Jordan Spieth withdraws from 2023 AT&T Byron Nelson with wrist injury

The final tune-up before the second major of the year has taken a hit.

The final tune-up before the second major of the year has taken a hit, as fan-favorite Jordan Spieth announced he has withdrawn from the 2023 AT&T Byron Nelson with a wrist injury.

Spieth posted scores of 72-77 in last week’s Wells Fargo Championship, leading to a missed cut. He and fellow Texan Scottie Scheffler were to be the big draws at TPC Craig Ranch in McKinney, Texas, this week as the top players gear up for the PGA Championship next week.

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On social media posts, Spieth said he felt pain in his left wrist last weekend and that doctors advised him to rest.

“The AT&T Byron Nelson means the absolute world to me and I’m disappointed to miss it this week,” Spieth’s message said. “Playing in front of friends & family in Dallas is one of the highlights of my year, and the tournament staff and volunteers are second to none. I look forward to being back next year and many years after.”

Spieth is from the Dallas area and has made 11 starts in the Byron Nelson, including 2010 when he was 16. A year ago he recorded a second-place finish.

It’s unclear if this will keep him out or hamper his ability to play in the PGA Championship, the lone major title he has yet to capture.

George McNeill is in the field now that Spieth is out. Other WDs this week include Lanto Griffin (D.J. Trahan in), Camilo Villegas (Kyle Stanley in) and Michael Thompson (D.A. Points in).

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Jordan Spieth, Collin Morikawa lead list of notable names to miss the cut at the 2023 Wells Fargo Championship

A few big names will be leaving Quail Hollow early.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — This year’s Wells Fargo Championship is the ninth designated event of the PGA Tour season, meaning the 156-player field was competing for a $20 million purse, with a whopping $3.6 million going to the winner.

After two rounds of play at Quail Hollow Club, 68 players made the weekend cut and another 88 are now heading home early and empty handed.

Three players who competed for the American team at the 2022 Presidents Cup last fall at Quail Hollow were sent packing, as well as a major champion, a rising PGA Tour star and a former world No. 1 who seemed to be rounding into form.

Here’s a closer look at some of the notable names who didn’t survive the 36-hole cut at the 2023 Wells Fargo Championship, which came in at 1 under par.

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2023 Wells Fargo Championship odds: Building the perfect fantasy lineup for Quail Hollow, led by Jordan Spieth

Who’s in your lineup this week?

We’re less than 24 hours away from the start of round one at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina, for the 2023 Wells Fargo Championship.

Jon Rahm and Scottie Scheffler, the top two players in the Official World Golf Ranking, have decided to take this week off (all players are permitted to skip one designated event this season).

Max Homa enters the week as the defending champion, although his win came at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm after the venue changed to accommodate the 2022 Presidents Cup being staged at Quail Hollow later in the year. Rory McIlroy, a three-time winner of this event, is the last player to win in Charlotte.

If you’re looking for a fantasy lineup to use this week, you’re in luck. Here’s one of our favorite rosters for the Wells Fargo Championship.

More Wells Fargo betting: Expert picks, odds | Sleepers | Prop bets

Rory McIlroy, defending champion Max Homa, Jordan Spieth highlight the 2023 Wells Fargo Championship field

World Nos. 1 and 2, Scottie Scheffler and Jon Rahm, are not in the field.

After a week south of the border, the PGA Tour heads to Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina, for the 2023 Wells Fargo Championship.

Last season, the Wells Fargo was held at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm due to the 2022 Presidents Cup being staged at Quail Hollow later in the year. Max Homa claimed the title in 2022 while Rory McIlroy bested LIV Golf’s Abraham Ancer in 2021, the last time it was played in Charlotte.

Homa most recently missed the cut at the Zurich Classic alongside Collin Morikawa — who’s playing in the Wells Fargo for the first time — while McIlroy hasn’t played a Tour event since the Masters and received some backlash after skipping the RBC Heritage, the second elevated event he didn’t play in in 2023.

Jordan Spieth is making his first start in Charlotte since 2013. Rickie Fowler, whose first Tour win came at Quail Hollow 11 years ago, is also playing in the tournament.

Scottie Scheffler and Jon Rahm, the top two players in the world, are sitting this one out. Players are allowed to skip one designated event this year.

Here’s the full field for the 2023 Wells Fargo Championship.

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Matt Fitzpatrick’s career-low day, Jimmy Walker does the CBS ‘walk-and-talk’, a star-studded leaderboard and more from Saturday at the RBC Heritage

Catch up on Saturday’s action here.

We’re 18 holes away from crowning a champion of the 2023 RBC Heritage at Harbour Town Golf Links in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina.

And Sunday is set to be a good one.

Jimmy Walker, the 36-hole leader, stumbled a little bit on Saturday, shooting a 1-over 72 and is tied for fourth, three back. Despite three bogeys on the back nine, including on Nos. 14 and 15, he did the “walk-and-talk” on CBS, chatting with Jim Nantz as he played the par-4 16th hole, which he parred.

Ranked 406th in the world, Walker, the 2016 PGA Championship winner, is back contending after several years of battling illness.

When asked his feeings on so many of his fellow pros asking about him, he said: “Well, that’s good. I’ve tried to live a good life, be a good dude, so that’s great. I appreciate it.”

Matt Fitzpatrick took advantage of ideal scoring conditions and shot his lowest round on the PGA Tour, an 8-under 63. He sits atop the leaderboard by one entering the final round.

If you missed any of Saturday’s action, no worries, we have you covered. Here’s everything you need to know from the third round of the RBC Heritage.

RBC Heritage: Sunday tee times

Meet Lincoln Rubis, an 11-year-old with 5 holes-in-one (three in a 22-day span) and the same childhood coach as Jordan Spieth

His scoring average in 2023 is 69.67.

Most babies sleep with a stuffed animal or a blanket. Lincoln Rubis cuddled with his plastic 7-iron.

Rubis, now 11, has been obsessed with golf from the moment his parents gave him his first set of plastic clubs at 18 months old. His father, Jon, said you could tell there was something special about Lincoln when he swung the club.

“I’m going, ‘OK, this is crazy,'” Jon said. “He could just swing it over and over again. He really took a liking to it.”

Fast forward 10 years, Lincoln and his family now live in the Dallas metroplex, and his love of golf has only grown. He has become one of the best junior golfers in the country. He has five holes-in-one, including three in a 22-day span a month ago. Lincoln also goes to the same childhood coach that Jordan Spieth did and has the same winning percentage as Scottie Scheffler on the Northern Texas PGA Junior Tour.

Not bad footsteps to be following.

Those are just a few of the amazing things Lincoln has accomplished, and he just turned 11 in January.

When he was 6, he got his first two aces within a month of each other. Fast forward five years, his tally is up to five holes-in-one, more than even some professionals have.

On Feb. 25, he was playing in a tournament at the Wigwam in Litchfield Park, Arizona, when he hit a pitching wedge from 101 yards to an island green. The ball one hopped, hit the flag stick and dropped.

“It was loud,” Jon said. “It just went bang.”

A week later, at Rock Creek Golf Club in Gordonville, Texas, Lincoln hit another ace, this one with a 9-iron from 113 yards. Jon was playing in a group behind and found out through a text message from other parents who were keeping score.

Then, 15 days later at Coyote Ridge in Carrollton, Texas, Lincoln played in cold temperatures with the wind chill below freezing in a tournament. On the uphill par-3 11th hole, Jon was standing next to the green and videoed Lincoln’s swing from the tee. He hit a 9-iron from 110 yards.

“It was blind for me because I was below the green, but the ball was tracking and I thought it was a good shot,” Jon said.

Jon shut off the camera as it landed and released. He couldn’t see the ball, but he knew it was a good shot. That’s when Lincoln started yelling and celebrating. Jon walked up to see the green, and he couldn’t see a golf ball.

“That’s when I knew it was in,” Jon said.

Three holes-in-one in 22 days, with two of those coming in tournaments. He won the latter at Coyote Ridge.

Speaking of tournament records, Scheffler, the six-time PGA Tour winner and second-ranked golfer in the world, won nearly 60 percent of his starts on the NTPGA during his career. So far, Lincoln has 27 wins in 47 events (57.4 win percentage) and has finished top two all but five times.

His scoring average in 2023 is 69.67. Lincoln is a bit smaller for his age and doesn’t hit the ball as far as some of his competitors, but he excels at finding ways to score and get the ball in the hole.

Last year, he tied for seventh at the U.S. Kids Worlds and also qualified for the Drive, Chip and Putt National Finals at Augusta National. He’s also sponsored by Titleist.

Then there’s the Jordan Spieth connection. Spieth’s first coach was Joey Anders, who teaches at Brookhaven. The Rubis’s are members at Brookhaven, and Anders has been teaching Lincoln at the same age he taught Spieth.

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Lincoln has even played some rounds with Shawn Spieth, Jordan’s father. As Shawn was getting ready for the PNC Championship last year, they played a couple rounds together.

“Shawn is so great, not only with Lincoln, but plenty of the junior golfers at Brookhaven,” Jon said. “It’s really cool.”

Last year at the Dallas Junior Golf Championship, a tournament that dates to the 1920s, Lincoln shot a 59. Jon is quick to point out the Ages 9-10 Division played about 4,200 yards, but no one had shot that low in the tournament’s history.

Most of Lincoln’s events now are played at 5,500 yards or close to, but a couple weeks ago, he and Jon, who’s a near-scratch golfer, went and played a course from 6,800 yards.

And what did Lincoln do? Knocked a wedge close for birdie on the final hole to beat his dad.

“I couldn’t have been happier,” Jon said. “I didn’t think he would beat me this early.”

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5 prop bets for the 2023 RBC Heritage including Justin Thomas or Max Homa to win at 14/1

A few of these are too good to pass up.

The annual Masters hangover is a bit more bearable this year thanks to the new designated events on the PGA Tour, as world No. 1 Jon Rahm, Scottie Scheffler, defending champion Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas and Collin Morikawa lead the best field in the history of the RBC Heritage.

Harbour Town Golf Links in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, is different than the other venues we’ve seen host these star-studded events so far this season. It demands precision, patience and does a fantastic job of minimizing the advantage bombers have off the tee.

Let’s jump onto five prop bets for the RBC Heritage, starting with a triple chance to win that includes two names we mentioned in our expert picks story on Tuesday.

More RBC Heritage betting: Expert picks | Sleepers

Listen to this week’s betting preview below:

Jordan Spieth says the RBC Heritage has the ‘potential to be as exciting an event as we’ve seen this year’

“It could be just such a massively bunched leaderboard of such big names.”

The RBC Heritage is going to be different in 2023.

It’s one of the PGA Tour’s designated events — seven of the world’s top 10 are set to tee it up Thursday — creating one of the best, if not the best, field Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, has ever seen.

But what makes it even more intriguing is that the golf course forces players to prioritize accuracy over brute distance.

It’s no secret that many residents of the Official World Golf Ranking’s top 20 are long-ball hitters and have dominated the designated events early this season.

Jon Rahm (Sentry Tournament of Champions, Genesis Invitational, Masters), Scottie Scheffler (WM Phoenix Open, Players Championship), Sam Burns (WGC-Dell Match Play) and Kurt Kitayama (Arnold Palmer Invitational) have conquered the loaded fields in 2023. What do they have in common?

All four players are ranked inside the top 35 in driving distance: Rahm (ninth), Burns (19th), Scheffler (20th) and Kitayama (35th).

RBC Heritage: Expert picks | Sleepers | Photos

But, according to defending champion Jordan Spieth, Harbour Town Golf Links could produce a more diverse leaderboard.

“I think on a course like this, it’s going to be more unique than any of the ones that we’ve experienced in any of the elevated events so far because you have a course where it doesn’t matter about length,” he said Tuesday after the ceremonial cannon shot. “You just have to golf your ball around. It’s an advantage if you hit it far and straight, but you’ve got to take risk on more than you do other places if you want to try and keep hitting driver.

“It could be just such a massively bunched leaderboard of such big names, it’s got the potential to be as exciting an event as we’ve seen this year.”

Pete Dye’s design has crowned an assortment of winners over the years. Spieth, Stewart Cink, Webb Simpson, C.T. Pan, Satoshi Kodaira, Wesley Bryan, Branden Grace and Jim Furyk are among those who have donned the tartan jacket going back to 2015.

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Tough to classify any of those guys as bombers.

On top of the required accuracy off the tee, most of the routing demands working the ball both ways.

“I’m sure there’s plenty of winners here who have only had to move it the other way once or twice, but yes, in order to get to all the pins and really position yourself the right way, it requires pretty much both ball flights,” said Spieth, one of the true artists on Tour when it comes to playing the required shot.

If you’re looking for an analogy for the 2023 RBC Heritage, think of it as putting 15-20 Lamborghinis on a Driver’s Ed practice track. Speed and horsepower are canceled out and all of a sudden those drivers are forced to parallel park, avoid cones and keep both hands on the wheel at all times.

If they don’t, they’ll fail.

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Jon Rahm wins 2023 Masters at Augusta National for second major title, will return to world No. 1

Rahm is the fourth Spaniard to win the Masters, joining Sergio Garcia, José María Olazábal and Seve Ballesteros.

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Two-time champion Jose Maria Olazabal missed the cut at the 87th Masters, but he donned his Green Jacket and waited behind the 18th green in the gloaming of a brisk but sunny Sunday at Augusta National Golf Club to welcome his fellow Spaniard Jon Rahm to the club.

“He said he hopes it’s the first of many more. We both mentioned something about Seve, and if he had given us 10 more seconds, I think we would have both ended up crying,” Rahm said.

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Rahm became the fourth Spaniard to win the Masters, joining Sergio Garcia (2017), Olazabal (1994, 1999) and Seve Ballesteros who died in 2011 and 40 years ago birdied the first four holes to win the title for the second time (the first being in 1980.) On what would’ve been Seve’s 66th birthday, Rahm had to play 30 holes, rallying from four strokes back at the start of the day and two behind with 18 holes to go to shoot 3-under 69 and beat Brooks Koepka and Phil Mickelson by four strokes.

Rahm, 28, grew up in Barrika, Spain a town of about 1,500 in the Basque country of northern Spain. As he developed his distinctive swing under the eye of Spanish golf coach Eduardo Celles, Rahm won tournaments with his aggressive and creative play, drawing comparisons to Ballesteros. He never witnessed the Spanish great play, but he met him once.

“I was too young to appreciate who I was shaking hands with,” he said of Ballesteros. “Obviously I grew up on Tiger (Woods) and Phil (Mickelson), respecting and admiring both players for what they’ve done. But my idol, it’s always been Seve. I try to emulate what he inspired on the golf course.”

On Tuesday, Rahm first learned during a media shoot that Seve’s birthday would coincide with the final round, and he discussed the topic while playing a practice round with Olazabal and Garcia.

“I was told a lot of things about why this could be the year, and I just didn’t want to buy into it too much,” he said.

On Thursday, Augusta National’s greens were receptive and scoring was low. Rahm spotted the field two strokes, opening with a 4-putt double bogey. Just 10 minutes before he teed off, his friend Zach Ertz, who plays tight end in the NFL and has won a Super Bowl, texted Rahm that the first green would be a walk in the park.

“Thank you, Zach,” Rahm said during his winner’s ceremony. “Don’t ever do that again.”

A younger version of Rahm may have self-combusted in anger and proceeded to shoot himself out of the tournament but this version of Rahm proved more resilient and as walked to the second tee, a famous quote jumped to mind from the time when Ballesteros was asked to explain his four-putt at the Masters.

“I just kept thinking to myself, ‘Well, I miss, I miss, I miss, I make.’ Move on to the next,” Rahm said. “If you’re going to make a double or four-putt or anything, it might as well be the first hole, 71 holes to make it up.”

Rahm rebounded with seven birdies and an eagle and posted 7-under 65 to share the first-round lead with Koepka and Viktor Hovland. Despite getting the wrong side of the draw, he followed it up with 69 as the weather worsened to improve to 10-under 134 and trailed Koepka by two strokes. It marked the first time at the Masters that two players reached double figures through 36 holes and set up a riveting weekend with two prizefighters ready to do battle.

In one corner, representing LIV Golf — bought and paid for to the tune of a reported $100 million, a figure he couldn’t say no to even though he had bad-mouthed the Saudi-funded league for months — was Koepka. The four-time major winner had a chip on his shoulder to prove that his myriad of injuries and defection to LIV didn’t mean he was washed up at 32. He was trying to join an exclusive group of only 20 men that had won five or more majors in their careers.

In the other corner, Rahm representing the PGA Tour, the FedEx Cup points leader who declared he cared about legacy and chasing down the records of Tiger Woods and Jack Nicklaus. He had one major to his credit, the first Spanish player to win the U.S. Open in 2021, but whether the Official World Golf Ranking said so or not he was convinced he was the best player in the world – and had been playing like it. The Masters marked the sixth time this season on the Tour that Rahm had entered the final round in first or second on the leaderboard, the most of any player.

The LIV-PGA Tour subplot could not be ignored and speaking at last week’s LIV event in Orlando, Graeme McDowell, who joined the upstart league last year, summed up what was at stake.

“It would be a watershed moment,” he said, if a LIV player were to win the Masters. “I think it will be hugely important. It will legitimize what we’re doing.”

Against that backdrop, the first of what turned out to be a two-round duel between a pair of broad-shouldered bombers was played in bone-chilling cold, wet, windy conditions on Saturday. Koepka slept on a four-stroke lead after play was suspended due to inclement weather, and carried a two-stroke edge after both shot 73s in the third round. Majors still are 72-hole affairs and unfortunately for Koepka, his final 18 resembled that of LIV Golf’s fearless leader Greg Norman when he was trying to close out many a major.

Koepka’s lead had vanished by the fourth hole, he didn’t make a birdie until 13 and looked out of sorts, fighting a double cross off the tee and a suddenly balky putter. He shot 3-over 75.

Rahm applied early pressure with a birdie at 3, scrambled for par at six and when he holed the putt the patrons exploded with delight as he took sole possession of the lead.

“I think most of the time in America Jon is rooted for less. That’s not a bad thing and I get it,” Rahm’s caddie, Adam Hayes said. “Today, I felt like Jon had a few more people out there rooting for him. Is that good or bad, I don’t know and I don’t know why.”

Rahm pitched perfectly to tap-in range at eight, a hole he played in 5-under for the week, to build a two-stroke advantage. He gave a stroke back with a bogey at nine, his lone dropped stroke of the day, but made a surgical dissection of the lengthened 13th for yet another birdie. Then he effectively put the tournament on ice with a remarkable birdie at 14, cutting an 8-iron approach from 142 yards in the first cut around a lone pine tree to within 5 feet of the hole.

“That was a wind the Spaniard up and let him go shot,” Hayes said. “I gave him the number and he just got in there and saw it.”

There was one last dicey moment at 18 when Rahm’s tee shot sailed left and he hit a provisional but found his ball and ripped a 4-iron inside 100 yards.

“I said, ‘C’mon, let’s get this thing up and down. Be a real champion. You don’t want to bogey the last hole,” Hayes recounted. “He said, ‘You read my mind.’ ”

Rahm did just that, making a ‘Seve par,’ and signing for a 72-hole total of 12-under 276. With the victory, Rahm will reclaim the top spot of the OWGR for the fifth time in his career. Mickelson birdied three of the final four holes to shoot 65, tying his lowest round in 114 trips around Augusta National. His previous low 65 dated to the opening round in 1996, and in doing so he became the oldest top-5 finisher in Masters history, surpassing Jimmy Demaret in 1952, and tied for second with Koepka.

“Didn’t feel like I did too much wrong, but that’s how golf goes sometimes,” Koepka said.

Rahm won for the fourth time on Tour this season, tying Garcia for most Tour wins by a Spanish-born player and he becomes the third player from Spain with multiple major titles, joining Ballesteros (5) and Olazábal (2). Watching from his home in Austin, Texas, Garcia, who missed the cut this year, was ecstatic his good friend won the Green Jacket.

“Super proud of him,” Garcia said. “It’s an honor for both of us to have won our Green Jackets on what would have been Seve’s birthday. We both idolized him growing up and we looked at him as the player we wanted to be.

“To me, at the moment, he’s the best player in the world. He’s so consistent and so good and he keeps getting better and better.”

Before 2022 champion Scottie Scheffler helped Rahm slip into his Green Jacket in the Butler Cabin, Rahm highlighted the importance of the 1997 Ryder Cup being played at Valderrama in Spain, which his parents attended and sparked their love of the game, and praised Seve’s role in shaping his future as a golfer.

“If it wasn’t for that Ryder Cup in ’97, my dad and I talk about it all the time, we don’t know where I would be or where as a family we would be,” Rahm said.

There he was in a Green Jacket, something he had dreamed of from a young age and standing at a podium on the Augusta National practice putting green and delivering one more eloquent speech at the outdoor Green Jacket public ceremony for the champion. When he had finished thanking everyone from the superintendent and staff to his caddie and family, Rahm had only these words left to conclude a wild and chaotic week at the 87th Masters:

“Happy Easter and rest in peace, Seve.” And then he made the symbol of the cross.

With reporting from Steve DiMeglio.

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‘Fatigued’ Jordan Spieth happy to be near top at Masters, but contemplating a future schedule change

“I got lazy picking targets,” Jordan said. “I probably only had a target on 50 percent of the shots this week.”

AUGUSTA, Ga. — After bogeying the 72nd hole, Jordan Spieth lowered his head as he exited the Champions Locker Room. In his left hand were his Under Armour golf shoes. In his right was a green Crow’s Nest cup, filled with a locally brewed wheat ale.

“I made a tremendous amount of mental mistakes,” Spieth said. “To be this close, it’s nice, but it almost frustrates me more.”

The 2015 Masters Champion was 7 under through 17 holes Sunday, and had sliced his pre-round deficit of 10 to 3. Then, the shot that cost him in 2018 reappeared.

Standing on No. 18 tee box, Spieth toed his drive left, forcing a pitch-out. The end result was five. And when playing partner Phil Mickelson birdied the hole, their positions on the towering white leaderboard flipped.

Spieth’s bogey capped a final-round 66, yet a bittersweet tie for fourth. It marked Spieth’s sixth top-5 in 10 tries at Augusta National.

“I played way too much coming into this,” Spieth said. “I came in mentally fatigued, and you overwork this week every year. I mean, this is eight out of 10 weeks. I need to change my schedule going forward to be sharper this week.”

Spieth noted his mental mistakes — most notably his Thursday decision to go pin hunting on No. 13. Spieth found the hazard and needed seven strokes to finish the hole.

“I got lazy picking targets,” Jordan said. “I probably only had a target on 50 percent of the shots this week, and I like to have them 100 percent of the time.”

Spieth spoke of Sunday’s atmosphere, comparing the second nine to 2015, 2016 and 2018.

“I have a lot of great memories coming off No. 15 green from the year I won, the year after, and 2018,” Jordan said. “Now, this year. You feel like everyone’s trying to will the ball in for you.”

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But similar to 2018, the final hole proved crippling. Five Aprils ago, Spieth trailed Patrick Reed by nine entering Sunday. Then, the Dallas native caught fire, birdieing nine of his first 16 to pull all-square with two to play.

But Spieth’s drive on No. 18 sailed off target and he exited the green with the same result as 2023.

“When you’re that far back, you have to have everything go right,” Spieth said moments after today’s round. “It was close, but I should have done a lot better in those first three rounds.”

Spieth finished 2023 with 69, 70, 76 and 66 (281).

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