Arnold Palmer Invitational: Final round tee times, TV info

Everything you need to know for the final round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

The 2020 Arnold Palmer Invitational comes to a conclusion on Sunday at Bay Hill Club and Lounge.

Tyrrell Hatton enters the final round with a two-shot lead at 6 under over Marc Leishman and Rory McIlroy, who sit T-2 at 4 under. Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Danny Lee, Sungjae Im and Harris English are T-4 at 3 under.

Among the notable names to miss the cut include Justin Rose, Phil Mickelson, Henrik Stenson, Tony Finau, Scott Piercy, Adam Scott and Matt Every, who shot a 65 and held the solo lead after the first round but came back on Friday and shot an 83.

Arnold Palmer Invitational: Best photos | Leaderboard | Updates
More: Koepka shoots worst round of PGA Tour career, shrugs it off

All times listed are Eastern.

Round 3

Time Players
8 a.m. Rob Oppenheim
8:10 a.m. Ryan Moore, Wyndham Clark
8:20 a.m. Brooks Koepka, Matthew Wolff
8:30 a.m. Doc Redman, Abraham Ancer
8:40 a.m. Robby Shelton, Sam Saunders
8:50 a.m. Scott Brown, Rod Perry
9 a.m. Vaughn Taylor, Brian Gay
9:10 a.m. Jimmy Walker, Hideki Matsuyama
9:20 a.m. Byeong Hun An, Billy Horschel
9:30 a.m. Adam Long, Kevin Na
9:40 a.m. Harry Higgs, Zac Blair
9:50 a.m. Keegan Bradley, Beau Hossler
10 a.m. Kevin Chappell, Davis Love III
10:10 a.m. Scott Harrington, Patrick Reed
10:20 a.m. Lanto Griffin, Harold Varner III
10:30 a.m. Matthew Fitzpatrick, Xinjun Zhang
10:40 a.m. Nick Taylor, Ian Poulter
10:50 a.m. Danny Willett, Steve Stricker
11 a.m. Viktor Hovland, Zach Johnson
11:10 a.m. Talor Gooch, Xander Schauffele
11:20 a.m. Rickie Fowler, Brendon Todd
11:30 a.m. Matt Wallace, Graeme McDowell
11:40 a.m. Bud Cauley, Troy Merritt
11:50 a.m. Jason Kokrak, Rory Sabbatini
Noon Keith Mitchell, Stewart Cink
12:10 p.m. Charley Hoffman, Dylan Frittelli
12:20 p.m. Kyoung-Hoon Lee, Joel Dahmen
12:30 p.m. Sam Burns, Max Homa
12:40 p.m. Scottie Scheffler, Tom Hoge
12:50 p.m. Patrick Rodgers, Collin Morikawa
1 p.m. Bryson DeChambeau, Matt Jones
1:10 p.m. Harris English, Sung Kang
1:20 p.m. Sungjae Im, Danny Lee
1:30 p.m. Rory McIlroy, Christiaan Bezuidenhout
1:40 p.m. Tyrrell Hatton, Marc Leishman

TV info

Sunday

Golf Channel: 12:30-2:30 p.m. ET
NBC: 2:30-6 p.m. ET
Sirius XM: Noon-5 p.m. ET
Twitter: 6:30-7:30 a.m. ET

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Honda Classic: Round 2 tee times, TV info

Everything you need to know for the second round of the Honda Classic at PGA National.

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After a gusty opening day at PGA National, a pair of players share the Honda Classic lead with rounds of 4-under 66. High winds in South Florida certainly didn’t make for an easy day, but Tom Lewis and Harris English managed to avoid the big numbers for the lead.

As it turns out, both of those men are playing the Honda on a sponsor’s invite. This week’s event, the 21st of the 2019-20 season, also features six of the world’s top-20 players. That list is highlighted by No. 2 Brooks Koepka, No. 12 Tommy Fleetwood and No. 13 Justin Rose, but none of those men fared particularly well in the first round. Fleetwood, at even, leads the trio at T-23.

Check out Friday’s second-round tee times and TV viewing info below.

Round 2 – Honda Classic

1st Tee – Friday

Tee Time Players
6:45 a.m. Robert Streb, Beau Hossler, Mark Hubbard
6:55 a.m. D.J. Trahan, Tom Hoge, Talor Gooch
7:05 a.m. Danny Lee, David Hearn, Scott Harrington
7:15 a.m. Kevin Tway, Grayson Murray, Daniel Berger
7:25 a.m. J.T. Poston, Ted Potter, Jr., Jimmy Walker
7:35 a.m. Tyler Duncan, Patton Kizzire, Jason Dufner
7:45 a.m. Jim Herman, Aaron Wise, Rory Sabbatini
7:55 a.m. Brian Stuard, Scott Brown, Sungjae Im
8:05 a.m. Camilo Villegas, Roger Sloan, Lucas Bjerregaard
8:15 a.m. Brian Harman, Sam Ryder, Doc Redman
8:25 a.m. Doug Ghim, Bo Hoag, Kurt Kitayama
8:35 a.m. Hank Lebioda, Chris Baker, Andrew McCain
11:35 a.m. Bud Cauley, Patrick Rodgers, Harry Higgs
11:45 a.m. Luke List, Adam Schenk, Wyndham Clark
11:55 a.m. Byeong Hun An, Xinjun Zhang, Erik van Rooyen
12:05 p.m. Ian Poulter, Brendan Steele, Hudson Swafford
12:15 p.m. Dylan Frittelli, Martin Trainer, Zach Johnson
12:25 p.m. Viktor Hovland, Joaquin Niemann, Rickie Fowler
12:35 p.m. Justin Rose, Billy Horschel, Tommy Fleetwood
12:45 p.m. Charl Schwartzel, Emiliano Grillo, Kiradech Aphibarnrat
12:55 p.m. Nick Watney, Cameron Percy, Sepp Straka
1:05 p.m. Brian Gay, Bo Van Pelt, Tim Wilkinson
1:15 p.m. Brandon Hagy, Cameron Davis, Ryo Ishikawa
1:25 p.m. Wes Roach, Henrik Norlander, Kramer Hickok

10th Tee – Friday

Tee Time Players
6:45 a.m. Harris English, Harold Varner III, Kyoung-Hoon Lee
6:55 a.m. John Huh, Sean O’Hair, Bronson Burgoon
7:05 a.m. Chris Stroud, Kevin Streelman, Matt Wallace
7:15 a.m. Corey Conners, Russell Knox, Davis Love III
7:25 a.m. Luke Donald, Stewart Cink, Vijay Singh
7:35 a.m. Shane Lowry, Gary Woodland, Louis Oosthuizen
7:45 a.m. Brooks Koepka, Matthew Wolff, Keith Mitchell
7:55 a.m. Scott Stallings, Lee Westwood, Jamie Lovemark
8:05 a.m. Jhonattan Vegas, Matt Every, Michael Thompson
8:15 a.m. Russell Henley, Mackenzie Hughes, Maverick McNealy
8:25 a.m. Joseph Bramlett, Tyler McCumber, Justin Bertsch
8:35 a.m. Vincent Whaley, Michael Gligic, Daniel Wetterich
11:35 a.m. Vaughn Taylor, Fabián Gómez, Seung-Yul Noh
11:45 a.m. Zac Blair, Denny McCarthy, Robby Shelton
11:55 a.m. Peter Malnati, Chesson Hadley, Arjun Atwal
12:05 p.m. Adam Long, Ryan Armour, Si Woo Kim
12:15 p.m. C.T. Pan, Greg Chalmers, Jim Furyk
12:25 p.m. Ryan Palmer, Keegan Bradley, Lucas Glover
12:35 p.m. Satoshi Kodaira, Brice Garnett, Austin Cook
12:45 p.m. Kyle Stanley, Chris Kirk, Richy Werenski
12:55 p.m. Cameron Tringale, Josh Teater, Sam Burns
1:05 p.m. Padraig Harrington, Matt Jones, Matthew NeSmith
1:15 p.m. Chase Seiffert, Sebastian Cappelen, Hayden Buckley
1:25 p.m. Rob Oppenheim, Mark Anderson, Tom Lewis

How to watch

Friday

PGA Tour Live: 7 a.m.-6 p.m. ET
Golf Channel:
2-6 p.m. ET
PGA Tour Radio: 12-6 p.m. ET

Saturday

PGA Tour Live: 7:15 a.m.-6 p.m. ET
Golf Channel: 1-3 p.m. ET
NBC: 3-6 p.m. ET
PGA Tour Radio: 1-6 p.m. ET

Sunday

PGA Tour Live: 7:15 a.m.-6 p.m. ET
Golf Channel: 1-3 p.m. ET
NBC: 3-6 p.m. ET
PGA Tour Radio: 1-6 p.m. ET

Honda Classic: Round 1 tee times, TV info

Everything you need to know for the first round of the Honda Classic at PGA National.

The PGA Tour is heading to PGA National for the Honda Classic.

This week’s event, the 21st of the 2019-20 season, features six of the world’s top-20 players, highlighted by No. 3 Brooks Koepka, No. 12 Tommy Fleetwood and No. 13 Justin Rose.

The biggest story, however, might be the absence of nearby residents and top-10 players Rory McIlroy, Justin Thomas, Dustin Johnson, Patrick Cantlay and Tiger Woods.

Featured groups for the Honda are as follows: Brooks Koepka, defending champion Keith Mitchell, Matthew Wolff; Rickie Fowler, last week’s Puerto Rico Open winner Viktor Hovland, Joaquin Niemann; Shane Lowry, Gary Woodland, Louis Oosthuizen; Tommy Fleetwood, Billy Horschel, Justin Rose.

Check out the tee times and viewing info below (All Times Eastern).

Round 1 – Honda Classic

1st Tee – Thursday

Tee Time Players
6:45 a.m. Vaughn Taylor, Fabián Gómez, Seung-Yul Noh
6:55 a.m. Zac Blair, Denny McCarthy, Robby Shelton
7:05 a.m. Peter Malnati, Chesson Hadley, Arjun Atwal
7:15 a.m. Adam Long, Ryan Armour, Si Woo Kim
7:25 a.m. C.T. Pan, Greg Chalmers, Jim Furyk
7:35 a.m. Ryan Palmer, Keegan Bradley, Lucas Glover
7:45 a.m. Satoshi Kodaira, Brice Garnett, Austin Cook
7:55 a.m. Kyle Stanley, Chris Kirk, Richy Werenski
8:05 a.m. Cameron Tringale, Josh Teater, Sam Burns
8:15 a.m. Padraig Harrington, Matt Jones, Matthew NeSmith
8:25 a.m. Chase Seiffert, Sebastian Cappelen, Hayden Buckley
8:35 a.m. Rob Oppenheim, Mark Anderson, Tom Lewis
11:35 a.m. Harris English, Harold Varner III, Kyoung-Hoon Lee
11:45 a.m. John Huh, Sean O’Hair, Bronson Burgoon
11:55 a.m. Chris Stroud, Kevin Streelman, Matt Wallace
12:05 p.m. Corey Conners, Russell Knox, Davis Love III
12:15 p.m. Luke Donald, Stewart Cink, Vijay Singh
12:25 p.m. Shane Lowry, Gary Woodland, Louis Oosthuizen
12:35 p.m. Brooks Koepka, Matthew Wolff, Keith Mitchell
12:45 p.m. Scott Stallings, Lee Westwood, Jamie Lovemark
12:55 p.m. Jhonattan Vegas, Matt Every, Michael Thompson
1:05 p.m. Russell Henley, Mackenzie Hughes, Maverick McNealy
1:15 p.m. Joseph Bramlett, Tyler McCumber, Justin Bertsch
1:25 p.m. Vincent Whaley, Michael Gligic, Daniel Wetterich

10th Tee – Thursday

Tee Time Players
6:45 a.m. Bud Cauley, Patrick Rodgers, Harry Higgs
6:55 a.m. Luke List, Adam Schenk, Wyndham Clark
7:05 a.m. Byeong Hun An, Xinjun Zhang, Erik van Rooyen
7:15 a.m. Ian Poulter, Brendan Steele, Hudson Swafford
7:25 a.m. Dylan Frittelli, Martin Trainer, Zach Johnson
7:35 a.m. Viktor Hovland, Joaquin Niemann, Rickie Fowler
7:45 a.m. Justin Rose, Billy Horschel, Tommy Fleetwood
7:55 a.m. Charl Schwartzel, Emiliano Grillo, Kiradech Aphibarnrat
8:05 a.m. Nick Watney, Cameron Percy, Sepp Straka
8:15 a.m. Brian Gay, Bo Van Pelt, Tim Wilkinson
8:25 a.m. Brandon Hagy, Cameron Davis, Ryo Ishikawa
8:35 a.m. Wes Roach, Henrik Norlander, Kramer Hickok
11:35 a.m. Robert Streb, Beau Hossler, Mark Hubbard
11:45 a.m. D.J. Trahan, Tom Hoge, Talor Gooch
11:55 a.m. Danny Lee, David Hearn, Scott Harrington
12:05 p.m. Kevin Tway, Grayson Murray, Daniel Berger
12:15 p.m. J.T. Poston, Ted Potter, Jr., Jimmy Walker
12:25 p.m. Tyler Duncan, Patton Kizzire, Jason Dufner
12:35 p.m. Jim Herman, Aaron Wise, Rory Sabbatini
12:45 p.m. Brian Stuard, Scott Brown, Sungjae Im
12:55 p.m. Camilo Villegas, Roger Sloan, Lucas Bjerregaard
1:05 p.m. Brian Harman, Sam Ryder, Doc Redman
1:15 p.m. Doug Ghim, Bo Hoag, Kurt Kitayama
1:25 p.m. Hank Lebioda, Chris Baker, Andrew McCain

How to watch

Thursday

PGA Tour Live: 7 a.m.-6 p.m. ET
Golf Channel: 2-6 p.m. ET
PGA Tour Radio: 12-6 p.m. ET

Friday

PGA Tour Live: 7 a.m.-6 p.m. ET
Golf Channel:
2-6 p.m. ET
PGA Tour Radio: 12-6 p.m. ET

Saturday

PGA Tour Live: 7:15 a.m.-6 p.m. ET
Golf Channel: 1-3 p.m. ET
NBC: 3-6 p.m. ET
PGA Tour Radio: 1-6 p.m. ET

Sunday

PGA Tour Live: 7:15 a.m.-6 p.m. ET
Golf Channel: 1-3 p.m. ET
NBC: 3-6 p.m. ET
PGA Tour Radio: 1-6 p.m. ET

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Misunderstood? Brooks Koepka details what he would change about golf, a sport he truly loves

Don’t let his candid criticism fool you, Brooks Koepka loves golf. He proved it with an in-depth profile in GQ.

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Ask Brooks Koepka a question and he’ll answer. It might not be the answer you expect or necessarily want to hear, but it’ll be honest.

The former World No. 1 – who now sits third behind Rory McIlroy and Jon Rahm – opened up in great detail in a profile in GQ about what he would change about the game of golf, a sport that he truly loves despite some outside perception.

“One thing I’d change is maybe the stuffiness,” said Koepka, who’s never viewed himself as just a golfer. “Golf has always had this persona of the triple-pleated khaki pants, the button-up shirt, very country club atmosphere, where it doesn’t always have to be that way. That’s part of the problem.”

He continued:

“Everybody always says, ‘You need to grow the game.’ Well, why do you need to be so buttoned-up? ‘You have to take your hat off when you get in here.’ ‘You’re not allowed in here unless you’re a member — or unless the member’s here.’ Really? I just never really liked the country club atmosphere. I know that drives a lot of people away from liking me. But just ’cause this golf club has such prestige and the members are all famous and have a lot of money. … like, why can’t I show up and just go play the golf course? Why do I have to sit in my car and wait for the member?”

Koepka then used hockey as an example. Players have issues. Then they fight. Then they go to the penalty box, cool off, and continue playing. It’s celebrated in hockey.

“Golf’s just held to a different standard,” added Koepka. “Because it’s supposed to be a gentleman’s sport. And that’s where I think they lose a lot of people. They just do.”

Koepka has previously called golf boring, saying, “If I could do it over again, I’d play baseball, 100 percent, no doubt.” But don’t let his candid criticism and outspoken nature – when asked – fool you. The 29-year-old winner of four major championships, seven PGA Tour and six European Tour tournaments, loves golf.

“I just think people confuse all this for me not loving the game. I love the game. I absolutely love the game,” said Koepka. “I don’t love the stuffy atmosphere that comes along with it. That, to me, isn’t enjoyable.”

When he practices, Koepka looks just like the weekend hacker: Shirt untucked, tennis shoes untied, no belt. That doesn’t fly at most golf clubs.

“But a lot of clubs, if I walked up like that, it’d be: ‘Sir, you need to tuck your shirt in. You need to take your hat off when you get in here.’ That’s just not my style of place. I’m not saying no rules is the answer. But it’s like, you want everyone to enjoy themselves when they’re there, you don’t want to feel like you’re walking on eggshells when you arrive at the golf course. I don’t like feeling like I’m walking on eggshells everywhere I go.”

Besides winning, what does the former Florida State Seminole enjoy about golf? Learning.

“I like the fact that I learn something every time I play,” he explained. “You can go mess around and find some new shot. No matter what you do, you’re never going to have the same shot again. … And I always think that that’s just so cool.”

“I love it,” he added, “but I know how to break away from it. That’s where the confusion lies. Or maybe the misconception of me lies. I absolutely love the game. If I didn’t love it, I’d retire right now. Don’t take me wrong, but I could go off and nobody would ever see me again and I could live a great life. I do it because I actually love golf. I love going to practice, to compete, to tournaments, grinding it out even when you don’t have your best, trying to figure out a way to get it done — that’s fun to me. But the one thing that I’ve been very good at is breaking away from the game when I need to.”

What’s one way he breaks away from the game? By not befriending those he competes with on Tour.

“This might come across the wrong way but I already have enough friends. I don’t need any more,” said Koepka of his relationship with other players. “Just ’cause we work together doesn’t mean we have to be friends. I’ve got enough friends.”

“I just don’t want to be that close with everybody I compete with,” Koepka said. “Like, I don’t even have Rory’s phone number. I didn’t have Tiger’s phone number for the longest time. Like, I just never saved it. … I’ll text guys after they win, you know, but I’m still competitive. I still get mad — I mean, I’m happy for them, but I’m still like, Man, that should’ve been me. Or: That could’ve been me. You know, you still just lost.”

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Honda Classic: Six of the world’s top-20 players bound for PGA National

A handful of golf’s best are bound for PGA National this week for the Honda Classic.

Honda Classic field includes three Majors winnings from last season, including world No. 2 and Palm Beach County native, Brooks Koepka

Keith Mitchell was standing on the 15th green during the final round of last year’s Honda Classic when the nerves set in.

Mitchell knew he was close to winning his first PGA Tour event, but when he was looking at a 5-foot putt to give him the outright lead, it became reality.

“In golf you have time to think about what’s going on before you actually do it,” Mitchell recently said. “So that walk from 15 tee to 15 green when I got a 5-footer straight up the hill and all I’m trying to do is focus on just making the putt, which was probably the easiest putt I had all day, and just to calm your nerves to make that putt.”

Mitchell made that putt and an even bigger one on 18, a 15-footer for birdie that clinched the title by one stroke over two of the game’s biggest names, Brooks Koepka and Rickie Fowler.

“Playing on tour is so difficult because you’re playing against 140 to 150 guys every week and when you win … how fun it is, how exciting,” Mitchell said. “Really, the opportunities make you want to win more and more and more. But you forget how hard it was to get there in the first place.”

Mitchell, 28, now gets that chance to add to his lone Tour victory this week at PGA National. While Mitchell was able to hold off two of the best players in the world a year ago, he will have to face down a more formidable field in 2020 if he’s going to join Jack Nicklaus as the only back-to-back champions in the in the tournament’s 48-year history. Nicklaus won in 1977-78 when it was called the Jackie Gleason Inverrary Classic.

Stuck in the middle of a stretch that includes Tiger Woods’ Genesis Invitational and WGC-Mexico City the two weeks prior and the Arnold Palmer Invitational and Players Championship the following two weeks, Honda took a hit a year ago with just three of the top 20 players in the world.

But that field is stronger this year with six of the top 20 – No. 2 Koepka of Jupiter, No. 11 Tommy Fleetwood, No. 12 Justin Rose, No. 17 Louis Oosthuizen, No. 18 Shane Lowry and No. 19 Gary Woodland of Delray Beach. Fowler, ranked 26th, also returns.

“We’ve doubled the top 20s in the field,” Honda executive director Ken Kennerly said. “The field is stronger this year. The schedule is the schedule, that’s always going to be the issue for us.”

The disappointment for the fans is five of the top 10 golfers in the world who have homes a short distance from the course are skipping the tournament: No. 1 Rory McIlroy (Jupiter), No. 4 Justin Thomas (Jupiter), No. 5 Dustin Johnson (Palm Beach Gardens), No. 7 Patrick Cantlay (North Palm Beach) and No. 9 Tiger Woods (Jupiter Island). The schedule is the primary reason although Cantlay is taking off time for a medical procedure.

“Schedules dictate where these guys play,” Kennerly said. “The good news from our perspective is every player I’ve talked to loves the Honda Classic, loves PGA National and the only reason why they chose to skip it is they’re lining themselves up for the Masters, they’re lining themselves up for The Players Championship and they’re coming off the Tiger Woods Invitational and Mexico.”

Still, the highlight this year is having three of the four Majors’ winners from a year ago, Koepka (PGA Championship), Woodland (U.S. Open) and Lowry (British Open).

Kennerly is trying to get all three to bring along their trophies for a photo op.

Koepka, who was raised in Wellington, has won four majors: the PGA Championship and U.S. Open twice each. He was ranked No. 1 in the world when he committed but since has been surpassed by McIlroy. He is seeking his first victory at his hometown tournament. Koepka made a charge last year with the second-lowest final-day round of 66 but fell one shot shy of winning his first Honda.

“I think Brooks has a little unfinished business,” Kennerly said.

Koepka and Daniel Berger of Jupiter are the two homegrown golfers in the field. “I think it would be exciting for one of those guys to win,” Kennerly said.

Koepka’s 8-under last year was his best showing at PGA National. He has played Honda five times, missing the cut once. He is 7-over par in his 18 rounds.

Berger was second in 2015, losing in a playoff to Padraig Harrington. He has played Honda four times, missing the cut once, with a score of 4-over par for his 14 rounds.

How much each golfer won at the WGC-Mexico Championship

Check out how much each golfer won this week at the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship.

Patrick Reed was steady enough on Sunday at Club de Golf Chapultepec to leave Mexico City with a new trophy.

Reed, who earned his eighth PGA Tour victory and second WGC win, putted for bogey on the par-4 18th to card a final-round 4-under 67 and win the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship at 18 under, one shot over Bryson DeChambeau.

DeChambeau, who finished Sunday 6-under 65, led earlier in the round, but Reed seized the lead with a string of birdies from Nos. 15-17.

Scroll through the list below to find out how much each golfer at the WGC-Mexico Championship won over the weekend.

WGC-MEXICO: Leaderboard | Photos

WGC-Mexico Championship

Position Player To Par Earnings
1 Patrick Reed -18 $1,820,000
2 Bryson DeChambeau -17 $1,150,000
T-3 Jon Rahm -15 $600,000
T-3 Erik van Rooyen -15 $600,000
5 Rory McIlroy -14 $430,000
T-6 Hideki Matsuyama -13 $320,666
T-6 Tyrrell Hatton -13 $320,666
T-6 Justin Thomas -13 $320,666
T-9 Billy Horschel -12 $237,500
T-9 Kevin Na -12 $237,500
11 Paul Casey -11 $205,000
T-12 Abraham Ancer -9 $182,000
T-12 Gary Woodland -9 $182,000
T-14 Xander Schauffele -8 $160,000
T-14 Sebastian Muñoz -8 $160,000
T-16 Carlos Ortiz -7 $143,500
T-16 Rafa Cabrera Bello -7 $143,500
T-18 Bubba Watson -6 $125,500
T-18 Tommy Fleetwood -6 $125,500
T-18 Kevin Kisner -6 $125,500
T-18 Benjamin Hebert -6 $125,500
T-22 Brandt Snedeker -5 $105,500
T-22 Lee Westwood -5 $105,500
T-22 Cameron Smith -5 $105,500
T-22 Matt Kuchar -5 $105,500
T-26 Adam Scott -4 $90,000
T-26 Zander Lombard -4 $90,000
T-26 Scottie Scheffler -4 $90,000
T-29 Shane Lowry -3 $73,500
T-29 Ryan Fox -3 $73,500
T-29 Sungjae Im -3 $73,500
T-29 Chez Reavie -3 $73,500
T-29 Lanto Griffin -3 $73,500
T-29 Christiaan Bezuidenhout -3 $73,500
T-29 Justin Harding -3 $73,500
T-29 Byeong Hun An -3 $73,500
T-37 Matthew Fitzpatrick -2 $56,200
T-37 Shaun Norris -2 $56,200
T-37 Brendon Todd -2 $56,200
T-37 Bernd Wiesberger -2 $56,200
T-37 Sergio Garcia -2 $56,200
T-42 Marc Leishman -1 $49,500
T-42 Branden Grace -1 $49,500
T-42 Danny Willett -1 $49,500
T-42 Matthias Schwab -1 $49,500
T-42 Robert MacIntyre -1 $49,500
T-42 Collin Morikawa -1 $49,500
T-48 Dustin Johnson E $45,500
T-48 Zach Murray E $45,500
50 Corey Conners +1 $44,000
T-51 Louis Oosthuizen +2 $42,500
T-51 Jason Kokrak +2 $42,500
T-53 Francesco Molinari +3 $39,100
T-53 Charles Howell III +3 $39,100
T-53 Victor Perez +3 $39,100
T-53 Kurt Kitayama +3 $39,100
T-53 Jazz Janewattananond +3 $39,100
T-58 Jordan Spieth +4 $36,500
T-58 Lucas Herbert +4 $36,500
T58 Matt Wallace +4 $36,500
T-61 Shugo Imahira +5 $35,000
T-61 Webb Simpson +5 $35,000
T-61 Lucas Glover +5 $35,000
64 Pablo Larrazabal +6 $34,000
65 Scott Hend +8 $33,750
66 Mike Lorenzo-Vera +10 $33,500
67 Jorge Campillo +11 $33,250
68 Ryo Ishikawa +12 $33,000
T-69 Marcus Kinhult +13 $32,625
T-69 Graeme McDowell +13 $32,625
71 Sung Kang +15 $32,250
72 Tae Hee Lee +19 $32,000

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How much each golfer won at the Puerto Rico Open

Check out how much each golfer won this weekend at the PGA Tour’s Puerto Rico Open.

Welcome to the winner’s circle, Viktor Hovland.

The former Oklahoma State standout, 2018 U.S. Amateur champion and current PGA Tour rookie earned his first win on Tour on Sunday, canning a 30-foot putt on the 18th green during Sunday’s final round of the Puerto Rico Open to win by one shot.

Hovland joins rising stars on Tour Collin Morikawa and Matthew Wolff, who both earned their first wins late in 2019.

Josh Teater finished second at 19 under, followed by Kyle Stanley, Sam Ryder and Emiliano Grillo, who were all T-3 at 15 under.

Check out the complete money list below.

PUERTO RICO OPEN: Leaderboard

Puerto Rico Open

Position Player To par Earnings
1 Viktor Hovland -20 $540,000
2 Josh Teater -19 $327,000
T3 Kyle Stanley -15 $159,000
T3 Sam Ryder -15 $159,000
T3 Emiliano Grillo -15 $159,000
T6 Matthew NeSmith -14 $101,250
T6 Ted Potter Jr. -14 $101,250
T6 Martin Laird -14 $101,250
T9 Jhonattan Vegas -13 $75,750
T9 Vincent Whaley -13 $75,750
T9 Joseph Bramlett -13 $75,750
T9 Wes Roach -13 $75,750
T9 Rob Oppenheim -13 $75,750
T14 Roberto Castro -12 $50,250
T14 Shawn Stefani -12 $50,250
T14 Kyoung-Hoon Lee -12 $50,250
T14 Adam Schenk -12 $50,250
T14 Xin-Jun Zhang -12 $50,250
T14 Ben Martin -12 $50,250
T20 Tim Wilkinson -11 $31,607
T20 Kristoffer Ventura -11 $31,607
T20 Will Gordon -11 $31,607
T20 Brice Garnett -11 $31,607
T20 Julian Etulain -11 $31,607
T20 Doug Ghim -11 $31,607
T20 Tyler McCumber -11 $31,607
T27 Kiradech Aphibarnrat -10 $20,119
T27 Bill Haas -10 $20,119
T27 Cameron Davis -10 $20,119
T27 Mark D. Anderson -10 $20,119
T27 Rhein Gibson -10 $20,119
T27 Zack Sucher -10 $20,119
T27 Robert Streb -10 $20,119
T27 Maverick McNealy -10 $20,119
T35 Beau Hossler -9 $13,700
T35 Seamus Power -9 $13,700
T35 Ryan Brehm -9 $13,700
T35 Johnson Wagner -9 $13,700
T35 George McNeill -9 $13,700
T35 Bo Hoag -9 $13,700
T35 Sang-Moon Bae -9 $13,700
T35 Chris Couch -9 $13,700
T35 Patrick Rodgers -9 $13,700
T44 Nelson Lauta Ledesma -8 $9,220
T44 Cameron Percy -8 $9,220
T44 Peter Uihlein -8 $9,220
T44 Anirban Lahiri -8 $9,220
T44 Henrik Norlander -8 $9,220
T44 Austin Cook -8 $9,220
T50 Arjun Atwal -7 $7,620
T50 David Lingmerth -7 $7,620
T52 Derek Ernst -6 $7,110
T52 Chase Seiffert -6 $7,110
T52 Robby Shelton -6 $7,110
T52 Fabian Gomez -6 $7,110
T52 MJ Daffue -6 $7,110
T52 D.J. Trahan -6 $7,110
T58 Michael Gellerman -5 $6,840
T58 Sebastian Cappelen -5 $6,840
T60 Alex Cejka -4 $6,660
T60 Bo Van Pelt -4 $6,660
T60 J.J. Henry -4 $6,660
T60 Roger Sloan -4 $6,660
T64 Brandon Hagy -3 $6,450
T64 Brendon de Jonge -3 $6,450
T64 John Senden -3 $6,450
T67 Scott Brown E $6,300
T67 Jay McLuen E $6,300
69 Daniel Chopra 3 $6,210

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With Masters debut approaching, Erik van Rooyen finds his groove at WGC-Mexico Championship

With his Masters debut approaching, Erik van Rooyen has found his groove at the WGC-Mexico Championship.

Erik van Rooyen picked the perfect time to find his A-game.

After tying the course record on Friday with a 62 (Jon Rahm would break the record with a 61 on Saturday), the 30-year-old finds himself in contention at this week’s WGC-Mexico Championship with a busy schedule ahead.

In 46 days the eyes of the golf world will be on Augusta National for the Masters, where van Rooyen will compete for the first time. He qualified for the Masters by finishing inside the top 50 of the final OWGR last year.

As a freshman in college in 2009 at the University of Minnesota, the Golden Gophers played in Augusta State’s tournament, held the weekend before the Masters. Van Rooyen and his Minnesota teammates got tickets to Monday’s practice round.

“I remember Tiger was warming up with Fred Couples, Trevor Immelman was on the range, and I guess you go see some iconic holes, No. 1, walked a few holes, and then went to Amen Corner,” recalled van Rooyen after Friday’s round in Mexico City. “Thirteen is a much bigger dogleg than what it seems on TV, and then we just kind of spent some time there, bought a little bit of merchandise, as everybody does, and yeah, just kind of tried to soak it in.”

WGC-MEXICO: Leaderboard | Photos | Updates

Looking back, van Rooyen has fond memories of his first trip to Augusta National. As an untested freshman, the South African knew his game was far from Masters-quality, but he knew he would one day get his chance.

“I always thought I’d play it, but until you do it, you don’t really know,” said van Rooyen.

“I’m probably looking forward to the first tee shot on Thursday with all the people there. That’s what you dream of, right?”

While his dream is soon to become a reality, van Rooyen has some work to do before driving down Magnolia Lane.

“I’d love to get into the Players. I’m currently just outside the top 50,” he said. “I’m playing Honda next week, hopefully Players, and then Match Play and then Augusta, which I’ve never been to before.”

After missing the cut at last week’s Genesis Invitational, the 30-year-old said he’s learned a lot about his game this week at a tournament featuring a field of the world’s best.

“I think at a tournament like this and a field like this, if you can play well, you can play well anywhere,” said van Rooyen. “So if I continue the way I’m going, it’ll be a big confidence booster.”

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Chez Reavie, Jon Rahm make holes-in-one Saturday at WGC-Mexico Championship

Chez Reavie and Jon Rahm both made holes-in-one Saturday during the third round at the WGC-Mexico Championship.

Putting is overrated.

It’s Moving Day at the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship, and what better way is there to shoot up the leaderboard than with a hole-in-one?

During Saturday’s third round at Mexico City’s Club de Golf Chapultepec, both Chez Reavie and Jon Rahm, former Arizona State Sun Devils, made holes-in-one within minutes of each other.

Reavie was first, acing the 167-yard par 3 third hole. It was Reavie’s fifth hole-in-one made on the PGA Tour and his second in the last two months. The two-time winner on Tour aced the eighth hole during the final round of the QBE Shootout in December.

Rahm was next, one-hopping his ball into the bottom of the cup off the tee at the 158-yard par 3 17th. But why talk about it when we can just show you?

Rahm walked off the course T-5 at 11 under with the leaders still playing. Reavie is 2 under, T-29.

[opinary poll=”what-are-your-thoughts-on-the-proposed-p-rHaSoW” customer=”golfweek”]

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Patrick Reed addresses outside noise, tries to ‘improve every day on and off the golf course’

Patrick Reed addressed his ability to block out the outside noise as he contends at the WGC-Mexico Championship.

[jwplayer fvAWbWmF-9JtFt04J]

The last few months have been anything but easy for Patrick Reed.

The fallout from a two-stroke penalty for a pair of practice swings taken in a waste bunker at December’s Hero World Challenge has brought on heckling fans, an incident with his caddie and fan at the Presidents Cup and even a cease and desist sent from his attorney to Golf Channel’s Brandel Chamblee.

In five events since the Hero, Reed has two missed cuts at the Sony Open as well as the Saudi International. He also has top-10 finishes with a T-2 at the Sentry Tournament of Champions and T-6 at the Farmers Insurance Open.

Despite more criticism from Brooks Koepka and claims of cheating by former CBS analyst Peter Kostis earlier this week, Reed brushed it all off and is working on another strong finish, this time at the WGC-Mexico Championship. After 36 holes, Reed is T-2 with Erik van Rooyen at 10 under, one shot behind leader Bryson DeChambeau.

WGC-MEXICO: Leaderboard | Best photos | Updates

“I think the biggest thing for me is I just work so hard at it,” Reed said in a TV interview after his round on his ability to compartmentalize and block out the noise from outside the ropes. “My team and I work really hard, and I’m not going to lie, just the whole thing on the outside distracts us from our ultimate goal, and that’s to go out and play great golf and continue to try to improve every day on and off the golf course.”

“As long as you’re doing that, then you’re living the right way,” added Reed. “So at the end of the day, you can’t please everybody, and I feel like I’m doing everything I need to be doing to continue to strive in the game of golf hopefully on and off the golf course.”

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