Robert MacIntyre didn’t like the buzzing of the CBS drone one bit and let them know at 2024 RBC Canadian Open

The big wasp in the sky failed to sting MacIntyre on Sunday.

HAMILTON, Ontario – Robert MacIntyre doesn’t like drones.

“If it didn’t go away, I was going to start throwing my clubs at it,” he said. “That’s how annoyed I was getting.”

During Sunday’s final round of the RBC Canadian Open, the CBS Sports drone following his pairing bothered him to end.

It had started on Saturday on the 18th hole but it began in earnest on the drivable par-4 fifth hole when the crowd went silent.

“It’s a big wasp. I asked ’em to get rid of it. They did,” he explained. “Next hole, I’m in the bunker, and sure enough everyone’s silent and all I hear is this buzzing again. I look up and here it is. And, I don’t know, one of the guys must have been getting sick of me. I just kept turning to him because I knew he was the man to go to when that drone starts annoying me because yesterday on 18 it was the same guy. And he just radioed, ‘Get that drone out of here.’”

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MacIntyre could be heard saying, “I told you once, I’m not going to tell you again.”

On the CBS broadcast, Jim Nantz, Dottie Pepper, who was following the group, and Trevor Immelman understood that it was disturbing MacIntyre but pushed back that drones are now part of the coverage. A request for a comment from CBS Sports wasn’t answered.

“They were horrible,” MacIntyre’s father, Dougie, who served as his caddie this week, said. “He was getting a wee bit agitated. It takes your concentration. In the back of the head you’re thinking about the buzzing so he called the rules official over.”

That occurred at the ninth fairway when MacIntyre was preparing to hit a wedge to the green.

“All I can hear is this drone again, and I had had enough at that point. Rules official from the R&A was just beside us, and I brought her over, and I said, ‘Look, this drone needs to get out of here. I’ve said it three times now. The drone is annoying me, the drone’s putting me off, it’s too close.’ I mean, it’s easier when the blimps up there, but it’s obviously the weather and stuff and it’s just, I had a job to do, and anything that was getting in my way was getting told to get out of the way. I was focused today and that drone was doing my head, and so I told it to get away.”

MacIntyre’s father said he helped calm down his son, who focused on the task at hand and earned his first Tour title.

“He gets grumpy. That’s his downfall. When he gets grumpy and mad at himself the game goes. He knows it himself,” Dougie said.

But the big wasp in the sky failed to sting MacIntyre on Sunday.

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Robert MacIntyre wins 2024 RBC Canadian Open with dad Dougie on the bag

It was truly a special week for Bobby Mac.

HAMILTON, Ontario – Dougie MacIntyre was sitting on his couch at home in Oban, Scotland. It was 8 o’clock on a Saturday night when “Bob” popped up on his phone for a FaceTime.

His son, the professional golf Robert MacIntyre, was in Dallas and had missed the cut the day before at the Charles Schwab Challenge. Having parted ways with his fourth caddie in the last 18 months, he asked, “How would you like to come to Canada and caddie for me at the RBC Canadian Open?”

Dougie was busy at home, where he is the greenkeeper at Glencruitten Golf Club. But his wife, Carol, gave him a look and said he needed to go be there for his son. Robert admitted he had asked a few others to be on the bag but no one wanted a one-week gig.

“If in doubt, phone dad,” MacIntyre said.

The next morning at 8 a.m., Dougie was on a direct flight to Toronto and seven days later they were embracing on the 18th green at Hamilton Golf & Country Club as Robert closed in 2-under 68 to win the 113th edition of Canada’s national championship. It marked the 27-year-old rookie’s maiden PGA Tour title, a one-stroke victory over Ben Griffin. MacIntyre became the first player to win with his father as his caddie since Heath Slocum had father Hack on the bag at the 2005 Sanderson Farms Championship.

“We’ve got a house between where you cross the road for four holes at Glencruitten and we used to go out every night in the summer, no matter the weather, we would play four holes every night,” Robert said. “He taught me the game of golf.”

The last time Dougie was on the bag was seven years ago at DP World Tour Q-School and that worked out well, too. MacIntyre won twice on that circuit and was a member of victorious Team Europe at the 2023 Ryder Cup in Rome. But living in Orlando and playing on the PGA Tour has been a big adjustment. He’s talked openly about his homesickness and loneliness. Rory McIlroy, MacIntyre’s Ryder Cup teammate, said he could relate.

“It’s a big culture shock compared to the place where he grew up in Oban. You know, traveling around America, it’s a different world. Some people adapt a little quicker than others. Everyone has to try to find their right rhythm,” McIlroy said. “It looks like Bob’s still figuring that out.”

He seemed right at home north of the border. MacIntyre opened his week with a 64 and after back-to-back 66s, he held a four-shot lead after 54 holes. Dougie had given Robert the tough love that he needed when he had fallen four strokes back on Saturday. Walking down the 10th hole on Saturday, he reminded him he had 27 holes to go.

“I don’t know what happened on the back nine yesterday, he just went daft,” said Dougie of the three birdies and an eagle run that catapulted Robert into the driver’s seat.

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On Sunday, Dougie woke up, looked out the window, heard the patter of rain and groaned, “Oh, big bag.” He had carried a lightweight bag for the first three rounds but for the final 18 he lugged a tour bag for the extra space to handle the rain gear. Anything for his son, right?

The lefthander would need his dad by his side as the final round unspooled on a crisp, gray, rainy afternoon. His four-stroke edge was gone before he left the third tee as he opened with a bogey and Canadian Mackenzie Hughes tied him at 13 under. MacIntyre’s swing felt fragile enough that he had messaged his coach that morning in search of a quick-fix.

His putter proved to be his sword and savior. While ranked 103rd in Strokes Gained: putting for the season, he led the field at the Open. MacIntyre carded three birdies to push his lead back to four at the turn. He grew agitated by a television drone, backing off several shots and calling for a rules official to come to his aid.

“If it didn’t go away, I was going to start throwing my clubs at it,” MacIntyre said. “That’s how annoyed I was getting. … I meant, it’s a big wasp. I asked them to get rid of it. They did.”

“He gets grumpy. That’s his downfall. When he gets grumpy and mad at himself the game goes,” Dougie said.

Not on this day. He canned a 21-foot birdie at No. 11 and looked to be coasting to victory. Neither bogeys at Nos. 12 and 13 nor a late charge by Griffin (65) and Victor Perez (64), who finished third, dimmed his spirit. Dougie made sure of that.

2024 RBC Canadian Open
Robert MacIntyre poses with two Canadian Mounties and the trophy after winning the 2024 RBC Canadian Open. (Photo: Dan Hamilton-USA TODAY Sports)

“He just kept telling me, ‘We just stay in the fight,’ ” Robert said. “With four or five holes to go, he goes, ‘If we play this in 1-under par, they got to come get ya.’ He knows what to say, when to say it,” Robert said.

MacIntyre blinked away tears when he knocked his second shot at 18 to 12 feet. He finished with a 72-hole total of 16-under 264 to become the fifth player from Scotland to win on the PGA Tour since 1940,  joining fellow countrymen Sandy Lyle, Paul Lawrie, Martin Laird and Russell Knox.

With leaky eyes, Dougie took a call from his wife while Robert was busy doing interviews. They have a foster son, who boasted that he blew Robert’s ball in the hole.

“Good man, you are some boy,” Dougie told him. “I was trying all day myself.”

Dougie joked after they shared the 36-hole lead that he needed to negotiate a fair wager with his son. Robert said he planned to pay his father the typical winner’s share, or 10 percent of his $1.638 million paycheck, and his parent’s wouldn’t have to worry about their mortgage anymore. Would Dougie be on his bag at the Memorial this coming week, the U.S. Open, which Robert is now qualified for, the week after, and the Travelers Championship, another Signature event, after that?

“One and done,” Dougie said. “I’m going back to cutting grass.”

But what a week it was for the MacIntyre boys.

After Fluff Cowan takes a tumble, C.T. Pan turns to a fan to caddie at 2024 RBC Canadian Open

Not all heroes wear capes, but some wear bibs.

HAMILTON, Ontario – Not all heroes wear capes, but some wear bibs.

That was the glib tweet on the RBC Canadian Open social media on Sunday.

It was a reference to fan Paul Emerson, who was watching the third hole of the final round at Hamilton Golf & Country Club when veteran caddie Mike “Fluff” Cowan took a spill on the wet grass going down a hill.

Cowan, 76, is beloved for his fluffy moustache and long run as a caddie for the likes of Tiger Woods, Peter Jacobsen and Jim Furyk for the past 25 years. Cowan joined C.T. Pan this season as Furyk dealt with injuries. But when Cowan went down on Sunday, Pan helped him to get medical attention while Shane Lowry picked up his own bag and his caddie grabbed Pan’s temporarily.

That’s when Emerson offered to lend a hand and donned a bib for two holes as Pan’s relief caddie.

“I helped Fluff get the bib off, threw it on and started walking up the hole,” Emerson told PGA Tour.com.

Pan made a birdie and a bogey during Emerson’s two-hole gig before he was replaced by Mike Campbell, who works in caddie services at the club. He took over until the turn when Al Riddell, Paul Barjon’s caddie, became Pan’s fourth caddie of the round.

Pan shot 1-under 69 and finished T-35 for the week.

Pan shot a final-round 69 and finished the week 3 under, tied for 35th.

The Rink is the place to be and be heard (like a hockey fan) at RBC Canadian Open

“I don’t think anybody could have dreamed when that idea was brought forward that it would have grown to what it is today”

HAMILTON, Ontario – Mackenzie Hughes arrived at the par-3 13th hole at Hamilton Golf & Country Club on Saturday and described the scene as pandemonium.

Before he could hit his tee shot, the fans at The Rink, the hockey-themed hole wrapped in boards on both sides of the tee, goalie helmets as tee markers, a goal on the tee, and an ice-resurfacing machine nearby, serenaded him with Canada’s national anthem.

“The hair on the back of my neck stood up,” Hughes said.

They sang “Hey, Baby!” before Trace Crowe teed off and John Denver’s “Take Me Home, Country Roads,” in between groups, while Rory McIlroy was treated to a Ryder Cup-esque Ole! Ole! Ole! Ole!

It was a hair-brained idea that debuted seven years ago and is now part of the fabric of the RBC Canadian Open. Credit goes to the executive director of Golf Saskatchewan, who suggested a hockey-themed hole to combine Canada’s most popular pastimes, golf and hockey. It debuted originally in 2017 at Glenn Abbey.

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The first year, rowdy fans lined the hockey-style boards, which replaced traditional roping, on one side of the seventh hole. The next year, at St. George’s it was both sides of the 16th hole, which created a different vibe, and it just keeps growing with a double decker tent lining the left side of the hole.

The Rink, the hockey-themed hole at the RBC Canadian Open, has become part of the fabric of the championship. (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

RBC Canadian Open tournament director Bryan Crawford told PGA Tour.com, “I don’t think anybody could have dreamed when that idea was brought forward that it would have grown to what it is today.”

It creates an electric atmosphere that is shades of the infamous 16th at TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course during the WM Phoenix Open, only these fans tend to be buzzed rather than three sheets to the wind and while they slap the boards and singalong to their heart’s content, it becomes quiet enough to hear a pin drop before a player tees off.

The pros have bought into putting a slice of Canada’s national pastime into the act, wearing their favorite hockey jersey. Mike Weir has worn a Detroit Red Wings jersey. Dustin Johnson, a past champion before departing to LIV, used to rock an Edmonton Oilers jersey of his father-in-law, “The Great One,” Wayne Gretzky. Former touring pro Graham DeLaet used to sport a Calgary Flames jersey.

2024 RBC Canadian Open
The hockey helmet tee box marker at the 2024 RBC Canadian Open. (Photo: Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

Two years ago, Golf Canada introduced The Rink at the Canadian Women’s Open, with Brooke Henderson donning a sweater of her hometown Ottawa Senators and Nelly Korda a Chicago Blackhawks jersey, the team that her boyfriend played for at the time. The volunteer marshals dress as referees too, and have dubbed the area around the tee “The Penalty Box.” And just like at a hockey game, the fans booed and chanted “Referees suck,” when one of them confiscated a plastic hockey puck that was being toss in the stands. It’s fast become one of the more unique experiences at a professional golf tournament without feeling too contrived or the fans getting out of control.

“On that Rink, there’s like no space. It’s just like the boards are right there on the tee and they’re banging and they’re screaming,” said Hughes, who wore a Durham 360 Painting jersey of a late friend as a tribute. “Walking on that tee, again, just a total hair-raising moment where, I mean, I’m trying to play it pretty cool, but inside I’m thinking this is really, really cool.”

Adam Scott gets a lesson from CBS’s Trevor Immelman as he chases a 91st straight major start

“I generally tell him to get his head out of his ass.”

HAMILTON, Ontario — Adam Scott possesses one of, if not the most, beautiful swings in golf. But even a Maserati needs a tune-up every once in a while.

On Saturday afternoon, having posted a third-round even-par 70 at Hamilton Golf & Country Club that left him T-49, Scott headed to the range to work on his driver after hitting just 3 of 14 fairways.

“I drove it a step into the first cut on nearly every hole. It was quite remarkable,” said the 43-year-old past Masters champion, pursing his lips in dissatisfaction.

Scott had a second set of eyes checking his every move – CBS’s lead golf analyst, Trevor Immelman, who didn’t have to go on air until 5 p.m. The two longtime friends had dinner Friday night and made an appointment to meet on the range after Scott’s round. Scott currently is without a coach, having parted with his brother-in-law, Brad Malone, around October. Lee Trevino always said he wouldn’t take a lesson from someone who couldn’t beat him. Immelman, the 2008 Masters champion, qualifies.

“I’ve enjoyed talking golf with Trevor and it’s just good to have someone that kind of knows me and my game so well so he can go, ‘You’re getting off base, what are you doing?’ ” Scott said. “He’s got a good eye and knowledge.”

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Scott said that Immelman has encouraged him to shorten his swing for months but it has been easier said than done.

“It’s good to have a purpose and work on stuff instead of aimlessly fiddling around to find something,” Scott said.

From the sound of things, Immelman was pleased with the length of Scott’s swing as he kept saying, “Yes,” as Scott took turns driving straight as a needle, with a slight fade and a draw on command.

“Adam is one of my best friends and we’ve known each other since we were teenagers,” Immelman wrote in a text. “He’s an amazing human being, all class. I fully believe that he still has what it takes to win at the highest level, and I really hope he does.”

Hitting balls next to Scott with a head cover placed under his right arm pit  was veteran pro Nate Lashley, who stopped to ask Immelman, “Are you trying to give the most perfect swing a lesson?”

Immelman smiled and replied, “I generally tell him to get his head out of his ass.”

Nate Lashley (front) asked Trevor Immelman, right, “Are you trying to give the most perfect swing a lesson?” (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

Scott tabbed the session with Immelman “very productive,” and it could come in handy for the final round. He could use a low round on Sunday to move up the standings at the Canadian Open. He entered the week at No. 58 in the Official World Golf Ranking. A missed cut at the PGA Championship last month knocked him out of the top 60 in the world for the first time in nearly six years and cost him a berth in the U.S. Open at Pinehurst in less than two months. A T-12 at the Colonial last week bumped him back inside the top 60, where he will need to remain following the conclusion of next week’s tournaments to gain a spot in the U.S. Open field. He hasn’t missed a major since the 2001 U.S. Open at Southern Hills, a span of 91 straight starts in men’s golf’s big four.

In 2018, the last time he slipped outside the top 60, he played in a 36-hole qualifier in Columbus, Ohio and earned his way into the field. But Scott said he won’t be playing at Final Qualifying on Monday. He signed up for a site in Ohio — he wasn’t originally planning to play north of the border — and said he’s won’t be there. He also isn’t in the field for next week’s Memorial. That means Sunday’s final round of the RBC Canadian Open is his last chance to make his case. It’s down to the wire, but as Scott noted, “Some weeks you don’t play and you move up in the rankings,” he said, before adding, “I know the situation. It will be what it will be.”

RBC Canadian Open 2024 Saturday third round tee times, PGA Tour pairings and how to watch

The purse this week is $9.1 million with $1.638 million going to the winner.

There won’t be a title defense at the 2024 RBC Canadian Open.

Nick Taylor was among those who missed the 36-hole cut Friday at Hamilton Golf & Country Club in Hamilton, Ontario.

On the good side of the leaderboard is two DP World Tour grads, Ryan Fox and Robert MacIntyre. Those two are tied at 10 under, two shots better than Joel Dahmen.

The top Canadian so far is Mackenzie Hughes, tied with Andrew Novak for fourth at 7 under, along with first-round leader David Skinns.

Two-time winner and world No. 2 Rory McIlroy, shot a second round 72, six shots worse than the 66 he shot Thursday while feeling “groggy”.

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Hamilton G&CC, a par-70 track measuring 7,084 yards. The purse at the 2024 RBC Canadian Open is $9.1 million with $1.638 million going to the winner. The champion will also receive 500 FedEx Cup points.

Here are the tee times and TV and streaming info for the third round of the 2024 RBC Canadian Open. All times listed are ET.

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Saturday tee times

How to watch, listen

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

Saturday, June 1

Golf Channel/Peacock: 2:30-5:30 p.m

CBS: 5:30-7:30 p.m.

Sirius XM: 2-7:30 p.m

ESPN+: 9:15 a.m.-7:30 p.m

Sunday, June 2

Golf Channel/Peacock: 1:30-2:30 p.m

CBS: 2:30-6:30 p.m.

Sirius XM: 1-6:30 p.m

ESPN+: 8:15 a.m.-6:30 p.m

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DP World Tour grads raid top of the leaderboard at 2024 RBC Canadian Open, which could have back-to-back Canadian champs among 5 things to know

HAMILTON, Ontario – DP World Tour graduates Robert MacIntyre and Ryan Fox are taking advantage of earning PGA Tour privileges this season north of the border. MacIntyre, a Scotsman who represented Team Europe at the Ryder Cup in Rome, and Fox, a New …

HAMILTON, Ontario – DP World Tour graduates Robert MacIntyre and Ryan Fox are taking advantage of earning PGA Tour privileges this season north of the border.

MacIntyre, a Scotsman who represented Team Europe at the Ryder Cup in Rome, and Fox, a New Zealand native, were among 10 DP World Tour pros who graduated to the PGA Tour this season for the first time. Earlier this year, Frenchman Matthieu Pavon won the Farmers Insurance Open and Finland’s Sami Valimaki finished second at the Mexico Open.

The agreement to give cards to DP World Tour pros was one of the final deals produced by former  DP World Tour commissioner Keith Pelley, a Canadian, who must love seeing this leaderboard. When Pelley announced he was taking a new post outside of golf back in his native country with Maple Leaf Sports Enterprises, MacIntyre was asked what his legacy would be. “He got me to the PGA Tour, didn’t he?” MacIntyre said. “He’s given me a pathway to achieve dreams I’ve always wanted to achieve.”

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The Scotsman is bogey-free through 36 holes and shares the lead with Fox with a total of 10-under 130 — and that much closer to achieving that dream of winning on the PGA Tour.

Here’s four more things to know about the second round of the RBC Canadian Open.

Scotland’s Robert MacIntyre is bogey-free through 36 holes with dad, Dougie, on the bag as his emergency caddie.

“He jumped at the chance,” the PGA Tour rookie said of his old man, who serves as a greenkeeper back home at Glencruitten Golf Course in Oban, Scotland. “It’s good to just spend an extra week with loved ones.”

MacIntyre, who fired a 4-under 66 at Hamilton Golf & Country Club on Friday, parted ways with his previous caddie after missing the cut last week. He called his father Saturday to ask him to fill in this week and he hopped on a flight the next day. It’s the first time MacIntyre has had his dad, who he tabbed a good golfer in his own right, on the bag since he caddied at DP World Tour Q-School seven years ago. For more on this story, click here.

Nick Taylor ended the 69-year drought without a Canadian native winning the RBC Canadian Open. Wouldn’t it be funny if they had back-to-back champions?

Mackenzie Hughes, who grew up nearby and took lessons at host course Hamilton Golf & Country Club as a junior, thrust himself into the conversation, ridding a sizzling hot putter to a 6-under 64 on Friday.

“I walk around this place often and think about myself as a young kid. I was here a lot as a young kid watching these tournaments in 2003 and 2006. I remember thinking how cool it was back then. I wanted to get close to the players, get autographs and all that,” Hughes said. “Yesterday on the first tee when they announced me and they say Dundas, Ontario, like just knowing how close that is to here it kind of hit me that it was really, really special. Doing it here does feel different. Being in Toronto is obviously still home, but I spent time here as a kid.”  

After an opening 1-under 69, Hughes, who started on No. 10, birdied three of his first six holes and holed a 60-degree wedge from 79 yards at No. 12 to  shoot 5-under 30 on his first nine and join the fray. After another birdie at No. 1, Hughes attempted to tee off first in his group but it was Shane Lowry’s honor.

“You got to give me that tee at least once today,” Lowry said.

Lowry wouldn’t have the tee for long because Hughes canned a 12-foot eagle putt at the fourth.

Hughes needed the oven mitts for his sizzling putter. He took just 22 putts and leads the field in SG: Putting through 36 holes. The Canadian faithful were loving it and Hughes was feeding off their energy.

“Those putts just seemed to be going in the middle of the hole and it got loud and it got really exciting there. I know the weekend will be even more amped up than that and I’m excited for it,” he said.

After the eagle at four, Hughes, who figures he’s played Hamilton some 50 times, realized he could shoot a special number.

“I knew standing in 7 fairway if I birdied the last three holes it was 59 too, so I was definitely aware of it coming down the end,” he said.

But Hughes made what he termed “two mental mistakes” at Nos. 7 and 8 that resulted in bogeys and left him settling for 64, the best round of the day. 

“While the finish was disappointing, I look at the whole body of work,” he said. “Starting today if you told me I was going to shoot 64, I would have taken it. So it gets me into contention for the weekend and that’s all I can ask for.”

Hughes is low Canadian through two rounds at 7-under 133 and T-4, and his words from the pre-championship press conference are starting to ring true.

“I’m here to win this trophy, it wouldn’t matter if it was for a thousand bucks or a million bucks, I’m here to play well and win this tournament,” he said.

Joel Dahmen hadn’t played in the Canadian Open in five years, but the PGA Tour Canada Player of the Year from a decade ago is happy to be back. He fired a 5-under 65 on Friday and sits in third place, just two shots back of the lead.

“I came here on Tuesday and I just kind of had great vibes again,” Dahmen said. “I almost felt bad I hadn’t been back. The schedule didn’t work out previously. It is, it’s a really special place.”

And special for Dahmen for good reason: he played 45 events over five seasons on PGA Tour Canada (2010-2014) and won twice in 2014 to earn his Korn Ferry Tour card.

Asked what has been working for him this week, Dahmen, who ranks No. 119 in the FedEx Cup standings, said, “Kind of done everything well.” Indeed, he ranks 22nd in SG: Tee-to-Green, fifth in proximity and fourth in SG: Putting.

Dahmen credited the pre-shot visualization work he’s been working hard on to commit to each shot.

“Having a clear plan, which sounds weird that I’ve played golf a long time without a clear plan,” he said. “But, yeah, it’s doing the same thing over and over again and it’s worked out great.

Harry Higgs talked about it a lot the last two weeks, and it’s kind of the same thing, really, you accept where it goes and you go and you do it again. It frees me up to play golf and let my body take over. My body knows what to do if I just kind of stay out of the way.”

So far, so good.

New Zealand’s Ryan Fox sunk a 12-foot birdie putt at the ninth hole, his 18th hole of the day, to tie for the 36-hole lead. 

Fox fired a 6-under 64, tied for the low round of the day, to tie MacIntyre.

“I drove it great, I hit may irons really good, and had a few more putts drop today. It could have been really silly,” Fox said.

It marks Fox’s first 36-hole lead/co-lead on the PGA Tour.

“Golf course kind of suits my eye,” Fox said. “Similar grass to what we play at home. Similar kind of old style, tree-lined golf course, which is what I grew up on.”

At No. 63 in the Official World Golf Ranking, is the highest-ranked Tour member that has not played in a Signature event this season. He entered the week No. 8 in the Aon Swing 5 standings and is currently projected to move to No. 1 and earn a spot in next week’s Memorial Tournament. 

Fox is seeking his first Tour title, but the 37-year-old pro counts four DP World Tour wins on his resume.

In addition to having his dad on the bag, Robert MacIntyre will enjoy being paired with Ryan Fox, a friend from there DP World Tour days.

“He’s a great kid,” Fox said. “We get along really well. Played together a bunch of times in Europe. Played together the first two days at Myrtle Beach this year. We both went pretty well there. Hopefully, we can have a bit of fun tomorrow and feed off each other and be in that final group again on Sunday.”

Speaking at the Myrtle Beach Classic earlier this month, MacIntyre explained why it’s tough traveling alone on the Tour. 

“It’s difficult for all the European guys, all the guys in Europe, coming out here this year. Obviously Foxy has got his family out with him. It’s a completely different lifestyle in the U.S., and good or bad, some people love it, some people hate it. It’s just a different culture, different style of life,” he said. :It’s good to have people in the same boat as you. I’ve struggled out here with the lifestyle.”

Robert MacIntyre, who admitted he ‘might be the problem,’ surges into lead at 2024 RBC Canadian Open with dad on bag

“I think I might need to negotiate a wage this week,” said MacIntyre’s dad.

HAMILTON, Ontario – Father knows best.

That’s been the case for the first 36 holes of the RBC Canadian Open for Scotland’s Robert MacIntyre, who is bogey-free through 36 holes with dad, Dougie, on the bag as his emergency caddie.

“He jumped at the chance,” the PGA Tour rookie said of his old man, who serves as a greenkeeper back home at Glencruitten Golf Course in Oban, Scotland. “It’s good to just spend an extra week with loved ones.”

MacIntyre fired a 4-under 66 at Hamilton Golf & Country Club on Friday to improve to 10-under 130 and take the early lead during the second round of play.

MacIntyre had been using caddie Mike Burrows while his usual boss Danny Willett was sidelined with injury earlier this season and did a five-week trial run with Scott Carmichael, but they parted ways last week after MacIntyre missed the cut. He called his father Saturday to ask him to fill in this week and he hopped on a flight the next day. It’s the first time MacIntyre has had his dad, who he tabbed a good golfer in his own right, on the bag since he caddied at DP World Tour Q-School seven years ago.

RBC Canadian Open: Photos | Merch | Leaderboard | Tee times

“We did all right there,” MacIntyre said. “He’s learning on the run and I’m kind of trying to stay as calm as I can. When I do miss a shot, I’m not trying to get too annoyed.”

There hasn’t been too much to be annoyed about so far. He birdied three of his first four holes en route to 64 on Thursday, and said he kept things simple for his dad. “He’s a bit out of his depth,” MacIntrye said.

Aware that Hamilton is a hilly golf course, he was able to secure for his father a lightweight bag with a kickstand from Titleist after walking nine holes on Monday in the rain with his usual Tour staff bag. MacIntyre said his 59-year-old father is fit enough to do 18 but he also plans to play in the upcoming U.S. Open qualifier in Toronto this coming Monday. (Dougie MacIntyre declined to speak for this story, saying, “I’ve been instructed by Bob not to.”)

2024 RBC Canadian Open
Robert MacIntyre plays his shot from the 18th tee during the second round of the 2024 RBC Canadian Open at Hamilton Golf & Country Club. (Photo: Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images)

“I thought 36 holes for my dad carrying that tour bag ain’t going to be pretty, so I’ve gone a bit easier on him,” he said.

MacIntyre also is going a bit easier on himself. He’s found the adjustment to playing on the PGA Tour a lonely existence and he’s only been home three weeks since January 3, so having his father by his side has been a benefit on multiple levels this week.

MacIntyre has recorded three top-10 finishes this season, most notably a T-8 at the PGA Championship earlier this month. MacIntyre has credited his strong play of late to an attitude adjustment. When asked why he needed one, he said, “Because I think my golf game’s not changed in the last, I don’t know, four, five years. Nothing’s changed. Only thing that’s changed this year is the environment that I’m in on the PGA Tour instead of the DP World Tour. So, I’ve got the golf game to compete anywhere in the world, and I knew that, from playing obviously Open Championships and the Masters my first time. There was something stopping me. There was something stopping me from competing. I felt like I had a terrible start to the year. [He missed three of his first four cuts.] Something was stopping me.

“We dug in deeper into stats and whatnot and we’re like, ‘Everything’s all right here, what is it?’ And then you got to look at yourself, you got to look yourself in the mirror and go, ‘You might be the problem.’ We sat down, we spoke about it, and I think my attitude was a problem. Just now I’m working hard on that, trying to just stay as even-keeled and just deal with whatever comes.”

So far, the Canadian fans have adopted the lefthander as one of their own.

“Lefties rule!” a fan bellowed.

“Right on!” another said.

Right to the top of the leaderboard and with his father doing his best to keep up with his son. As they walked off the last green after a tidy up-and-down par, Dougie turned to his son and said tongue firmly in cheek, “I think I might need to negotiate a wage this week.”

RBC Canadian Open 2024 Friday second round tee times, PGA Tour pairings and how to watch

The purse at the 2024 RBC Canadian Open is $9.1 million with $1.638 million going to the winner.

The PGA Tour is north of the border for its annual Canadian visit.

The 2024 RBC Canadian Open is being contested this week at Hamilton Golf & Country Club in Hamilton, Ontario.

Two-time winner and world No. 2 Rory McIlroy — who admitted he was “groggy” after his first round — is joined in the field by defending champion and countryman Nick Taylor.

Fellow Canadian Adam Hadwin is there as well. A year ago, he was tackled by a security guard known only as Mr. X, who finally broke silence about the 18th hole takedown but did so without identifying himself.

Among the others in the field: Tommy Fleetwood, Sahith Theegala, Cameron Young, Sam Burns, Shane Lowry and Sean O’Hair, who was the last man to get into the field who had to drive five hours to catch a flight.

RBC Canadian Open: Photos | Best merchandise | Leaderboard

Hamilton G&CC, a par-70 track measuring 7,084 yards, is paying homage to Canada’s hockey history once again.

The purse at the 2024 RBC Canadian Open is $9.1 million with $1.638 million going to the winner. The champion will also receive 500 FedEx Cup points.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the second round of the 2024 RBC Canadian Open. All times listed are ET.

RBC Canadian Open: Leaderboard | Photos

Friday tee times

How to watch, listen

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

Thursday, May 30

Golf Channel/Peacock: 3-6 p.m.

Sirius XM: 12-6 p.m

ESPN+: 6:45 a.m.-6 p.m

Friday, May 31

Golf Channel/Peacock: 3-6 p.m.

Sirius XM: 12-6 p.m

ESPN+: 6:45 a.m.-6 p.m

Saturday, June 1

Golf Channel/Peacock: 2:30-5:30 p.m

CBS: 5:30-7:30 p.m.

Sirius XM: 2-7:30 p.m

ESPN+: 9:15 a.m.-7:30 p.m

Sunday, June 2

Golf Channel/Peacock: 1:30-2:30 p.m

CBS: 2:30-6:30 p.m.

Sirius XM: 1-6:30 p.m

ESPN+: 8:15 a.m.-6:30 p.m

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A ‘groggy’ Rory McIlroy blames caddie’s birthday dinner for slow start, still shoots 66 at 2024 RBC Canadian Open

“Had a couple of glasses of wine. I was probably feeling a little groggy when I woke up.”

HAMILTON, Ontario – Rory McIlroy was stuck in neutral during Thursday’s opening round of the RBC Canadian Open, and he had a good idea why. It was caddie Harry Diamond’s fault – sort of.

“A bit of a slow start,” McIlroy conceded. “Harry’s birthday dinner last night so had a couple of glasses of wine. I was probably feeling a little groggy when I woke up.”

With a 7:40 a.m. ET tee time off No. 10, that was understandable.

Could it have been a bit of a rust after a week off?  “I certainly switched off,” McIlroy had said on Wednesday. “I went to one of my best friend’s wedding in Italy for four days, which was a lot of fun, good to see a lot of people from home I haven’t seen in a long time. Yeah, it was actually a really good trip, I needed it. Then I had a lovely, I had a great weekend at home. Spent time with my family and with Poppy and, yeah, it was awesome. So I needed that reset. I’m playing four weeks in a row here, so, yeah, I’m ready to go, but, yeah, it’s been a busy stretch and I’m sort of easing my way back into it. I probably hit a grand total of probably 150 balls last week.”

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After his round, McIlroy offered another reason for being stuck on the par train. He hadn’t seen the back nine this week, having only played the front during the pro-am on Wednesday.

“So I was sort of happy enough to get out of there in even par and not make a bogey,” McIlroy said.

He made nine straight pars to start his round, including at the par-5 17th, where he drove into a hospitality tent.

“Some guy yelled out, ‘You need a wrist band to get in here,’ ” McIlroy said. “So that was pretty funny.”

Once McIlroy flipped to the front nine, he also flipped the script and stuck a wedge to four feet at the first to break the seal. He added three more birdies to shoot 66. He dubbed it “a good day’s work.”

In 2019, the last time the RBC Canadian Open was played at Hamilton Golf & Country Club, McIlroy fired a 61 to win by seven. The next day the course was ripped up for a renovation. Did they Rory-proof it?

“You can’t be quite as aggressive with the second shots, there are a lot of run-offs, there’s a lot of sections of the greens that you have to be careful about,” he said. “It used to be if you missed the green here it would go off into the rough maybe a couple yards but now with all these run-offs it can run 20 yards away from you.”

Whether it was because he was groggy, rusty, or playing a nine that he lacked familiarity with, McIlroy pulled it together to post 66 and sits three strokes off the lead shared by Sam Burns and Sean O’Hair after his first round of his bid for his third RBC Canadian Open title.