Knapp time, class from Matt Wallace among things to know from third round of 2024 Mexico Open

Knapp set a nine-hole scoring record on Saturday.

Early on in his rookie season on the PGA Tour, Jake Knapp is quickly making a name for himself. He has a chance Sunday to make sure people don’t have an excuse to not know who he is.

Knapp had a historic start Saturday during the third round of the 2024 Mexico Open at Vidanta, making seven birdies on the front nine for a 7-under 28, the lowest nine-hole score in course history. He shot 63, tied for the lowest round of the week, on Moving Day and leads by four heading to Sunday at Vidanta Vallarta in search of his first PGA Tour win in only his ninth start.

“Struck it very similar to how I did the last couple days when I was able to get some more putts to fall,” Knapp said. “Would like to clean up a few of those bogeys on the back nine, but it was a great day.”

Knapp started with birdies on Nos. 1-2, and after a par at 3 made four straight from 4-7. Another par at 8, then Knapp added a seventh circle to the card on the ninth for a 7-under front nine.

The back nine had plenty more excitement, most of it thanks to some struggles around the greens. Knapp had three bogeys but offset that with four birdies, including on his final two holes. He sits at 19 under with 18 holes to play.

For the week, Knapp is first in Strokes Gained: Approach, gaining nearly nine shots on the field. He’s fourth Off the Tee. But around the green, he’s losing more than a stroke.

However, his power off the tee and accuracy from the fairway is making up for the couple of shortcomings around the putting surfaces. And he’s 18 holes away from a life-changing victory.

“Just a lot of the same,” Knapp said of his routine Saturday night. “Go back, shower, go to the gym tonight, do my preparation for tomorrow morning and get ready to go for tomorrow afternoon.”

Here are four more things to know about the third round of the Mexico Open at Vidanta.

David Skinns’ results in 2024 Mexico Open

Former Vol David Skinns’ results in the 2024 Mexico Open.

The Mexico Open is taking place Thursday-Sunday at Vidanta Vallarta.

Former Vol David Skinns (-1) is part of the field. He did not make the cut after two rounds.

There is a four-way tie for first place (-11) after the second-round. Two-under is the cut line entering Saturday’s third-round.

Skinns played for the Vols from 2001-05, appearing in 46 tournaments. He came to Tennessee from Lincoln, England.

The former Vol has appeared in 32 PGA TOUR events during his career. He has made 13-of-32 cuts on the PGA TOUR. Skinns has appeared in 151 events, including three wins, on the Korn Ferry Tour during his career.

Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

History in the making, international leaderboard highlight 2024 Mexico Open at Vidanta second round takeaways

A pair of Mexican players are excelling at their national open.

The last player from Mexico to win the Mexico Open? Alvaro Ortiz.

Where does Ortiz sit after the second round of the 2024 Mexico Open at Vidanta? Tied for first.

Ortiz, who won the Mexico Open in 2021 when it was a PGA Tour Latinoamerica event, shot 7-under 64, a career best, on Friday to move into a share of first at Vidanta Vallarta alongside Englishman Matt Wallace, Finland’s Sami Valimaki and American Jake Knapp. Ortiz is a member of the Korn Ferry Tour and is making his 10th PGA Tour start this week. It’s his fourth made cut, however, the 28-year-old who played collegiately at Arkansas would have a historic and breakthrough win if he were to claim the Mexico Open title for the second time in four years.

The tournament is the national open of Mexico, but it’s only the third year it has been a PGA Tour event. Like when Nick Taylor won the Canadian Open last summer, it just means more when a national is able to capture their home open. The same can be said for Ortiz if he were to capitalize this weekend. He would become only the second Mexican ever to win his national open twice, joining Ernesto Perez Acosta.

Mexico Open: Photos

“From tee to green it was as good as it could be,” Ortiz said. “I hit the ball very well and just felt very comfortable out there. It was very clean, very stress free and I was glad to be able to make that eagle on 6. I feel like I was losing a little bit of momentum leaving a couple putts go, but it was good to get that one back. Happy to be in the position you I’m in.”

Ortiz birdied every other hole on his first nine, the back nine at Vidanta Vallarta, going out in 5-under 31. Then on the back nine, he had a clean card with eight pars and an eagle coming on the par-5 sixth hole to sign for his 64.

As far as any added pressure this weekend?

“No, it’s more fun, it’s more fun,” he said. “I don’t get to do that often. As many people, the yelling, it’s fun. I don’t get that much in the States, but it’s pretty cool to see how many people are coming and hopefully it will be packed this weekend.”

Santiago De La Fuente of Mexico putts on the second green during the second round of the Mexico Open at Vidanta at Vidanta Vallarta on February 23, 2024 in Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)

He’s not the only Mexican having a strong week, either. Amateur Santiago De la Fuente, who won the Latin America Amateur Championship in January, sits at 6 under and T-9 heading to the weekend.

The duo has plenty of similarities. They’ve both won the LAAC, with Ortiz placing in the top five four times in five appearances at the event. Ortiz and his brother, Carlos of the LIV Golf League, are the last two Mexican players to tee it up in the Masters (Ortiz in 2019, Carlos in 2021) since Victor Regalado in 1979. De la Fuente will add his name to the list this April.

Here are four more things to know from the second round of the 2024 Mexico Open at Vidanta:

‘Part-time golfer, full-time father’: Tony Finau caddied for his kids hours after winning the Mexico Open

It’s impossible not to love Tony Finau and his family.

Tony Finau cleaned house in Mexico last week.

Not only did he win the Mexico Open at Vidanta for his sixth PGA Tour title, he took it to his kids on the par-3 course at Vidanta Vallarta throughout the week, too.

“It was a good all-around week in golf for me,” Finau said in his press conference Tuesday ahead of the 2023 Wells Fargo Championship.

Finau is one of the stars highlighting the field of the latest designated event, this one coming at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina. And although Finau hasn’t had much success in the tournament, he’s coming in having won four of his last 18 starts and playing the best golf of his career.

However, it’s a video captured Sunday night that drew attention from the golf community.

Finau was seen playing The Lakes Course, a par-3 layout with lights just down the road from Vidanta Vallarta, carrying golf bags for his sons, Jraice and Sage. This coming just hours after he won a PGA Tour event.

“I’m kind of a part-time golfer, full-time father, that’s kind of my thing,” Finau said. “My kids are only young once, and my boys are only young once. I want to make sure I’m there for them as much as possible. That’s also why I have them travel with me. It’s pretty dang cool that we’re able to share that special moment on the golf course having won the tournament, but then shooting straight over to the par 3 and then having that time with them was a lot of fun.”

Finau’s son Jraice is making a name for himself on the course, but Sage, his second-youngest child, just recently took a liking to golf.

Finau said he let Sage hit a putt during the Masters Par 3 Contest, and he made it. Ever since, Sage has been constantly badgering dad to go and play.

The family was out on the par-3 course nearly every night, and it just so happened that the video of Finau carrying his son’s clubs was caught Sunday.

“It was just cool to cap off an amazing week with my boys and be on the golf course,” Finau said. “I fell in love with the game of golf playing evening golf with my dad and my brother and it brings back memories that are just unforgettable. Hopefully my boys are enjoying it like I was when I was a kid, just being with my dad and my brother.

“It’s just special to be with them, no matter what. If I would have finished second, I would have been with them still. My boys were counting on me, and that’s something that I take pride in just as a father.”

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2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour. Just ask this week’s winner, Tony Finau.

The 33-year-old won the 2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta on Sunday for his sixth career PGA Tour victory and second of the season. Finau shot a 5-under 66 to claim the title at 24 under and the top prize of $1,386,000. Defending champion Jon Rahm finished runner-up, three shots back at 21 under and will take home $839,300. With that, Rahm set a record for most money won in a single season on the PGA Tour. Third-place finisher Brandon Wu, who finished T-2 with Finau last year, earned $531,300.

Check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned this week at the 2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta in Vallarta, Mexico.

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2023 Mexico Open prize money

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Tony Finau -24 $1,386,000
2 Jon Rahm -21 $839,300
3 Brandon Wu -19 $531,300
4 Akshay Bhatia -18 $377,300
T5 Emiliano Grillo -16 $284,900
T5 Eric Cole -16 $284,900
T5 Austin Smotherman -16 $284,900
T8 Cameron Champ -14 $232,925
T8 Ben Taylor -14 $232,925
T10 Patrick Rodgers -13 $179,025
T10 Alejandro Tosti -13 $179,025
T10 Harry Hall -13 $179,025
T10 Beau Hossler -13 $179,025
T10 Joseph Bramlett -13 $179,025
T15 Dylan Wu -12 $132,825
T15 Jimmy Walker -12 $132,825
T15 Carson Young -12 $132,825
T18 Greyson Sigg -11 $98,432
T18 Mark Hubbard -11 $98,432
T18 Adam Long -11 $98,432
T18 Stephan Jaeger -11 $98,432
T18 Vincent Norrman -11 $98,432
T18 Kevin Roy -11 $98,432
T24 Francesco Molinari -10 $62,755
T24 S.H. Kim -10 $62,755
T24 Wyndham Clark -10 $62,755
T24 Kevin Chappell -10 $62,755
T24 Andrew Putnam -10 $62,755
T24 Will Gordon -10 $62,755
T30 Trevor Werbylo -9 $50,435
T30 Taylor Pendrith -9 $50,435
T30 Michael Kim -9 $50,435
T33 Ryan Moore -8 $41,067
T33 Nicolai Hojgaard -8 $41,067
T33 Brice Garnett -8 $41,067
T33 Ryan Gerard -8 $41,067
T33 Byeong Hun An -8 $41,067
T33 Erik van Rooyen -8 $41,067
T39 Nate Lashley -7 $30,415
T39 Austin Cook -7 $30,415
T39 Geoff Ogilvy -7 $30,415
T39 Aaron Baddeley -7 $30,415
T39 Gary Woodland -7 $30,415
T39 Scott Piercy -7 $30,415
T39 Michael Gligic -7 $30,415
T46 Ben Martin -6 $22,818
T46 Seung-Yul Noh -6 $22,818
T46 Richy Werenski -6 $22,818
T49 James Hahn -5 $19,199
T49 Andrew Novak -5 $19,199
T49 Satoshi Kodaira -5 $19,199
T49 Chez Reavie -5 $19,199
T49 Zecheng Dou -5 $19,199
T49 Austin Eckroat -5 $19,199
T55 Sebastián Vazquez -4 $17,787
T55 Cody Gribble -4 $17,787
T55 Charley Hoffman -4 $17,787
T55 Jonathan Byrd -4 $17,787
T55 Carl Yuan -4 $17,787
T60 Derek Ernst -3 $16,940
T60 Raul Pereda -3 $16,940
T60 David Lipsky -3 $16,940
T60 Cameron Percy -3 $16,940
T60 Tano Goya -3 $16,940
T60 Maverick McNealy -3 $16,940
T66 Nico Echavarria -2 $16,247
T66 Derek Lamely -2 $16,247
T66 Lanto Griffin -2 $16,247
69 Augusto Nunez -1 $15,939
T70 Trevor Cone E $15,708
T70 Bill Haas E $15,708
72 Jonas Blixt 3 $15,477
73 Lee Hodges 4 $15,323

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Tony Finau tops world No. 1 Jon Rahm, wins Mexico Open at Vidanta

Finau now has six wins in his PGA Tour career and two already this season.

The story of how Tony Finau defied the odds to become a six-time PGA Tour winner could be golf’s version of the Hollywood blockbuster “The Blind Side,” in which Michael Oher turned a love of football into a college scholarship and eventually NFL success.

On Sunday, Finau carded a 5-under 66 at Vidanta Vallarta Golf Club near the Banderas Bay in Mexico’s Pacific to win the Mexico Open at Vidanta by three strokes over world No. 1 Jon Rahm.

“He’s the best and he’s on top of the world right now and I knew I was going to have my hands full with him all the way to the end,” Finau said. “It’s crazy how this game is, you never think you have a tournament won until it’s over.”

Finau, 33, was runner-up to Rahm at this event a year ago, but this time the results were reversed. Finau, who opened with rounds of 65-64-65, held a two-stroke lead heading into the final round.

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Rahm signed for a third-round bogey-free 10-under 61 — a tournament record — and was bidding for his fifth win of the season and his first title defense on the PGA Tour. But he couldn’t go low enough again, posting a 4-under 67 in the final round.

“It was a day where I didn’t do much wrong, but I didn’t do much right, either,” Rahm said.

The Spaniard did succeed in breaking the single-season record for prize money — $14,462,840 — before the calendar flipped to May.

Finau, who is of Tongan descent, is the third-oldest of eight children. It was his younger brother, Gipper, then 5, who became enthralled by seeing Tiger Woods win the 1997 Masters on TV. That motivated their mother, Ravena, to ask her husband to teach the boys the game. This despite the fact that Finau’s father, Gary, never had swung a golf club.

Lessons and buckets of balls were beyond the family’s means, so Gary, who worked in cargo at Delta Air Lines, checked out instructional books and videotapes at the library. “Golf My Way” by Jack Nicklaus became his bible, and he plastered frame-by-frame images of the Golden Bear’s swing to their garage walls. The brothers shared a discarded 6-iron. Sets of clubs were purchased at Salvation Army. The boys blasted balls off carpet into a mattress in the family garage in Utah. When the brothers became good enough to play a regulation course near their home, Gary picked them up after school and drove them to the football field first.

“We’d stop there so they could see all their friends practicing Pop Warner football,” Gary recalled. “There must have been 400-500 of them. I said, ‘Where is everybody?’ They’d say, ‘Right here.’ Then we’d drive up to the golf course. I’d say, ‘Who’s here?’ They’d say, ‘Nobody.’ I’d tell them, ‘Exactly. Your chance to make it in golf is way better, boys. There’s no competition here. So let’s practice.’ ”

That they did and with the guidance of a loving and dedicated father, Finau became one of the world’s best golfers. He’s won five times on Tour in the last 19 months. Billy Horschel played with Finau the first two rounds when he kicked off his torrid run at the 2021 Northern Trust. When they were signing their scorecards, Horschel told him he’d never seen Finau putt better.

“I’ve always said he’s a good putter from outside 10 feet, really great putter from 10-20 feet, great speed, great imagination of how the putts are going to break but inside 10 feet he’s a different guy,” Horschel explained. “That week he looked so confident inside 10 feet. He looked like he was going to make everything. I told him, ‘You look so confident and you’ve got to just believe that you’re a good putter.’ I was so impressed to see another side of him. Did I think he was going to win that week? No. I think he’s taken so much confidence from that win and believes in himself that he’s a good putter. I think you’ll see a pretty special run from Tony the next five years.”

Finau’s coach, Boyd Summerhays, had a feeling another victory might be in the offing this week.

“This was where he turned around his season last year so I knew he loved the course,” Summerhays said. “That’s all it was, he was trending and looking great in practice at home.”

Finau won the Cadence Houston Open in November, but his results of late weren’t reflecting how well he was playing, Summerhays said. Finau had made the cut in all 10 starts this year but had just two top-10 finishes since his win. He blamed inconsistency on the greens despite being on pace to have his best putting season of his career. He worked on his putting last week at home and it paid off. Finau ranked eighth in Strokes Gained: putting for the week. He made three birdies in his first seven holes and a clutch 18-foot par putt at eight to keep his momentum. Brandon Wu, 26, temporarily tied for the lead with an eagle at six and birdie at seven. But he drove into the water at No. 10 and settled for third with a 68.

“I think going toe to toe with two of the best players in the world is good,” Wu said. “Good to kind of feel the emotions, know how to stay calm in the moment and stay focused on myself. It was a great experience and glad to have done it.”

Wu wasn’t the only up-and-comer to gain valuable experience being in the trophy hunt. Akshay Bhatia, 21, who earned special temporary Tour membership with a second-place finish at the Puerto Rico Open in March, played his way into the final group and posted even-par 71 to finish fourth.

But it wasn’t enough to match Finau, who shot a 72-hole total of 24-under 260 and secured his fourth win in 280 days, joining Rahm, Max Homa and Scottie Scheffler as multiple winners on Tour this season.

“To get this win was huge and hopefully propels me to do more great things as the season unfolds,” Finau said.

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2023 Mexico Open: Jon Rahm’s scorching 61, Tony Finau eyeing sixth win and more from Saturday’s third round

Rahm signed for a third-round bogey-free 10-under 61 — a tournament record — and is now just two strokes behind Big Tone.

This week’s field was anything but loaded. Jon Rahm and Tony Finau were the lone household names who made the trip south of the border. And after 54 holes those two players have found themselves at the top of the leaderboard. It appears we’re in for a clash of the Titans at the 2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta.

The Spaniard trailed Finau by six shots entering Saturday but he caught fire at Vidanta Vallarta. Rahm signed for a third-round bogey-free 10-under 61 — a tournament record — and is now just two strokes behind Big Tone.

Finau, who opened with rounds of 65-64, began his day with a birdie at the first. His opening nine wasn’t too exciting after that, although he did add another birdie at the seventh.

After a few pars to start his second half, Finau strung together three straight birdies on Nos. 12-14 then added another on the 16th. He gave one away at the par-3 17th after failing to convert a six-foot par putt, however, he got it right back with a birdie at the last.

Finau (19 under) signed for a third-round 6-under 65 and will tee off Sunday afternoon with a two-stroke lead over Rahm and Akshay Bhatia.

If you missed any of the action on Saturday, no worries, we have you covered. Get caught up on the third round of the 2023 Mexico Open below.

Mexico Open: Sunday tee timesPhotos

Sources: Houston Open making power play for spring date on 2024 PGA Tour schedule

Golfweek has learned from multiple sources that the Houston stop is eyeing a return to the main schedule.

KAPALUA, Hawaii – The 2023 portion of the 2022-23 season is just kicking off and already the talk has shifted to 2024 and beyond.

Changes are coming and one tournament angling for a different future is the Cadence Bank Houston Open.

Earlier this week, Golf Channel reported that the Houston stop, which dates to 1946 and has been played in October since 2019, wasn’t listed as one of the fall events in 2023. Golfweek has learned from multiple sources that the Houston stop is eyeing a return to the main schedule. While it is too soon to know for sure, Houston could take over the date currently occupied by the Mexico Open which in 2023 is set for late April.

But according to Golfweek sources, who spoke under the condition of anonymity, Houston wasn’t listed on the preliminary fall schedule that has been shown to players because tournament organizers don’t want to hold two events within a span of what could be five months, should it join the main schedule.

When asked Sunday at the Sentry Tournament of Champions specifically about Houston’s place on the fall schedule in 2023, PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan said, “The reality is there are a lot of moving parts to the fall schedule and we haven’t finalized the schedule yet.”

Monahan noted that the fall schedule should be announced by the Players Championship in March.

In the meantime, there is plenty of back-room negotiations going on. Jim Crane, who is the owner of the MLB champion Houston Astros, also is believed to be leveraging the emergence of LIV Golf as a potential suitor for a Houston event if Crane doesn’t get the spring PGA Tour date he desires.

Crane is an investor in Escalante Golf, which staged two LIV Golf events in the upstart circuit’s inaugural year – Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club in Oregon and The International in Massachusetts – and is expected to host a third LIV event this season at The Gallery Golf Club in Marana, Arizona. An Escalante Golf representative said the company doesn’t disclose information on its investors.

“He’s not a conscientious observer,” one source said of Crane’s feelings about the Saudi Arabian PIF Fund being the chief underwriter of the upstart league.

Crane, along with Giles Kibbe, senior vice president and general counsel for the Astros and president of the Astros Golf Foundation, played in the pro-am at LIV’s Boston event, the city where Monahan cut his teeth as tournament director of the now-defunct Deutsche Bank Championship.

“When he goes out to play in a pro-am in Boston, he’s sending a message. He doesn’t even play Pebble anymore,” a source said of Crane.

Houston is one of the largest markets in the U.S., and the Tour certainly doesn’t want to lose it. Despite the Houston Open being successful going up against football and on the heels of a steady stream of baseball playoff games in recent years, Crane reportedly is no longer willing to support a golf tournament in the fall.

The Mexico event joined as a limited field World Golf Championship in 2017 and was downgraded to a regular PGA Tour tournament this year as a full-field event. That required a move of the course from Mexico City’s Chapultepec to Puerto Vallarta and Vidanta Vallarta. With Mexico’s best players joining LIV, there has been speculation that the Mexico tournament could pull the plug after this year.

Playing in a LIV pro-am isn’t the only power-play move Crane has made to get the date he wants or potentially take his ball and go home. He also owns the Floridian Golf Club in Palm City, Florida, and Dustin Johnson and Brooks Koepka, who both jumped ship to LIV last year, are among its members. According to a source, Johnson approached Crane about having a LIV tournament at The Floridian with Johnson’s name on it but Crane turned it down.

“If he didn’t get the date he wanted (from the PGA Tour), he might not have said no,” a source said.

Efforts to reach Cadence Bank tournament director Colby Callaway weren’t successful.

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2022 Mexico Open at Vidanta prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour, folks. Just ask this week’s winner, Jon Rahm.

The 27-year-old Spaniard claimed his seventh PGA Tour win Sunday at the 2022 Mexico Open at Vidanta by one shot over the trio of Kurt Kitayama, Brandon Wu and Tony Finau.

“It wasn’t my best putting weekend. But I stayed aggressive,” Rahm said of his round. “I wish it was a little less stressful but a win is a win.”

Rahm will take home $1.3 million for his efforts, with the trio of runners-up earning $552,367. Check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned this week at the 2022 Mexico Open at Vidanta.

Mexico Open: Leaderboard | Winner’s bag

Mexico Open prize money

Position Player Scores Earnings
1 Jon Rahm -17 $1,314,000
T2 Brandon Wu -16 $552,367
T2 Tony Finau -16 $552,367
T2 Kurt Kitayama -16 $552,367
5 Davis Riley -15 $299,300
T6 Aaron Wise -14 $238,163
T6 David Lipsky -14 $238,163
T6 Alex Smalley -14 $238,163
T6 Cameron Champ -14 $238,163
10 Patrick Rodgers -13 $198,925
T11 Martin Trainer -12 $177,025
T11 Nate Lashley -12 $177,025
T13 Grayson Murray -11 $147,825
T13 Chez Reavie -11 $147,825
T15 Lanto Griffin -10 $104,187
T15 Anirban Lahiri -10 $104,187
T15 Peter Malnati -10 $104,187
T15 Kelly Kraft -10 $104,187
T15 Jonathan Byrd -10 $104,187
T15 Adam Long -10 $104,187
T15 Stephan Jaeger -10 $104,187
T15 Andrew Novak -10 $104,187
T15 Satoshi Kodaira -10 $104,187
T24 Gary Woodland -9 $60,955
T24 Michael Gligic -9 $60,955
T24 Sahith Theegala -9 $60,955
T24 Trey Mullinax -9 $60,955
T24 Aaron Rai -9 $60,955
T29 Ryan Blaum -8 $48,910
T29 Sebastián Muñoz -8 $48,910
T29 C.T. Pan -8 $48,910
T29 Hank Lebioda -8 $48,910
T33 Graeme McDowell -7 $36,541
T33 Greyson Sigg -7 $36,541
T33 Brice Garnett -7 $36,541
T33 Scott Piercy -7 $36,541
T33 Emiliano Grillo -7 $36,541
T33 Doug Ghim -7 $36,541
T33 Cameron Tringale -7 $36,541
T33 Charles Howell III -7 $36,541
T33 Wesley Bryan -7 $36,541
T42 Ben Kohles -6 $23,287
T42 Kevin Na -6 $23,287
T42 John Huh -6 $23,287
T42 Robert Garrigus -6 $23,287
T42 Brian Stuard -6 $23,287
T42 Abraham Ancer -6 $23,287
T42 Alvaro Ortiz -6 $23,287
T42 Brandon Hagy -6 $23,287
T42 Patrick Reed -6 $23,287
T51 Tommy Gainey -5 $17,356
T51 David Skinns -5 $17,356
T51 Mark Hubbard -5 $17,356
T51 Carlos Ortiz -5 $17,356
T51 Lee Hodges -5 $17,356
T51 Sung Kang -5 $17,356
T51 Turk Pettit -5 $17,356
T51 Scott Brown -5 $17,356
T59 Matt Jones -4 $16,498
T59 Bill Haas -4 $16,498
T61 Callum Tarren -3 $16,133
T61 Hayden Buckley -3 $16,133
T61 Kiradech Aphibarnrat -3 $16,133
T64 Justin Lower -2 $15,768
T64 Brendon Todd -2 $15,768
66 Pat Perez -1 $15,549
T67 Austin Smotherman E $15,111
T67 D.A. Points E $15,111
T67 Wyndham Clark E $15,111
T67 Matt Wallace E $15,111
T67 Kevin Streelman E $15,111
72 Bryson Nimmer 1 $14,673
73 Brett Drewitt 4 $14,527
74 Joshua Creel 5 $14,381

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Winner’s Bag: Jon Rahm, Mexico Open at Vidanta

Check out the clubs that got the job done in Mexico.

A complete list of the golf equipment Jon Rahm used to win the PGA Tour’s 2022 Mexico Open at Vidanta:

DRIVER: Callaway Rogue ST Triple Diamond LS (10.5 degrees), with Aldila Tour Green 75 TX shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”$549.99 – GlobalGolf” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/doqYDk”]

FAIRWAY WOOD: Callaway Epic Speed (15 degrees), with Aldila Tour Green 75 TX shaft, (19 degrees), with Graphite Design Tour AD SI-8 shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”$299.99 – GlobalGolf” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/2reRyg”]

IRONS: Callaway Apex TCB (4-PW), with Project X 6.5 shafts

WEDGES: Callaway JAWS Forged (52, 56, 60 degrees), with Project X 6.5 shafts

PUTTER: Odyssey White Hot OG Rossie S  

[afflinkbutton text=”$219.99 – GlobalGolf” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/QOXxvY”]

BALL: Callaway Chrome Soft X

[afflinkbutton text=”$49.99 per dozen – GlobalGolf” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/Ryo0Za”]

GRIPS: Golf Pride MCC

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