Shot-by-shot: Tiger Woods shoots 1-over 72 Thursday at 2024 Genesis Invitational

Everything you need to know from Tiger’s return to the PGA Tour at Riviera Country Club.

The Big Cat is back.

Tiger Woods returned to PGA Tour action on Thursday as the 15-time major champion made his 2024 debut at the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club just outside of Los Angeles. Woods will do double duty as the tournament host of the $20 million signature event, which his TGR Foundation organizes.

The 82-time PGA Tour winner played both the Hero World Challenge and PNC Championship in the winter, but fans hadn’t seen Woods on the course in an official event since he withdrew from the 2023 Masters. In 14 previous starts at Riv, Tiger has one runner-up finish (1999) and just three top 10s. He finished T-45 last year.

Check out shot-by-shot analysis of Woods’ opening round 1-over 72 below.

Netflix’s Full Swing teaser shows what fans can expect from season two

Season two drops on March 6.

Last month it was announced that the second season of “Full Swing,” the Netflix docuseries that goes behind the scenes of professional golf, will be released on March 6, 2024.

On Wednesday the streaming service dropped a 27-second teaser video that featured the titles of all eight episodes and a sneak peek at who would be featured in each. The players involved in Season 2 include the likes of Rory McIlroy, Justin Thomas, Matt Fitzpatrick, Rickie Fowler, Joel Dahmen, Keegan Bradley, Tom Kim, Luke Donald and Wyndham Clark, to name a few.

The season starts and ends with two-part episodes titled The Game Has Changed, which presumably will detail the PGA Tour and LIV Golf’s struggle for professional golf supremacy and ends with All Roads Lead to Rome, which unfortunately for American fans will go in-depth on everything that happened at the 2023 Ryder Cup.

Check out the teaser clip below.

Full Swing: Ranking all the episodes in Season One

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 category=1375]

Justin Thomas paired with Tiger Woods Friday and Saturday at Genesis Invitational

Justin Thomas and Tiger Woods paired together Thursday and Friday at the Genesis Invitational

Alabama legend [autotag]Justin Thomas[/autotag] will be back on the links this weekend as he will be taking part in the Genesis Invitational at the Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, CA. However, the real news is that Thomas will be paired with Gary Woodland and Tiger Woods on Thursday and Friday.

In 2023, Woods only appeared in three tournaments so all eyes will be on the trio. To add to the buzz, it will also be Tiger’s first tournament since ending his partnership with Nike and he will be unveiling his new brand ‘Sun Day Red’. The three are currently slated to tee off at 9:25 a.m. local time.

A year ago, the winner was John Rahm who will enter this year’s contest as one of the favorites again. The tournament also has a purse of $20 million, so it is one of the more lucrative weekends on the PGA Tour.

Thomas is off to a great start to begin the 2024 campaign with a top-three finish at the American Express, a top-six finish at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and T-12 last week at the Waste Management Open.

Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion. You can also follow Sam Murphy on Twitter @SamMurphy02.

Genesis Invitational 2024 odds, course history and picks to win

It’s go-time at Riviera.

Genesis Invitational. Riviera Country Club. Tiger Woods.

Does it get any better than that?

The PGA Tour’s third signature event of the season is here and a loaded field has made its way to Los Angeles, including the tournament host.

Woods last played at the PNC Championship in December, after finishing 18th at the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas. His last official Tour start came at the Masters last April.

More: Tiger Woods hires new caddie

The 15-time major champion will be joined by world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, Viktor Hovland, Xander Schauffele, Patrick Cantlay and Max Homa.

Reigning champion Jon Rahm is not in L.A. to defend his title thanks to his recent move to LIV Golf.

Golf course

Riviera Country Club | Par 71 | 7,322 yards

2023 Genesis Invitational
Tiger Woods plays his second shot on the 18th hole during the third round of the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club on February 18, 2023, in Pacific Palisades, California. (Photo by Cliff Hawkins/Getty Images)

Course history

Scheffler, Thomas join those who say LIV defectors should be punished if returning to PGA Tour; Brandel Chamblee proposes ‘fair punishment’

“They should have to sit out for a period of time, pay fines, and support/play in only non-signature events.”

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — If the PGA Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund end up going into business together, what will that mean for LIV defectors being admitted back to the Tour?

That remains to be determined, and while there have been many opinions on whether they should be punished or allowed back because they “strengthen the product,” few have suggested what would make for a fair punishment.

The most common player response has been to say some form of it being above their pay grade. But not Golf Channel’s Brandel Chamblee. He has been one of if not the most consistent and sharpest critics of LIV, and he responded to a question on social media on what he thought fair punishment for jumping to LIV might be. “They should have to sit out for a period of time, pay fines, and when they come back, support/play in only non-signature events for as long they played for LIV,” Chamblee wrote on X.

Last week, Rory McIlroy said he didn’t think LIV defectors should be punished. Rickie Fowler was first to publicly say he disagreed with McIlroy. He has had more company sharing his opinion this week, namely two-time major winner Justin Thomas and world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler.

“I would say that there’s a handful of players on LIV that would make the tour a better place, but I’m definitely not in the agreement that they should just be able to come back that easily,” Thomas said Tuesday, two days before the WM Phoenix Open gets underway at TPC Scottsdale. “I think there’s a lot of us that made sacrifices … I would have a hard time with it (welcoming back LIV players without penalty).”

On Wednesday, Golfweek’s Eamon Lynch asked world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler how he feels about the subject during “Golf Today” on Golf Channel.

“That’s definitely a complicated issue that I’m not sitting too far on one side of the fence with that,” Scheffler said. “I think there’s a different level of player that left – you had some guys that left our Tour and then sued our Tour, that wasn’t really in great taste; and then you had some other guys that just left and they wanted to do something different, and everybody made their decision, and I have no bad blood toward the guys that left. But a path toward coming back, it wouldn’t be a very popular decision, I think, if they just came back like nothing ever happened. They did kind of leave and – they left our Tour, that’s just part of it. There should be a pathway back for them, but they definitely shouldn’t be able to come back without any sort of contribution to the Tour.”

When pressed as to what that pathway and punishment should look like, Scheffler offered little of substance.

“I’m not really sure what that is, but there should be something,” Scheffler added. “I think that’s going to be the opinion of most of the players that stayed. You know, we remained loyal to a tour, a tour that was loyal to us. I built my entire career here on the PGA Tour, and I wasn’t willing to leave it. I dreamt of playing on this tour. Some of the guys that left, maybe that wasn’t for them, but I think if they want a pathway back, there should be one, but it definitely shouldn’t just be coming back in first week they want to come back and play. There should be some sort of caveat to them getting back on our tour.”

So far, only Chamblee has publicly offered what a version of punishment might look like.

After dealing with recurring rib injury, Bud Cauley set to make first PGA Tour start since 2020

“He’s been kicking my ass at home, that’s for sure,” Justin Thomas said. “I know how good Bud is.”

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – It’s been so long since Bud Cauley has played on the PGA Tour that he joked on Tuesday that he had to look for his ball marker and think about how many tees he likes to carry in his pocket.

Cauley, 33, is set to make his first Tour start this week at the WM Phoenix Open since the 2020 Fortinet Championship. While competing in Ohio at the Memorial in June 2018, he sustained six broken ribs, a broken leg and a collapsed lung in the single-car accident in which he was a passenger. While he recovered and resumed his playing career, the injury to his ribs never fully healed.

“Out of the blue, my (right) side started to hurt again,” he said.

When he visited the doctor in April 2021, they determined he needed surgery to remove the plates in his chest but during the procedure, they couldn’t take them out because the bone had grown on top of the plates.

“So stitched me back up, said, ‘I think we’ll be OK, we took a little scar tissue out, you’ll be fine,’ and then like 12 days later, my incision popped open,” Cauley recalled, noting that his wife, Christy, noticed his shirt was wet. “Take my shirt off, there’s just a hole in the side of my chest.”

More surgeries followed and they didn’t heal well. He suffered from a seroma, the abnormal accumulation of serous fluid in a dead space containing plasma and lymphatic fluid, and C. diff. colitis, an infection of the colon from antibiotics. “Everything that could go wrong seemed to go wrong,” he said.

He tried to hit balls a couple months after his first surgery once his incision had healed and hit about four shots and stopped. Then he didn’t hit another golf ball until September.

“After a year goes by and two years goes by, your optimism starts to fade a little bit,” he said.

With his optimism for recovery nearly depleted, Cauley, who has made 198 career Tour starts and banked nearly $10 million in career earnings, conceded there were conversations with his wife that if his latest surgery didn’t work out, it might be time to pursue other career opportunities.

“When you grow up doing it every day and you play golf every day, and when it gets taken away, it does change your perspective on just how fortunate we are to be able to play golf and even to get to do the thing that you enjoy doing,” he said.

His latest surgery seems to have given him a new lease on his playing career. He made two rehab starts on the Korn Ferry Tour last month in The Bahamas, finishing T-21 and T-35. He has 27 Tour starts left on a major medical extension after finishing No. 83 on the 2020 FedEx Cup, needing to earn 391.355 points to keep his card.

“My golf swing is virtually the same. I’m lucky that even though I’ve had so many things happen to my side, I haven’t lost any speed or anything, and my range of motion is the same,” Cauley said.

Justin Thomas, who arrived at the University of Alabama a semester after Cauley turned pro following his junior season, has been playing with him back home in Florida and said he’s ready.

“He’s been kicking my ass at home, that’s for sure,” Thomas said. “I know how good Bud is and I know his raw talent … He’s just too good of a player to not have won out here at some point.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=1 tag=451189250]

10 of the best players at the WM Phoenix Open over the last 5 seasons

Is the winner this week on this list?

The world’s best players are in Arizona this week for the PGA Tour’s annual party in the desert, the WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale.

World No. 1 and back-to-back defending champion Scottie Scheffler returns hoping to make it a three-peat, while a loaded field including Justin Thomas, Jordan Spieth, Max Homa and Wyndham Clark will try to stop him.

Thomas, thanks to his recent form and course history at TPC Scottsdale, is one of the popular picks to win this week at 10/1.

Listed below are 10 players with some of the best course history at the WM Phoenix Open over the last five seasons.

WM Phoenix Open: Picks to win, odds

WM Phoenix Open 2024 odds, course history and picks to win

It’s time for The People’s Open.

The People’s Open. The Darty — a day party for those unfamiliar with the lingo — in the Desert.

Whatever you call it, the WM Phoenix Open is the PGA Tour’s annual bash at TPC Scottsdale.

And a loaded field has traveled to Arizona this year, including back-to-back defending champion and world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler. He’ll be joined by Justin Thomas, Max Homa, Sam Burns, Jordan Spieth, last week’s 54-hole winner Wyndham Clark, Matt Fitzpatrick and Min Woo Lee.

Two top-5 players in the world, Viktor Hovland and Xander Schauffele, withdrew from the tournament on Monday.

Scheffler is the first Tour player this year hoping to make it a turkey, with Tom Kim set to pursue the same feat later this year at the Shriners Children’s Open.

Golf course

TPC Scottsdale | Par 71 | 7,261 yards

2023 WM Phoenix Open
Charley Hoffman plays his tee shot on the 16th hole during the final round of the 2023 WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. (Photo: Rob Schumacher/The Arizona Republic)

Course history

Betting preview

Golfers who have broken 60 in the history of pro golf

It’s one of the hardest things to achieve in the game.

The first one came in 1977.

It was another 14 years before someone did it again.

It was then eight years after that before it happened a third time.

Breaking 60 has always held mythical status in golf.

Al Geiberger (1977), Chip Beck (1991) and David Duval (1999) were the first three to pull it off.

Since 2010, there have been eight more PGA Tour golfers who shot a 59, including Jim Furyk, who also shot a record-setting 58 from in 2016. He remains the only golfer to shoot a 58 on Tour and he’s the only golfer to break 60 twice.

Bryson DeChambeau joined the 58 Club after his 12-under round in a LIV Golf event.

Scottie Scheffler is the latest to break 60 on the PGA Tour, shooting a 59 in the second round of the 2020 Northern Trust. It’s the 12th time that a Tour golfer broke 60.

On the LPGA, there has only been one 59. It came in 2001 and was accomplished by Annika Sorenstam.

Joaquinn Niemann’s 59 in the 2024 LIV opener made him the second on that circuit to do it.

And in 2024, a golfer on the Korn Ferry Tour became the first to shoot 57 in a PGA Tour-sanctioned event.

Here’s a closer look at the sub-60 rounds in pro golf.

Scottie Scheffler goes low, Ludvig Aberg making bombs among 5 things to know at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Catch up on the action here.

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – Ludvig Aberg’s putter was hot from the get-go on Friday at Pebble Beach Golf Links.

The 24-year-old Swede sank a 42-foot birdie putt at the first and rolled in a 36-foot eagle putt from off the green at the second and hardly slowed down – he drained a 28-footer at the fourth – en route to carding a bogey-free 7-under 65 in the second round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

“I don’t remember the last time I did that,” he said of draining two bombs to start a round. “So, obviously that’s a little bonus.”

Aberg improved to 11-under 133 and tied for the 36-hole lead with world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler (64) and first-round leader Thomas Detry, who shot 2-under 70 at Spyglass Hill Golf Course.

Pebble Pro-Am: Saturday tee times | Photos

Aberg, who had a four-putt from four feet a week ago at the Farmers Insurance Open and finished T-9, led the field in Strokes Gained: Putting on Friday, holing more than 120 feet of putts.

“I felt like over these last couple of weeks it’s been quite streaky,” he said of his putting. “It’s been a little bit a lot of good and a lot of bad. We just checked a little bit of alignment, a little bit of setup yesterday and try to keep it inside the frame.”

It paid quick dividends as he added a nine-foot uphill birdie at 11 and a tap-in two-putt birdie from long range at the par-5 14th. Aberg is making his debut in this event, but he played here twice in college for Texas Tech in the Carmel Cup.

“I never played well here actually,” he said with a smile. “I never did.”

Apparently, he’s a quick learner.

Here are four more things to know at the midway point of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.