Are Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele becoming America’s dynamic duo?

Ahead of the Players Championship, Golfweek’s Adam Schupak asks are Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele America’s dynamic duo?

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PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – On Saturday morning of the 2019 Presidents Cup, Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele were being beaten rather handily in a morning alternate-shot match when they were informed that Tiger Woods wanted to send them back out together in the afternoon. What did they think about that?

“We kind of looked at each other and didn’t really hesitate,” Cantlay recalled on Wednesday on the eve of the Players Championship. “We were like, ‘Yeah, put us out in the afternoon, we’ll go get it done.’ And we won that afternoon and played really well.”

It was the start of a beautiful friendship that has only blossomed on the golf course, over dinner and while playing cards, particularly gin. While there are several months to go before qualifying for the U.S. Ryder Cup team is completed and captain’s choices are made, Cantlay and Schauffele are quickly developing into America’s best duo.

Think about it: It’s highly unlikely that Tiger Woods will be able to play with Justin Thomas as they did to great effect at the Presidents Cup and JT’s successful partnership with Jordan Spieth in France still seems dicey despite Spieth’s recent resurgence. Brooks and DJ? I don’t think so. And who do you pair with Patrick Reed? So many questions for U.S. Captain Steve Stricker, but he would be wise to keep the Cantlay-Schauffele pairing intact.

Players Championship: Tee times, TV | Odds | Fantasy picks

For starters, they are two of the hottest players in the world. Cantlay has recorded six straight top 20 finishes, including a win at the Zozo Championship and a runner-up at the American Express. He’s No. 7 in the world and winning a significant title such as the Players this week would be the next box for him to check in solidifying his place in the game’s upper echelon. Schauffele is No. 5 in the world having made a Tour-best 23 straight cuts and finishing runner-up eight times since his last victory at the Sentry Tournament of Champions in 2019. He’s knocked on a lot of doors and no one would be surprised if he claimed the Players or a green jacket next month or really any of the four majors this season.

Ever since the Presidents Cup, Cantlay and Schauffele have become regular practice-round partners.

“Both of us were sort of like I would say lone soldiers for the most part, in terms of playing practice rounds by ourselves. And I know his team pretty well and he knows my – now he knows my team pretty well – but I pretty much knew everyone on Pat’s team before I knew Pat really well himself. So, it was kind of an easy mix. We just kind have a pretty laid-back schedule for a practice time. We do enjoying a game every week, it’s very competitive, and we feel like when we play against each other it sort of sharpens ourselves for the best week possible.”

Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay during a practice round prior to the Sentry Tournament Of Champions. (Photo by Cliff Hawkins/Getty Images)

On Tuesday, rather than battle head-to-head, Cantlay and Schauffele teamed up against Thomas and Spieth in a spirited nine-hole match on the front nine at the Stadium at TPC Sawgrass.

“We had them down every single way and JT made like a 35-footer on the last and Pat and I both missed our birdie putts,” Schauffele said.

“It hurt tying,” added Cantlay.

These two are part of a mutual admiration society. Here’s Schauffele waxing rhapsodic about Cantlay: “It’s almost impossible to rattle him,” Schauffele said. “He really doesn’t have a weakness and so there’s a lot for me to learn from him in terms of short game shots and how he approaches the game. So, it’s been great for me. I’m not sure if he’s learned anything from me, but I definitely learned something from him.”

When those plaudits were repeated to Cantlay, he held serve: “See, there he goes again, just being the best partner you could ask for, saying nice things,” Cantlay said. “He’s just good people. So, I feel like if it’s not something golf, which sometimes it is, we talk golf and we talk strategy I’ll learn something just that I can use in daily life, just because he’s such a good guy.”

As their friendship grows, so has their place as two of the top American pros, both under 30 and positioned to be a tandem in international competition for the next decade. And yet they remain two of the most underrated players in the game.

“We’re not particularly flashy and so that doesn’t get a lot of attention, if we’re not winning golf tournaments,” Cantlay said.

That could change this week at the Players or some time down the road on the way to the Ryder Cup, but by the time the biennial competition is played at Whistling Straits in late September, these friends likely will be told they’re being sent back out in the afternoon together. These two won’t be afraid to go “get it done.”

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Ho-hum: Patrick Cantlay continues low-key roll at Riviera Country Club in Genesis Invitational

Nothing to see here, just Patrick Cantlay once again near the top of the leaderboard on the PGA Tour, this week at the Genesis Invitational.

Even for the understated Patrick Cantlay, his account of his recent play on the PGA Tour was quite the understatement.

“I’m really confident in my game right now,” Cantlay said Thursday after posting a 4-under-par 67 in the first round of the Genesis Invitational at revered Rivera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California.

Who wouldn’t be?

Cantlay has finished second in the American Express and in a tie for third in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in his last two starts and won his third Tour title last fall at the Zozo Championship at Sherwood.

In his last nine rounds, he’s 41 strokes to the better of par.

And he’s ranked No. 8 in the world.

Cantlay’s confidence certainly won’t crack this week, especially at Riviera, which he calls the best course on Tour. So even when he started with a bogey in frigid temperatures, he wound up on the first page of the leaderboard. Among the early leaders, Cantlay trails Matthew Fitzpatrick by one shot. World No. 1 Dustin Johnson came home with a 68, defending champion Adam Scott a 69.

Genesis Invitational: Leaderboard | Photos

“There’s no tricks or anything,” Cantlay said of Riviera. “There’s a lot of holes out here that are just how far and how straight can you hit your driver and then hit your golf ball in the right spot, but you can hit any shape you want.

“I don’t think you necessarily have to shape the golf ball, but you definitely have to be cognizant of where you’re leaving the golf ball even off the tee. I thought the golf course is incredible, I think it’s the best on Tour.”

He didn’t change his mind even after starting his round on the drivable par-4 10th at a quarter past 7 a.m. local. He drove over the green, chipped to 50 feet (on purpose) and then three-putted.

“I made a great swing and, opposed to landing it short of the green, I landed it two yards on the green and I was dead,” he said. “I had to play to 50 feet. Hit a good shot to 50 feet, like an actual good shot, and then three‑putted. And didn’t feel like I did anything wrong except the hole is really, really hard when it’s blowing 15 miles an hour downwind.

“I could have tried to flop it and I just thought I’m still going to have 20 feet for birdie even if I hit a great shot, so I didn’t think it was worth it, especially first hole of the day, 7:00 in the morning and cold and windy.”

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Cantlay followed his opening bogey with two birdies. He had another bout of frustration on the par-5 first hole, the easiest hole on the course. He walked off a par but then birdied four of his last eight holes.

“I hit the ball really well all day and was able to score on one side of the golf course,” he said.

Cantlay is more encouraged than disheartened by his close calls the past two weeks. Like he does on the golf course, he just methodically moves forward.

“I think you want to learn from it and then discard it after you’ve learned whatever you need to learn from it,” Cantlay said about his last two starts. “Definitely by the time the next week rolls around, the last week is gone because you’re so focused on the task at hand that that’s all that matters.

“Definitely take the things I’m working on in my swing and the things that are going well in my game and carry them over to this week. I’m really confident in my game right now. Even though I bogeyed the 10th hole, which you feel you shouldn’t bogey because it’s so short, I felt like my game’s in such a good spot that it was only a matter of time before I turned around and made some birdies.

“Definitely taking that confidence with me.”

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AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am live stream, TV channel, start time, schedule, how to watch

The AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am will resume on Friday with Round 2 from beautiful Pebble Beach and Spyglass Hill golf courses, stream it here.

What an incredible day yesterday at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Jordan Spieth had a day as he inches closer to the lead while Patrick Cantlay tied the course record on the first day of the tournament, we should have an incredible weekend of golf ahead of us.

Round 2 will begin on Friday with the round starting at 11:50 a.m. ET with live coverage beginning at 3 p.m. ET on Friday. We’ll get to see beautiful Pebble Beach and Spyglass Hill this afternoon.

The Featured Groups on Thursday include some of the best golfers in the world with Phil Mickelson, Paul Casey, Francesco Molinari, and Stewart Cink.

Here is everything you need on how, when, and where to watch the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am today and throughout the weekend.

AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, Round 2

  • When: Friday, February 12
  • Live Coverage: 3:00 p.m. ET
  • TV Channel: The Golf Channel
  • Live Stream: fuboTV (watch for free)

Featured Groups, Friday

  • Phil Mickelson, Max Homa, Paul Casey 
  • Francesco Molinari, Brandt Snedeker, Stewart Cink 

Pebble Beach Pro-Am Schedule

Rounds 1 & 2: Thursday and Friday

Live Coverage begins at 3:00 p.m. ET

 Round 3: Saturday

Live Coverage begins at 1:00 p.m. ET

Live Coverage begins at 3:00 p.m. ET

 Round 4: Sunday

Live Coverage begins at 1:00 p.m. ET

Live Coverage begins at 3:00 p.m. ET

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AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am: Patrick Cantlay ties course record, takes lead with 10-under 62

Patrick Cantlay, who shot 61 in his last tournament round, picked up where he left off by tying the Pebble Beach course record of 62.

Whether in the middle of a desert or hard by the sea, Patrick Cantlay can seemingly do no wrong.

Cantlay, who shattered the course record at PGA West’s TPC Stadium Course with an 11-under 61 in the final round of the American Express in his previous start, picked up right where he left off and birdied seven of the first eight holes at Pebble Beach Golf Links. He wasn’t done either. He tacked on a birdie at 11 to go with a pair of birdies at the finishing holes to tie the course record of 10-under 62.

“I feel like I’m in a groove right now,” said Cantlay, who called it a continuation of his 65-61 weekend at the American Express. “My swing feels really good right now. The ball’s starting on the line that I’m seeing, and then my distance control has been really good, which is key out here. I try to leave myself below the hole a lot and I was able to do that.”

Cantlay took advantage of receptive greens and a wind-free day to blitz a defenseless Pebble Beach and build a two-stroke lead over 19-year-old Akshay Bhatia and Henrik Norlander, who both played Pebble too, after the opening round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Rookie Will Gordon returned the low score at Spyglass Hill, the tournament’s sister course, with a bogey-free 6-under 66.

Pebble Beach Pro-Am: Leaderboard | Photos | Tee times, TV info

Cantlay possesses one of the most complete games on the PGA Tour and he had all cylinders firing on Thursday. Accuracy off the tee set him up for short irons and his putter was deadly on the greens.

“Hit a lot of good shots just right out of the gate and made everything,” Cantlay said. “The first hole I just had a wedge in. The second hole I got up-and-down from just off the green (for birdie at the par 5). And for the most part, it’s wedges all the way until you get to the 8th hole. So, you do want to take advantage and today I did.”

Cantlay credited his hot putter for taking care of the rest.

“The difference the last three rounds I played on Tour is just making putts,” he said. “I think I 1-putted every green on the front nine. So, when you only have nine putts on nine holes it’s no surprise you played really well. Some of that is set up by ball striking. I had a lot of really good looks. And every time you play Pebble Beach you kind of want to get off to a hot start on those first seven holes and today I had a great start.”

Another player who didn’t skip a beat after his best performance in nearly a year last week in Phoenix was Jordan Spieth, who posted 7-under 65 at Pebble Beach. Spieth even delivered a highlight-reel moment, holing out for eagle from 113 yards at No. 10.

“I needed to cover 107 on the false front and it hit. I fixed the pitch mark maybe two short of the hole and I think it bounced past it and then spun back,” Spieth said. “Once I saw where it landed I knew it would be close. It was a bonus for it to obviously go in. I saw it drop and then there was three people on the balcony of the house in the distance and a couple people near the green, volunteers where his hands went up. But it’s still weird having a moment like that where you’re used to kind of a loud roar and it’s just so kind of calm and quiet.”

Bhatia, the teenager who hails from North Carolina and is playing this week on a sponsor’s exemption, became the fourth player in the last 25 years to hit all 18 greens in regulation at Pebble Beach, and the first to do so since Ryan Palmer in 2008, en route to shooting a bogey-free 8-under par 64.

“The views actually really help me,” Bhatia said. “Because I can look out at the ocean and my mind goes blank. It’s just beautiful.”

But as Cantlay and other regulars at Pebble can attest, the famed layout can be both a beauty and a beast. The weather forecast is expected to turn nasty the remainder of the tournament, making scoring conditions less favorable.

“I think we got Pebble in pretty much ideal conditions and I don’t think it’s going to be like that the rest of the week,” Cantlay said. “This place can be a bear when the wind’s blowing, especially when you get out to that point on 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. So I’m sure the conditions will be a lot tougher this weekend, but I welcome the challenge and it will be fun.”

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Patrick Cantlay ready for all kinds of different at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Entering as the highest-ranked player in the field, Patrick Cantlay is ready for all kinds of different at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – The last we saw of Patrick Cantlay, he was going all kinds of Superman in the American Express’ final round on the PGA West Stadium Course two weeks ago in the southern California desert, shooting an 11-under-par 61 to fall just one shot short of champion Si Woo Kim.

This week, however, in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am up the coast on the Monterey Peninsula, he might feel like a 90-pound weakling.

Not because he’s suddenly loss all his muscle mass during his two-week break. No, it all has to do with the weather and the setting. In these parts this week, the air is chilly, the temps are low (55 degrees is the expected high all week), the winds are up and the forecast calls for plenty of rain the first three days of the tournament. Thus, Cantlay will hit shots he normally doesn’t see coming off his clubs.

“I think (the rain) will make everything just a little tougher,” Cantlay said Tuesday after a practice round at Spyglass Hill. “It’s already cold, so it might feel a little colder even, and I think that will make scores just a little worse, especially if the wind were to blow.

Pebble Beach Pro-Am: Odds | Fantasy rankings

“And then depending if they play lift, clean, and place or not, mud on the golf ball always adds a little bit of unpredictability and that would make it a little harder. And then the golf ball will go a lot shorter. It already goes very short here compared to the rest of the country, so if it rains, it will go even shorter.”

How much shorter?

“It goes considerably shorter this week,” said Cantlay, who at No. 11 is the highest-ranked player in the field after Dustin Johnson withdrew. “If the wind’s into you, it goes even shorter. I feel like the wind affects the golf ball more here. I think that’s for two reasons: The ball actually is going shorter, so you can put the same amount of force into the golf ball and it goes shorter. Then second, it’s so cold that it’s hard to move your body as fast or make your swing as long.

“Especially with the greens being soft, you can hit low shots, so there’s really no advantage to trying to step on an 8-iron and get the most out of it. You’re better off hitting a three quarter 7-iron and for the most part it’s just going to sit and stop.

“So, for example, if I’m on the east coast and it’s the summer, I could hit a 7-iron 185 or 190 (yards). I hit 7-iron from 157 yards today in my practice round at Spyglass. So it’s a considerable difference.”

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There will be a different feel on the ground, too, as spectators are not allowed and celebrities and amateurs will not be playing side-by-side the professionals because of COVID-19 safety measures. Grandstands ae nowhere to be found, too. And only two courses – Pebble Beach and Spyglass Hill – are in play this year.

Still, all things considered, Cantlay is eager to get going in Thursday’s first round. He’s in good form – a win in the Zozo Championship at Sherwood and a runner-up finish in the American Express sandwiched ties for 17th and 13th in the Masters and Sentry Tournament of Champions in his last four starts. And he counts a tie for ninth in 2013 and a tie for 11th last year as his best results in his four starts in this tournament.

“I always like being up here in Monterey,” he said. “Even though it’s cold this time of year, I like playing Pebble Beach. I like Spyglass. So I’m excited for this year. It looks like we’re going to get some rain, which isn’t uncommon, but I always like being here and I like the golf courses and I like the California golf.

“My game’s been good. Obviously how I played my last round on Tour was unbelievable, even I was a little surprised I was able to shoot 11-under on that golf course. But I think it bodes well for the future, and my game’s in a good spot, my processes are all really good, and if I can make a bunch of putts like I did on that Sunday, look out.”

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Fantasy golf power rankings for the 2021 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Feeling lucky this week? Check out the fantasy golf power rankings for the 2021 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

Pebble Beach Golf Links again hosts the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, although the Pro-Am portion of the event is being abandoned this year due to COVID-19 protocols.

Fans will not be in attendance, and the tournament will only be played on two courses, Pebble Beach and Spyglass Hill, while Monterey Peninsula CC takes the week off this year. Dustin Johnson withdrew from the tournament on Monday evening.

Below, we look at the fantasy golf power rankings and odds for the 2021 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Odds last updated Tuesday at 8:30 a.m. ET.

Fantasy golf power rankings

30. Akshay Bhatia (+30000)

Picked up his first professional top-10 finish at the Safeway Open in the fall but has missed the cut in two of three events since. He’s second on Tour in Par 4 Efficiency: 350-400 Yards and there are six such holes on this week’s main course.

29. Brian Gay (+20000)

Claimed victory at the Bermuda Championship in the fall on a course designed by Robert Trent Jones Sr., who designed this week’s secondary course, Spyglass Hill GC. Had back-to-back top-10 finishes in this event in 2018 and 2019.

28. Tyler Duncan (+20000)

The 2019 RSM Classic winner doesn’t have a top-10 finish since, but he’s a good irons player and should be well-suited to the shorter – and more open – venue.

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27. Seung Yul Noh (+30000)

An excellent short-game player. He surprised with a T-11 finish in last year’s Travelers Championship against a much stronger field than this.

26. Davis Riley (+25000)

Two-time winner on the Korn Ferry Tour last year who’s third on the regular-season points list. Tied for 58th last week for his first made cut on the PGA Tour since 2019.

25. Alex Noren (+5000)

Has cooled off since a stretch of three top-10 finishes in four events last summer, but this is a great field for him to get back on track.

24. Harold Varner III (+6600)

A T-13 finish last week was his third top-20 result already on the 2020-21 Tour season. He missed the cut last year, but he has often flirted with contention against fields comparable to this.

23. Denny McCarthy (+15000)

Typically a strong putter but has struggled with the flat stick this season. Missed the cut last week and in two of three events this year, but he had three top 10s last year in more similar fields.

22. Tom Lewis (+15000)

A consistent performer on the European Tour who burst onto the PGA Tour scene with a co-runner-up finish at the WGC FedEx St. Jude Invitational in the summer. He hasn’t found that success in North America, but this is one of the weaker fields he has competed against.

21. Chez Reavie (+8000)

Averaging 0.59 Strokes Gained: Approach through 22 measured rounds on the season. He’ll benefit from being able to leave the driver in the bag on the shorter track.

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20. Joel Dahmen (+6600)

Missed the cut last week with 1.17 strokes lost around-the-green per round. He tied for 14th here last year with 1.50 SG: Approach per round.

19. Matthew NeSmith (+6000)

Tied for seventh last week with a strong 1.14 SG: Approach per round. He tied for 11th in this event last year.

18. Sam Burns (+3500)

Finished T-22 last week but on the back of 2.72 SG: Putting per round. He hasn’t played a round at Pebble Beach and could be in for a letdown with his driver not as much of a difference-maker.

17. Henrik Norlander (+4500)

Can often rely too heavily on his putter but has strung together some quality finishes with a well-rounded game. He tied for 25th here last year.

16. Kevin Streelman (+3500)

Has made back-to-back cuts after opening 2021 with a missed cut at The American Express. He finished alone in second last year with 3.37 SG: Tee-to-Green per round.

15. Phil Mickelson (+4500)

Leads the field among those with a minimum of two appearances at Pebble Beach with 2.16 strokes gained on the field per round. The elder statesman still hits bombs, but those won’t help him as much here.

14. Nick Taylor (+7000)

The defending champ hasn’t done much since and comes in off a missed cut at the Waste Management Phoenix Open. Still, he can’t be ruled out in this field.

13. Matt Jones (+5000)

Moved back inside the top 100 of the Official World Golf Ranking with a T-30 finish last week. He has made eight straight cuts with most against stronger fields.

12. James Hahn (+5500)

Was in contention Sunday in Phoenix until Brooks Koepka’s surge up the leaderboard left him in the dust. He finished 10th and averaged 1.01 SG: Approach per round for the week.

11. Brian Harman (+5000)

Twenty-sixth in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings and one of the top players in this field by that measure. Tied for eighth at The American Express before a T-36 finish last week in a stronger field.


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10. Jordan Spieth (+2000)

Stole headlines last week with a resurgent 54-hole lead but finished T-4 with a disappointing Sunday effort. He led the field with 1.96 SG: Approach per round.

9. Max Homa (+4000)

Gained 1.47 strokes on approach per round. Tied for 14th in this event last year following a T-10 in 2019.

8. Cameron Davis (+3300)

Has already moved from 229th to 141st in the OWGR since the beginning of 2021. His third-place finish at The American Express sparked the biggest jump.

7. Si Woo Kim (+3000)

Has followed his victory at The American Express with a missed cut at the Farmers Insurance Open and a T-50 in Phoenix. He’s gaining 0.53 strokes per round around-the-green on the season.

6. Will Zalatoris (+1800)

The early PGA Tour Rookie of the Year frontrunner had another top-20 finish last week with a T-17. He gained 1.16 strokes per round on approach.

5. Francesco Molinari (+2200)

The 2018 Open Championship winner is one of the top players in this field despite his 92nd placing in the Golfweek rankings. He has two top 10s in two events this year after a forgettable 2020.

4. Daniel Berger (+1200)

His missed cut last week was his first since the Memorial Tournament in the summer. He tied for fifth in this event last year early in his comeback season.

3. Paul Casey (+1600)

The Englishman has had a successful, globe-trotting last month. He tied for eighth at The American Express, won the Omega Dubai Desert Classic and tied for 12th at the Saudi International. He’ll play for a fourth straight week with a lot of travel in between.

2. Jason Day (+1800)

Started showing some of his former world No. 1 form last summer and has placed in the top six in six of the last eight years in this event.

1. Patrick Cantlay (+650)

Best player in this field in the Golfweek rankings following Johnson’s withdrawal. Tied for 11th here last year.

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Patrick Cantlay’s magical weekend comes up just short at the American Express

Patrick Cantlay shot an 11-under 61 in the final round but it wasn’t enough to lift the American Express trophy.

LA QUINTA, Calif. – Patrick Cantlay’s magical weekend fell just short of an unforgettable ending.

Cantlay shattered the course record by two strokes with an 11-under 61 at PGA West’s Pete Dye Stadium Course. After making the cut on the number at 4-under, he exploded for 20 birdies over his weekend 36 holes, tying the best score in relation to par in the final two rounds of a 72-hole event on the PGA Tour (18-under).

It took an equally flawless round of 64 from 54-hole leader Si Woo Kim to edge him out for the trophy at the American Express.

“I did everything I could,” Cantlay said. “He just played unbelievable too.”

The American ExpressLeaderboard | Winner’s bag | Prize money

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Cantlay, 28, is beginning to develop a reputation for going low on the weekend. At the 2019 Masters, he also made the cut on the number and shot 64-68 to take the lead after an eagle at 15 before finishing T-9. In late October, he poured in nine birdies to rally from three strokes back and win the Zozo Championship. This time, Cantlay started Sunday four strokes back.

“I put myself so behind the 8-ball making the cut just on the number,” he said.

On Moving Day, he shot 65, which would’ve been even better had he not hit a shot out of bounds at No. 8, his 17th hole of the day. Knowing he needed to go low on Sunday, Cantlay carded a career-high 11 birdies. The top-ranked player in the field at World No. 10, Cantlay capped off an unforgettable round with a 38-foot birdie putt at the last.

“It kept building and building and today I felt like I could make everything and I made a lot of them,” he said of the 151 feet, 10 inches of putts he holed on Sunday, his most feet of putts made in a round of his Tour career.

“He played video game golf,” said Cantlay’s swing instructor Jamie Mulligan.

On a sun-splashed day lacking the forecasted wind, Cantlay took advantage, one of three players to tour the first nine in 6-under 30. It included the only dicey moment of the day as he nearly dropped a shot at No. 7 when he tugged his drive and had to pitch out.

But he rescued par with a 9-foot par putt and dodged every landmine on the Dye layout. At the par-3 13th, with water left and the flag tucked dangerously close to it, he drew a beautiful tee shot that caught the slope and stopped 5 feet away. He missed a 6-foot birdie putt at No. 14, shaking his head in disappointment, but bounced back with a 20-foot birdie putt one hole later. Shortsided and with a downhill lie, he hit a delicate pitch from 30 yards to 5 feet for another birdie at the par-5 16th that playing competitor Garry Woodland applauded.

When Cantlay sank his 38-foot birdie putt at 18, he walked over to his caddie Matt Minister and said, “That’s as good as I can play.”

It was a weekend for the record books, but not enough to lift a trophy.

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Si Woo Kim shoots 64 on Sunday, takes title at American Express

Si Woo Kim fired a 64 on Sunday, capturing the title at the American Express on the Pete Dye Stadium Course at PGA West.

Using a birdie on the tournament’s 71st hole, Si Woo Kim fired a 64 on Sunday, capturing the title at the American Express on the Pete Dye Stadium Course at PGA West in La Quinta, California.

Kim’s 18-foot putt on No. 17 moved him to 23 under and was crucial in securing the title.

Kim got hot mid-round, using a string of six birdies on eight holes, starting at No. 4, to briefly take sole possession of the lead. The two-time winner on the PGA Tour hadn’t won since his 2017 victory in the Players Championship.

Patrick Cantlay, who made the cut on the number but then shot a 65 on Saturday during the third round, made the turn Sunday at 30 and didn’t slow down on the back. He took the lead at 22 under on the final hole by virtue of a 37-foot putt, but then had to watch Kim, who had a string of holes remaining.

After making the birdie on No. 17, Kim was true on his final drive of the day, finding the fairway and then hitting the 18th green in regulation. He two-putted to victory.

The American ExpressLeaderboardPhotos

Tony Finau, who has routinely been near the top of leaderboards on Sundays before faltering, did so again. Finau was tied for the lead on the back nine, but knocked the ball in the water on the par-5 No. 11 and made bogey. He never really recovered, finishing fourth at 19 under behind Cameron Davis (-20).

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The 2020 Masters is up for grabs

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak gives a detailed description of the players in the field for the 2020 Masters at Augusta National Golf Club.

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak gives a detailed description of the players in the field for the 2020 Masters at Augusta National Golf Club.

Winner’s Bag: Patrick Cantlay, Zozo Championship

A complete list of the gear Patrick Cantlay used to win the PGA Tour’s 2020 Zozo Championship over Justin Thomas and Jon Rahm at Sherwood.

The golf equipment Patrick Cantlay used to win the PGA Tour’s 2020 Zozo Championship:

DRIVER: Titleist TS3 (10.5 degrees), with Mitsubishi Diamana ZF 60X shaft

FAIRWAY WOOD: Titleist 915F (15 degrees), with Mitsubishi Diamana ZF 70X shaft

HYBRID: Titleist 816 H2 (21 degrees), with Fujikura ATMOS Black 9X shaft

IRONS: Titleist 718 AP2 (4-9), with True Temper Dynamic Gold X100 shafts

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM7 (46, 52, 56 degrees bent to 57 and 61 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S300 shafts

PUTTER: Scotty Cameron Newport GSS prototype

BALL: Titleist Pro V1x

GRIPS: Golf Pride Tour Velvet