2023 Zurich Classic field highlighted by teams of Collin Morikawa/Max Homa, Xander Schauffele/Patrick Cantlay and John Daly/David Duval

Find the full field and all teams for the Zurich Classic here.

The PGA Tour heads to Louisiana next week for the Zurich Classic at TPC Louisiana in Avondale, the lone team event on the schedule.

The two-mean teams will alternate between four-ball and foursomes all four days, starting with four-ball on Thursday. A cut will be made after 36 holes.

Eight players ranked inside the top 20 in the Official World Golf Ranking will be teeing it up, highlighted by defending champions Xander Schauffele (sixth) and Patrick Cantlay (fourth) and a new team of Collin Morikawa (11th) and Max Homa (seventh).

Joining the young guns are John Daly and David Duval, two PGA Tour Champions members who are teaming up in NOLA.

Someone keep an eye on Daly this week.

Find the full field and all teams below:

[pickup_prop id=”33101″]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=]

10 best men’s college players of the decade

Adam Woodard breaks down the top 10 male college golfers of the decade plus a few other honorable mentions.

College golf has increasingly become a window into the next generation of PGA Tour stars. It has helped tremendously that the NCAA Championship has been televised since 2014. That brought college stars right into golf fans’ living rooms, showing exactly the level of play that’s out there.

To reflect on the top college players of the past decade is to play a game of “remember them when.” The resumes are deep on these players, and each made a contribution to his team or his program that was beyond meaningful. These players raised the bar in college golf, and showed just how deep the talent pool is.

Here are the top 10 men’s college golfers of the decade followed by a few honorable mentions (in alphabetical order).

Top 10

Patrick Cantlay, UCLA

Patrick Cantlay during the 110th U.S. Amateur at Chambers Bay in University Place, Washington.

Cantlay spent 55 weeks as the No. 1 player in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, a record he held until Jon Rahm broke it in 2016. He turned pro in 2012 after his sophomore season at UCLA, but it was his freshman season that caught the nation’s attention. Cantlay won four events in the 2010-11 season, including the NCAA San Diego Regional, and finished second at the NCAA Championship, where he led the Bruins to match play. In two years Cantlay had 14 top 10 finishes and 24 rounds in the 60s.