Caitlin Clark’s golf equipment at The RSM Classic

Check out the gear WNBA superstar Caitlin Clark is using in the PGA Tour’s 2024 RSM Classic pro-am.

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The PGA Tour’s final full-field event of 2024 takes place this week on the Sea Island Golf Club’s Seaside and Plantation courses, and once again, WNBA star Caitlin Clark is stealing the show at the pro-am.

Clark, who competed last week in the pro-am at The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican, teed off on Wednesday alongside 2007 Masters champion Zach Johnson, and PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan was in the fivesome.

Clark is using a Callaway Paradym X driver with 10.5 degrees of loft, along with a 15-degree Paradym X fairway wood and Paradym X 3- and 4-hybrids. Those clubs are all designed to help get the ball up easily and maximize forgiveness, which the Indiana Fever star clearly needs. She almost hit the spectators last week on the first tee.

Clark has been playing Callaway Paradym X irons (5-AW), along with 54- and 58-degree Callaway JAWS Raw wedges in her bag. However, Wednesday morning she also had 50- and 60-degree Callaway Opus wedges in her bag, finished in Iowa Hawkeye black and yellow.

Clark’s putter is an Odyssey Ai-One Double Wide, a heel-toe weighted blade with an extended back flange.

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[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Caitlin Clark’s irons” link=”https://pga-tour-superstore.pxf.io/rnV5ry”]

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Caitlin Clark’s wedges” link=”https://pga-tour-superstore.pxf.io/09Jrn3″]

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Caitlin Clark’s putter” link=”https://pga-tour-superstore.pxf.io/Wq0KMX”]

2024 RSM Classic Thursday tee times, PGA Tour pairings and how to watch

The purse at the RSM Classic is $7.6 million with $1.368 million going to the winner.

The final event of the PGA Tour season is here.

The 2024 RSM Classic gets underway Thursday at Sea Island Golf Club’s Seaside and Plantation Courses, with weekend play exclusively on the Seaside Course in St. Simons Island, Georgia. This week is the final chance for players to get into the top 125 of the FedEx Cup standings with Nos. 122-140 all in the field.

Ludvig Aberg is the defending champion.

The Seaside Course ranks No. 1 in Golfweek’s Best list of public-access courses in Georgia, and it also ties for No. 71 on Golfweek’s Best list of modern courses in the U.S. – the renovation by Fazio was extensive enough for the layout to qualify as a modern course. The Plantation Course ranks No. 6 on the list of top public-access courses in the state.

The purse at the RSM Classic is $7.6 million with $1.368 million going to the winner. The winner will also receive 500 FedEx Cup points.

RSM: Leaderboard | Odds, picks

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s what you you need to know for the first round of the 2024 RSM Classic. All times listed are ET.

Thursday tee times

Seaside Course

Time Tee Players
8:50 a.m. 1 Kevin Tway, William McGirt, Patrick Rodgers
8:50 a.m. 10 Brandon Wu, S.H. Kim, Ben Kohles
9:01 a.m. 1 James Hahn, Joseph Bramlett, Carson Young
9:01 a.m. 10 Troy Merritt, Michael Kim, Patrick Fishburn
9:12 a.m. 1 Richy Werenski, Adam Hadwin, Tyson Alexander
9:12 a.m. 10 Lanto Griffin, Vince Whaley, Will Gordon
9:23 a.m. 1 Matt McCarty, Ludvig Åberg, Luke Clanton (a)
9:23 a.m. 10 Davis Riley, Luke List, Adam Svensson
9:34 a.m. 1 Nico Echavarria, J.T. Poston, Brian Harman
9:34 a.m. 10 Lee Hodges, Trey Mullinax, Daniel Berger
9:45 a.m. 1 Russell Knox, Sean O’Hair, Hayden Springer
9:45 a.m. 10 Martin Laird, Tommy Gainey, Kelly Kraft
9:56 a.m. 1 Alejandro Tosti, Adrien Dumont de Chassart, Steven Fisk
9:56 a.m. 10 Austin Smotherman, Norman Xiong, Paul Peterson
10:07 a.m. 1 Nate Lashley, Mark Hubbard, Callum Tarren
10:07 a.m. 10 Bud Cauley, Robby Shelton, Ryo Hisatsune
10:18 a.m. 1 Doug Ghim, Justin Lower, Sam Stevens
10:18 a.m. 10 S.Y. Noh, Taylor Montgomery, Greyson Sigg
10:29 a.m. 1 Peter Malnati, Cameron Champ, Webb Simpson
10:29 a.m. 10 Nick Watney, Maverick McNealy, Roger Sloan
10:40 a.m. 1 Jake Knapp, Gary Woodland, Brandt Snedeker
10:40 a.m. 10 Taylor Moore, Chad Ramey, Andrew Putnam
10:51 a.m. 1 Chez Reavie, Denny McCarthy, Henrik Norlander
10:51 a.m. 10 Camilo Villegas, Matt Wallace, Ryan Brehm
11:02 a.m. 1 Trace Crowe, Wilson Furr, Francisco Bidé
11:02 a.m. 10 Joe Highsmith, Philip Knowles, Blake McShea

Plantation Course

Time Tee Players
8:50 a.m. 1 Adam Long, Sam Ryder, Jacob Bridgeman
8:50 a.m. 10 Dylan Frittelli, Matt NeSmith, Justin Suh
9:01 a.m. 1 Garrick Higgo, Martin Trainer, Eric Cole
9:01 a.m. 10 Kevin Chappell, Carl Yuan, David Skinns
9:12 a.m. 1 Austin Cook, Josh Teater, Hayden Buckley
9:12 a.m. 10 Tyler Duncan, Ryan Moore, Ben Taylor
9:23 a.m. 1 Nick Hardy, J.J. Spaun, Stewart Cink
9:23 a.m. 10 Matt Kuchar, Aaron Baddeley, Kevin Streelman
9:34 a.m. 1 Kevin Kisner, Brendon Todd, Adam Schenk
9:34 a.m. 10 Rafael Campos, Kevin Yu, Si Woo Kim
9:45 a.m. 1 Tim Wilkinson, Erik Barnes, Reid Davenport
9:45 a.m. 10 Tom Whitney, Blaine Hale, Jr., Kyle Westmoreland
9:56 a.m. 1 MJ Daffue, Anders Albertson, Drew Doyle
9:56 a.m. 10 Ryan McCormick, Raul Pereda, Marcus Byrd
10:07 a.m. 1 Cody Gribble, Sangmoon Bae, Ben Griffin
10:07 a.m. 10 Keith Mitchell, Alex Smalley, Pierceson Coody
10:18 a.m. 1 Sung Kang, Andrew Novak, Dylan Wu
10:18 a.m. 10 Davis Love III, Zach Johnson, Jonathan Byrd
10:29 a.m. 1 Robert Streb, Bill Haas, Chandler Phillips
10:29 a.m. 10 Patton Kizzire, Davis Thompson, Harris English
10:40 a.m. 1 Brice Garnett, Mackenzie Hughes, K.H. Lee
10:40 a.m. 10 Austin Eckroat, Chris Kirk, Sepp Straka
10:51 a.m. 1 Lucas Glover, Seamus Power, Francesco Molinari
10:51 a.m. 10 Joel Dahmen, Wesley Bryan, Zac Blair
11:02 a.m. 1 Zecheng Dou, Kevin Dougherty, Jacob Modleski (a)
11:02 a.m. 10 Michael Thorbjornsen, Paul Barjon, Christo Lamprecht

How to watch, listen

You can also watch the RSM Classic on Golf Channel free on Fubo. All times ET.

Thursday, Nov. 21

Golf Channel: 12-3 p.m.

Sirius XM: 9 a.m.-3 p.m

ESPN+: 8 a.m.-4 p.m.

Friday, Nov. 22

Golf Channel: 12-3 p.m.

Sirius XM: 9 a.m.-3 p.m.

ESPN+: 8 a.m.-4 p.m.

Saturday, Nov. 23

Golf Channel: 1-4 p.m.

Sirius XM: 11 a.m.-4 p.m.

Sunday, Nov. 24

Golf Channel: 1-4 p.m.

Sirius XM: 11 a.m.-4 p.m.

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The RSM Classic 2024 odds, course history and picks to win

Let’s get a winner to end the year.

The final official PGA Tour event of 2024 has arrived, as Sea Island Golf Club’s Seaside Course is once again set to host The RSM Classic. Defending champion Ludvig Aberg makes his return to golf’s biggest stage this week after a two-month recovery from knee surgery. The Swede hasn’t played since a 16th-place finish at the Tour Championship.

Some of the other players teeing it up in St. Simons Island, Georgia, this week include Brian Harman, Harris English, Lucas Glover, J.T. Poston and Denny McCarthy.

More: Lucas Glover slams changes being voted on by PGA Tour Policy Board: ‘They think we’re stupid’

The champion on Sunday afternoon will receive $1.368 million of the $7.6 million purse and 500 FedEx Cup points.

This is the final week for players to solidify their spot in the FedEx Cup top 125 and earn cards for next season. There are several notable players on the bubble in the RSM field, including Joel Dahmen and Daniel Berger.

Golf course

Sea Island Golf Club’s Seaside Course | Par 70 | 7,005 yards

2023 RSM Classic
Ludvig Aberg of Sweden plays a shot from a bunker on the 13th hole during the final round of The RSM Classic on the Seaside Course at Sea Island Resort on November 19, 2023 in St Simons Island, Georgia. (Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images)

Course history

RSM Classic odds

Player Odds Player Odds
Ludvig Aberg (+900) Matt Wallace (+3000)
Davis Thompson (+2200) J.J. Spaun (+3500)
Brian Harman (+2200) Eric Cole (+3500)
Denny McCarthy (+2500) Chris Kirk (+3500)
Si Woo Kim (+2800) Andrew Novak (+3500)
J.T. Poston (+3000) Mackenzie Hughes (+3500)
Harris English (+3000) Lucas Glover (+3500)
Seamus Power (+3000) Doug Ghim (+4000)
Ben Griffin (+3000) Luke Clanton (+4000)
Maverick McNealy (+3000) Justin Lower (+4500)

Picks to win The RSM Classic

Ben Griffin

2024 FedEx St. Jude Championship
Ben Griffin walks down the fairway on the 18th hole on the first day of the FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tenn., on Thursday, August 15, 2024.

Odds: 30/1

Analysis: We had Griffin on the card last week for the Bermuda Championship and he finished solo eighth. So, we’re riding with him again, hoping he can earn his first Tour victory at the RSM.

He has four top-25 finishes in his last five starts and has played well at Sea Island in the past: T-8 in 2023 and T-29 in 2022.

J.J. Spaun

J.J. Spaun of the United States plays his shot from the 15th tee during the second round of the Procore Championship 2024 at Silverado Resort on September 13, 2024 in Napa, California. (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)

Odds: 35/1

Analysis: Spaun has loved this tournament over the last few years: T-13 in 2023, T-15 in 2022 and T-16 in 2021. Before a T-30 finish at the World Wide Technology Championship a few weeks ago, Spaun tied for sixth at the Zozo Championship.

Greyson Sigg

Greyson Sigg of the United States prepares to play his shot from the fourth tee during the first round of the Butterfield Bermuda Championship 2024 at Port Royal Golf Course on November 14, 2024 in Southampton, Bermuda. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

Odds: 60/1

Analysis: Since missing the cut at the Sanderson Farms, Sigg has played some high-level golf. He tied for 11th at the Black Desert, for 23rd at the Shriners and for ninth last week in Bermuda. The Augusta, Georgia, native tied for eighth at the RSM last year and finished in a share of 15th in 2022.

PGA Tour Policy Board approves changes to field sizes, eligibility and FedEx Cup points system

The PGA Tour is changing in 2026.

The PGA Tour is officially getting smaller in 2026.

On Monday, the PGA Tour Policy Board approved “competitive changes supported by the Player Advisory Council that will deliver a stronger and more competitive and entertaining PGA Tour to fans, players, tournaments and partners,” according to the PGA Tour.

The changes include field size adjustments to account for events with limited daylight and minor changes to the FedExCup points structure. Eligibility and field size changes will take effect for the 2026 season, while adjustments to the FedExCup points system will be implemented beginning in 2025.

“Today’s announced changes build on the competitive and schedule enhancements incorporated over the last six years in seeking the best version of the PGA Tour for our fans, players, tournaments and partners,” PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan said in a release. “This was a true collaborative effort, and I’m extremely proud of the PAC for the time and effort they put into evaluating how we build a stronger PGA Tour.”

Lynch: The PGA Tour’s board meeting will bring changes, but not yet to player entitlement or fans being shortchanged

For eligibility, the changes include exempt status changing from top 125 to top 100 in the FedExCup standings with conditional status for finishers 101-125. This change was incorporated for players who receive their cards via the Korn Ferry Tour/DP World Tour/Q-School to have a greater certainty of schedule and equitable playing opportunities for full-field events, per the release.

Only the top 20 finishers on the Korn Ferry Tour will receive PGA Tour cards instead of 30. Ten players from the DP World Tour will still receive cards, and Q-School will be limited to five instead of five and ties.

For Monday qualifiers, in 144-player fields, only four spots will be available. That number goes to two spots for 132-player events and none for 120-player fields.

Sponsor exemptions used for players in the DP World Tour/Korn Ferry Tour/Q-School category, and those restricted to PGA Tour members, will be removed and reallocated to the next eligible members on the priority ranking. Open events maintain unrestricted sponsor exemptions.

More: Lucas Glover slams changes being voted on by PGA Tour Policy Board: ‘They think we’re stupid’

As for field sizes, the Tour is reducing the maximum number of players in a starting field played on one course from 156 to 144 players; a reduction to 120 or 132 as required by circumstances such as daylight. The Players will move to a field size of 120 players. Most tournaments played on multiple courses will stay at 156 players, with the exception of the Farmers Insurance Open, which will have 144 players.

These FedEx Cup points changes go into effect next year: major championships and the Players will have a slight increase to second-place points and a slight decrease in points for positions 11 and beyond. Signature events will have a slight decrease in points for positions 7 and beyond.

Some other approved changes include the top-10 finishers and ties, including amateurs, to be granted access to the next event, rather than the top-10 professionals. Additionally, an extra point will be awarded for a top-five finish in PGA Tour University Accelerated. Additionally, Invitational eligibility adjustments were made for the Players, Charles Schwab Challenge and Genesis Scottish Open to align with the revised standard eligibility structure.

“The PAC discussions were based on a number of guiding principles, including our belief that PGA Tour membership is the pinnacle of achievement in men’s professional golf,” said Policy Board player director Adam Scott. “The player representatives of the PGA Tour recognize the need to be continually improving its offerings to enhance the golf fan experience. The changes approved today will provide equitable playing opportunities for new young talent to be showcased, and positively refine the playing experience for our members.”

Lynch: The PGA Tour’s board meeting will bring changes, but not yet to player entitlement or fans being shortchanged

Administration changes mean the boardroom is now more likely to revere Warren Buffett than Arnie or Jack.

Just days after the birth of his first child and on the brink of losing his status, career journeyman Rafael Campos came up with a ‘Hail Mary’ moment on Sunday, winning the Butterfield Bermuda Championship to safeguard his job and punch his ticket to the Masters. Meanwhile, a yacht spin away at a boardroom in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, decisions were made Monday that ensure people like him will have fewer pathways to the Tour, less opportunity to use any card they earn, and dim prospects of keeping it.

The past 24 hours could hardly have produced a more jarring juxtaposition between the marketing romanticism of the PGA Tour and its modern, miserly reality.

Changes in the administration of the Tour — the addition of private investors and the rise of players who fancy themselves such — mean the boardroom is now more likely to revere Warren Buffett than, say, Arnie or Jack. Buffett has often said that price is what you pay and value is what you get, and much of what was being deliberated today focused on whether there’s sufficient value in what they’re paying for. Even if not every constituency is being subjected to the same metrics.

Rank-and-file members didn’t emerge well from this meeting. Beginning in 2026, field sizes will be reduced, the ranks of exempt players will be cut, and the number of Korn Ferry Tour grads and Monday qualifiers will be slashed. The dominant (and wholly defensible) sentiment is that too many guys are paid too much for too scant a contribution to the business, so the herd must be culled. And to be fair, some of the player-directors who made these calls are almost certainly going to find themselves on the wrong side of the cull soon enough.

2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship
Rafael Campos of Puerto Rico reacts after putting in to win on the 18th green during the final round of the Butterfield Bermuda Championship 2024 at Port Royal Golf Course on November 17, 2024, in Southampton, Bermuda. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

Also on the agenda was tens of millions of dollars of budget cuts, what private equity likes to call “efficiencies.” Addressing bloat and waste is a long overdue exercise in this organization, but many of those who work at the GloHo deserve more defenders than they’ll see when the axe starts swinging. The operations and culture of the Tour — a mix of competence, complacency and conceit, depending on who you’re dealing with — is overdue a shake-up, but people who’ve done a good job will still be hurt. Cuts ought to be with a scalpel to safeguard talent, growth and revenue, but those decisions are now heavily influenced by folks accustomed to using chainsaws, and who have a great deal of experience in sports but none in golf.

Another cost-versus-value analysis will focus on the Tour’s potential deal with the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia. Are player-directors willing to accept things like team golf and no reparations from LIV defectors in return for a smoother pathway to reunifying the game? They must surely grasp that an opportunity now presents itself in the form of a stubby Cheeto thumb eager to tilt the scales of the Department of Justice in favor of whoever is most flattering, though it’s a pity the Tour lacked PIF’s foresight to lob a couple billion bucks into Jared Kushner’s Affinity Partners hedge fund.

Other reckonings will come in due course. For tournaments, which exist now in a caste system that elevates some and diminishes others, and with a risk to the entire Fall series if new global priorities emerge as part of a deal. Sponsors, too, will make their own value calculations. How many will pay in excess of $20 million to players who won’t actually guarantee their appearances? And for sluggish ratings within a niche audience? The Tour’s board will be dealing with troublesome fallout long after Greg Norman and his LIV folly have been dislodged from the Saudi teat.

More: Lucas Glover slams changes being voted on by PGA Tour Policy Board: ‘They think we’re stupid’

As of today, the Tour’s investment partners at Strategic Sports Group are a loud, powerful and impatient presence in the boardroom. That’s a positive. Outsiders with an eye on returns are incentivized to dispense with outdated practices and attitudes and push a more forward-thinking, less protectionist vision. But SSG’s can’t be the only voice that matters. Who will advocate for what can’t be represented on a balance sheet? Like the charitable impact tournaments have at a community level, the legacy and tradition around particular cities and sponsors, or the essential meritocracy of having pathways for less privileged players. That should not be lost in the accounting.

For all the changes approved today, this final Tour board meeting of 2024 won’t address two painful necessities. At some point, the board needs to face down the entitlement of top players, whose compensation seems only to rise even while the stock of their enterprise craters. And they’ll have to get real about serving the constituency that actually gives (fans) rather than just the one that takes.

If they’re confident that their decisions will produce an enhanced product for long-suffering fans, then it’s about time one of them peeked around the boardroom door and began explaining how.

Donald Trump’s plan to unite PGA Tour-LIV Golf may have started last week in Florida

One month after LIV’s inaugural event, Trump told PGA Tour golfers to, “take the money now.”

Donald Trump recently golfed with PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan in Florida and sat next to Yasir Al-Rumayyan, the head of Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, at a UFC event, perhaps initiating his plan to help unite the PGA Tour and LIV Golf.

Trump, the president elect, recently said he believes it would take “the better part of 15 minutes” for him to get a deal done between the two tours that have been negotiating for 18 months in an attempt to combine commercial businesses and rights into a new for-profit company.

Trump, an avid golfer and golf fan, hosted Monahan at Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida, on Friday, one day before sitting between Al-Rumayyan and Elon Musk at the UCF event at Madison Square Garden in New York City.

A PGA Tour spokesperson confirmed Friday’s golf outing to the Washington Post.

“President-Elect Trump has always been a champion of the game of golf and Commissioner Monahan was honored to accept his invitation to play at Trump International. The President-Elect and the Commissioner share a love for the game and the Commissioner enjoyed their time together.”

The Post reported the round was initiated by Trump.

Trump’s victory increased hope for LIV, which is financed by the PIF, and the PGA Tour could resolved their differences and end the rivalry that has fractured golf.

Rory McIlroy, the third-ranked golfer in the world, believes Trump’s return to the White House will be good for the sport.

“I think that clears the way a little bit,” McIlroy told reporters at the DP World Tour’s Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship soon after Trump was declared the winner of the election.

McIlroy won the DP World Tour Championship in Dubai on Sunday.

Trump aligned with LIV from the start

Trump’s adversarial relationship with the PGA Tour led to his becoming an advocate of LIV, which was started in 2022 by Greg Norman.

“He might be able to (get a deal done),” McIlroy, the four-time major winner said about Trump. “He’s got Elon Musk, who I think is the smartest man in the world, beside him. We might be able to do something if we can get Musk involved, too.

“Yeah, I think from the outside looking in, it’s probably a little less complicated than it actually is. But obviously Trump has a great relationship with Saudi Arabia. He’s got a great relationship with golf. He’s a lover of golf. So, maybe. Who knows?”

Trump told the Sirius XM podcast “Let’s Go!” he believes it would take him “the better part of 15 minutes” to get a deal done.

“I’m really going to work on other things, to be honest with you,” Trump said. “I think we have much bigger problems than that. But I do think we should have one tour and they should have the best players in that tour.”

McIlroy said this summer among the reasons the sides cannot agree are half the players on both sides do not want an agreement and the U.S. Department of Justice.

The DOJ is headed by the U.S. attorney general, who reports directly to the president and is a member of the president’s Cabinet.

LIV just completed its third year. During that time it has played six events on Trump properties, including three at Trump National Doral outside of Miami. Trump frequently has played in the LIV pro-ams at his courses.

One month after LIV’s inaugural event, Trump told PGA Tour golfers to, “take the money now.”

Initial field for 2024 PNC Championship set, but Tiger and Charlie aren’t entered … yet

A pair of Masters champions will make their debut.

A pair of Masters champions are set to make their debut at the 2024 PNC Championship.

Fred Couples and Trevor Immelman will tee it up for the first time next month at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club Orlando in the silly-season event. Couples will partner with his 16-year-old stepson, Hunter Hannemann, while Immelman will pair with his 18-year-old son Jacob Immelman.

Eighteen of the 20 teams were announced Monday, and there were plenty of familiar names on the tee sheet. Lee Trevino, who has played in every edition, will be back, as will defending champions Bernhard Langer and son Jason.

However, there is one notable omission as of yet: Tiger Woods and son Charlie.

The duo has teed it up the past four years, including a runner-up finish in 2021. But with Tiger undergoing surgery for another back surgery in September, his status for the PNC, and his Hero World Challenge event in the Bahamas in two weeks, remains in the air.

The PNC features 20 major champions and their relatives competing in a two-day, 36-hole scramble for the Willie Park Trophy. To qualify, players must have won a major championship or the Players while their partner must not hold any playing status on a professional Tour.

Here’s a look at the field for the 2024 PNC Championship, which is set for Dec. 19-22:

  • Stewart Cink and Connor Cink
  • Fred Couples and Hunter Hannemann
  • John Daly and John Daly II
  • David Duval and Brady Duval
  • Nick Faldo and Matthew Faldo
  • Trevor Immelman and Jacob Immelman
  • Nelly Korda and Petr Korda
  • Matt Kuchar and Carson Kuchar
  • Bernhard Langer and Jason Langer
  • Tom Lehman and Sean Lehman
  • Justin Leonard and Luke Leonard
  • Mark O’Meara and Sean O’Meara
  • Gary Player and Alexander Hall
  • Nick Price and Greg Price
  • Vijah Singh and Qass Singh
  • Annika Sorenstam and Will McGee
  • Steve Stricker and Izzi Stricker
  • Lee Trevino and Sean Trevino
  • TBD
  • TBD

2024 RSM Classic: Prize money, TV coverage, who’s in the field and more

The PGA Tour’s season finale is here.

Only one event is left on the PGA Tour in 2024, and this week, the Tour is back in the United States for the first time in nearly a month.

The 2024 RSM Classic gets underway Thursday in Georgia, and it’s the final official event of the PGA Tour’s season.

The RSM Classic is the eighth and final PGA Tour in the fall slate. After this week, the Tour is of until The Sentry in January, though there will be three silly-season events in December, including Tiger Woods’ Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas.

From TV coverage to field information and prize money, here’s what you need to know about the 2024 RSM Classic.

RSM Classic course information

Sea Island Golf Club’s Seaside Course in St. Simons Island, Georgia, is a par-70 layout measuring 7,005 yards. Tom Fazio was the architect. The tournament will also use the Plantation Course for the first two rounds. The event has been at Sea Island since 2010 when Davis Love III and Zach Johnson created it.

RSM Classic purse, prize money

The purse at the 2024 RSM Classic is $7.6 million with a first-place prize of $1.368 million. Five of the eight fall events have smaller purses from a year ago, including the RSM, which is down $400,000.

RSM Classic TV coverage

Thursday, Nov. 21: 12-3 p.m. ET (Golf Channel)
Friday, Nov. 22: 12-3 p.m. ET (Golf Channel)
Saturday, Nov. 23: 1-4 p.m. ET (Golf Channel)
Sunday, Nov. 24: 1-4 p.m. ET (Golf Channel)

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RSM Classic field

There will be 156 golfers in the field when play starts Thursday. The biggest name is Ludvig Aberg, who makes his return to play after knee surgery as defending champion at the RSM.

Here’s a look at the complete field.

Lucas Glover slams changes being voted on by PGA Tour Policy Board: ‘They think we’re stupid’

“There’s 200 guys that this is their life and their job,” he said.

As the PGA Tour Policy Board meets Monday to vote on a number of changes that include reducing field sizes and the number of fully exempt cards available beginning in 2026, former U.S. Open champion Lucas Glover has emerged as its most vocal opponent.

“I think it’s terrible,” he said. “And then hiding behind pace of play, I think challenges our intelligence. They think we’re stupid.”

Glover contends that 20 years ago when he was starting out on the Tour, there were no more than a handful of slow players. Now? “We have 50,” he said. “So don’t cut fields because it’s a pace of play issue. Tell us to play faster, or just say you’re trying to appease six guys and make them happy so they don’t go somewhere else and play golf.”

This is a sore subject with Glover, who notes he has been part of the “cool kid meetings and not in the cool kid meetings,” and points out the Tour’s job is to do what’s right for the full membership. “There’s 200 guys that this is their life and their job,” he said.

Gary Young, the Tour’s senior vice president of rules and competition, takes a different view. Will reduced field sizes help the pace of play? “Absolutely it will,” he said. “It’s something that we’ve been saying for years that 156-man fields are too many players. It’s basically 78 players in a wave, 13 groups per side and our pace of play is set somewhere around 4 and half hours. You do the math and if they play in time par, which is basically 2 hours and 15 minutes, they make the turn and all of a sudden the group ahead of them is just walking off the tee because there’s 2 hours and 12 minutes of tee times. It becomes a parking lot. There’s nowhere to go.”

To Young, the solution is larger tee-time intervals and to do that the Tour must reduce the fields.

“We asked ourselves in the PAC meetings if we were starting the Tour from scratch what would be our maximum field size?” Young explained. “As we talked it through with the players on that subcommittee, there was agreement in the room that you would never build it so that groups would be turning and waiting at the turn. So that’s where the whole idea of 144 being our maximum field size, everyone felt that that was the right number, and the mathematics on it worked. You’ll see that some of our other fields have been reduced even further, and that’s due to time constraints.

“So a great example is we play a field size of 144 players at the Players Championship, and there’s not enough daylight for 144 players. But we always placed an emphasis on starts for members, trying to maximize the number of starts they could get in a season, and sometimes, unfortunately, it was at the detriment of everyone else in the tournament. Now we looked at it from strictly how many hours of daylight do we have, and what’s the proper field size for each event on Tour. So we went straight by sunrise and sunset building in about three hours between the waves, which is what you need. And then that gives the afternoon wave some room to run, they’re not starting out right behind the last group making the turn and backing up. So we think that we’ve done a nice job building the schedule and finally getting all the field sizes correct for the future.”

Glover has a better idea.

“You get a better pace of play policy or enforce the one you have better,” he said. “If I’m in a slow twosome and an official came up and said, ‘You guys are behind, this is not a warning, y’all are on the clock and if you get a bad time, that’s a shot penalty,’ guess who’s running to their ball? That’s what we need to be doing.”

But the Tour’s system has shied away from handing out penalty strokes – the current system warns a group that they are out of position, then it gets told they are being put on the clock. If a player exceeds the time limit, the official has to tell them immediately but there is no punishment for the first bad time; not until the second bad time is a player penalized. Young conceded, “You’d have to be somewhat crazy or not paying attention to ever reach that final stage.”

Young acknowledged if the changes to field sizes is approved, it likely won’t mean any significant change to the number of slow play penalties.

“Unless they change the structure of the process, which is a four-tiered process, no,” he said. “If the players themselves want to make a serious change to it and want to visit moving to a penalty phase sooner, it’s their organization, we certainly would implement it if that’s something they want to put into effect. But we’re not there right now.”

Where we are is on the verge of reducing field sizes and not everyone — especially Glover — is happy about it.

FedEx Cup Fall standings update: Wesley Bryan moves into final spot at 125

Only one event is left to secure a PGA Tour card.

Only one event is left in the PGA Tour season.

Rafael Campos won the 2024 Butterfield Bermuda Championship on Sunday, a move that vaulted him from No. 147 in the FedEx Cup standings to 80th. And he wasn’t the only player to move inside the number with only one chance left for players to secure their cards for the 2025 season.

Any golfer who finishes Nos. 51-60 in the FedEx Cup standings will earn entry into the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and Genesis Invitational, the first two signature events of 2025. Those who finished inside of the top 125 will earn their PGA Tour cards for 2025. This week, Nico Echavarria has joined the group, moving up two spots from 61 to 59.

Bermuda: Prize money

Here’s a look at the standings after the Butterfield Bermuda:

Aon Next 10 standings

Name Position Previous
Mazkenzie Hughes 51 51
Maverick McNealy 52 53
Patrick Rodgers 53 55
Harris English 54 52
Seamus Power 55 54
Ben Griffin 56 58
Tom Kim 57 56
Nick Taylor 58 57
Nico Echavarria 59 61
Justin Rose 60 59
Kevin Yu 61 60
Lucas Glover 62 62
Mark Hubbard 63 71
Jake Knapp 64 63
Min Woo Lee 65 64

FedEx Cup top 125 standings

Name Position Previous
Sami Valimaki 121 117
Sam Ryder 122 135
Zac Blair 123 118
Joel Dahmen 124 121
Wesley Bryan 125 128
Henrik Norlander 126 122
Daniel Berger 127 124
Hayden Springer 128 125
Pierceson Coody 129 132
S.H. Kim 130 127