Stewart Cink is always looking for an edge. It got him back to the Sentry Tournament of Champions.

Stewart Cink has always looked for an edge in his PGA Tour career. Statistics and a new caddie seem to be working in his favor.

There’s something to be said for seeing life through the eyes of your children. That will figure heavily into Stewart Cink’s livelihood this year as son Reagan Cink, a recent Georgia Tech graduate, continues to caddie for dad after their father-son partnership produced undeniable results last fall to the tune of a Safeway Open win and two other top-12 finishes.

That Cink, 47, is starting his year at Kapalua’s Plantation Course on Maui is a good indication of his resurgent PGA Tour career. He hasn’t played the winners-only event that traditionally starts the new year since 2010, when he appeared at Kapalua as the reigning British Open champion.

“It feels like a reward and you’re reminded of it constantly as soon as you look out there and see whales and look over to Molokai and it just feels a lot different,” Cink said of the setting.

Put another way, two renovations to the Plantation Course have taken place since Cink last competed here. But if it looks different to Cink, it looks brand new to his caddie. Reagan has walked many a Tour course, but “he’s never seen them from a strategy and playability type of a standpoint,” noted his dad.

Stewart Cink talks with his caddie and son Reagan on the 13th hole during the Safeway Open at Silverado Resort on September 12, 2020. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images)

Cink, a 24-year Tour veteran, had all but stopped playing practice rounds, but he’ll build them back in so that Reagan can get the lay of the land. He’ll build in additional rest, too, to offset more time on the course early in the week.

It speaks to Cink’s age and experience that he even has a son old enough to caddie for him on Tour. There aren’t many other men in player dining with whom he can share that experience, but there’s always been a comfort in being on the road with family.

Now that his children are grown and with his wife Lisa often traveling with him, it’s really only the family dogs who are left behind. Asked to name his best Christmas gift, Cink went straight to the Furbo, an automatic dog feeder outfitted with a camera. The machine catapults treats through the air, something the dogs caught on to quickly.

“When the dogs get close to it, they send your phone a notification and you can kind of see the video and you can talk to them,” he said. “So that’s been fun because missing the dogs, being away from home, that’s part of the tough part of traveling.”

Cink is looking around as much as he ever has in his career. When he started out as a pro, Cink said he’d zero in on Curtis Strange, Paul Azinger and Tom Lehman, sitting with them at lunch to try to figure out what made them established champions.

To start this week at Kapalua, he played a practice round with Sungjae Im, who, at 22, is almost exactly one year younger than Cink’s youngest son. Cink and Im actually live in the same neighborhood in Atlanta, Im having just bought a house there. Still, it’s the first time they’ve played together.

There’s not much insight Im can give a guy like Cink in terms of how you make this life-on-the-road thing work, as Cink noted, but there’s certainly something there when it comes to ball striking.

“It really is like he’s not a human being when he hits the ball, he’s just so consistent and his strike is so pure every time and he’s just, he’s a master at ball striking,” Cink said. “So, but now the tables are turned where I don’t look for older guys, I’m now kind of like looking at the younger players and I’m just constantly trying to learn something from either age group.”

Past the kind of old-fashioned fact-finding Cink employed at the beginning of his career, the Tour’s strokes-gained statistic also has helped a guy like Cink figure out how to remain competitive late into his career. For Cink, it has debunked a theory he’s often heard that all the best players are attacking every flag. It helps him see where he might be losing strokes to like players.

“There’s a lot of noise too,” he said, “but you find out what’s relevant to you and you can really make a big change in the way you play and your decision making and it can add up to a few shots lower every week and that can be a really big deal.”

The formula may have changed over the years, most recently with the addition of his son on the bag, but Cink’s current one seems to be working just fine.

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Golfweek’s Best Courses 2020: Hawaii

Kapalua in Maui is No. 1 on the list in Hawaii for Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play 2020.

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Ocean views, lava-lined fairways, palm trees – golf in Hawaii naturally has plenty going for it. But the best of the best public-access golf in the island paradise is even better these days after renovations and restorations to several top courses in recent years.

That starts at Kapalua’s Plantation Course, annual host site of the PGA Tour’s Sentry Tournament of Champions. The design team of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw oversaw extensive restoration work on the Plantation that wrapped up late in 2019, helping what already was No. 1 on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list in the Aloha State strengthen its grasp on the top spot.

Golfweek ranks courses by compiling the average ratings – on a points basis of 1 to 10 – of its more than 750 raters to create several industry-leading lists of courses. That includes the popular Best Courses You Can Play list for courses that allow non-member tee times. These generally are defined as courses accessible to resort guests or regular daily-fee players.

Kapalua’s Plantation Course is famous for providing sweeping views of the Pacific Ocean on television as the Tour kicks off its annual calendar each year. The course, which plays some 400 feet up and down the side of a mountain in Maui, opened in 1991, and regular wear and tear over the years led to the renovation that wrapped up 13 months ago. Now the course has been restored to its fast and firm conditions, perfect for golf in the island breezes with balls frequently rolling prodigious distances along sweeping fairways and into greens.

Aside from being the top public-access layout in Hawaii, Plantation ranks No. 44 among all tracks on Golfweek’s Best Modern Courses list for layouts built in or after 1960.

Hualalai Golf Club
Four Seasons Resort Hualālai in Hawaii (Courtesy of Four Seasons)

Four Seasons Resort Hualālai in Kailua-Kona, ranked No. 5 in Hawaii on that Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list, is another example of a recent renovation, having wrapped up work in 2020 on its Jack Nicklaus-designed layout. Set among black lava rock alongside the Pacific, the layout received a new coat of paspalum grass, bunkers were reshaped and greens were recontoured. The resort said it worked closely with Nicklaus to retain the integrity of the course that hosts the PGA Tour Champions’ Mitsubishi Electric Championship.

Four Season Resorts Manele course in Hawaii (Courtesy of Four Seasons)

Four Season Resort’s Manele Course in Lanai is No. 2 on Hawaii’s public-access list and is No. 51 on Golfweek’s Best Modern list for the entire U.S. Built by Nicklaus in 1991 on lava outcroppings, the course features three holes atop cliffs above the Pacific.

Mauna Kea Beach Hotel’s eponymous course at Kohala Coast is No. 3 on Hawaii’s public-access list. Built by Robert Trent Jones Sr. in 1964, the layout sits atop a black lava field and received a modernization by Rees Jones in 2008.

Princeville Makai Golf Club in Hawaii (Courtesy of Princeville Makai)

Princeville Makai in Kauai, Robert Trent Jones Jr.’s first-ever solo course, is No. 4 on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list. Opened in 1971 and renovated in 2009-’10, the layout features six ocean holes.

As might be expected, Hawaii also features stunning private golf courses. Nanea in Kona is No. 1 in Hawaii on Golfweek’s Best Private Courses list, and it is No. 17 on Golfweek’s Best Modern list for the whole U.S.

Kukio Golf and Beach Club in Kailua-Kona is No. 2 on Hawaii’s Private list, followed by No. 3 Kohanaiki in Kailua-Kona, No. 4 Hokulia in Kailua-Kona and No. 5 Kukuiula in Koloa.

Mauna Kea Beach Hotel’s course in Hawaii (Courtesy of Mauna Kea)

 

 

Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play in Hawaii

1. Kapalua (Plantation)

Maui (No. 44 m) 

2. Four Seasons Resort (Manele)

Lanai (No. 51 m)

3. Mauna Kea Beach Hotel

Kohala Coast (No. 194 m)

4. Princeville Makai

Kauai (m)

5. Four Seasons Resort Hualalai

Kailua-Kona (m)

6. Grand Hyatt Kauai Resort & Spa (Poipu Bay)

Kauai (m)

7. Wailea (Gold)

Maui (m)

8. Mauna Lani (North)

Kona (m)

9. Turtle Bay Resort (Arnold Palmer)

Oahu (m)

10. Wailea (Emerald)

Maui (m)

11. Kapolei GC

Kapolei (m)

12. Ocean Course at Hokuala

Kauai (m)

13. Wailua Municipal

Kauai (m)

14. Royal Ka’anapali

Lahaina (m)

15. *Mauna Lani (South)

Kona (m)

Golfweek’s Best Private Courses 2020 in Hawaii

1. Nanea

Kona (No. 17 m)

2. Kukio Golf & Beach Club

Kailua-Kona (m)

3. *Kohanaiki

Kailua-Kona (m)

4. Hokulia

Kailua-Kona (m)

5. Kukuiula

Koloa (m)

*New to the lists in 2020

(m): modern; (c): classic

Golfweek’s Best 2020

How we rate them

The members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on our 10 criteria. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings on each course are averaged together to produce a final rating for each course. Then each course is ranked against other courses in its state, or nationally, to produce the final rankings.

Xander Schauffele at Sentry: ‘I should’ve won the tournament’

A clearly disappointed Xander Schauffele spoke to Golf Channel minutes after being eliminated on the first playoff hole.

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A clearly disappointed Xander Schauffele, minutes after being eliminated on the first playoff hole at the Sentry Tournament of Champions, said: “I should’ve won the tournament” during a post-round interview on Golf Channel.

Schauffele, the tournament’s defending champion, three-putted the 18th hole in regulation and then three-putted it again on the first playoff hole.

Schauffele took a one-shot lead into the final round but ended up in a three-way playoff with Patrick Reed and Justin Thomas.

Schauffele has four PGA Tour wins, and they all were in come-from-behind fashion, including the 2019 Sentry, where he shot a final-round 62 to storm from five shots back to claim the title.

Justin Thomas, who went on to win on the third playoff hole, also felt like he was supposed to come out on top, saying: “For some reason, I was supposed to win this week.”

Sentry TOC: ScoresPhotos | Money | Winner’s bag

“JT was right there, but with the circumstances given I should have closed it out but I didn’t,” Schauffele said.

“I kind of did everything I was supposed to until the last moment, which sucks but it’s another learning experience and I guess I’ll have to work on some wind putting.”

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Justin Thomas closes out Sentry Tournament of Champions victory on third extra hole

Justin Thomas prevailed in a playoff at the Sentry Tournament of Champions on Sunday after making three additional trips down the par-5 18th

Justin Thomas prevailed in a playoff at the Sentry Tournament of Champions on Sunday after making three additional trips down the par-5 18th at Kapalua’s Plantation Course. Thomas, who won this tournament in 2017, effectively added more than an hour to his victory march after spending most of Sunday afternoon with the lead.

Thomas finally holed a 3-footer for birdie in approaching darkness, edging Patrick Reed, also a past champion here, for the title. Defending champion Xander Schauffele, who had the 54-hole lead, dropped out after a par on the first playoff hole.

Schauffele took a one-shot lead into the final round but Thomas, who played alongside him in the final group, had the lead for most of the day. Reed had been finished with his round, a 7-under 66, for 45 minutes before Schauffele and Thomas stumbled through the closing hole in regulation.

In fact, after scrambling to a third-round 74, Reed entered the final day four back and four groups ahead of the leaders. He was a side story for much of the day before Thomas and Schauffele came back to meet him at 14 under.

Thomas, who won this event in 2017, caught fire mid-round on Sunday, making six birdies in an eight-hole stretch including four consecutive from Nos. 8-11 at Kapalua’s Plantation Course.

He and Schauffele had never played in the same group on the weekend of a PGA Tour event before Sunday. Thomas’s birdie run, coupled with Schauffele’s ability to keep himself in contention through a series of clutch putts, provided entertaining theater. Reed added highlights throughout the day, to the tune of seven birdies – including one at 18 that secured his spot in the playoff.

Even though Thomas seemed to lose a bit of steam with a bogey on No. 16 – where he left his par putt one rotation short – he still had a one-shot advantage on Schauffele and Reed when he teed off on the par-5 18th. There, however, he hit his approach there in a penalty area, took a drop and two-putted for bogey to drop to 14 under. Ultimately, he was able to redeem himself.

It’s Thomas’ 12th career PGA Tour title and his third win in his last seven starts.

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Sentry Tournament of Champions: Final round tee times, TV information

Here are the tee times and viewing information for the final round of the Sentry Tournament of Champions from Kapalua in Hawaii.

The PGA Tour is back as the new year kicks off in Hawaii. Thirty-four winners from the 2019 season assembled this week at the Plantation Course at Kapalua.

Defending champion Xander Schauffele will enter the final round with a one-shot lead as he tries to become the first repeat winner in this event since Geoff Ogilvy did it in 2010.

Below are tee times for the final round of the 2020 Sentry Tournament of Champions.

Sentry TOC: Scores | Podcast | Photos | Updates

All times are listed in Eastern Standard Time.

Final round

1st Tee

Tee time Players
2:40 p.m. Kevin Na, Martin Trainer
2:50 p.m. Dylan Frittelli, J.B. Holmes
3 p.m. Adam Long, Keith Mitchell
3:10 p.m. Brendon Todd, Graeme McDowell
3:20 p.m. Ryan Palmer, Sebastian Munoz
3:30 p.m. Sung Kang, Chez Reavie
3:40 p.m. Corey Conners, Max Homa
3:50 p.m. Paul Casey, Cameron Champ
4 p.m. Tyler Duncan, Jim Herman
4:10 p.m. Dustin Johnson, Lanto Griffin
4:20 p.m. Patrick Cantlay, Rickie Fowler
4:30 p.m. Matt Kuchar, Nate Lashley
4:40 p.m. Joaquin Niemann, Patrick Reed
4:50 p.m. J.T. Poston, Matthew Wolff
5 p.m. Jon Rahm, Collin Morikawa
5:10 p.m. Gary Woodland, Kevin Kisner
5:20 p.m. Xander Schauffele, Justin Thomas

TV information

All information is in Eastern Standard Time

Sunday

Golf Channel: 6-10 p.m. (live)
Replay on Golf Channel: 11 p.m.-3 a.m.

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Xander Schauffele aiming to convert 54-hole lead to Sentry TOC title defense

Xander Schauffele will take a slim advantage into Sunday’s final round at Kapalua’s Plantation Course.

The top of the Sentry Tournament of Champions leaderboard saw an invasion of the twentysomethings on Saturday. Xander Schauffele will take a slim advantage into Sunday’s final round at Kapalua’s Plantation Course.

Schauffele started the day with the lead but lost it to Justin Thomas for much of the afternoon. When Thomas made a late bogey at No. 17, Schauffele took advantage. He tapped in for par on No. 18 to finish off a 71, and at 11 under, leads Thomas by one shot.

The two men, both 26 years old, account for two of the past three titles in this event, with Schauffele looking for the title defense at Kapalua.

Sentry TOC: Scores | Podcast | Photos

Schauffele and Thomas posted the only two under-par rounds from the last three groups on the course. Some of the day’s best golf came from players in the groups ahead.

Kevin Kisner bogeyed his second hole of the day but birdied four of his final six on the front nine. Two more birdies on the back made up a third-round 68, which was as good as anyone in the 34-man field on Saturday and bumped him 15 spots up the leaderboard into a large tied for fourth at 7 under.

Gary Woodland, who gained entry to the field as the 2019 U.S. Open champion, had six birdies in what would have been a flawless day but for a double-bogey on No. 7. His 69 moved him to 8 under, where he sits solo third and only three shots off the lead.

Interestingly, Woodland finds himself in exactly the opposite position he was in a year ago. Entering the final round, Schauffele trailed Woodland by five shots. Schauffele won with a blazing final-round 62.

“I always like to be in the lead, I’d like to be in his spot right now,” Woodland told Golf Channel after the round. “Obviously last year I played great all week and ran into a buzz saw. For me, personally, I’m happy with where my game is, I’m playing great, the golf course obviously sets up pretty good for me. We’re supposed to get some tough conditions tomorrow, which I’m in favor of.”

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Patrick Cantlay involved in classic open-mic fail at Sentry Tournament of Champions

A Golf Channel microphone on the 17th tee caught Patrick Cantlay dropping an F-bomb and saying, “Two more holes and we can get a Mai Tai.”

Patrick Cantlay can expect to receive a stern letter from PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan, and it won’t have anything to do with his dreadful pace of play. This one will be for “conduct unbecoming a professional.”

Cantlay, 27, was guilty of what will go down as one of the great open microphone fails. It happened coming out of a commercial break and while it’s unclear exactly what Cantlay was referring to, he is telling a story to fellow competitor Jon Rahm and caddie Adam Hayes on the 17th tee at Kapalua’s Plantation Course.

It had something to do with the wildly erratic weather conditions at Kapalua that made the Plantation Course a handful: “I’ve been waiting for this weather for 40 years. These pampered f$#%s need to play,” Cantlay can be heard saying clear as day.

Sentry TOC: Scores | Podcast | Photos | Updates | Tee Times 

Cantlay was prepping to tee off and speaking aloud when he dropped his ‘F-bomb,’ and then in what will be a new one-liner repeated on golf courses for years to come, he said to his caddie, “Two more holes and we can get a Mai Tai.”

“I’ll get my Mai Tai; you can get your water,” his caddie replied.

“Don’t spoil it for me,” Cantlay said.

“Gosh,” Golf Channel commentator Paul Azinger said, “He’s not really staying in the moment. He’s already in the 19th hole in his head.”

“Talk about unfiltered,” host Dan Hicks added. “They do have to realize that there are live mics around, especially when you’re turning into a star player like Cantlay is.”

Cantlay shot 2-under 71 and is tied for fifth, three strokes behind leader Xander Schauffele.

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Sentry Tournament of Champions: Round 3 tee times, TV information

Here are the Round 3 tee times for the PGA Tour’s Sentry Tournament of Champions at the Plantation Course at Kapalua.

The PGA Tour is back as the new year kicks off in Hawaii. Thirty-four winners from the 2019 season assemble this week at the Plantation Course at Kapalua.

Patrick Reed used a stellar short game and deadly putter to card eight birdies and one bogey en route to a 7-under 66 at Kapalua’s Plantation Course. He is one shot behind leader Xander Schauffele, the defending champion, who is bogey-free through 36 holes.

Below are tee times for the third round of the 2020 Sentry Tournament of Champions.

Sentry TOC: Scores | Podcast | Photos | Updates

All times are listed in Eastern Standard Time.

Round 3

1st Tee

Tee time Players
1 p.m. Kevin Na, Martin Trainer
1:10 p.m. J.B. Holmes, Dylan Fritelli
1:20 p.m. Tyler Duncan, Keith Mitchell
1:30 p.m. Cameron Champ, Sebastian Munoz
1:40 p.m. Jim Herman, Max Homa
1:50 p.m. Brendon Todd, Paul Casey
2 p.m. Adam Long, Sung Kang
2:10 p.m. Kevin Kisner, Chez Reavie
2:20 p.m. Dustin Johnson, Ryan Palmer
2:30 p.m. Graeme McDowell, Corey Conners
2:40 p.m. Jon Rahm, Matt Kuchar
2:50 p.m. Collin Morikawa, Lanto Griffin
3 p.m. Gary Woodland, Nate Lashley
3:10 p.m. J.T. Poston, Matthew Wolff
3:20 p.m. Patrick Cantlay, Justin Thomas
3:30 p.m. Joaquin Niemann, Rickie Fowler
3:40 p.m. Xander Schauffele, Patrick Reed

TV information

All information is in Eastern Standard Time

Saturday

NBC: 4-6 p.m. (live)

Golf Channel: 6-8 p.m. (live)
Replay on Golf Channel: 8 p.m.-1 a.m.

Sunday

Golf Channel: 6-10 p.m. (live)
Replay on Golf Channel: 11 p.m.-3 a.m.

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Patrick Reed rides hot putter to second-round 66 at Sentry Tournament of Champions

Neither rain, wind nor the need for a rule’s official could faze Patrick Reed during the second round in Kapalua.

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Neither rain, nor wind, nor the need for a rule’s official could faze Patrick Reed during the second round of the Sentry Tournament Championship.

Reed used a stellar short game and deadly putter to card eight birdies and one bogey en route to a 7-under 66 at Kapalua’s Plantation Course. He trails defending champion Xander Schauffele, who made birdie at the last for 68 and a 36-hole total of 9-under 137, by one stroke.

Conditions shifted from placid sunshine in Round One to intermittent rain and pesky winds gusting up to 35 mph. It didn’t bother everyone. Rickie Fowler said he loves playing in the wind, noting “I feel like this golf course allows you to use your imagination.”

It sure fit the eye of Reed, who learned to cope with gusty winds growing up in Texas.

“The biggest thing was I had control of the golf ball,” he told Golf Channel after the round.

Sentry TOC: Scores | Podcast | Photos | Updates

Reed rallied after a rocky start that included a triple bogey on seven on Thursday, but Reed realized it was just one bad iron swing and a “fluke bunker shot” that he sculled across the green.

“I thought it was stuff I could easily fix and manage and not do again,” he said. “I’ve come a long way on learning what to do in the middle of the rounds.”

Reed played his next 21 holes in 9 under to grab a share of the lead. To do so, he abandoned his patented draw in favor of a fade mid-round and his putter took care of the rest.

“In the past I wouldn’t have done that. I’d have continued to try to hit the draw and it would’ve kept going right and I’d have kept on struggling, but I was able to flip it around there and let the putter do the work,” said Reed, who posted 72 on Thursday.

Patrick Reed lines up a putt on the 18th green during the second round of the Sentry Tournament of Champions. (Cliff Hawkins/Getty Images)

His putter masked some of his ball-striking woes. Reed has holed 278 feet, 4 inches of putts, his second-best total through 36 holes. That tally includes a 41-foot birdie at four to get the party started on Friday. Reed nearly chipped in at the fifth for eagle, then stuck his tee shot at the 184-yard par-3 eighth to 7 feet and rolled in the putt to go out in 32.

As the weather did a rinse-and-repeat cycle from drizzle to sunshine to a full-on downpour, Reed kept charging, canning a 14-foot birdie putt at 10 and lifting a short iron from 146 yards over the lip of a fairway bunker to 12 feet and running in that putt too. At 14, Reed lobbed his second shot from 45 yards over a bunker to the back fringe and used the backstop to draw his ball within 4 feet from the hole. Reed’s birdie gave him sole possession of the lead.

But one hole later, Reed ran into trouble and it required a call to a PGA Tour rule’s official. Reed flew his second shot at the par 5 into the penalty area and it took a search party to find it in the tall grass. A volunteer found the ball just before the allotted 3 minutes elapsed, but Reed noticed that in doing so his tball had moved.

“He went to separate the grass to look at the golf ball and then the golf ball moved and sank to the very bottom,” Reed explained to Golf Channel’s Todd Lewis.

Reed was the subject of a rules infraction at the Hero World Challenge last month when video replay revealed that his ball moved in a waste area and he was penalized two strokes.

In this particular circumstance, Reed was allowed to move the ball back to its original position without being penalized because an outside agency – the volunteer – had caused it to move.

“It’s pretty important for Patrick Reed to get it right at this point in his career and he’s going to have to get it right for a long time to come,” Golf Channel commentator Paul Azinger said, adding, “We’re going to watch him like a hawk with the cameras.”

So far, Reed is getting it right with his putter. He’s made 14 birdies through two rounds and one-putted 22 of 36 holes. He capped his birdie binge on Friday with a bounce-back birdie at 17, rattling in a 28-foot birdie at 17 to regain the lead.

[opinary poll=”which-golfer-had-the-more-memorable-2019″ customer=”golfweek”]

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Sentry Tournament of Champions: Round 2 tee times, TV information

Here are the Round 2 tee times for the PGA Tour’s Sentry Tournament of Champions at the Plantation Course at Kapalua.

The PGA Tour is back as the new year kicks off in Hawaii. Thirty-four winners from the 2019 season assembled this week at the Plantation Course at Kapalua.

Joaquin Niemann fired a bogey-free 7-under 66 to grab a one-stroke lead over Justin Thomas after the first round in Maui.

Below are tee times for the second round of the Sentry Tournament of Champions.

All times are listed in Eastern Standard Time.

Round 2

1st Tee

Tee time Players
2:50 PM Keith Mitchell, J.B. Holmes
3:00 PM Max Homa, Kevin Na
3:10 PM Paul Casey, Chez Reavie
3:20 PM Adam Long, Graeme McDowell
3:30 PM Gary Woodland, Martin Trainer
3:40 PM Cameron Champ, Corey Conners
3:50 PM Patrick Reed, Jim Herman
4:00 PM Dustin Johnson, Kevin Kisner
4:10 PM Dylan Fritelli, Sung Kang
4:20 PM Ryan Palmer, Sebastian Munoz
4:30 PM Nate Lashley, Collin Morikawa
4:40 PM Brendon Todd, Lanto Griffin
4:50 PM Xander Schauffele, J.T. Poston
5:00 PM Patrick Cantlay, Jon Rahm
5:10 PM Tyler Duncan, Matthew Wolff
5:20 PM Matt Kuchar, Rickie Fowler
5:30 PM Joaquin Niemann, Justin Thomas

Viewing information

All information is in Eastern Standard Time

Friday

Golf Channel: 6-10 p.m. (live)
Replay on Golf Channel: 11 p.m.-3 a.m.

Saturday

NBC: 4-6 p.m. (live)

Golf Channel: 6-8 p.m. (live)
Replay on Golf Channel: 8 p.m.-1 a.m.

Sunday

Golf Channel: 6-10 p.m. (live)
Replay on Golf Channel: 11 p.m.-3 a.m.

[opinary poll=”which-golfer-had-the-more-memorable-2019″ customer=”golfweek”]