Stewart Cink keeps lead at 2024 Charles Schwab Cup Championship, Steven Alker takes over points lead

Two down, two to go, a second lucky break and a new No. 1.

PHOENIX — Two down, two to go, a second lucky break and a new No. 1.

Stewart Cink shot a 5-under 66 to maintain his three-shot lead on the 35-man field in the 2024 Charles Schwab Cup Championship. For the second day in a row, he avoided disaster on the par-5 18th hole.

On Thursday, a shot out of a bunker hit the flagstick dead on and stopped two feet away, setting up a closing birdie. On Friday, his second shot was well short of the green, hitting the bank that slopes down towards a lake. But his ball managed to stay hung up in the rough and not get wet. He then chipped on and two-putted for par.

“It was just a little bit of a lazy swing there on 18. This is going to happen, but obviously it was a little further right than I meant for it to be, but we had plenty of distance to make sure we had kind of a wide space to give ourselves a little forgiveness there,” Cink said. “That bank actually does have some grass over there on 18. When you get back in towards the middle of the green, there’s no grass. So that part of the hole will hold a golf ball. Still, very glad it stayed up.”

Cink avoided bogey on Friday and has just one over 36 holes. He’s seeking his second PGA Tour Champions victory in 2024.

67-year-old Langer shoots 64

Bernhard Langer had the round of the day, a 7-under 64. It’s his best round in this event and it’s three shots better than his age. It’s also the 21st time the ageless wonder has shot his age or better.

“Every once in a while I look back at my career and have to almost pinch myself and say, man, that’s pretty amazing what you’ve done the last whatever, so many years,” he said. “Like a day today, to shoot 64, 3 under my age, not a whole lot of people can do that.”

On the par-4 17th, Langer drained a long putt of about 25 feet for his eighth birdie of the day. He said a slight putter alignment adjustment is paying dividends.

“I moved the ball a little bit further away from me. Started to look better, ball was rolling online and so far, so good. It’s worked two days in a row,” he said.


Schwab Cup: Format, TV, prize money | Winners in 2024 | Money in 2024


Langer had plans to make the 2024 Masters his final trip down Magnolia Lane, but a ruptured Achilles in February scuttled that. He later said 2025 would be his last time competing at Augusta National and he confirmed that again Friday.

2024 Charles Schwab Cup Championship
Bernhard Langer takes a club from his bag on the ninth hole during the second round of the 2024 Charles Schwab Cup Championship at Phoenix Country Club. (Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

“It will be, no doubt about it. That course is just so long,” he said. “The last five or 10 years when I played there, it’s just playing very long. It’s not much fun hitting 3-woods into par 4s and 2-hybrids and all that kind of stuff. The holes are made for 7-, 8-, 9-irons and I’m coming in with some metal and other things.”

New No. 1 in Schwab points

As for the tournament within the tournament, the season-long points race, there’s a new leader in the projected standings. Steven Alker, who came into the week in the No. 2 spot, has overtaken Ernie Els, who has been No. 1 for the last 12 tournaments.

Alker, who won the Cup two years ago and then this tournament last season, shot a 3-under 68 Friday at Phoenix Country Club and is tied for fourth. Meanwhile Els shot a 70 and is 3 under overall this week, tied for ninth. Els is seeking his first Schwab Cup points title.

Back to Cink. While he can’t win the season title, there are scenarios where he could finish as high as second.

How it works

The Charles Schwab Cup Championship is a four-round, 72-hole, no-cut tournament.

Unlike the PGA Tour’s post-season – where the Tour Championship winner is declared the FedEx Cup champion – it’s possible to have someone win this event while someone else captures the Schwab season title.

The winner of the tournament wins the Charles Schwab Cup Championship. The winner of the season-long race is the Charles Schwab Cup champion.

‘I’m not really supposed to be here’: Jason Caron, a club pro from Long Island, has earned 2025 PGA Tour Champions card

“Someone said ‘You’re playing with house money’ and that’s kinda how I looked at it.”

PHOENIX — Who knew how important a tie for 32nd place could be?

Jason Caron can tell you. That finish he posted at the 2023 Senior PGA Professional Championship earned him a spot in the 2024 KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship.

He then went out and shot 69-70-67 before closing with a 66 to finish tied for fourth. That earned him a payday of $154,000, but more important, gained him access into more PGA Tour Champions events. Caron, 52, has played eight in all, missing just one cut and earning three top fours.

His most recent outing was a tie for third in the penultimate tournament in the Charles Schwab Cup playoffs and that punched his ticket to the season finale at Phoenix Country Club. Even better, by making the final 36, he earned a tour card on the Champions tour for 2025.

What a out-of-nowhere season for a guy who played 168 Korn Ferry Tour events and 65 PGA Tour events – his last full season there was 2003 – before deciding on a different path, moving on from competitive golf to be the head pro at Mill River in Oyster Bay, New York.

“Someone said ‘You’re playing with house money’ and that’s kinda how I looked at it,” Caron said after an even-par first round at the 2024 Charles Schwab Cup Championship.


Schwab Cup: Format, TV, prize money | Winners in 2024 | Money in 2024


Back in his days as a pro golfer, there was always the pressure to succeed because, after all, everyone needs a steady paycheck. But he’s had a great job for a while now and when discussing the sequence of events, Caron makes it clear that he’s found a perspective that lets him swing freely. Reaching the final stop of the year and earning playing status next year is just the cherry on top.

“It sounds, you know, really stupid, but it really didn’t matter to me because I have a job. Mill River is where I’m supposed to be so this was all kind of an added bonus this year. Never in my wildest dreams had I thought about being here [in Phoenix]. It didn’t cross my mind,” he said. “I can honestly tell you I really didn’t think about the consequences, I just played golf and I mean, the checks, like I said, are pretty cool when you play well and to be here is like, ridiculous.”

Caron owns the golf shop at Mill River, which he said will open around May 15. That frees him up to play from January up till the season starts on Long Island. He said he’ll play the majors during the summer then ramp it up again down the stretch in the fall. Without hesitation he said there was never a thought of leaving his club to play full-time.

“No chance, because I know that … listen, when you’re playing great, everything is amazing,” he said. “I’ve had when it’s not so good and it stinks and I know that.”

Steven Alker is familiar with Caron’s play but also his ascension. Alker won the Cup series title two years ago after coming out of nowhere himself. He Monday qualified into an event in 2021 where he finished top 10. Eight more top 10s later and he was a mainstay on the tour.

“I know he’s got good game because I played with him out on Tour,” Alker said. “He’s done the hard yards, he’s been around, he’s done Korn Ferry, he’s been on and off the PGA Tour. I think where he was and what he was doing as a club pro and to come out here, it’s exciting.”

Caron remembers battling to hang on to status with Alker back in the day.

“When we were playing, we weren’t world-beaters,” Caron said. “We were good and we played and kept cards and stuff like that but we weren’t the guys that were at the top and playing the PGA Tour and playing super well.

“It’s been awesome to watch, a guy that hasn’t had huge success in his early golf life but now he’s killing it.”

Will Caron follow the same path? Only time will tell. If not, he’ll be content to go back to his full-time gig on Long Island, where most people are fans of the New York sports teams.

Caron, though, grew up in Massachusetts and is a lifelong fan of the Patriots, Bruins and Red Sox.

“So I was not disappointed when the Yankees lost,” he quipped.

How it works

The Charles Schwab Cup Championship is a four-round, 72-hole, no-cut tournament.

Unlike the PGA Tour’s post-season – where the Tour Championship winner is declared the FedEx Cup champion – it’s possible to have someone win this event while someone else captures the Schwab season title.

The winner of the tournament wins the Charles Schwab Cup Championship. The winner of the season-long race is the Charles Schwab Cup champion.

A PGA Professional is three shots back of the lead at 2024 Simmons Bank Championship

Caron was the low pro at the 84th KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship in May.

Twelve PGA of America Golf Professionals made the cut at the 84th KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship in May. Jason Caron, PGA Head Golf Professional at Mill River Club in Oyster Bay, New York, was one of them.

In fact, when he earned Low Senior PGA of America Golf Professional in the event after finishing in a tie for fourth, he not only pocketed $154,000 in prize money but won new appliances for his entire kitchen.

On Friday, Caron was at it again, posting a 7-under 65 at Pleasant Valley Country Club in the first round of the 2024 Simmons Bank Championship. That score was good enough to place him three shots back of the first-round lead with 36 holes to go in the PGA Tour Champions’ penultimate event in 2024. Caron is tied for third alongside Retief Goosen and Thomas Bjorn.

Vijay held the lead at 8 under for most of the day until Steven Alker closed birdie-eagle to shoot a 62 and get to 10 under.

Caron had five birdies over his first nine holes and posted two more on the back during a round in which he avoided bogey. He closed with five straight pars.

Playing his ninth Champions tour event, Caron, 52, also has 65 PGA Tour events under his belt. He made 21 cuts on that circuit, good for $324,300 in career earnings.

Some of his notable victories include the 2012 Connecticut Open as well as the 2017 and 2020 PGA Stroke Play Championship.

He played college golf at Charleston Southern. His wife, Liz, was on two NCAA championship teams at Duke.

Charles Schwab Cup standings update

Caron has also vaulted from No. 53 to No. 35 in the Charles Schwab Cup standings. That would put him in line to advance to the season finale at Phoenix Country Club in two weeks where only the top 36 will advance. With Caron’s move up, someone had to slide back and that was Scott Dunlap, who was the “bubble boy” at No. 36 heading into this week.

At the top of the standings there’s been a switch, with Alker overtaking Ernie Els for the No. 1 spot in the projected standings. Els is now No. 2, with Stephen Ames still third.