiting from Seattle following his group and he gave them plenty to cheer about.

“They cheered for a couple pars as well,” he said. “A lot of them haven’t seen a golf tournament before and it was really fun to put a good round together in front of them.”

Here are four more things to know from the first round at the Sony Open.

A warm aloha: Watch Gary Woodland’s emotional return to PGA Tour after brain surgery

Woodland was visibly emotional on the first tee Thursday at the Sony Open in Hawaii.

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Gary Woodland underwent surgery to remove a tumor from his brain on Sept. 18, 2023. Just 115 days later, the four-time PGA Tour winner was back to work with a strong showing of support.

The 2019 U.S. Open champion made his return to PGA Tour play on Thursday in the first round of the 2024 Sony Open in Hawaii at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu. Woodland was visibly emotional on No. 10 tee, his first hole of the day, as he received a warm aloha from the crowd on hand. Woodland missed the fairway on the short par 4 but scrambled for par.

“I had gone four and a half months of every day really thinking I was going to die,” Woodland said on Tuesday ahead of his 2024 debut. “Every day it was a new way of dying, new way of death. The jolting in the middle of the night scared the heck out of me.”

MORE: The inspiring story of Gary Woodland’s return to golf

Before his surgery, Woodland competed in 24 Tour events in the 2023 season and earned six top-25 finishes, with two inside the top 10.

He shot a 1-over 73 and was tied for 83rd but that was secondary.

“Probably the happiest I’ve ever been shooting over par, tell you that,” he said. “At the end of the day the goal this week was to see how I was mentally, and I was really, really good.”

Woodland had three bogeys in his first eight holes – he played the back nine first – but birdied two of his final seven, including his last hole of the day, the par-5 ninth.

“This was one of the hardest rounds I’ve ever had here,” he said. “And got off to a rough start. I was excited and was doing a lot of breathing trying to slow everything down because I was moving fast. I settled in, especially the last nine holes, and played really, really well. A lot to build on and. Like I said, I’m excited. The energy stayed up. Focus stayed up. A lot to be proud of.”

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