Scottie Scheffler defends title at 2024 Hero World Challenge, earns ninth win of year

Scheffler ran away with his second Hero title.

NASSAU, Bahamas — Eight wasn’t enough for Scottie Scheffler.

With birdies on three of the first four holes on Sunday, he assumed the lead and cruised to a six-stroke victory over Tom Kim at the 2024 Hero World Challenge for his ninth win of the year.

“It feels nice,” Scheffler said. “I’ve been fortunate to get some wins out of some really good golf. This was another week where I played really solid and was able to see some nice results from that. Overall it was a pretty fun year.”

Was it ever. Scheffler closed with a birdie at the final hole to shoot 9-under 63 at Albany Club, a 72-hole total of 25-under 263 and successfully defend his title at the 20-man unofficial event hosted by Tiger Woods.

“You were in my tummy last time,” Meredith Scheffler told the couple’s first born, son Bennett, who arrived in May and was carried around the course by her mother in a baby carrier.

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Scheffler, the world No. 1 and FedEx Cup champion, won seven times on the PGA Tour, including the Masters, Players Championship and Tour Championship. He also won a gold medal at the Paris Olympics, which he counts as win No. 8.

“Gotta enjoy each one, they’re all so unique,” Scheffler’s caddie Ted Scott said. “It’s just good to see him back on the horse.” And he smiled a wry smile  before dashing to the airport to catch a flight.

Scheffler opened with 67 and followed with a bogey-free 64 to assume the lead. But he shot a rather pedestrian third-round 69 and trailed Justin Thomas by one stroke heading into the final round. Thomas wedged from 112 yards to 3 feet at the first to protect his one-shot lead. But he made bogeys at Nos. 2 and 5 (and a birdie at three) to lose the lead and never got it back. Scheffler now has shot lower than Thomas, who closed in 71 and finished alone in third, eight of the last nine times they have been paired together.

More: Hero World Challenge prize money payouts

“I would have liked to put a little more heat obviously on Scottie going to the back nine,” Thomas said. “But I mean, you know, obviously I can’t expect to have good things happen when I’m leading by one over Scottie and only shooting 1 under on Sunday.”

Scheffler stormed out of the gate hot to let it be known he meant business. He drained an 8-foot birdie at the first and reached the par-5 third hole in two and two-putted for another birdie. Then a body blow to the hopes of his competitors at the fourth: He sank a 49-foot birdie putt.

“Anytime you see a long putt go in like that, it’s always a good feeling and it’s good momentum and I try to use that as good fuel for the rest of the round,” he said.

Kim, who closed in 68, cut Scheffler’s lead to one momentarily with a 4-foot birdie at the ninth before Scheffler converted his own 4-foot birdie putt at nine in the next group. He kept the pedal down on the back nine, making birdie at 10 and went flag hunting at 13. He dripped in the 6-foot putt using the claw grip, taking his palm of the right hand off the club, which he used from around 15 feet and in this week for the first time in competition.

“It’s over,” a fan said, perhaps prematurely, but he wasn’t wrong.

Scottie Scheffler of the United States plays his shot from the fourth tee during the final round of the Hero World Challenge 2024 at Albany Golf Course on December 08, 2024 in Nassau, Bahamas. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

Scheffler left little doubt down the stretch, driving the green at the 359-yard par 4 14th for another birdie and adding circles on the card at Nos. 16 and 18.

When it was all said and done, some of the best players were left with nothing else to do but praise his brilliance.

“Sometimes he makes the competition look like he’s just playing around with us, you know what I mean, which isn’t easy to do,” Jason Day said.

To Kim, who often played money games at home in Dallas with Scheffler before the birth of Bennett and noted he lost 95 percent of those matches marveled at how Scheffler never goes out shoots and bad score.

“He comes out here and wins, he does it all the time,” Kim said. “I think the biggest thing that I see is that he’s always trying to get better. Despite winning nine times this year, he’s always finding little ways and I think it’s really, really cool to see and you can take a lot from that.”

Thomas and others echoed a similar sentiment that Scheffler excels at handling all the outside noise – whether it be the birth of his baby or being arrested before his tee time at the PGA Championship or just dealing with expectations he’s supposed to win every time he tees it up. No one has proved better at being able to compartmentalize and stay in his own little bubble.

“I don’t think people understand how difficult it is to win when you’re expected to win or when every single person that’s there expects you to play well and you expect you to play well and then to still play well,” Thomas said. “It truly is just as much of a talent as being able to, you know, control your distance with your wedges or flight a driver or hit it far, whatever it is, is being able to stay present, stay in the moment.

“It’s very hard to explain, but it’s so hard to do sometimes,” Thomas added. “To me that’s been the most impressive thing from Scottie.”

The year 2024 was for Scottie Scheffler, and if his latest putting adjustment is any indication, he’s in for only more success in 2025.

Justin Thomas pulls ahead, but Scottie Scheffler is in his rearview mirror at the Hero World Challenge

Catch up on Saturday’s action here.

NASSAU, Bahamas – Justin Thomas has one last chance to win a tournament in 2024 and he’ll head into the final round with a one-stroke lead over world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler at the Hero World Challenge.

Thomas carded a bogey-free 6-under 66 at Albany Club on a warm and wind-swept Saturday to improve to 17-under 199.

“I didn’t think I played nearly as well as he had the first two days but it was tough out there and I made a few more putts,” he said.

His play has been none too shabby: he’s bogey-free for his last 51 holes, his lone bogey came at the par-5 third hole in the opening round. Thomas struggled mightily with the putter the first two days, ranking last in Strokes Gained: Putting, and joked, “there was only one way to go.”

Competing for the first time since welcoming the birth of his first child, daughter Molly, he reeled off birdies at Nos. 4 and 6 from inside 10 feet and then let his driver do some damage. Using a 46-inch driver this week, he drove the green at the 359-yard seventh to inside 10 feet and two-putted for birdie.

“That was nice,” he said. “I didn’t have to go full go. It was an advantage for me. I felt like I could be in control… Because how the green sits, you can’t see the ball until you get up there so it was nice to see it up there.”

He tacked on a birdie at nine to go out in 32, then started finding his touch from long range with his putter. First, he made an 18-foot par putt on the par-3 12th hole. His next birdie, at No. 14, was an unlikely one. After being out of position off the tee, his pitch ran 47 feet past the hole, but he buried it after recalling something his caddie had said the other day.

“I had a similar thing on Thursday where I hit a bad chip and Rev was, you can still make the putt, you’re fine, that kind of thing. I kind of reminded myself that,” he said.

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Thomas has had a lot of success at the Hero over the years, owning top-five finishes in his four most recent appearances (third/2023, fifth/2022, T-5/2021, T-5/2019). But victory has eluded the 15-time Tour winner since the 2022 PGA Championship.

“I’ve been progressing nicely, been working on all the right things. Feel like I’ve been seeing signs of improvement, which is what you want and that’s all I can do. I can’t control everybody else or what’s going on, I’ve just got to keep playing as good as I possibly can and hope that it’s enough come Sunday,” he said.

If so, that trophy would come from none other than Tiger Woods.

“That would be great. I’ve had a couple opportunities in the past, but it’s definitely something I’d love to check off my box in my career at some point,” he said.

Hero World Challenge 2024
Scottie Scheffler of the United States walks off the seventh tee during the third round of the Hero World Challenge 2024 at Albany Golf Course on December 07, 2024 in Nassau, Bahamas. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

Defending champion Scottie Scheffler shot 69 on Saturday and played his way into the final group alongside Thomas. But is he pleased with his play so far, which included an 8-under 64 on Friday? Not so much.

“Pleased I think would be a stretch, but overall my game’s in a good spot,” said Scheffler, who has never shot an over score in 15 rounds at Albany. “I’ve liked what I’ve seen the last few days out there on the course and hoping to finish off with a real solid round tomorrow.”

If pleased wasn’t the right description, Scheffler was asked what word he’d use instead. “That’s too difficult a question. My vocabulary is not that vast,” he said with a smile and a chuckle.

Earlier in his comments summing up the round, he chose the word “decent.”

“I had a stretch at 13, 14, 15 where I felt like I lost a shot or two there, but outside of that I did a lot of really good things today,” he said.

Scheffler complained of a few too many lip-outs spoiling what could’ve been another mid-60s round for him.

“I felt I had some good putts that should have gone in. I had a putt on 1 that looked really good, I had a putt on 10, putt there on 18 that I hit a really good putt just around the cup,” he said. “Overall I feel like it’s coming off my blade really nice. Yeah, so every time it looks like it’s going towards the hole, I feel like it should be going in and that’s a good feeling.”

Still, he’s poised to join Tiger Woods (2006, ’07) and Viktor Hovland (2021, ’22) as the only back-to-back winners of the Hero World Challenge.

Hero World Challenge 2024
Tom Kim of South Korea and caddie, Paul Tesori, look on from the third tee during the third round of the Hero World Challenge 2024 at Albany Golf Course on December 07, 2024 in Nassau, Bahamas. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

Tom Kim had a good feeling.

Coming off the lone hiccup of his day at 17, where he needed two shots to extricate himself from the sand, Kim caught the left bunker at 18 and got his revenge. He holed the bunker shot for birdie, his 12th of the day, and posted 10-under 62. Then he told caddie Paul Tesori he knew he was going to make it.

“He actually called BS on it,” Kim said. “He said, ‘No, you didn’t,’ and I tell him like I really did. I saw a good spot, it was a really good spot to miss at. We talked over the shot and kind of let it go. As soon as it landed, I was like, man, this is a really good shot.”

Man, was it a really good day. Kim’s 12 birdies were the most he’s ever made on the Tour.

“I had a few long putts where you’re not really expecting to make and those go in. I did a lot of good things just to keep my momentum going,” he said, noting a clutch par save at No. 8 and a 20-footer on No. 9. “Made a bomb on 10. Had a really easy — I hit a good drive on 11 so it was kind of like an easy birdie, but didn’t hit it on the green and chipped it really good.”

Given that the wind picked up and scoring tended to be higher on Saturday, Scheffler was impressed with Kim’s ability to go low.

“That’s pretty serious golf out there,” he said. “I feel like I played pretty solid yesterday with no wind and shot 8, so 10 in the wind is a pretty special round.”

Kim vaulted to 15 under overall, good for solo third and two back of the lead, which is all the more impressive given that he was 3 over after six holes and opened in 2-over 74. Kim said he made a small adjustment that has paid quick dividends.

“My spin numbers were coming out a little different than usual. So paid a lot of attention after the round and just put that in play yesterday and automatically I saw some results and I just kind of did the same thing and just seems to be paying off a little bit,” he said.

‘Can they both lose?’: Alabama fan Justin Thomas calls Texas-Georgia SEC title game a ‘lose-lose’

“I don’t know who I want to win.”

Justin Thomas is as big a fan of the Alabama Crimson Tide as anyone out there.

His Tide football team, however, is not in the SEC title game Saturday. Instead, his 8-3 Alabama squad will sit back and watch Texas and Georgia battle it out in Atlanta. All three seem to be in the 12-team College Football Playoff field but JT was asked if he’s rooting for Texas, assuming a healthy hatred for the Georgia Bulldogs.

“My hate? Well, I don’t really like Texas, either. I’m kind of in a lose-lose in that game, I don’t know who I want to win. I mean, it’s good for the conference. I think Texas comes in in their first year and I think they’re one of the best teams in the country,” he said. “Yeah, I don’t know. I’m rooting for a tie maybe.”

He then asked: “Can they both lose?”

Hero World Challenge 2024 odds, course history and picks to win

It’s time for a fun week in The Bahamas.

Golf’s silly season is here, and the first tournament up to bat is Tiger Woods’ Hero World Challenge in Albany. Although the 15-time major champion isn’t in the field, we’ll still be treated with some of the best players in the world including Scottie Scheffler, Justin Thomas, Ludvig Aberg, Wyndham Clark and Patrick Cantlay, among others.

Tony Finau, amid countless LIV Golf rumors circulating around social media, withdrew from the field on Monday.

Because this isn’t an official PGA Tour event, the winner will not earn any FedEx Cup points. One thing is official, however — the money. Sunday’s champion will go home with $1 million of the $5 million purse.

Without further ado, let’s jump into our betting preview and see who we’ll be targeting in The Bahamas.

Hero World Challenge: Tournament hub

Golf course

Albany Golf Course | Par 72 | 7,449 yards

2023 Hero World Challenge
Scottie Scheffler plays his shot from the 18th tee during the final round of the Hero World Challenge at Albany Golf Course on December 03, 2023 in Nassau, Bahamas. (Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

Hero World Challenge betting odds

Player Odds Player Odds
Scottie Scheffler (+220) Sahith Theegala (+2200)
Ludvig Aberg (+850) Jason Day (+2200)
Justin Thomas (+1000) Robert MacIntyre (+2500)
Sungjae Im (+1400) Akshay Bhatia (+2500)
Sam Burns (+1400) Aaron Rai (+2500)
Russell Henley (+1400) Keegan Bradley (+2500)
Patrick Cantlay (+1600) Cameron Young (+2800)
Wyndham Clark (+1800) Sepp Straka (+3000)
Brian Harman (+2000) Nick Dunlap (+3500)
Tom Kim (+2000) Matthieu Pavon (+8000)

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Picks to win the Hero World Challenge

Justin Thomas

Justin Thomas of the US tees off at the 10th hole during the round 1 of Zozo Championships PGA golf tournament at the Narashino Country Club in Inzai, Chiba prefecture on October 24, 2024 (Photo by TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA/AFP via Getty Images)

Odds: 10/1

Analysis: Woods’ best buddy has finished T-5 or better in four straight appearances at the Hero, including a third-place finish last December. In his last Tour start, the Louisville product tied for second at the Zozo Championship in Japan.

Tom Kim

2024 FedEx St. Jude Championship
Tom Kim walks on the first green during the third round of the 2024 FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee. (Mike Mulholland/Getty Images)

Odds: 20/1

Analysis: In a 20-man field, getting +2000 odds for Tom Kim is too good to pass up. Despite missing the cut in his latest Tour start — Shriners Children’s Open — Kim finished second a week later at the DP World Tour’s Genesis Championship. He’s played in the Hero once, finishing T-10 in 2022.

Robert MacIntyre

Robert MacIntyre of Scotland plays his second shot on the 15th hole during day four of the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship 2024 at the Old Course at St Andrews on October 06, 2024 in St Andrews, Scotland. (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images)

Odds: 25/1

Analysis: Unlike many of the players in this field, MacIntyre has been playing golf this fall. In his last two DP World Tour starts, the Scot finished T-19 at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship and T-7 at the DP World Tour Championship. This will be MacIntyre’s first appearance at the Hero.

Tiger Woods says he’s ‘disappointed’ to be a no-go for the 2024 Hero World Challenge

It’s not the news most golf fans wanted but it’s probably not surprising.

It’s not the news most golf fans wanted but it’s probably not surprising.

On Monday afternoon, Tiger Woods announced on social media that he will not compete in the upcoming Hero World Challenge, his annual bash in the Bahamas.

“I am disappointed that I will not be able to compete this year at the Hero World Challenge, but always look forward to being tournament host,” he wrote.

He also broke some other news. It was about a month ago that the initial field list was released with 17 names. Tiger’s update on Monday added that the last three spots will go to new dad Justin Thomas, Jason Day and Nick Dunlap.

Woods, who finished 18th in the 20-man field in 2023, is a five-time past champion of the event. He had microdecompression surgery on his lower back Sept. 13 to relieve nerve impingement and back pain.

He hasn’t announced when he plans to try to play again. He often has used the Hero World Challenge as a barometer of how his body is feeling in a 72-hole, no-cut event and work off some rust after a layoff. Woods last played at the British Open in July.

The 2024 Hero returns to Albany for the ninth year, from Dec. 5-8.

Golfweek’s Adam Scupak contributed to this article.

2024 Hero World Challenge field

The latest update:

  • Akshay Bhatia, Cameron Young IN
  • Hideki Matsuyama, Billy Horschel OUT
Golfer Country
Scottie Scheffler U.S.
Ludvig Aberg Sweden
Wyndham Clark U.S.
Akshay Bhatia U.S.
Patrick Cantlay U.S.
Sahith Theegala U.S.
Keegan Bradley U.S.
Russell Henley U.S.
Robert MacIntyre Scotland
Sam Burns U.S.
Brian Harman U.S.
Sungjae Im Korea
Tony Finau U.S.
Tom Kim Korea
Aaron Rai England
Cameron Young U.S.
Matthieu Pavon France
Justin Thomas U.S.
Jason Day Australia
Nick Dunlap U.S.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 tag=2621]

‘Our little girl is here!’ Justin Thomas and wife, Jillian, welcome their first child, Molly

Thomas’ last Tour start came at the Zozo Championship in Japan a month ago.

On Thursday, PGA Tour superstar Justin Thomas announced via social media that he and his wife, Jillian, welcomed their first child into the world, Molly Grace Thomas.

“Our little girl is here! Molly Grace Thomas arrived to us 11/18/24, and we couldn’t be more in love,” his Instagram post read. “Both momma (who is a superhero!) and Molly are healthy, and doing well! ❤️ A massive thank you to @jupitermedicalcenter and their entire staff for such great care the last few days. They made the recovery for Jill and Molly as smooth as possible.”

Thomas’ last Tour start came at the Zozo Championship in Japan a month ago — he tied for second — and he wasn’t in the initial field for the Hero World Challenge. We’ll have to wait and see when Thomas will tee it up next.

But until then, congratulations to the Thomas family.

 

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Nico Echavarria birdies the last and stares down Justin Thomas to win the 2024 Zozo Championship

“This is my second victory, so I just need 80 more victories to catch (Tiger). I’m on my way, though.”

Shortly after upsetting one of the best players in the world to win the Zozo Championship, Colombia’s Nico Echavarria phoned his mother at home and tried to fight back tears but it was a losing proposition.

“My parents are at home in Medellin and it’s pretty late there. They stayed up all night watching the golf and I’m glad they did,” Echavarria said. “Yeah, very happy and emotional just being able to talk to them because my parents are the reason I play this beautiful sport.”

And he played it beautifully on Sunday in Inzai City in the Japanese prefecture of Chiba, 25 miles northeast of Tokyo, making birdies at two of the final three holes to shoot 3-under 67 at Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club to secure his second PGA Tour title.

When he won for the first time last year at the Puerto Rico Open, Echavarria said the victory proved to himself that he was better than he even thought. Asked what this second win means, he smiled and said, “Proving it a little more now.”

He added: “I don’t think I would’ve gotten this win without the victory in Puerto Rico. I took a lot from that and kept myself calm,” he said.

With just one top 10 this season and three missed cuts in his last four starts, Echavarria was a surprise contender, racing into the lead with a pair of 64s and a 65 to set the 54-hole tournament scoring mark and grab a two-stroke lead.

Nico Echavarria of Colombia kisses his girlfriend, Claudia, after winning the tournament on the 18th green during the final round of the Zozo Championship 2024 at Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club on October 27, 2024 in Inzai, Chiba, Japan. (Photo by Yong Teck Lim/Getty Images)

Tied for the lead at the 72nd hole, Echavarria reached the par-5 18th in two, leaving himself a 40-foot eagle putt. He lagged to 3 feet and converted the clinching stroke for a 72-hole total of 20-under 260, to edge former world No. 1 Justin Thomas and rookie Max Greyserman by one shot.

Echavarria, 30, started the final round with birdies at Nos. 2 and 7 before a bogey at No. 8 dropped him back into a tie. He reclaimed sole possession of the lead at No. 13, planting his tee shot to 13 feet and canning the downhill, right-to-left breaking birdie putt. He pumped his right fist, one of two times he’d do so on the back nine as his putting prowess shined.

“New grip this week, that was the difference,” explained Echavarria, who swapped out the grip on Tuesday. “Just needed one week for the putter to get hot and this week was it.”

One hole later, however, his lead was gone thanks to a two-shot swing when he made a sloppy bogey at the par 5 and Greyserman canned a 29-foot birdie putt. That proved to be Greyserman’s final birdie. Echavarria wasn’t done yet and answered with another 13-foot birdie, this time at the par-3 16th and clenched his fist. Echavarria and Geyserman, who had been partners this season at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans and finished T-4, remained tied until the 72nd hole.

Greyserman missed the fairway at 18 and had to lay up and his 25-foot birdie putt burned the right edge. He closed in 65 and unlike at the Wyndham Championship where he blew a four-stroke lead with five holes to go, he had no reason to hang his head after earning his third runner-up finish in his last five starts. He topped the field in Strokes Gained: Putting, and made over 100 feet of putts in each round.

“It wasn’t like Wyndham where I gave it away, I felt good out there the whole time. I mean, super comfortable. It was like I was playing at home,” Greyserman said. “Didn’t quite execute down the stretch when I needed to. I mean, Nico stepped up there and he hit a great second shot. He earned it.”

Thomas, who was seeking his first victory in 29 months, closed with a bogey-free 66 but after sinking three birdies in his first six holes, his putter went cold. Before the tournament began, he switched back to a trusty mallet that he’d used in many of his 15 previous Tour titles but it let him down when it mattered most in the final round. He burned edges and lipped out putts, making 11 consecutive pars before a birdie at the last. He ranked 66th in SG: Putting in the 78-man field on Sunday and lost strokes with the short stick for the week.

“It’s a mixture of obviously bummed and disappointed, but I played so well,” said Thomas, who made just one bogey all week and led the field in multiple statistical categories, including scrambling. “I played plenty well enough to win the tournament.”

Rickie Fowler shot a bogey-free 6-under 64 and finished fourth. It marked his first top-10 finish in 23 starts this season and best result dating to his last win at the Rocket Mortgage Classic last July.

Echavarria, who had missed the cut in three of the four previous FedEx Cup Fall events and hadn’t recorded a top-10 finish in a stroke-play tournament all season, sensed his game was close, results be damned. Victory, which includes a spot in his first Masters, made the hard times worth it.

“Moments like this are the ones that make everything better,” he said.

When told that his 72-hole total broke the previous mark set by Tiger Woods in 2019, Echavarria marveled that he had won the same tournament as Tiger.

“This is my second victory, so I just need 80 more victories to catch him,” he said. “I’m on my way, though.”

Nico Echavarria regains two-shot lead with closing eagle, Justin Thomas keeps pace and more from 2024 Zozo Championship

Catch up on the action here.

When they stood on the final tee box on Saturday, Nico Echavarria and Justin Thomas were knotted up at 15 under. However, when the final round of the 2024 Zozo Championship gets underway on Sunday — Saturday night in the United States thanks to the significant time difference — Echavarria will have a two-shot advantage.

The 30-year-old Columbian found the fairway on the par-5 closer and stuck his 241-yard second shot to two feet for a tap-in eagle. Thomas, on the other hand, missed a four-foot birdie putt that would have pulled him within a shot with 18 holes to play.

Although Echavarria has just one PGA Tour win compared to Thomas’ 15, his came more recently than the two-time major champion’s latest. The University of Arkansas product won the Puerto Rico Open last year while the world No. 32 hasn’t hoisted hardware since the ’22 PGA Championship.

“At the end of the day it has been a while, but I’ve still won a pretty good amount of golf tournaments,” Thomas said after signing his card. “I know how to win. It’s just a matter of executing and doing it and that’s really been the biggest difference.”

The winner in Japan will earn $1.53 million of the $8.5 million purse, 500 FedEx Cup points and a two-year exemption on Tour.

Here’s what you need to know from Day 3 at the Zozo Championship.

Zozo: Photos | Leaderboard

Third-round takeaways from the Zozo Championship

Can Echavarria hold off one of the best in the game?

Nico Echavarria of Colombia smiles on the 18th green during the third round of the Zozo Championship 2024 at Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club on October 26, 2024 in Inzai, Chiba, Japan. (Photo by Lintao Zhang/Getty Images)

Echavarria’s lone Tour win came at the Puerto Rico Open, an opposite field event to the Arnold Palmer Invitational. So holding off Thomas, one of the biggest names in the sport, will be a challenge he has yet to face. Only time will tell how he responds.

“Yeah, absolutely,” he replied when asked if his experience in Puerto Rico will help on Sunday. “Obviously this is a better field than the one in Puerto Rico, there’s better players out here, but a win is a win. I’m going to rely on that and keep doing what I’m doing, trying to have fun and see where we go.”

As for his round on Saturday, Echavarria was 1 over through four but quickly turned it around with four birdies over the last five holes of his front nine to make the turn with a 3-under 31. On the way home, he made a bogey and a birdie before his closing eagle to finish out his 5-under effort.

Over the final 18 holes, Echavarria is looking to keep it simple.

“Just stay in the moment. It’s a cliche, but it’s really important. You don’t want to go ahead with yourself, especially there’s a lot of hard holes out here. You just have to hit shot by shot and try to be in the fairway, try to hit the green and see if the putt goes in.”

Thomas hopes to break drought

Justin Thomas of the United States hits his tee shot on the 14th hole during the third round of the Zozo Championship 2024 at Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club on October 26, 2024 in Inzai, Chiba, Japan. (Photo by Yong Teck Lim/Getty Images)

It’s not often we see one of the best players in the game go years without winning, but Thomas has struggled for most of the last two seasons. In fact, he’s won just twice since a three-win 2019-20 season: ’21 Players and ’22 PGA.

But he’ll have a chance to get back in the winner’s circle on Sunday thanks to a third-round bogey-free 5-under 65.

Unlike Echavarria, Thomas got off to a hot start with birdies on Nos. 1 and 2. After seven straight pars to close his opening nine holes, Thomas grabbed three more birdies on Nos. 10, 11 and 14.

His round might have ended in disappointing fashion, but he’s still well within striking distance with 18 holes to play.

“I would have obviously loved a couple more there coming in, but I played really, really solid, played really well,” he said. “You know, I just kind of feel like I did what I needed to do and got it around the course well. It’s nice to post a good score with it.”

What’s his key to victory?

“Honestly, although I’m behind, it’s still patience. Anything can happen out here. You have a lot of birdie holes that you can make bogey in a heartbeat if you get out of position or get in the wrong spot around the greens. I know that with greens this soft, any hole is birdiable. I think just because if I happen to be even through five, six, seven holes, that doesn’t mean I’m out of it, I just have to keep my head down and really just treat each hole for what it is and really try to make as many birdies as I can.”

Fowler ends his round with a bang

Rickie Fowler of the United States acknowledges the gallery after holing out with the birdie on the 18th green during the third round of the Zozo Championship 2024 at Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club on October 26, 2024 in Inzai, Chiba, Japan. (Photo by Yong Teck Lim/Getty Images)

Fowler returned to the Tour earlier this month after an extended time away following the birth of his second child, but his game hasn’t shown many signs of rust.

In his first start since the Open, Fowler tied for 16th at the Sanderson Farms Championship. Two weeks later, the fan-favorite finished T-23 at the Shriners Children’s Open. And through 54 holes of the Zozo, Fowler is 11 under and in a tie for fourth.

On Saturday, Fowler made four birdies and two bogeys before closing his round in dramatic fashion with a 44-foot birdie putt after hitting his approach shot from the wrong fairway.

“I’m excited because I feel like I really haven’t had my best between Sanderson, Vegas and here the first three days,” he said. “I know I have a lot more in the tank and what I can do. Hopefully just clean a few things up. There’s been a lot of good signs, but over the past few events I just haven’t really put it all together. So I’m looking forward to getting out there and hopefully we can get a good one going.”

Fowler, who will start the final round six back of Echavarria, last won over a year ago at the Rocket Mortgage Classic.

Top 10 and odds to win

Position Player Score Odds to win
1st Nico Echavarria 17 under (+130)
2nd Justin Thomas 15 under (+140)
3rd Max Greyserman 14 under (+450)
T-4 Nate Lashley 11 under (+7500)
T-4 Kevin Yu 11 under (+5000)
T-4 Rickie Fowler 11 under (+4500)
7th Kurt Kitayama 10 under (+6000)
T-8 Jhonattan Vegas 9 under (+25000)
T-8 Andrew Novak 9 under (+25000)
T-8 Eric Cole 9 under (+25000)
T-8 C.T. Pan 9 under (+30000)

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Justin Thomas’s late-night stint in the Golf Channel booth at Zozo Championship includes analyzing Rickie Fowler’s flow and more: ‘I’m not a real big Mullet Rick fan’

Thomas showed his talking head skills late Wednesday night – or was it early Thursday morning?

Some day – mark my words – Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas are going to be in the booth together doing commentary. It may be on some still-to-be created app or the next Netflix but give it 30 years and when those guys are finally done collecting baubles on the senior circuit (if there still is a senior circuit), they’re going to take TV commentary next level.

Thomas showed his talking head skills late Wednesday night – or was it early Thursday morning? The Golf Channel televised the Zozo Championship from 11 p.m.-3 a.m. ET and for those who stayed up for first round coverage, they were treated to Thomas joining the booth with the underrated jack-of-all-trades George Savaricas and former Tour pro Graham DeLaet, who has been cutting his teeth as an analyst for PGA Tour Live and is the go-to-guy for Canada’s TSN.

ZozoSecond round tee times | Photos | Leaderboard

After shooting 4-under 66 at Narashino Golf Club, Thomas touched on a wealth of subjects. While showing the highlights of his round, Savaricus asked Thomas about his switch back to a mallet putter this week.

“It’s great, it’s Old Faithful. I’ve had a lot of success and won a lot of tournaments with this putter,” Thomas said. “It’s a familiar, familiar feeling.”

We learned that No. 11 is a hole he’ll take par and run and some other course strategy stuff that will be useful to know while enjoying the next three rounds. Then Thomas was asked about his struggles last year and how he’s bounced back and he gave some great insight into the mental game of a major champion and former world No. 1.

“This game is so hard and can really take so much out of you and beat you up some but you’re also never as far it seems,” he said. “Is it the chicken or the egg? Was I hitting it bad and not playing well because my mental game wasn’t good or was it vice-versa?”

He continued: “I always tell people that I’m sorry, but golf is my job and if I’m not playing good golf it’s pretty hard for me to be happy. I understand everyone has different outlooks, but it’s like you need to be out there and enjoy it, but it’s like, buddy, would you be happy if you were sucking at your job? So, no, I’m not going to be happy.”

Justin Thomas will soon be a dad

Before things got too deep for late-night TV and went off the rails, Savaricas lightened the mood by bringing up the fact that Thomas was about to be last member of the Spring Break club – following in the footsteps of Spieth, Smylie Kaufman and Rickie Fowler – to become a dad. Thomas and his wife, Jillian, are expecting their first child, a daughter, in November.

“On the flight home, once this tournament is over, it’s going to become pretty real for me,” admitted Thomas, who likely is making his last start for the foreseeable future.

When Savaricus asked which of the guys he’d be most likely to ask for some advice on doing diapers, Thomas cracked, “Next question.”

“I’d ask all of their wives,” he added.

“Well played,” Savaricus said.

So about Rickie Fowler’s hair

The camera cut to Fowler weighing his next shot and Savaricus did a splendid job of setting Thomas up for his best analysis of all.

“How about Rickie’s flow now? He’s really letting it go in back,” Savaricus noted.

Hey, at 2 a.m., this is the stuff the viewer has been waiting for, am I right?

“I’m not a real big ‘Mullet Rick’ fan,” Thomas said. “I like the short hair Rickie. It’s wild, he looks about 5-8 years younger when he has his hair short. He always has something – it’s the stache, it’s the hair – but it’s Rick, you know, you’ve got to love him for whatever it is.”

2024 Zozo Championship
Rickie Fowler at the 2024 Zozo Championship at Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club. (Lintao Zhang/Getty Images)

This segment with Thomas easily was the highlight of the late night-early morning coverage, and further proof that Thomas, who was great working with Charles Barkley and company on the broadcast of The Match, has a future behind the mic when he’s ready to hang up the spikes.

He even delivered one more line worthy of chuckles. As he signed off, DeLaet said what every man is supposed to say to a soon-to-be papa: “You’re going to be a great dad.”

“Aah,” Thomas said as if he was touched by the comment. “That’s the nicest thing you’ve ever said to me.”

Justin Thomas returns to Japan at Zozo Championship for final start before birth of first child

“It will be a challenge in different ways but one that we’re excited for.”

Justin Thomas has 15 PGA Tour victories. Four of those have come in Asia.

His first two PGA Tour wins came in Malaysia at the CIMB Classic in 2015 and 2016. A year later, he won the CJ Cup in South Korea. In 2019, he added a second victory at the CJ Cup in South Korea.

This week, the 31-year-old Thomas returns to the largest continent in the world in search of his first victory since the 2022 PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club. He’s one of the numerous stars teeing it up in Chiba, Japan, at the 2024 Zozo Championship, the PGA Tour’s lone regular season event in Asia this year. It’s his first time playing in the event since 2019, which was the inaugural tournament.

It’s also his last start before becoming a dad. Thomas’ wife, Jillian, is due with the couple’s first child, a girl, in late November.

“Any golf shot or situation I am in this week, it’s not going to be anything close to as hard as it’s going to be in a month or so when our little one comes,” Thomas said Tuesday in his pre-tournament press conference. “We’re very fortunate with the timing of being able … for me being able to come here. I think reality will probably set in when I’m flying home and then when I get home because it will be getting in crunch time.”

Zozo Championship: Thursday tee times

Thomas will make his first start at the Zozo since the Tour Championship, where he finished T-14. He’s coming off a season where he had more top-10 finishes (5) than he did missed cuts (4), but he remains in search of win No. 16.

In 2019, Thomas finished T-17 at the Zozo, but that week belonged to Tiger Woods, who tied the PGA Tour’s all-time wins mark with his 82nd.

“It was a very obviously historic moment, historic week,” Thomas said. “The tournament didn’t get the hype and the buzz and the atmosphere it deserved, but naturally anything that Tiger wins is going to amplify that. I think him having that historic win brought that energy and just gave the tournament kind of the recognition I feel like it deserved, or deserves.”

Another reason the 2019 tournament is remembered is because of a typhoon that hit Japan, bringing torrential downpours. Thomas said it was the most rain he had ever seen in a single day.

This year, the forecast calls for possible showers early Friday morning, but otherwise, it’s going to be a stellar week for players and fans alike.

“It’s just a great opportunity for us to come play in front of different fans,” Thomas said. “I mean, how excited everybody is to see so many of us that play on Tour, it’s really cool. I mean, they make us feel very welcome and so excited for us to be here.”

Justin Thomas of the United States reacts on the 11th green during the second round of the Zozo Championship at Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club on October 26, 2019, in Inzai, Chiba, Japan. (Photo by Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images)

This week, Thomas’ focus is on the golf course, a place he’s focused on finding as many fairways and greens as he can. It’s likely to be his last start of 2024, and then he can turn his attention to being a father.

How ready is he for that chapter?

“I don’t think you ever are,” Thomas said while laughing. “All I know is I’ll be as ready as I possibly can, and we’re going to make the most out of every situation we can. I can’t tell you honestly if I’m ready because I’ve never done it before. I’ll let you know in a couple months.

“It will be a challenge in different ways but one that we’re excited for.”