What’s the secret to La Quinta Country Club’s pristine greens once compared to Augusta National’s?

What’s the secret to La Quinta Country Club’s pristine greens?

LA QUINTA, Calif. — Long lauded for sporting some of the best playing conditions on the PGA Tour, historic La Quinta Country Club doesn’t rest on its roll.

With PGA Tour pros Jon Rahm, Patrick Cantlay, Brendan Steele and this year’s Ryder Cup captain Zach Johnson offering annual superlatives on the quality and consistency of the club’s putting surfaces, the turf team at La Quinta begins its tourney and peak-season member prep long before the first American Express ball is ever struck.

“For me, getting the greens ready to be seeded in the first week of October is the most important thing,” said Tim Putnam, director of agronomy at La Quinta Country Club. “Everything we do to create that surface that we seed into, that’s what I spend the most time worrying about and ensuring we get exactly right.”

This year’s 64th version of The American Express is far from Putnam’s first rodeo. A desert-area superintendent since the late 1990s, he began his tenure as La Quinta Country Club’s agronomy frontman in 2002. With the club preparing to co-host the PGA Tour’s annual stop in the desert for a 51st time, Putnam’s “secret sauce” for the condition of his greens once earned quality comparisons to the game’s most extolled putting surfaces at Augusta National Golf Club from Rahm during his 2018 victory in the desert.

The Lawrence Hughes design at La Quinta that opened in 1959 is considered “classic” beyond its time-tested, six-plus decades of play. With a dearth of distance by today’s tour standards (7,060 yards), combined with skinny corridors and an onus on iron accuracy, the scoring lens for professionals is most often focused on the flatstick.

“They may be some of the best surfaces I’ve ever seen,” said Scottie Scheffler, who is ranked second in the world golf ranking. “They’re really, really good. That’s consistent. It’s been like that — I think this is my fourth time here at this event — and they have been like that every time I’ve been over there.

“It’s pretty amazing what that superintendent and the club can do with those greens,” Scheffler said. “If you’re rolling it good — there’s a little bit of a pull there that can be tough to read at times — but once you start making a few putts that hole can look really big because those greens are nice.”

Manning a maintenance crew of two dozen employees across a relatively small turf footprint of 113 acres, Putnam’s purview is set upon every blade and each grain.

The La Quinta Country Club greens roll with Tifdwarf hybrid bermudagrass and are overseeded in October with a combination of poa trivialis and perennial ryegrass.

“The ryegrass really helps early on,” says Putnam, “and helps the Poa get established, provides a bit of shade for the Poa and helps with traffic stress.”

Per his autumn focus, Putnam’s overseed preparation includes growth regulators and verticutters working at very shallow heights.

“The key to me is getting rid of enough Bermuda tissue, so you’re creating a good seed bed,” Putnam said. “And using the verticutters to help lift up the Bermuda and get it to peel off better. And then I like to use something I stumbled upon a long time ago, a brush, called a Grain Master, and it’s got really stiff poly-bristles on it. When I drag that around, it stands the Bermuda up and also works great in conjunction with using Scythe on the putting surfaces to kind off burn off the green tissue of the Bermuda.”

As the course reopens from overseed and the calendar enters the holiday season, Putnam plans ahead.

“In December, I’ll have them running at a 10 ½ or 11 (on the Stimpmeter) for member play, and then heading into the AMEX, I really watch the weather,” the director of agronomy said. “If it’s going to be cool like it is now, I’ve got to be sure that they’re not too fast going into the tournament, because they won’t grow that much. And over the course of rolling the greens for five or six straight days (during the tournament week), they can get too fast.”

Around the start of the calendar year and the impending return of The American Express, Putnam and staff work a delicate dance of manning the speed of the greens. For the tournament, La Quinta’s greens actually run a shade slower than the 11 ½ (or even 12) Putnam measures on the Stimpmeter for member play the rest of the season.

Considering that, for uniform layout, pin placements remain the same across all three tournament courses for the first three rounds until every golfer has played each of the holes, Putnam needs to be additionally mindful of not making the setup too challenging for the event’s amateur players and keeping pace-of-play intact.

For American Express week, Putnam works in tandem with the PGA Tour’s agronomy staff to ensure his putting surfaces roll at similar speeds as the other two tournament courses at PGA West — the Nicklaus Tournament and Pete Dye Stadium courses.

“The tour wants the three courses to be as comparable as possible to each other, and speeds of about 11 are where they’ve settled in,” Putnam said. “Maybe a little closer to 10 ½ at PGA West, with those greens having a few bigger slopes.”

In addition to the speed of the putting greens, the PGA Tour staff also pays close attention to mower heights for continuity and quality.

“We were once mowing greens at about 100 or 115-thousandths of an inch – which was the height we needed to not exceed that 10 ½ speed – but if you had a putt that was rolling across multiple mow lines, there was a tiny bit of grain-effect with ball movement,” Putnam said. “So I showed that to the PGA Tour agronomist, and told him we really needed to be at 105-thousandths of an inch to avoid that phenomenon.”

January has been cooler than average in the Coachella Valley with only two daytime high temperatures warmer than 70 degrees this month. Because of the cooler conditions, Putnam looks to return to the 110 mow height along with adding another dollop of that secret sauce.

“Poa trivialis is interesting in that it really grows upright, whereas most grasses grow a bit more laterally,” he said. “With Poa triv (ialis), you’ll actually get grain from the mower. As the mower goes over, it lays it in one direction and then as the mower comes back, it lays it in the other direction. We came up with a process of using these little brushes on the mowers, and now we’ll actually mow against the grain, or, against the previous line. We’re trying to make the grass stand up straight everywhere.”

During the tournament, Putnam and his staff will stimp the greens both morning and afternoon, to ensure they’re not getting too fast.

“But I do want to be able to roll the greens every day,” he said, “because with the pins staying in the same place, there’s a lot of foot-printing around the hole.”

While Putnam appreciates the yearly accolades from the PGA professionals, he’s fast to acknowledge that the pristine conditions aren’t unique to just La Quinta Country Club but to a number of the desert’s 120 courses.

“There are a half-dozen courses out here in the valley whose greens are as good as mine,” he said. “And, for an entire area, the courses out here in our desert are in as good or better shape than anywhere in the country.”

Of course, Putnam is equally aware that the eyes of the nation are annually affixed on his terrain, expecting to view the perfect roll.

“When you see a close-up of a putt on TV, and the ball starts to slow down, I want to see it tracking on that same arc,” Putnam said. “That’s when I know I’ve got these greens going really good.”

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Check the yardage book: PGA West’s Pete Dye Stadium Course for the PGA Tour’s 2023 The American Express

StrackaLine offers hole-by-hole maps for the PGA Tour’s 2023 The American Express in California.

PGA West’s Pete Dye Stadium Course in La Quinta, California – one of three courses used for the PGA Tour’s 2023 The American Express – opened in 1986 with a design by the legendary architect whose name appears in the layout’s title.

The 7,187-yard, par-72 Stadium Course is the main track for this week’s event, hosting each player for one of the first three rounds as well as Sunday’s final round. The other two courses used in the first three rounds are La Quinta Country Club (7,060 yards, par 72) and PGA West’s Nicklaus Tournament Course (7,147 yards, par 72). All the players have one round on each course before the cut is made for Sunday’s final round.

The Stadium Course ranks No. 11 in California on Golfweek’s Best list of top public-access courses, and the Nicklaus Tournament Course is No. 23 in the state on that list.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the pros face this week on the Stadium Course. Check out the maps of each hole below.

2023 American Express picks: Rickie Fowler (90/1), Jason Day (70/1) among long shots you should target at PGA West

Fowler already has T-2 and T-6 finishes this season. Can he grab his first Tour win since 2019 this week?

A loaded field consisting of 10 of the world’s top 19 players has made its way to the California desert for the American Express at PGA West.

World No. 2 Scottie Scheffler and No. 4 Jon Rahm are the two betting favorites while Patrick Cantlay, Xander Schauffele and Will Zalatoris are the other top 10 players set to tee it up Thursday.

With a three-course rotation used over the first three rounds, the cut will be made after 54 holes. Pete Dye’s Stadium Course will host the final round Sunday.

We already covered some of the best bets for the week, highlighted by Zalatoris and Tony Finau, but now it’s time to take a look at some long shots.

2023 American Express odds: Will Zalatoris, Tony Finau among best bets at PGA West

Both Zalatoris and Finau are coming off top 11 performances at the Sentry TOC.

After a few weeks in paradise, the PGA Tour heads to the desert of California for the American Express. Lucky for us, most of the top players in the world have made the trip.

Ten of the top 19 in the Official World Golf Ranking will be battling in the event, including No. 2 Scottie Scheffler and No. 4 Jon Rahm. Patrick Cantlay, Xander Schauffele and Will Zalatoris round out the top 10 players in the field. Rahm, who recently won the Sentry Tournament of Champions in Maui, captured the title at this event in 2018.

Players will rotate between three golf courses during the first three rounds before the final round is played at the Pete Dye Stadium Course. There will be a 54-hole cut.

AmEx: 10 players to watch

Golf courses

The American Express 2022
The 16th hole during the first round of The American Express on the Stadium course at PGA West on January 20, 2022, in La Quinta, California. (Photo: Steph Chambers/Getty Images)

PGA West (Stadium Course) | 7,187 yards | Par 72
PGA West (Nicklaus Tournament Course) | 7,147 yards | Par 72
La Quinta Country Club | 7,060 yards | Par 72

Data Golf Information

Course Fit (compares golf courses based on the degree to which different golfer attributes — such as driving distance — to predict who performs well at each course – DataGolf): 1. The Reinassance Club, 2. Caves Valley Golf Club, 3. TPC Lousiana

Trending (the players’ last three starts): 1. Jon Rahm (1, T-8, 1), 2. Tony Finau (1, 7, T-7), 3. Scottie Scheffler (T-9, 2, T-7)

Percent chance to win (based on course history, fit, trending, etc.): 1. Jon Rahm (10.8 percent), 2. Scottie Scheffler (9.7 percent), 3. Patrick Cantlay (6.5 percent)

Golfweek’s weekly podcast

Listen to Riley Hamel and Andy Nesbitt on this week’s episode of Twilight 9! The boys discuss Si Woo Kim’s win at the Sony Open, preview the American Express and make a few picks for the week. Plus, Justin Thomas stops by for a quick chat!

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Betting preview

World No. 1 Jon Rahm shoots stress-free opening-round 66 at American Express

Jon Rahm clearly has an affinity for La Quinta Country Club.

LA QUINTA, Calif. — The last time the world’s No. 1 golfer Jon Rahm teed it up, he was shooting 33 under two weeks ago in Hawaii. The last time Rahm played La Quinta Country Club, he shot a 10-under 62.

That’s why his perfectly acceptable 6-under 66 Thursday in the first round of The American Express felt a little. … meh, even though it has him near the top of the leaderboard.

It was a bogey-free round where he hit 15 of 18 greens in regulation. He drove it in the fairway, was never really in trouble. He just made it look easy and stress-free out there, and yet he felt like he left too many strokes on the course.

“The score and the weather,” said Rahm when asked what he liked about his round. “It’s a golf course where if you play well you give yourself a lot of birdie chances, and that’s what happened today. My swing didn’t feel 100 percent, and I adjusted and played some good golf. Hopefully, I can tidy up a couple putts. The first few holes I had the worst putts.”

Rahm did start slow. He was a pedestrian 2 under through nine holes, missing makeable birdie putts on Nos. 1, 2, 3, 7 and 9. That left him frustrated, especially with how pristine the greens were at La Quinta Country Club, one of three courses used in the tournament.

AMERICAN EXPRESSLeaderboard | Photos | Yardage book | TV

“The ball rolls so perfect there (so) shouldn’t be any excuses, and if it doesn’t go in it should at least be closer than what I was doing today,” he said. “Once I adjusted to the speed, it became better, but yeah it can be frustrating. … You’re always thinking what could be, but then I ended up making a great par putt on 4 and a great par save on 12 so it evens out.”

After that frustrating front, Rahm got hot on the back nine. He birdied the 10th, and then reached the par-5 11th hole in two, two-putting for another birdie. His tee shot on the par-3 12th left him in the left greenside bunker. He had a subpar sand shot, but rolled in a 20-footer to save par, which drew his only fist-pump of the day. He then followed that up with a tap-in birdie on the 13th, and all of a sudden he went from 2 under to 5 under and shot up the leaderboard.

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Rahm added a 16-foot birdie putt on No. 16 for his sixth birdie of the day to go with no bogeys. He birdied all four par-5s in his round.

Rahm’s playing partner, Tony Finau, who is ranked No. 17 in the world, struggled. He finished at even-par, which is going to be hard to recover from. He was 3 under through six holes, but didn’t make enough putts and didn’t find enough good birdie chances on a course that gives them up freely. He bogeyed four of the next eight holes with only one birdie mixed in.

Conversely, Rahm was in control throughout the round. Even though he felt like he could’ve shot lower, like the 10 under he shot here in 2018 when he won the tournament, he knows his 6 under keeps him in the hunt. His round embodied the old golf adage that you can’t win a tournament on Thursday, but you can lose it.

“That year (2018) I got off to a flying start, I was 10 under and then 16 under through two days,” the 27-year-old Spaniard said. “But the greens were a little bit firm today. We had some gusty winds, the wind changed quite a bit today. You just didn’t see as many gimmes as you usually see around here.”

As Rahm moves to the Nicklaus Tournament Course on Friday and the Stadium Course on Saturday, he will look back wistfully on his day at La Quinta Country Club, which he clearly has an affinity for. He gushed about the club, which is being used for the 50th time in this tournament.

“It’s one of those that I’m always looking forward to playing. It’s a great golf course. It’s always in great shape and without a doubt, if I had to be a member of one of the courses in the rotation it would have to be this one,” he said. “I plea to be an honorary member. I think ‘Would they give it to me?’ It’s just a really enjoyable walk.”

The ball’s in your court La Quinta Country Club, if you’re looking for a new member.

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Birdie bonanza continues on PGA Tour, this time at American Express

“Welcome to the new normal,” said Patrick Cantlay, as the world’s best golfers go low once again.

LA QUINTA, Calif. – The birdie bonanza on the PGA Tour continues this week at the American Express.

First it was Cameron Smith lighting up Kapalua’s Plantation Course to the tune of a 72-hole Tour record 34-under 258 in Maui at the Sentry Tournament of Champions followed by Hideki Matsuyama shooting 63-63 last weekend to win the Sony Open in Hawaii. This week the Tour returns to the mainland, playing over three courses – PGA West’s Stadium and Nicklaus Course and  – and it’s another birdiefest.

“Welcome to the new normal,” said Patrick Cantlay, who started his first round at La Quinta by playing 7 under in his first seven holes before closing with five straight pars to shoot a 62 to tie for the lead. “You’ll have to get into the 20s (under par) to have a chance to win.”

On a typical “dome golf day” of blue skies and not a breath of wind, Northern Ireland’s Graeme McDowell made birdie on four of his first six holes en route to posting 6-under 66. McDowell made an 11th-hour decision to play this week, returning to the desert for the first time since 2004.

“I think my caddie and I are both looking at each other wondering why it’s taken us so long to get here,” he said. “Obviously the weather is perfect and these golf courses are so well presented and it’s the place to play early in the season because you feel like you get the conditions to go out there and make some birdies and see exactly where your game is.”

Making birdies in bunches is good for his confidence and the soul, McDowell said. World No. 1 Jon Rahm made sure he’ll be in the mix for claiming the trophy on Sunday by matching McDowell with 6-under 66 and raved about the golf course and its greens as smooth as billiard tables.

AMERICAN EXPRESS: Leaderboard | Photos | Yardage book | TV

“La Quinta Country Club it’s a great golf course, it’s always in pristine shape, one of the best we play all year shape-wise,” he said. “It’s a golf course where if you play well you can give yourself a lot of birdie chances and that’s what happened today.”

But Rahm conceded his score could’ve been even lower had he holed a few more putts, meaning he’ll have to do damage on the tougher courses over at PGA West, noting that the Pete Dye Stadium Course has the most bite.

“You feel like if you come out here, if you’re not shooting 6-, 7-under for the most part, you’re almost losing strokes,” Rahm said.

Indeed, players were going low with Korn Ferry Tour graduate Lee Hodges leading the way among the early finishers with a 10-under 62 at La Quinta and joined Rahm in singing his praises for the golf course.

“It’s one of my favorite golf courses I’ve ever played to be honest,” Hodges said. “I played it I guess three times now and it’s spectacular. It’s like hitting off of mats half the time.”

Hodges, 26, carded nine birdies and an eagle at the par-5 fifth en route to his lowest round of his career on Tour. After a missed cut last week, he said tried to enjoy the walk and that was the key to his success.

“I knew that my game was there to play really well, so just got to try to change a little bit of my attitude,” he said. “I think that was a big help.”

The always affable Harry Higgs was all smiles after his round, too, especially after using a 5-iron from 199 yards to ace the par-3 15th at La Quinta and shot 66.

But not everyone fared so well at La Quinta. Reigning PGA Championship winner Phil Mickelson, who serves as tournament host and is a former champion of the event too, made a nine on the par-4 eight hole and signed for 6-over 78.

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Check the yardage book: PGA West’s Pete Dye Stadium Course for The American Express

StrackaLine provides hole-by-hole maps of the layout that will host one early round plus the final round of the PGA Tour event in La Quinta.

PGA West’s Pete Dye Stadium Course, which opened in 1986 in La Quinta, California, is one of three courses used for this week’s The American Express on the PGA Tour.

Paired with amateurs in a pro-am format, the pros will play one round each Thursday-Saturday on the Dye Stadium Course (7,113 yards, par 72), La Quinta Country Club (7,060 yards, par 72) and PGA West’s Nicklaus Tournament Course (7,159 yards, par 72). Sunday’s final round will be on the Dye Stadium Course.

The Stadium Course ranks No. 11 in California on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access layouts, with the Nicklaus Tournament Course ranked No. 25 on that list.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the pros face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below.

As it celebrates 50 years on the PGA Tour, this course only trails a few for longevity (like Augusta National and Pebble Beach)

This gem may have evolved from one of the toughest golf courses in the tournament to one of the easiest on the PGA Tour.

Charlie Sifford made a lot of history on the PGA Tour, but Sifford also made at least a little history in the desert’s PGA Tour event, The American Express.

On Jan. 29, 1964, a new course debuted in the tournament, known then as the Palm Springs Golf Classic. La Quinta Country Club was considered to be perhaps the toughest of the courses in the five-day, four-course format of the tournament that was still a year away from adding Bob Hope’s name to the title.

La Quinta’s tight fairways and small greens might have been difficult, but it wasn’t too daunting that day for Sifford, who had joined the PGA Tour in 1961 as the first African-American golfer on Tour after the all-Caucasian clause for Tour membership had been discarded. In the first round of the 1964 tournament, Sifford fired a 6-under 66, setting the course competitive record and tying for first place after 18 holes with Tommy Jacobs, who had played at Bermuda Dunes Country Club that day.

Sifford eventually finished tied for seventh in the tournament – Jacobs won in a playoff at host Eldorado Country Club – but his place in tournament history was secure. As La Quinta Country Club celebrates its 50th playing in The American Express this year, it may have evolved from one of the toughest golf courses in the tournament to one of the easiest courses on Tour. But its history in the event is equally as secure.

More: American Express golf tournament 2022: Tickets, parking, schedule and more

More: Count on low scoring for American Express, but just how low will golfers go?

The 50th playing of The American Express at La Quinta sets a record for most years played in the event, snapping a tie with Bermuda Dunes Country Club. That record could have been set in 2021, but La Quinta was dropped from the field for a year as part of COVID-19 pandemic protocols.

La Quinta Country Club hasn’t hosted the tournament since 1983, and for a few years it was in a rotation with Tamarisk Country Club. But with 50 years in the tournament, La Quinta has been surpassed in years played on the PGA Tour by only a handful of courses with names like Augusta National and Pebble Beach.

“I always enjoy playing La Quinta Country Club because it’s such a great course and fun to play on this rotation,” tournament host and two-time American Express winner Phil Mickelson said last year over the prospect of the course not being in the 2021 event.

“We’re going to miss La Quinta Country Club,” Kevin Na said at the time. “It’s a great golf course, fantastic greens there every year. We’re going to miss that.”

Mickelson and Na show the reason La Quinta is still in the event for a 50th time. The PGA Tour players enjoy the old-school nature of the course, which opened in 1959. The layout, designed by Lawrence Hughes and capable of playing just over 7,000 yards for the tournament, has not changed much since its 1964 tournament debut, even with a renovation in the late 1990s.

The course still sports narrow fairways, reachable par 5s, demanding par 3s and homes and palm trees left and right of most holes in a throwback feel to golf’s burgeoning days in the desert in the 1950s. The course offers a pair of scorable par 5s on the fifth and sixth holes, but danger on demanding par 4s like the tricky 14th, one of the toughest holes in the tournament.

Being in the tournament is still important to the club and its membership, even if it takes the course away from members for a week to 10 days in January, said the course’s head pro.

“On the flip side of that, the new members who have joined since I have been here, say the last three to seven years, it’s important to them that that tournament was here,” said Chris Gilley. “You walk down our hallways, it is our club, what was the Bob Hope and is now The America Express. It’s our history. It’s our tradition. It is part of what separates us from similar valley clubs.”

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Still part of the event

Still being in the tournament is equally as important, Gilley said. While other 1950s courses have left The American Express rotation, courses like Indian Wells, Tamarisk, Thunderbird and Eldorado country clubs, La Quinta had been part of the event for 11 consecutive years before stepping aside because of the pandemic last year.

“‘Still’ is a key word when we sell our club to our guests or perspective members. We are still host to The American Express, formerly the Bob Hope. That resonates with people as they walk through our doors,” Gilley said.

Tom Nieporte, center, won the Bob Hope Desert Classic
Tom Nieporte, center, won the Bob Hope Desert Classic at La Quinta Country Club in 1967. He received his trophy from President Dwight D. Eisenhower and tournament host Bob Hope.

While La Quinta has only hosted The American Express four times, meaning it was played during the four-day pro-am and then the pros-only Sunday round, the course has a history of eclectic winners.

In 1967, the first year the course hosted the tournament, a part-time touring pro and full-time club pro named Tom Nieporte edged Doug Sanders by a shot for the victory. In 1970, Bruce Devlin surged in the final round to beat Larry Ziegler by four shots. Rik Massengale set a tournament record of 23-under par in winning at La Quinta in 1977, and Keith Fergus edged Rex Caldwell in a playoff in 1983, the last year La Quinta hosted the event.

La Quinta’s other claim to tournament history came in 2017, when Adam Hadwin fired a 13-under 59 on the course in the third round, matching the low round in the tournament shot by David Duval in 1999 at the Palmer Course at PGA West. Hadwin went on to finish second in 2017 to Hudson Swafford.

Returning to La Quinta Country Club this week means The American Express is again paying honor to not just La Quinta but the courses that helped to make the desert famous. And La Quinta gets to show again it can stand up to the best players in the world.

Course leader

Courses played in The American Express tournament since 1960:

50: La Quinta Country Club
49: Bermuda Dunes Country Club
45: Indian Wells Country Club
24: Palmer Course, PGA West
19: Eldorado Country Club
18: Tamarisk Country Club
9: Stadium Course, PGA West
8: Nicklaus Tournament Course, PGA West
6: Nicklaus Private Course, PGA West
4: SilverRock Resort
3: Classic Club; Indian Ridge Country Club; Thunderbird Country Club

 

The American Express: Round 1 tee times, TV info

This PGA Tour stop will be played on 3 courses: La Quinta Country Club, Stadium Course at PGA West, Nicklaus Tournament Course at PGA West.

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The PGA Tour returns to the Coachella Valley. This time, there’s a new sponsor and name of the event that started as the Bob Hope Desert Classic

The 61st rendition of the golf tournament is called The American Express.

It starts on Thursday and will be played at three courses – La Quinta Country Club, the Stadium Course at PGA West and the Nicklaus Tournament Course at PGA West.

Defending champion Adam Long returns along with two-time American Express winner Phil Mickelson, the tournament’s host, and other top players like Rickie Fowler, Francesco Molinari, Tony Finau and Paul Casey.

MORE: Betting odds | Fantasy

Round 1

1st tee – Stadium Course

Time Players
11:30 a.m. Patrick Rodgers, Cameron Tringale, amateurs TBD
11:40 a.m. Jimmy Walker, Stewart Cink, amateurs TBD
11:50 a.m. Vince Covello, Ryan Brehm, amateurs TBD
Noon J.J. Spaun, Sam Ryder, amateurs TBD
12:10 p.m. Jason Dufner, Max Homa, amateurs TBD
12:20 p.m. Doc Redman, D.J. Trahan, amateurs TBD
12:30 p.m. Ricky Barnes, Cameron Percy, amateurs TBD
12:40 p.m. Ben Crane, Nick Watney, amateurs TBD
12:50 p.m. Kevin Kisner, Kevin Chappell, amateurs TBD
1 p.m. Scott Harrington, Henrik Norlander, amateurs TBD
1:10 p.m. Aaron Baddeley, James Hahn, amateurs TBD
1:20 p.m. Charles Howell III, Chez Reavie, amateurs TBD
1:30 p.m. Rafael Campos, Akshay Bhatia, amateurs TBD

Round 1

1st tee – La Quinta Country Club

Time Players
11:30 a.m. Adam Long, Paul Casey, amateurs TBD
11:40 a.m. Phil Mickelson, Tony Finau, amateurs TBD
11:50 a.m. Charley Hoffman, Kevin Streelman, amateurs TBD
Noon Bud Cauley, Beau Hossler, amateurs TBD
12:10 p.m. Rickie Fowler, Francesco Molinari, amateurs TBD
12:20 p.m. Maverick McNealy, Kramer Hickok, amateurs TBD
12:30 p.m. Mackenzie Hughes, Nick Taylor, amateurs TBD
12:40 p.m. Scott Piercy, Chesson Hadley, amateurs TBD
12:50 p.m. Steve Stricker, Brendan Steele, amateurs TBD
1 p.m. Wyndham Clark, Harold Varner III, amateurs TBD
1:10 p.m. Abraham Ancer, Sungjae Im, amateurs TBD
1:20 p.m. Aaron Wise, Matthew Wolff, amateurs TBD
1:30 p.m. Scottie Scheffler, Robby Shelton, amateurs TBD

Round 1

1st tee – Nicklaus Tournament Course

Time Players
11:30 a.m. Jhonattan Vegas, Byeong Hun An, amateurs TBD
11:40 a.m. Cameron Champ, Billy Horschel, amateurs TBD
11:50 a.m. Rob Oppenheim, Hank Lebioda, amateurs TBD
Noon Anirban Lahiri, Mark Hubbard, amateurs TBD
12:10 p.m. Sebastian Munoz, J.T. Poston, amateurs TBD
12:20 p.m. Michael Gellerman, Harry Higgs, amateurs TBD
12:30 p.m. Sepp Straka, Harris English, amateurs TBD
12:40 p.m. Scott Stallings, Lucas Bjerregaard, amateurs TBD
12:50 p.m. Kevin Na, Russell Knox, amateurs TBD
1 p.m. Luke List, Alex Noren, amateurs TBD
1:10 p.m. Lucas Glover, Vaughn Taylor, amateurs TBD
1:20 p.m. Brendon Todd, Zach Johnson, amateurs TBD
1:30 p.m. Cameron Davis, Doug Ghin, amateurs TBD

Round 1

10th tee – Stadium Course

Time Players
11:30 a.m. Fabian Gomez, Carlos Ortiz, amateurs TBD
11:40 a.m. Andrew Landry, Brice Garnett, amateurs TBD
11:50 a.m. Ben Taylor, Brian Smock, amateurs TBD
Noon Brian Gay, Hunter Mahan, amateurs TBD
12:10 p.m. Troy Merritt, Greg Chalmers, amateurs TBD
12:20 p.m. Tyler McCumber, Nelson Ledesma, amateurs TBD
12:30 p.m. Jason Kokrak, Brandon Hagy, amateurs TBD
12:40 p.m. Denny McCarthy, Tom Hoge, amateurs TBD
12:50 p.m. Ted Potter, Jr., Grayson Murray, amateurs TBD
1 p.m. Bronson Burgoon, Kyoung-Hoon Lee, amateurs TBD
1:10 p.m. Martin Laird, Sam Burns, amateurs TBD
1:20 p.m. Nate Lashley, Austin Cook, amateurs TBD
1:30 p.m. Matthew NeSmith, Chase Seiffer, amateurs TBD

Round 1

10th tee – La Quinta Country Club

Time Players
11:30 a.m. Scott Brown, Josh Teater, amateurs TBD
11:40 a.m. Patton Kizzire, Hudson Swafford, amateurs TBD
11:50 a.m. Joseph Bramlett, Kristoffer Ventura, amateurs TBD
Noon Mark Wilson, Michael Thompson, amateurs TBD
12:10 p.m. Daniel Berger, Brian Harman, amateurs TBD
12:20 p.m. Bo Hoag, Xinjun Zhang, amateurs TBD
12:30 p.m. Tim Wilkinson, David Hearn, amateurs TBD
12:40 p.m. Seung-Yul Noh, Zac Blair, amateurs TBD
12:50 p.m. Kyle Stanley, Andrew Putnam, amateurs TBD
1 p.m. Sam Saunders, Charlers Reiter, amateurs TBD
1:10 p.m. Bill Haas, Bo Van Pelt, amateurs TBD
1:20 p.m. Ryan Moore, Kevin Stadler, amateurs TBD
1:30 p.m. Wes Roach, Rhein Gibson, amateurs TBD

Round 1

10th tee – Nicklaus Tournament Course

Time Players
11:30 a.m. Matt Every, Talor Gooch, amateurs TBD
11:40 a.m. Tyler Duncan, Martin Trainer, amateurs TBD
11:50 a.m. Isaiah Salinda, Chris Baker, amateurs TBD
Noon Brian Stuard, Adam Schenk, amateurs TBD
12:10 p.m. Rory Sabbatini, Russell Henley, amateurs TBD
12:20 p.m. Mark Anderson, Vincent Whaley
12:30 p.m. Dominic Bozzelli, Ben Martin, amateurs TBD
12:40 p.m. John Senden, Peter Malnati, amateurs TBD
12:50 p.m. Robert Streb, Danny Lee, amateurs TBD
1 p.m. Richy Werenski, Roger Sloan, amateurs TBD
1:10 p.m. John Huh, Chris Stroud, amateurs TBD
1:20 p.m. Si Woo Kim, Ryan Armour, amateurs TBD
1:30 p.m. Sebastian Cappelen, Michael Gligic, amateurs TBD

TV, streaming, radio information

All times listed are Eastern Standard Time.

Thursday

Twitter: 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
SiriusXM: 1-7 p.m.
Golf Channel: 3-7 p.m.

Friday

Twitter: 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
SiriusXM: 1-7 p.m.
Golf Channel: 3-7 p.m.

Saturday

SiriusXM: 1-7 p.m.
Golf Channel: 3-7 p.m.

Sunday

SiriusXM: 2-7 p.m.
Golf Channel: 3-7 p.m.

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