Nick Saban congratulates former Alabama golfer Lee Hodges on first PGA Tour Win

Lee Hodges receives cool phone call from Nick Saban after earning first career PGA Tour win

Over the weekend, former Alabama golfer Lee Hodges earned his first career win on the PGA Tour after shooting 24 under par at the 3M Open at TPC Twin Cities to win by a whopping seven strokes. As if that isn’t enough to make your weekend, Hodges received a call from none other than Crimson Tide head coach Nick Saban.

Saban is a huge golf fanatic himself, known for hitting the links in the offseason. He has done an outstanding job building relationships with guys like Hodges and Justin Thomas who are both Alabama alum. Hodges is clearly very appreciative of hearing from the greatest football coach of all time and wishes Saban and the Tide well heading into the 2023 season.

The 3M Open was Hodges’s third top-10 finish of the year, but it was his first within the top five. Hodges is the 54th-ranked golfer in the world, and at only 28 years old, it’s a name worth remembering.

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Here’s what Justin Thomas needs to do at the Wyndham Championship to make FedEx Cup playoffs

Thomas hasn’t played at the Wyndham since 2016 — he missed the cut.

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The 2022-23 PGA Tour regular season has been a mixed bag for Justin Thomas. But it’s been more bad than good of late.

In his last seven starts, Thomas has missed five cuts, including the U.S. Open and the Open — he tied for 65th at the PGA Championship.

It would have been tough to see that coming after the way he began this year’s campaign with eight top-25 finishes in his first 11 starts, highlighted by a solo fourth at the WM Phoenix Open.

This week, Thomas returns to the site of his Tour debut, the Wyndham Championship (78th, 2009). In two professional appearances at Sedgefield Country Club, Thomas has finished 56th (2015) and MC (2016).

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Our partners at For The Win have taken a look at what exactly Thomas has to do this week to make the postseason.

In order for Thomas to make the playoff field — he currently ranks 79th in the FedEx Cup standings — he’ll have to finish in the top 15 in Greensboro, North Carolina.

Thomas is +3500 to win the Wyndham Championship, which ties for the seventh-best in the field, +400 to finish in the top 10 and +190 for a top 20.

If he makes it into the field for next week’s FedEx St. Jude Championship played at TPC Southwind, Thomas will have plenty of good course history to tap into. He won the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational in 2020 and finished 13th last year.

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Top 70 bubble watch: PGA Tour players currently in (and out) of the FedEx Cup Playoffs

It’s last call for the FedEx Cup Playoffs and a handful of big names on the PGA Tour are lining up for one last shot.

It’s last call for the FedEx Cup Playoffs and a handful of big names on the PGA Tour are lining up for one last shot.

After the conclusion of this week’s Wyndham Championship, the top 70 players in the FedEx Cup standings will qualify for the first event of the playoffs, the FedEx St. Jude Championship (Aug. 10-13). The top 50 will then advance to the BMW Championship (Aug. 17-20), and the top 30 will ultimately punch their tickets to the season-ending Tour Championship (Aug. 24-27). This year, the total bonus pool for the FedEx Cup Playoffs is a whopping $75 million.

With the regular season coming to a close on Sunday at Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina, players ranked No. 60 (670) to No. 80  (538) are separated by just 132 points. Each of the last 10 players in and first 10 players out are in the field this week, too.

Cam Davis (No. 69) played his way just inside the top 70 with a T-10 at the 3M Open, same with Lee Hodges, who rose from No. 74 to No. 33 thanks to his win at TPC Twin Cities. Meanwhile, Justin Thomas dropped after his 3M Open missed cut (but more on him to come).

Here are some notable PGA Tour names who are on the outside looking in for the 2023 FedEx Cup Playoffs.

MORE: FedEx Cup Standings

Former Alabama golfer, Lee Hodges, earns first PGA Tour victory

Former Alabama golfer Lee Hodges earns first PGA Tour win at 3M Open at TPC Twin Cities in Minnesota

Former Alabama golfer, Lee Hodges, earned his first win on the PGA Tour Sunday after beating the field by seven strokes at the 3M Open at TPC Twin Cities in Blaine, Minnesota. The 28-year-old Hodges led the tournament wire to wire after shooting a remarkable 24 under par over the course of the weekend.

Hodges is one of seven former Crimson Tide golfers to be on the PGA Tour with the group being headlined by Justin Thomas. The purse for the Open was $7.8 million. His career winnings on the tour are $3.6 million.

Hodges joined the Tour in 2022 with the 3M Open this weekend being his 65th career event and only his second top-five finish. Hodges was born and raised in Ardmore, Alabama.

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Pair of 29s, Lee Hodges’ record-setting pace among 3M Open third-round takeaways

Lee Hodges is pulling a Brian Harman.

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BLAINE, Minn. — Lee Hodges is pulling a Brian Harman.

Last week, Harman led by five shots after 54 holes in his triumph at the British Open. This week, it’s a completely different set of circumstances, but Hodges’ lead is five with 18 holes to play.

The second-year Tour pro has played flawless golf and led after every round of the 3M Open at TPC Twin Cities. Coming into the week on the outside of the FedEx Cup Playoffs bubble, Hodges needed a big week to punch his ticket in the field at the FedEx St. Jude Championship in Memphis. He’s doing just that.

Although it may be a big lead, a reminder: last year in Minnesota, Scott Piercy led by four after three rounds and was up by that many on the back nine and lost.

3M Open: Photos | Merchandise

Here’s everything you need to know from the third round of the 3M Open.

Justin Thomas, Cameron Young lead list of notables to miss cut at 3M Open

Some stars are heading home early.

BLAINE, Minn. — Coming into the 2023 3M Open at TPC Twin Cities, the penultimate event of the PGA Tour’s 2022-23 regular season, there were plenty of golfers who needed to make a final push to get into the FedEx Cup Playoffs.

Lee Hodges is in the lead at 15 under after Friday’s action, and he finished his second round with a birdie putt after the horn sounded to suspend play. It was suspended due to darkness with a few groups remaining who will finish the second round Saturday morning.

However, plenty of golfers needing a good week in the Twin Cities are packing their bags and heading home early.

Those who missed the cut, which came at 4-under 138, included players who were making a playoff push and others who were hoping to make their respective Ryder Cup teams.

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The cut won’t officially be made until Saturday morning when the second round concludes, but the number is set.

Here’s a look at nine golfers who missed the cut at the 3M Open.

Justin Thomas, Sam Burns headline field for 2023 Wyndham Championship

Find the full Wyndham Championship field here.

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Next up on the PGA Tour schedule, the final event of the regular season.

A solid field of Tour pros is headed to Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina, for the 2023 Wyndham Championship.

Justin Thomas, who is hoping to earn a spot in the FedEx Cup Playoffs with a solid performance at the Wyndham, is the biggest name in the field.

Thomas will be joined by Sam Burns, Adam Scott, Hideki Matsuyama, Billy Horschel, Matt Kuchar, Harris English, Joel Dahmen, Zach Johnson, Luke Donald, Shane Lowry and Gary Woodland.

Tom Kim, the defending champion, is not in the field as he withdrew from the event due to the ankle injury he suffered in the Open Championship at Royal Liverpool.

Here’s the full field for the 2023 Wyndham Championship.

Justin Thomas may have run out of time to make Ryder Cup team, FedEx Cup Playoffs

Justin Thomas has never missed out on the FedEx Cup Playoffs.

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BLAINE, Minn. — The expression on Justin Thomas’ face was telling.

He stood on the 18th tee box at TPC Twin Cities on Friday morning, mumbling to himself after his tee shot on the par 5 drifted too far right and into the water. He looked dejected. Defeated. Deflated.

He dropped a ball in the fairway and fired away at the green. Instantly, his body language told the story. Splash. His third shot also came up short in the water.

Thomas started the second round at the 3M Open sitting at 2 under par. That’s where he finished after an even-par 71 on Friday that definitely didn’t lack excitement. Thomas showed flashes of the player everyone knows he’s capable of being, including four birdies in his last five holes. But he also had poorly-timed mistakes that led to him missing his fifth cut in the last seven starts, like his double bogey on the par-5 18th.

With two weeks left in the PGA Tour’s regular season, Thomas came to Minneapolis hoping not only to make a FedEx Cup Playoffs push, but also to earn a spot on the U.S. Ryder Cup team. Now, he heads home early again to prepare for next week’s Wyndham Championship in Greensboro, North Carolina, with seemingly one final shot to accomplish both of those tasks.

Thomas didn’t speak with media after his round, but his facial expression walking into the clubhouse told the story.

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After his double bogey on the 18th, his ninth hole in the second round, Thomas bounced back with a birdie on the par-4 first. However, a poor tee shot on the par-3 fourth led to another double bogey, putting Thomas at 1 over. He needed four birdies to make the weekend and had only five holes to do so.

He got one on the fifth, hitting his approach shot to four feet. Another came on the par-5 sixth after reaching the green in two. Then on the par-4 seventh, he hit his approach from the rough to three feet and sank another putt. Three straight birdies, one more needed to make the cut.

On the eighth tee, a par 3, his approach sailed into rough, leaving a tricky pitch to a back right pin. His second shot didn’t leave the thick stuff, coming to rest just short of the fridge and a hill that would’ve sent his ball tumbling toward the hole. Instead, he chipped again and knocked in a bogey putt.

Then on the ninth, his final hole, his drive found the right rough, and he hit his approach to 30 feet. Thomas proceeded to drill the putt for birdie.

The two-time major winner went on an incredible run with four birdies in his final five holes, but two doubles and a poorly-timed bogey on his penultimate hole led to his demise.

Thomas said coming into the week he was trying to have more fun. He feels as if he is doing everything the right way, and the results just aren’t coming.

Before the 3M Open, he was projected to be 75th in the FedEx Cup standings. Now, he’s projected 79th.

Next week, Thomas will tee it up at Sedgefield Country Club with one final chance to earn his way into the FedEx Cup Playoffs. Additionally, he’s running out of chances to show U.S. captain Zach Johnson he deserves a spot on the Ryder Cup team.

In his PGA Tour career, Thomas has never missed out on the FedEx Cup Playoffs and only once, his rookie season, has he not teed it up at East Lake. Both of those streaks are in major jeopardy.

PGA Tour players on the FedEx Cup Playoffs bubble heading into 3M Open

It’s make or break time.

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BLAINE, Minn. — There are only two regular season events left in the 2022-23 PGA Tour season, meaning the FedEx Cup Playoffs are right around the corner.

However, this year, they’re going to be unlike ever before. Only 70 players will qualify for the FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee, unlike the 125 who have in year’s past. From there, the top 50 make it to the BMW Championship at Olympia Fields in Illinois, and then the top 30 advance to East Lake in Atlanta for the Tour Championship.

The change in amount of players who qualify for the playoffs means some big names joined the field of this week’s 3M Open in Blaine, Minnesota, at TPC Twin Cities.

At the top end, Jon Rahm is No. 1 in the FEC standings, with world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler right behind. Rory McIlroy won his third FedEx Cup last year.

Here’s a closer look at some interesting names in the FedEx Cup points standings, including some who have work to do to stay in the top 70 and others who need to make a push to make it to Memphis.

Could the 2023 3M Open be the slump-buster that Justin Thomas needs?

“I want to make the Ryder Cup more than anything. I’m probably honestly trying too hard to do it.”

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Justin Thomas didn’t expect to be in Minnesota this week and making his debut in the PGA Tour’s 3M Open, but he arrived in the Land of 10,000 Lakes on Saturday after missing the cut at the British Open, his fourth missed cut in his last six starts.

Thomas shot an opening-round 82, tying the highest score he’s posted in his career and packed his bags early for the third time in this year’s four major championships. (He finished back of the pack in his title defense at the PGA Championship.) Of his dismal performance last weekend, he said, “I’ll hit shots like a No. 1 player in the world, and then I’ll make a 9 on my last hole of the tournament. I don’t know if it’s a focus thing or I’m just putting too much pressure on myself or what it is, but when I figure it out, I’ll be better for it.”

Thomas’s first course of business is to qualify for the FedEx Cup Playoffs, which he won in 2017. In his nine years as a Tour member, he has never missed the playoffs, but he enters the week at No. 75 in the season-long standings. This is the first year that 70 players – down from 125 – qualify for the first of three post-season events. Being on the outside looking in is unchartered territory for Thomas, who has five top-five FedEx Cup finishes in the past six seasons.

This stretch of bad golf constitutes the longest slump of Thomas’s career. He hasn’t won since last May and has recorded just three top-10 finishes this season after never having registered fewer than seven in a season. He’s also fallen from No. 8 at the start of the year in the Official World Golf Ranking to No. 24. Some of his stats help explain what has gone wrong: he ranks 159th in Strokes Gained: Putting, losing more than a full stroke to the field per 72 holes, and dropped from third two years ago to 40th in SG: Approach, a category in which he’d ranked in the top 10 in each of the last six seasons.

3M Open: Odds | Tee times

With just two regular-season FedEx Cup events remaining, Thomas had little choice but to sign up for the 3M Open and he’s already registered for the Wyndham Championship next week, where he’ll make his first start in seven years, to give himself his best chance of qualifying for the FedEx St. Jude Championship, where he counts one of his 15 career Tour titles, and to improve his odds of advancing to the BMW Championship (top 50) and then the Tour Championship (top 30). Stats guru Justin Ray of Twenty First Group, a sports intelligence agency, crunched the numbers and lists Thomas’s playoff probability at 40.4 percent. But Thomas won’t be deterred.

“I really feel like great things are coming,” Thomas said during his Tuesday pre-tournament press conference. “I have a lot of faith and belief in myself to know that this is just a challenge and an opportunity for me to grow and get better and really come out of this even better than I have been in the past.”

Not only does Thomas need to play well if he wants a shot at the playoffs, but he also is attempting to show some form ahead of the Ryder Cup in September and make his case to be one of six picks by U.S. Captain Zach Johnson. He sits No. 14 in the point standings and only the top six automatically qualify.

“I want to make the Ryder Cup more than anything,” Thomas said at the British Open. “I’m probably honestly trying too hard to do it.”

One player who is confident that this will be a short-term blip in what is shaping up to be a Hall of Fame career for Thomas is defending 3M Open champion Tony Finau, who played in the same group with Thomas last week at Royal Liverpool.

“He’s playing some quality golf, he’s getting some tough breaks. Hitting a couple more errant shots than I’m used to him hitting playing with him, but this game is so fickle, you’re never as far off as you think, and he’s definitely not,” Finau said. “J.T.’s going to be more than fine, he’ll find his form. It’s crazy in our sport, you know, how fast we forget how great someone like J.T. is. But you get to appreciate his talent and what he’s accomplished to this point in his career more when he’s going through a slump like this.”

Finau offered Thomas the following advice to get through his rough patch.

“You just continue to play and believe, that’s all there is to it,” he said. “But J.T.’s an extremely talented player and one of the best in our game, arguably the best of our generation. I have full faith that he’s going to snap out of it.”

That’s why Thomas is at TPC Twin Cities this week — to show himself and Johnson, his Ryder Cup captain, what he’s capable of and try to bust out of his slump.

“Hopefully this is the week that it all clicks and comes together,” Thomas said.