Winning is hard: These 14 pros nearly picked up their first PGA Tour win this season

“Second place is just the first-place loser. There is no room for second place.”

With the calendar flipping to June, the PGA Tour counts eight first-time winners this season, including the duo of Davis Riley and Nick Hardy, who teamed up for their first wins at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

It was almost nine on Sunday as Denny McCarthy had a putt to win the Memorial only to be denied his maiden victory by Viktor Hovland.

McCarthy isn’t alone. So far this season, 14 different players have finished runner-up or tied for second 15 times while bidding for their first Tour title. If the Netflix documentary “Full Swing” taught us anything it is that winning is hard. (Don’t drink every time a player says just that or you may not make it through a single episode.)

“The only one who will remember you if you come in second place is your wife and your dog,” World Golf Hall of Famer Gary Player once said, “and that is only if you have a good wife and a good dog.”

NASCAR’s Dale Earnhardt didn’t mince words either, saying, “Second place is just the first-place loser. There is no room for second place.”

Nevertheless, let’s take a closer look at this year’s runner-ups, who were so close to tasting victory and climbing another rung on the professional golf ladder with their first Tour wins.

Chad Ramey shines in first Players Championship appearance, Collin Morikawa gets his swagger back and more from Thursday at TPC Sawgrass

Catch up on all the action from Day 1 of the Players here.

What a day for Chad Ramey.

The one-time PGA Tour winner got off to the perfect start in his first trip to TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, for the Players Championship on Thursday carding eight birdies and no bogeys for an opening round 8-under 65.

He began his day with a circle on No. 1 then added three more to the card before making the turn with a 4-under 32. Ramey made back-to-back birds twice on the back nine, first at Nos. 10 and 11 then at Nos. 16 and 17. His birdie on the island green was nearly a one (23 inches), but a two on the iconic par 3 is always a treat.

“There’s always nerves, but it’s just they don’t mean anything. It kind of means you care,” Ramey said of his nerves after his day was done. “You’ve just got to deal with them. That’s kind of why we play the game. It’s why we’re here is to have those nerves.

“Just kind of push past them, push them aside, and just do what you’ve got to do.”

If he stays in contention over the weekend, it’ll be interesting to see how he handles those nerves down the stretch of the Tour’s flagship event.

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The first round was suspended by darkness with 23 players having not finished their first rounds.

If you missed any of the action from Day 1, no worries, we got you covered. Here are some notes from round one of the Players Championship.

Players: Leaderboard | Friday tee times | Photos

Hayden Buckley throws his club, hat celebrating hole-in-one at TPC Sawgrass No. 17

The first ace of the weekend occurred before anyone finished brewing their morning coffee.

What a great start to the morning for Hayden Buckley and anyone who bet on at least one ace at hole No. 17 during the 2023 Players Championship.

Just around 9 a.m. ET, Buckley rolled up to the tee box at the infamous island green at hit a gorgeous shot that landed a bit behind the flag stick, caught the slope and rolled right back into the cup for the first (and maybe only?) ace of the weekend.

Naturally, Buckley lost his dang mind in celebration and rightfully so.

The odds of any player making a hole-in-one on No. 17 this week were +250 (and boosted to +375 at FanDuel), but don’t think for a moment that Buckley’s accomplishment is something any average golfer could accomplish at this course.

TPC Sawgrass released a video tracking 95 amateurs attempting to take on the island green and only three even came away with birdies while the rest put 102 balls in the water.

It’s also the second week in a row we’ve seen an ace on Tour after Viktor Hovland pulled one off at the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

The moral of the story is if you like free drinks, you don’t want to miss the PGA’s Florida swing.

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Hayden Buckley aces the island green 17th at TPC Sawgrass, loses his mind Thursday at 2023 Players Championship

Just 10 players have made a hole-in-one on the iconic par 3 since 1991.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Drinks are on Hayden Buckley on Thursday.

The 27-year-old pro aced the iconic par-3 17th at TPC Sawgrass and then celebrated with gusto.

“I had a little feeling something like that might happen this week,” said Buckley, who made his second hole-in-one on the PGA Tour and fifth of his life. “I don’t know, I’ve been hitting it well, but it’s always nice to see it happen on that hole, too.”

Starting on the back nine and playing in just the second group of the day to step to the water-guarded par 3 in the opening round of the 2023 Players Championship, Buckley chose a pitching wedge with just 125 yards to the front-hole location. His shot landed just right of the hole, bounced once and then spun back into the cup.

“I’m so sorry for my squeak. Holy cow,” said Christina Kim on PGA Tour Live. “Oh, I want to see that again.”

Don’t we all.

Buckley threw his hat in the air, pumped his fists, screamed, “C’mon!” and tossed his club as he slapped hands with pros Adam Long and Taylor Montgomery.

It was a much more animated reaction compared to when Buckley made an ace in Las Vegas last year as a rookie.

“It was early in the morning, nobody was really out there,” he said. “I guess I had to have a little bit more of a reaction this time. I had friends and my wife in the crowd, so I had to entertain them a little bit.”

Buckley was cruising along at 5 under through his first 11 holes when the wheels came off and he signed for 1-over 73. But an ace is an ace and he said he’d celebrated later.

“I need a lot of water, but maybe like a Maker’s and Sprite I think is what I’ll have,” he said. “I guess I’m buying a lot of people drinks, too, so that’s probably the only downside. Drinks on me, I guess.”

One year after Shane Lowry aced the hole in the third round, Buckley became the 10th player to do so since 1991:

2023: Hayden Buckley, 1st round
2022: Shane Lowry, 3rd round
2019: Ryan Moore, 1st round
2017: Sergio Garcia, 1st round
2016: Willy Wilcox, 2nd round
2002: Miguel Angel Jimenez, 1st round
2000: Paul Azinger, 3rd round
1999: Joey Sindelar, 1st round
1997: Fred Couples, final round
1991: Brian Claar, 3rd round

Buckley, a former walk-on at Missouri, finished second at the Sony Open at Hawaii, his best career finish on the PGA Tour, but entered the Players having missed his last three cuts.

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Si Woo Kim steals 2023 Sony Open in Hawaii title with clutch late birdies

The win is Kim’s fourth on the PGA Tour.

Si Woo Kim said he had nothing to lose, so he played aggressively on his chip shot on the 17th hole during the final round of the Sony Open in Hawaii. He picked a great time to chip in for birdie.

“It can’t get better than this,” Kim said.

The 27-year-old South Korean tied for the lead with a dramatic chip-in at the par 3 and added a two-putt birdie from 42 feet at 18 to match the low score on Sunday.

Kim’s 6-under 64 at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu propelled him to a one-stroke victory over Hayden Buckley and his fourth career PGA Tour title. It’s an impressive tally, which includes the 2017 Players Championship, but Kim still has work to do to catch his bride, Ji Hyun Oh, who turned professional in 2014 and has seven wins on the KLPGA to her credit. The couple tied the knot on December 19.

“Feel like we’re (on our) honeymoon because we came here early last week,” he said.

Kim said he was going to approach the final round of the Sony Open with a different mindset, trying not to focus so much on winning the tournament.

“Just play the golf,” he said.

Whatever that entailed, it worked. Kim, who trailed by three strokes at the start of the day, came out firing with birdies on the first three holes and marked six circles on his card in his first 12 holes to assume a one-stroke lead over Buckley.

In September, Kim represented the International team in the Presidents Cup. After playing a practice round with teammate Adam Scott, he adopted Scott’s putting style and use of a broomstick-length putter that week. It came in handy as he knocked off Justin Thomas of the U.S. in a singles match en route to going 3-0-1 in the competition. Kim tried to downplay the significance of his victory over Thomas, calling it “just a lucky day,” but later conceded it gave him a boost of confidence.

“My game was little down like at the end of the season, but I think that kind of like gave me momentum,” he said.

On Sunday, Kim chased down Buckley, the 54-hole leader, who started with a birdie but then his putter cooled off and he made his first bogey of the day at No. 11, missing from 5 feet, to fall one stroke behind Kim.

“I feel like the putting was a little shaky,” Buckley conceded.

Buckley’s putter temporarily woke from its slumber as he holed a 17-foot birdie at 12 and a 29-foot birdie at 14 to vault into first. But it was shaky down the stretch, especially inside 15 feet. Buckley lipped out a 4-foot par putt on the left at 15 to drop back into a tie for the lead at 16 under but rebounded with a birdie one hole later.

Buckley’s 16-footer at 16 reclaimed the lead momentarily. Just when it appeared that Buckley had the edge to grab his first title, Kim answered with his chip-in from 28 feet over the 17th green. His celebratory fist pump rivaled that of Tiger Woods in his prime.

“Right before that I heard the noise, I knew he made it,” Kim said of Buckley’s birdie putt at 16. “It was a tough lie — into the grain — so I had to be aggressive and I had nothing to lose and it went in.”

Kim drove into the left fairway bunker at 18 but his second shot, a 5-iron from 236 yards, at the par-5 was a beauty, bounding on to the green and stopping 42 feet short of the hole. He got down in two putts for the go-ahead birdie. Kim shot a pair of 64s on the weekend to finish with a 72-hole total of 18-under 262. Buckley, whose runner-up finish marked a personal best in 40 career Tour starts, signed for a final-round 68. He had a chance to tie and force a playoff but his 12-foot birdie putt at 18 slid by on the left. Chris Kirk, who was trying to end a winless drought of nearly eight years, shot 68 and finished third.

“Winning on the PGA Tour is the hardest thing to do, and sometimes you just get beat,” Buckley said. “I feel like that’s what happened today.”

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Saturday at Waialae: Several players vying for first win, jam-packed leaderboard and more from the third round of Sony Open in Hawaii

You may not know the names, but the battle on Sunday is set to bring the drama.

With 18 holes to play at Waialae Country Club, the Sony Open title is up for grabs.

The finish in Hawaii is set to come down to the wire with 15 players at or within five shots of the lead including many looking for their first career win or first in several years.

Hayden Buckley created some separation late in his round when he stuck his 222-yard approach to a few feet and converted the eagle to finish the day at 15 under, two shots ahead of the pack. The 2023 Sony would be Buckley’s first win on the PGA Tour.

If you missed the third-round action, no worries, we have you covered. Here’s everything you missed from Saturday on Oahu.

Past champion Webb Simpson, Harris English withdraw from WM Phoenix Open

Webb Simpson won the WM Phoenix Open in 2020.

Webb Simpson has withdrawn from the 2022 WM Phoenix Open. He’s a past champion of the event, winning two years ago in 2020.

The Players champion’s last start on the PGA Tour came at the Sony Open where he tied for 61st.

Replacing him in the field is Hayden Buckley, who made the cut at last week’s AT& Pebble Beach Pro-Am, ending the week T-49.

Earlier Wednesday, U.S. Ryder Cupper Harris English also withdrew from the WMPO field and was replaced by Cameron Young.

As it stands right now, Simpson will be teeing it up at Riviera next week for the Genesis Invitational. His last appearance there came in 2017 where he tied for 39th.

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PGA Tour rookies achieve their dreams, but can they keep their dream jobs?

Unlike some pro sports, there are no guaranteed contracts in professional golf.

NAPA, Calif. – Callum Tarren wondered when he might be getting his PGA Tour card.

The 30-year-old England native seemingly had worked a lifetime to gain admission to the big leagues. He finished tied for fourth at the Nationwide Children’s Hospital Championship three weeks ago, a result that locked up one of the 25 PGA Tour cards given out in the Korn Ferry Tour Finals with one event still remaining. But he skipped the ceremony a week later to fly home and spend time with his first child, Sofia, born two weeks earlier.

Tarren’s friend, David Skinns, a 39-year-old journeyman pro from England who spent time during golf’s pandemic shutdown as both a bartender and DoorDash driver to make ends meet before earning his card too, made sure Tarren received the grand symbol of Tour membership at the Fortinet Championship, the first of 48 tournaments that make up the 2021-22 PGA Tour season. Skinns marked his golf ball on the putting green with Tarren’s card during a practice round at Silverado Resort & Spa’s North Course.

Tarren and Skinns aren’t the only ones who have waited a long time to achieve their dream of playing on the PGA Tour. Justin Lower, 38, attended Q-School six times, missed earning his card by a single shot in 2018, and needed to pitch to a foot from 30 yards to save par at the final hole at the Korn Ferry Tour Championship in Indiana to secure the last card. Lower still wasn’t sure if he’d done enough until his fellow pros and caddies showered him with beer and champagne. When he finally grabbed hold of his coveted PGA Tour card, Lower said, “It’s heavier than I thought it would be.”

There are 27 rookies in this season’s class on the PGA Tour, the most since 2011 when 35 earned cards, and 26 of them are in the field this week (all but Matthias Schwab). Max McGreevy and Jared Wolfe are making their Tour debuts.

Some, like Aaron Rai, a 26-year-old Englishman who once holed a record 207 straight 10-foot putts at age 15, needed just three starts in the Korn Ferry Tour Finals to graduate while others such as Scott Gutschewski, 44, is returning to the big leagues full time for the first time since 2011. He made just two PGA Tour starts in the past 10 years. How did he celebrate his success? He went to Denny’s.

“It ain’t Applebees, but still pretty fancy,” he tweeted.

Hayden Buckley was the last man to get into the Korn Ferry Tour’s Lecom Suncoast Classic in February and then birdied the first hole of a sudden-death playoff to jumpstart earning his Tour playing privileges. Membership has its privileges. It also means having to play against the likes of World No. 1 Jon Rahm and PGA Championship winner Phil Mickelson, who headline the field this week in Napa.

But there are no guaranteed contracts in professional golf. Stephan Jaeger is back for his third tour of duty. He was the Korn Ferry Tour Player of the Year, winning his sixth career title on the circuit, tied for second most all time, but he’s yet to record a top-10 finish in 62 starts on the PGA Tour. Still, he remains undeterred.

“I’ve done a lot over the last year and that’s given me a lot of confidence that like, ‘Hey, I can do this out here,’ ” he said.

Lower shares Jaeger’s never-give-up attitude. The 11-year-pro shed tears of joy when he finally secured the job he’d always dreamed of. This week marks the arrival at his destination, PGA Tour member, but the real work had just begun.

“It means everything,” he said, “and I don’t think this is it. I don’t think my journey is over at all. I think it’s just getting started.”

Last man in the field Hayden Buckley wins Korn Ferry Tour event in a playoff

Perhaps the least likely golfer to win the Korn Ferry Tour’s LECOM Suncoast Classic claimed the crown at Lakewood National Golf Club.

LAKEWOOD RANCH, Fla. — Perhaps the least likely golfer to win the third annual LECOM Suncoast Classic claimed the crown on Sunday in sudden death at Lakewood National Golf Club.

After finishing 72 holes of play tied at 13-under with Taylor Montgomery of Las Vegas and Dawson Armstrong of Valdosta, Georgia, 24-year-old Hayden Buckley of Chattanooga, Tennessee, went out and birdied the par-4 18th hole to win on the first hole of sudden death.

Buckley seemed light years away from being a final-day contender after not making it through Monday’s qualifier to make it into the field. He made the list of alternates and turned out to be the 144th and final player admitted to the main draw.

Buckley was on the practice putting green at 7 a.m. when he got the call for his 7:17 a.m. tee time on Thursday. He barely made it in time to tee off.

“I know I belong out here,” Buckley said. “I’m just waiting for my chance. It’s just a matter of time. I am playing consistently.”

No one would argue that after this week. It was Buckley’s first-ever Korn Ferry championship, along with his inaugural top ten finish. Buckley takes home $108,000 of the $600,000 purse.

The final round began with Buckley and Billy Kennerly of Seattle sharing the third-round lead at 12-under. Playing in the final twosome together, Buckley took the lead when Kennerly bogeyed the par-4 second hole, one of the toughest at Lakewood National.

Kennerly retook the lead with a birdie on the par-5 sixth hole and looked like he was cruising toward the title with a two-stroke lead when disaster struck on the par-3 17th. Kennerly lost his lead with a double bogey and went on to bogey the final hole to miss the playoff by one stroke. He finished fourth at 12-under.

Defending champion Andrew Novak, who won last year in dramatic style with lengthy birdie putts on the final two holes of the tournament, failed to make the cut this week. He missed the mark by a single stroke, playing the first two rounds at 2-under par.

The Wofford College alum credits his first and only Korn Ferry victory with changing the trajectory of his career, at least for a while. Like so many others on the tour, the four-month hiatus taken due the coronavirus had an impact on his game.

“Winning here was a good confidence boost for about five months,” Novak said. “But the quarantine really kind of messed up the momentum of it.”

As for his performance at this week’s Suncoast Classic, the first tournament since the long break, he said, “I didn’t execute the game plan that I wanted. It was tough making putts.”

Last year’s runner-up by a single stroke, John Chin of Virginia, also missed the cut with the same 2-under total.

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