Why Bryson DeChambeau scurried back to N.C. from Texas after thinking he’d missed a cut

“I learned my lesson,” said Bryson DeChambeau on his 1,000-mile commute to make his Wells Fargo Championship third-round tee time.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – High in the sky heading home to Dallas on Friday after thinking he had missed the cut in the Wells Fargo Championship, Bryson DeChambeau got a text message from his agent that changed his itinerary.

“Hey, you’re 68th now.”

“What? No way,” DeChambeau thought to himself, realizing weekend play was actually in play. Turns out DeChambeau, who was in 90th place when he finished his second round, was moving up the leaderboard during his flight as strong winds started to batter Quail Hollow Club.

Sure enough, when the world No. 5’s three-hour flight on the NetJets private aircraft touched down, he was inside the cut.

Some 30 minutes later he realized he had made the 2-over cut on the number. And was a touch over 1,000 miles from the Queen City.

Wells Fargo Championship: Leaderboard | Photos

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“Well, whoops, that was a mistake,” he said to Connor Olson, a member of his team who was on the flight.

DeChambeau made the most of the awkward predicament. He went into scramble mode but secured a new flight crew to head back to the Wells Fargo Championship for the third round. He got in one of his one-hour intense workouts. Had a nice dinner. Couple of protein shakes. Went to bed at 8 p.m. to wake up in time for his 2:45 a.m. CT eastward flight from Dallas.

The return flight landed at 6:20 a.m. local time and after a 30-minute drive to the course, he had a little more than one hour to make his 8:10 a.m. tee time.

“Put on my clothes in the locker room and headed out to the putting green,” the reigning U.S. Open Champion said. “This morning was not easy. But, you know, for whatever reason I just feel like the more weird things happen to me, the greater my resolve sometimes can be and today was a case of that. And got a little unlucky on 18, but other than that, you know, I played a great round of golf today. I’m very pleased.”

Indeed it was a splendid round of golf – until the punishing 18th hole. DeChambeau continued his ascent up the leaderboard with five birdies through 17 holes and was within three strokes of the lead. But he ran into turbulence on the 468-yard finishing hole when his drive was left in the rough and hit his second into a greenside bunker. He needed two to get out of the bunker and made double.

His 3-under-par 68 left him 1 under through 54 holes and five shots out of the lead with the leaders yet to tee off.

Afterward, he said it was an expensive mistake to have made.

“Way too expensive,” he said. “But the thing is, I have a chance to go make a good check this week and I think that would offset it. So if I was to not come back and withdraw, lose world ranking points and all that, I had to incur the cost. It’s my fault. It did (think of not coming back), but I said there’s no way I can do that. I can’t let down Wells Fargo, I can’t let down Quail Hollow.

“Oh, yeah. I learned my lesson, for sure.”

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Wells Fargo Championship tee times, TV/streaming info for Saturday’s second round

Seventy-seven players made the cut and will play the weekend at the Wells Fargo Championship. Here’s the when and where on TV and tee times.

Rory McIlroy will have a late tee time Saturday at the Wells Fargo Championship after he fired a 5-under-par 66 to vault up the leaderboard at Quail Hollow Club.

He is two back of a trio players who share the lead at 6 under: Matt Wallace (67), Gary Woodland (69) and Patrick Rodgers (68). At 5 under was Kramer Hickok (69). Joining McIlroy at 4 under were Scott Piercy (68), Keith Mitchell (71), Carlos Ortiz (68) and Scott Stallings (69).

One day after shooting a tournament-best 7-under 64, Phil Mickelson complained that he went brain dead on the back nine at Quail Hollow Club, shooting 4-over 75 to fall to 3-under 139. He did survive the cut though.

Jon Rahm, meanwhile, did not, his PGA Tour-leading streak of 22 straight made cuts coming to an end. He and other notables went home on Friday night after missing the cut.

Tee times

1st tee

Tee Time Players
7:15 a.m. Michael Gligic
7:20 a.m. Jimmy Walker, Zach Johnson
7:30 a.m. J.J. Spaun, Bo Van Pelt
7:40 a.m. D.J. Trahan, Russell Henley
7:50 a.m. K.J. Choi, Jonas Blixt
8 a.m. Kevin Tway, Brendan Steele
8:10 a.m. Bryson DeChambeau, Shane Lowry
8:20 a.m. Beau Hossler, Wyndham Clark
8:30 a.m. Sepp Straka, Matthew NeSmith
8:40 a.m. Aaron Wise, Richy Werenski
8:55 a.m. C.T. Pan, KH Lee
9:05 a.m. Seamus Power, Hank Lebioda
9:15 a.m. Lanto Griffin, Sean O’Hair
9:25 a.m. Hunter Mahan, Xander Schauffele
9:35 a.m. Justin Thomas, Ted Potter, Jr.
9:45 a.m. Tim Wilkinson, J.T. Poston
9:55 a.m. Andrew Putnam, Charl Schwartzel
10:05 a.m. Joaquin Niemann, Jason Dufner
10:15 a.m. Tommy Fleetwood, Brandon Hagy
10:25 a.m. Patton Kizzire, Harris English
10:40 a.m. Viktor Hovland, Pat Perez
10:50 a.m. Johnson Wagner, Peter Malnati
11 a.m. Jhonattan Vegas, Ryan Moore
11:10 a.m. Keegan Bradley, Kyle Stanley
11:20 a.m. Corey Conners, Russel Knox
11:30 a.m. Cameron Davis, Nick Taylor
11:40 a.m. Brian Stuard, Kevin Streelman
11:50 a.m. Vincent Whaley, Talor Gooch
12 p.m. Brian Harman, Satoshi Kodaira
12:10 p.m. Emiliano Grillo, Roger Sloan
12:25 p.m. Matt Jones, Ben Martin
12:35 p.m. Patrick Reed, Stewart Cink
12:45 p.m. Abraham Ancer, Joel Dahmen
12:55 p.m. Phil Mickelson, Bubba Watson
1:05 p.m. Scott Stallings, Luke List
1:15 p.m. Keith Mitchell, Carlos Ortiz
1:25 p.m. Rory McIlroy, Scott Piercy
1:35 p.m. Patrick Rodgers, Kramer Hickok
1:45 p.m. Matt Wallace, Gary Woodland

TV, streaming, radio information

Saturday, May 8

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 1-3 p.m.
CBS: 
3-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live on Paramount+: 8 a.m.-6 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

Sunday, May 9

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 1-3 p.m.
CBS: 
3-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live on Paramount+: 8 a.m.-6 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

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Jon Rahm sees end to PGA Tour-leading cuts made streak at Wells Fargo Championship

After Friday’s second round of the Wells Fargo Championship, the cut it landed on +2, and that meant some big names heading home.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Throughout the blustery afternoon at Quail Hollow in Friday’s second round of the Wells Fargo Championship, the projected cut hovered around 1 over.

As evening approached, the cut started to go back and forth between +1 and +2.

And then +2 and +3.

At day’s end, it landed on +2.

That meant some big names heading home, including world No. 3 Jon Rahm, who had made a PGA Tour-leading 22 consecutive cuts. The new leader is Joaquin Niemann with 18. Also among those missing the weekend are Masters runner-up Will Zalatoris, Patrick Cantlay, Tony Finau, defending champion Max Homa and Rickie Fowler.

Making the cut on the number were reigning U.S. Open champion Bryson DeChambeau and reigning Open champion Shane Lowry.

Seventy-seven players made the cut. Here are the notables who didn’t:

Wells Fargo Championship tee times, TV/streaming info for Friday’s second round

Phil Mickelson and Rickie Fowler are making headlines as the Wells Fargo Championship moves to Friday’s second round.

Quail Hollow plays host once again for the Wells Fargo Championship. The 2020 tournament was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Five-time PGA Tour winner Rickie Fowler looked upbeat as he shot a 1-under-par 70 in Thursday’s first round at Quail Hollow. He said a recent break was a reset as he tries to find his past form with a new swing.

Peter Malnati had missed eight consecutive cuts heading into the first round. So of course he shot 4-under-par 67 to get on the first page of the leaderboard.

The first-round leader, by two shots over KH Lee and Keegan Bradley, is Phil Mickelson. Lefty made a lone bogey Thursday as he bested his finest round of the year by three shots. It was clearly Mickelson’s best showing in 2021.

Tee times

1st tee

Tee Time Players
6:50 a.m. Talor Gooch, Matt Wallace, Robby Shelton
7:01 a.m. James Hahn, Luke List, Bronson Burgoon
7:12 a.m. Kevin Streelman, Lucas Glover, Rory Sabbatini
7:23 a.m. Michael Thompson, Scott Piercy, Ryan Armour
7:34 a.m. Joel Dahmen, Lanto Griffin, Phil Mickelson
7:45 a.m. Shane Lowry, Keith Mitchell, Jason Dufner
7:56 a.m. Martin Trainer, Brice Garnett, Russell Knox
8:07 a.m. Sung Kang, Brendan Steele, D.A. Points
8:18 a.m. Adam Hadwin, Ben Martin, K.J. Choi
8:29 a.m. Charl Schwartzel, Chesson Hadley, Patrick Rodgers
8:40 a.m. Kyle Stanley, Sean O’Hair, Seamus Power
8:51 a.m. Roger Sloan, Hank Lebioda, Kramer Hickok
9:02 a.m. Rob Oppenheim, Justin Suh, Patrick Cover
12:10 p.m. Russell Henley, Byeong Hun An, Mark Hubbard
12:21 p.m. Johnson Wagner, Maverick McNealy, Scott Harrington
12:32 p.m. Cameron Tringale, J.J. Spaun, Erik van Rooyen
12:43 p.m. Max Homa, Jon Rahm, Webb Simpson
12:54 p.m. Justin Thomas, Viktor Hovland, Patrick Cantlay
1:05 p.m. Chez Reavie, Ian Poulter, Luke Donald
1:16 p.m. Carlos Ortiz, Sungjae Im, Troy Merritt
1:27 p.m. Francesco Molinari, J.B. Holmes, Patton Kizzire
1:38 p.m. Richy Werenski, Grayson Murray, Mackenzie Hughes
1:49 p.m. Vaughn Taylor, Kelly Kraft, Sepp Straka
2 p.m. Cameron Percy, Adam Schenk, Bo Hoag
2:11 p.m. Rafa Cabrera Bello, Tom Lewis, Michael Gligic
2:22 p.m. Vincent Whaley, Lucas Herbert, Akshay Bhatia

10th tee

Tee Time Players
6:50 a.m. Hunter Mahan, David Hearn, Chase Seiffert
7:01 a.m. Brian Stuard, Tommy Fleetwood, Beau Hossler
7:12 a.m. Harold Varner III, Cameron Davis, Brandon Hagy
7:23 a.m. Bryson DeChambeau, Joaquin Niemann, Xander Schauffele
7:34 a.m. Stewart Cink, Patrick Reed, Rory McIlroy
7:45 a.m. Nick Taylor, Gary Woodland, Corey Conners
7:56 a.m. Kevin Tway, Andrew Putnam, Bubba Watson
8:07 a.m. Matt Jones, Keegan Bradley, Austin Cook
8:18 a.m. Jonas Blixt, Danny Lee, Xinjun Zhang
8:29 a.m. Emiliano Grillo, Tom Hoge, Sam Ryder
8:40 a.m. Jhonattan Vegas, Ryan Moore, Will Zalatoris
8:51 a.m. Bill Haas, D.J. Trahan, Tyler McCumber
9:02 a.m. Kris Ventura, Sebastian Cappelen, Keenan Huskey
12:10 p.m. Bo Van Pelt, Denny McCarthy, Harry Higgs
12:21 p.m. Seung-Yul Noh, Henrik Norlander, Doc Redman
12:32 p.m. Brian Harman, Peter Malnati, Kyoung-Hoon Lee
12:43 p.m. Sebastián Muñoz, J.T. Poston, Adam Long
12:54 p.m. C.T. Pan, Jason Day, Pat Perez
1:05 p.m. Michael Kim, Jimmy Walker, Tony Finau
1:16 p.m. Robert Streb, Nate Lashley, Aaron Wise
1:27 p.m. Tyler Duncan, Satoshi Kodaira, Zach Johnson
1:38 p.m. Harris English, Rickie Fowler, Ted Potter, Jr.
1:49 p.m. John Huh, Jamie Lovemark, Will Gordon
2 p.m. Scott Brown, Abraham Ancer, Matthew NeSmith
2:11 p.m. Scott Stallings, Wyndham Clark, Rafael Campos
2:22 p.m. Joseph Bramlett, Ryan Brehm, Cory Schneider

TV, streaming, radio information

Friday, May 7

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 2-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 7 a.m.-6 p.m. (featured groups)

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 12-6 p.m.

Saturday, May 8

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 1-3 p.m.
CBS: 
3-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live on Paramount+: 8 a.m.-6 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

Sunday, May 9

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 1-3 p.m.
CBS: 
3-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live on Paramount+: 8 a.m.-6 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

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Tour Championship, even the Ryder Cup, not out of reach for Max Homa

The Tour Championship and even the Ryder Cup could be in the cards for Max Homa if he keeps his name near the top of leaderboards.

As Max Homa entered the locker room at Charlotte’s Quail Hollow, the memories of the last time he was there came flooding back.

That’s when he had to wait out a suspension of play during the final round of the 2019 Wells Fargo Championship as he chased his first PGA Tour title. A sudden queasiness hit his gut, just as it did on that day when he finally tasted victory after an arduous journey to being a Tour winner.

“I felt like I was going to throw up but my hands felt unbelievable on the club,” Homa said of his breakthrough.

Homa’s rise from some of the lowest of lows to a two-time Tour winner and in the midst of his best golf of his career should be the celebrated more than his ability to roast a golf swing on social media. Homa has a tattoo with the word relentless on his forearm, but his forgettable 2017 season when he earned $18,008 on the Tour, made just two cuts and played one Sunday are tattooed in his memory.

“I think that a lot of people would have either quit playing golf or gone into a serious like hole with not their game, like mentally, I think. My game was obviously already in the hole,” he said on the eve of his title defense two years later due to cancellation of last year’s tournament during the global pandemic.

Wells Fargo: Tee times, TV info | Field by the rankings | Fantasy picks

Homa delivered one of the most candid, soul-searching winner’s press conferences, plumbing the depths of his dive to No. 959 in the world at the end of 2017 and how he came out the better for it.

“I used to say when I hit rock bottom I found a shovel and kept digging,” Homa said. “I went to some low places and there would be times when I would wallow and honestly just hate my golf game, dislike what I was out there in what’s supposed to be my favorite place in the world is a golf course, and all of a sudden I started to hate it, hated going. All I’ve ever known is working as hard as humanly possible, and I realized in that year, year or two when I started to play bad, that my attitude was going to have to get a lot better because if my golf game was going to be that bad, my brain better be on point. I think that was a big turning point for me. I’m very proud I finally found a ladder and started climbing upwards because it was getting dark down there.”

Homa credits being “tough” with helping him find that ladder, and his mental strength was his biggest asset during his dark period but while he didn’t throw a pity party for himself that doesn’t mean there wasn’t pain along the way. Imagine feeling that your game was in such shambles that you didn’t want to play practice rounds with other golfers.

Max Homa
Max Homa reacts as he walks off the 12th green during the final round of the 2019 Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow Club on May 5, 2019 in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Photo: Sam Greenwood/Getty Images)

“I felt like I was on an island and it was, you know, borderline embarrassing,” he said after his victory in 2019. “It was embarrassing at times. But it ain’t embarrassing anymore. It’s a cool story now.”

As he put it, he kept dusting himself off and got back to work at getting better bit by bit. When he arrived in Charlotte in 2019, Homa was ranked No. 413 in the world and improved more than 300 spots with the W. In the aftermath, he recorded a few top 10s, including a T-3 at the 3M Open last summer that lifted him to No. 68 in the world, but he also missed eight cuts in a span of 13 events. His game still lacked consistency. The feeling of victory was fleeting and he wondered why he couldn’t do it again.

“When you come up short or when you miss a cut, it feels like you’re so far away from what your potential, what you should be doing,” he explained. “Once you win, unless you keep winning every week like Tiger, it feels like you’re kind of going backwards.”

Backwards was unacceptable for Homa, whose game had come so far. He made a difficult decision and parted ways with his longtime instructor Les Johnson.

“I felt like I was kind of going in a bit of a circle at times, and I was confused I guessed,” Homa said.

Time for a change

Homa’s caddie Joe Greiner had worked with Tour pro Kevin Chappell, who became a top-50 player in the world under the tutelage of Englishman Mark Blackburn. Greiner suggested Blackburn might be a good fit. They worked together for the first time at the U.S. Open at Winged Foot in September, where Homa had missed the cut. Blackburn screened his body at a Marriott and then did a session at the course.

“I called Joe afterwards,” Blackburn recalled, “and said, ‘This kid is pretty special.’ Joe said, ‘I told you so.’ ”

“I was shocked how fast everything’s clicked,” said Homa, who notched his second Tour title at the Genesis Invitational in February and has climbed to No. 39 in the world.

The Genesis Invitational
Max Homa stands with the trophy and tournament host Tiger Woods at the 2021 Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club on February 21, 2021 in Pacific Palisades, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images)

When asked last week at the Valspar Championship, what he’s figured out, he gave a succinct and honest answer, “I’m just better at golf now.”

And coming off a T-6 finish in Tampa playing what he termed “one of the most all‑around good weeks of golf I’ve had as far as my game goes,” Homa is ranked No. 16 in the FedEx Cup and poised to make his first trip to the Tour Championship.

He’s even thinking the U.S. Ryder Cup team – he’s ranked 16th in the points standing for that, too – could be in the cards if he keeps his name near the top of leaderboards. It’s quite a remarkable improvement from where he was just two years ago.

“I have a really cool perspective on this game because I’ve seen what pretty much the bottom looks like,” Homa said, “so anytime I’m playing OK I feel like I appreciate it more and I appreciate how easy it is.”

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World No. 2 Justin Thomas looks to get past putting disappointment at Quail Hollow

Thomas had 117 putts for the week at Valspar. The longest he made all week was 14 feet.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – En route to a tie for 13th in last week’s Valspar Championship, world No. 2 Justin Thomas had most of his game spot on.

He ranked first in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee, first in Strokes Gained: Approach to the Green, and first in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green.

As for his putting, he ranked 67th in strokes gained.

Ouch.

His frustration on the greens reached a crescendo after Saturday’s third round when he said, “If I’m putting well this week, I’m winning this tournament without question.” While he had his best putting day in the final round – he needed just 26 putts – he had 117 putts for the week. The longest he made all week was 14 feet.

Thomas, the reigning Players champion, didn’t take out his disappointment by breaking his flat stick. Nor did he banish it to the trunk and find a new one. He didn’t go changing his grip, either.

Instead, he chalked up tournament as being one of those weeks where no matter what he did, no matter how good his stroke was, no matter how good the putts looked, they just would not fall.

“It wasn’t like something was really that off,” Thomas said Wednesday at Quail Hollow Club, home to the Wells Fargo Championship. “I hit a lot of really, really good putts, a lot of quality putts. Everything fundamentally was pretty good, just the ball wasn’t going in.

“You have weeks like that, but obviously it doesn’t get that bad very often and hopefully not ever. But it was just one of those weeks where I felt like I was stroking it well, I felt good over the putter on Thursday and Friday and just nothing went in.”

With his putter not cooperating heading into the weekend, Thomas fell into some old tendencies that did nothing to improve the situation.

“I was opening the putting face too much going back and then I have a tendency to drag it a little bit or have a hard time timing it up right to get the clubface square, putter face square,” he said. “That was something I was fighting a little bit maybe over the course of the week in terms of some misses, but overall as a whole I felt like they’re very difficult greens to read.

“You have a lot of grain that kind of goes opposite of the slopes and a lot of subtle ridges. Clearly Sam Burns (the winner) didn’t feel that way, and many others, but I felt like I was putting the ball actually pretty well, just nothing was going in.”

Thomas put in some extra work on the practice putting green on Tuesday and Wednesday and feels good heading in the first round. And he certainly fancies the track this week – he won the 2017 PGA Championship at Quail Hollow.

“I have a lot of great memories,” said Thomas, who tied for seventh in the Wells Fargo Championship in 2015, missed the cut in 2016 and finished in a tie for 21st in 2018. “I love Charlotte, I love the fans here, I love the golf course. It’s a fun atmosphere and it’s a very good golf course, so it should be a good week.”

That is, if the putter is behaving, it should be.

2021 Wells Fargo Championship matchups and PGA Tour prop bet picks

Check out the matchups and prop bet picks for the PGA Tour’s 2021 Wells Fargo Championship.

Two weeks out from the 2021 PGA Championship, the PGA Tour stops at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina, for the Wells Fargo Championship. Below, we’ll look for the best value prop bets in the 2021 Wells Fargo Championship odds, with matchups, placings and first-round leader picks and predictions.

The event returns to the PGA Tour schedule after it was canceled in 2020 amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Max Homa returns as the defending champion from 2019. He’ll be challenged by a strong field featuring eight of the top-10 golfers in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings.

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Wednesday at 8:45 a.m. ET.

Wells Fargo Championship: Odds | Tee times

Matchups

Xander Schauffele vs. Viktor Hovland (-105)

Schauffele and Hovland enter the week second and fourth, respectively, in the Golfweek rankings. As such, Hovland is a slight underdog in this 72-hole matchup as he makes his debut at Quail Hollow.

The Norwegian is coming off a T-3 finish at the difficult Copperheard for the Valspar Championship; Schauffele has been off of tournament play since his T-3 finish at the Masters.

Schauffele also has poor course history at Quail Hollow with a T-72 finish in 2018 and a missed cut at the 2017 PGA Championship played here.

Justin Thomas vs. Jon Rahm (-110)

The top-two tournament betting favorites are pitted in a 72-hole matchup priced as a pick ’em. Rahm is No. 1 in the Golfweek rankings and Thomas enters the week sixth in the world. Neither played here in 2019 but Thomas tied for 21st in 2018.

Rahm leads the Tour with 2.28 total strokes gained on the field per round this season. Thomas leads in Strokes Gained: Approach, but Rahm is the longer hitter and that will provide the advantage at the 7,500-yard, par-71 venue.

Placings

Top 10: Doc Redman (+1600)

Redman tied for 18th at the 2019 Wells Fargo Championship with 1.20 SG: Off-the-Tee per round. His early 2021 form has been ugly with five missed cuts through nine events, but he tied for 39th at last week’s Valspar Championship with 0.79 SG: Off-the-Tee per round.

At his best, his game is well-suited to Quail Hollow. The venue could help him round back into form.

Place your legal, online 2021 Wells Fargo Championship bets in CO, IA, IN, MI, NJ, PA, TN, VA and WV at BetMGM. Risk-free first bet! Terms and conditions apply. Bet now!

Top South American: Joaquin Niemann (+110)

We cashed this ticket on Neimann last week with his T-8 finish at the Valspar. He only narrowly edged out Camilo Villegas (T-11), but a win is a win.

Double down this week with Niemann’s 1.38 SG: Tee-to-Green and 1.72 total strokes gained per round both easily ranked as the best in this four-man group.

First-round leader

Rory McIlroy (+2800)

McIlroy is my pick to win this week as the former world No. 1 looks to move past a missed cut at the Masters ahead of 2021’s second major. The recently-turned 32-year-old leads this field with 2.76 strokes gained per round at Quail Hollow and two Wells Fargo titles.

He offers a higher payout for the 18-hole lead than he does to win the event (+1800). He’ll receive a boost by playing his opening round with Ryder Cup rival Patrick Reed.

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Wells Fargo Championship tee times, TV info for Thursday’s first round

From tee times to TV info, here’s everything you need to know for the first round of the Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow.

The PGA Tour makes its way up the East Coast this week, leaving Florida for Charlotte, North Carolina.

Quail Hollow plays host once again for the 2021 Wells Fargo Championship after the 2020 tournament was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Max Homa returns as defending champion from 2019 and is grouped with world No. 3 Jon Rahm and Webb Simpson, a Quail Hollow resident. Fellow featured groups include Justin Thomas, Viktor Hovland, Patrick Cantlay; Stewart Cink, Patrick Reed, Rory McIlroy; Bryson DeChambeau, Joaquin Niemann and Xander Schauffele.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the first round of the 2021 Wells Fargo Championship.

Wells Fargo Championship: Odds and predictions
More: Ian Poulter’s son to caddie at Wells Fargo

Tee times

1st tee

Tee Time Players
6:50 a.m. Bo Van Pelt, Denny McCarthy, Harry Higgs
7:01 a.m. Seung-Yul Noh, Henrik Norlander, Doc Redman
7:12 a.m. Brian Harman, Peter Malnati, Kyoung-Hoon Lee
7:23 a.m. Sebastián Muñoz, J.T. Poston, Adam Long
7:34 a.m. C.T. Pan, Jason Day, Pat Perez
7:45 a.m. Michael Kim, Jimmy Walker, Tony Finau
7:56 a.m. Robert Streb, Nate Lashley, Aaron Wise
8:07 a.m. Tyler Duncan, Satoshi Kodaira, Zach Johnson
8:18 a.m. Harris English, Rickie Fowler, Ted Potter, Jr.
8:29 a.m. John Huh, Jamie Lovemark, Will Gordon
8:40 a.m. Scott Brown, Abraham Ancer, Matthew NeSmith
8:51 a.m. Scott Stallings, Wyndham Clark, Rafael Campos
9:02 a.m. Joseph Bramlett, Ryan Brehm, Cory Schneider
12:10 p.m. Hunter Mahan, David Hearn, Chase Seiffert
12:21 p.m. Brian Stuard, Tommy Fleetwood, Beau Hossler
12:32 p.m. Harold Varner III, Cameron Davis, Brandon Hagy
12:43 p.m. Bryson DeChambeau, Joaquin Niemann, Xander Schauffele
12:54 p.m. Stewart Cink, Patrick Reed, Rory McIlroy
1:05 p.m. Nick Taylor, Gary Woodland, Corey Conners
1:16 p.m. Kevin Tway, Andrew Putnam, Bubba Watson
1:27 p.m. Matt Jones, Keegan Bradley, Austin Cook
1:38 p.m. Jonas Blixt, Danny Lee, Xinjun Zhang
1:49 p.m. Emiliano Grillo, Tom Hoge, Sam Ryder
2 p.m. Jhonattan Vegas, Ryan Moore, Will Zalatoris
2:11 p.m. Bill Haas, D.J. Trahan, Tyler McCumber
2:22 p.m. Kris Ventura, Sebastian Cappelen, Keenan Huskey

10th tee

Tee Time Players
6:50 a.m. Russell Henley, Byeong Hun An, Mark Hubbard
7:01 a.m. Johnson Wagner, Maverick McNealy, Scott Harrington
7:12 a.m. Cameron Tringale, J.J. Spaun, Erik van Rooyen
7:23 a.m. Max Homa, Jon Rahm, Webb Simpson
7:34 a.m. Justin Thomas, Viktor Hovland, Patrick Cantlay
7:45 a.m. Chez Reavie, Ian Poulter, Luke Donald
7:56 a.m. Carlos Ortiz, Sungjae Im, Troy Merritt
8:07 a.m. Francesco Molinari, J.B. Holmes, Patton Kizzire
8:18 a.m. Richy Werenski, Grayson Murray, Mackenzie Hughes
8:29 a.m. Vaughn Taylor, Kelly Kraft, Sepp Straka
8:40 a.m. Cameron Percy, Adam Schenk, Bo Hoag
8:51 a.m. Rafa Cabrera Bello, Tom Lewis, Michael Gligic
9:02 a.m. Vincent Whaley, Lucas Herbert, Akshay Bhatia
12:10 p.m. Talor Gooch, Matt Wallace, Robby Shelton
12:21 p.m. James Hahn, Luke List, Bronson Burgoon
12:32 p.m. Kevin Streelman, Lucas Glover, Rory Sabbatini
12:43 p.m. Michael Thompson, Scott Piercy, Ryan Armour
12:54 p.m. Joel Dahmen, Lanto Griffin, Phil Mickelson
1:05 p.m. Shane Lowry, Keith Mitchell, Jason Dufner
1:16 p.m. Martin Trainer, Brice Garnett, Russell Knox
1:27 p.m. Sung Kang, Brendan Steele, D.A. Points
1:38 p.m. Adam Hadwin, Ben Martin, K.J. Choi
1:49 p.m. Charl Schwartzel, Chesson Hadley, Patrick Rodgers
2 p.m. Kyle Stanley, Sean O’Hair, Seamus Power
2:11 p.m. Roger Sloan, Hank Lebioda, Kramer Hickok
2:22 p.m. Rob Oppenheim, Justin Suh, Patrick Cover

TV, streaming, radio information

Thursday, May 6

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 2-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 7 a.m.-6 p.m. (featured groups)

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 12-6 p.m.

Friday, May 7

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 2-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 7 a.m.-6 p.m. (featured groups)

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 12-6 p.m.

Saturday, May 8

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 1-3 p.m.
CBS: 
3-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 8 a.m.-6 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

Sunday, May 9

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 1-3 p.m.
CBS: 
3-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 8 a.m.-6 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

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Ian Poulter’s son, Luke, to caddie for him at Wells Fargo Championship

When Luke Poulter watched Stewart Cink win the RBC Heritage with son Reagan on the bag, he asked his father when he could caddie for him.

PALM HARBOR, Fla. – When Luke Poulter watched Stewart Cink win the RBC Heritage with son Reagan on the bag, he asked his father when he could caddie for him at a PGA Tour event. Turns out it would be sooner than even he expected.

Ian Poulter announced on his Instagram that Luke, who is 16 and home-schooled, will be on his bag at the Wells Fargo Championship this week. Poulter’s steady sidekick, James Walton, is turning 40 this week and his wife is planning a celebration.

“He’ll be relaxing somewhere on a beach,” Poulter said.

That left an opening for Luke to fill in for the first time at a professional event. Ian recalled caddying for his son at a U.S. Kids event at Walt Disney World in Orlando in 2014, but this will be the first time that roles are reversed.

“It will be nice for him to get a real inside look at what goes on inside between these silly ears and inside the ropes and give him a little look,” Poulter said at the Valspar Championship. “It will be great for his learning experience to become a Tour player himself.”

Luke is ranked No. 141 in the AJGA Rolex Rankings and finished T-6 in his most recent tournament at the Sergio and Angela Garcia Foundation Junior Championship in March (71-73-71). (He’s ranked No. 275 in the Golfweek Junior Rankings.)

“He wants to do what I do. It’s the only thing going on in his brain,” Ian said. “He fully believes in his mind if he continues to work hard and keeps improving, he’s going to have an opportunity. I believe that because of what I see. He is way further advanced than where I was, but yet I wasn’t that advanced at 16.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/CN_JtcFh576/

Luke enjoyed a learning experience last week attempting local qualifying for the U.S. Open. He was 1 under coming up the last hole, which wasn’t going to be enough to advance, before hitting two drives out of bounds and made a quadruple bogey.

“He’s got me for distance, he’s got me on club speed and ball speed. That crossover has happened and it’s only going to grow,” Ian said. “Where he doesn’t have me beat is on the golf course. We rarely play but when we do play, he hasn’t beaten me. I’m going to make him earn that. I want him to earn it and to reward him when it does.”

Ian said he grinds harder to beat his son than he does to make a cut on the PGA Tour.

Ian famously turned pro as a 4 handicap and worked as an assistant pro back home in England, but he said Luke will benefit greatly from four years in college.

When asked to pick Luke’s biggest victory, he said, “It will be when he puts pen to paper and signs for college. In my opinion that will be his biggest victory so far because I was never in that position.”

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Presidents Cup captain Trevor Immelman is the man with the plan for International Team

Ernie Els has passed the baton to fellow South African Trevor Immelman ensuring continuity for the International side moving forward.

Melville Fuller, a former chief justice of the United States, once said, “Without continuity men would become like flies in summer.”

As far as we know, Fuller wasn’t speaking about the International Team for the Presidents Cup, but he might as well have been. On Tuesday, South African Trevor Immelman was named 2021 Presidents Cup captain for the International squad when the biennial competition is held at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte.

This was a vote for team continuity as Ernie Els passed the baton to Immelman, the 2008 Masters champion, who served as understudy at the 2019 Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne. What Els did to breathe new life into the matches can’t be underscored enough. He created “a family dynamic” and gave the team “an identity,” Immelman said.

“We felt that over the years that might have been something that was missing,” he said. “It’s a pretty big hurdle to try and overcome when you have players coming from seven, eight, nine different countries, different cultures, different languages. It’s a big hurdle for us to have to overcome that particular week.”

True continuity, one could argue, would have been Els coming back for a second tour of duty. Instead he’s throwing his efforts behind a bigger and more personal cause: Els for Autism, a disease his son, Ben, suffers from, and this is the best use of his time. What Els did was create a blueprint for Immelman and future captains – whether it be Canadian Mike Weir, Korea’s K.J. Choi, or Australians Geoff Ogilvy and Adam Scott.

“What he has created for our team, I think, is going to be so massive, not just in Charlotte but I’m talking about three, four, five, six Presidents Cups down the road,” Immelman said. “I think what Ernie did for our team, giving us something to build off of, we sure are hoping that that is going to be some kind of turning point for our team to where we can find a way to finally win this Cup again.”

While no one on the International Team, especially Els, was celebrating a moral victory in holding the lead entering Sunday’s singles before the U.S. rallied for a 16-14 victory at Royal Melbourne, Els and Co. believe they have put an end to a lopsided competition (the U.S. leads 11-1-1 in 13 matches). Someday, Els may be remembered as the International team’s version of Tony Jacklin, who accepted the European Ryder Cup captain’s role in 1983 and two years later became the inspirational leader of its first triumph in 28 years. That win ignited an intense rivalry.

“My relationship with Trevor goes way back and I have always had the utmost respect for him as a player and a person,” Els said. “Trevor was an invaluable member of our team and completely bought into what we were trying to do at Royal Melbourne, so it is gratifying to see him take this next step and lead the International Team.”

Els met Immelman when he was 6 or 7 and handed Immelman a golf trophy at age 12. They are the best of friends, and Immelman, who was a teammate of Els on the International side in defeat in 2005 and 2007, considered it an honor to jump back into the fold as one of Els’s lieutenants.

“When he picked me as an assistant captain, I had no designs at all or even thoughts of possibly being a captain one day. I was just so focused on trying to help him,” Immelman said. “It just sort of organically came about.”

Immelman, 40, had his playing career curtailed by injuries, but he’s still active on the PGA Tour as a TV commentator for CBS and studio analyst for Golf Channel. He plays just enough on the PGA Tour as a two-time past champion to be active and familiar with all the players. That knowledge, as well as prior experience working with Els and as captain of the Junior Presidents Cup International team in 2017, will serve him well.

The fact remains that the U.S. side likely will be loaded again — don’t forget that Brooks Koepka was sidelined — and competing at a course they play every year during the Wells Fargo Championship (and in 2017, the PGA Championship). This will be the true test for the International sides much ballyhooed blueprint, just as playing away in France in 2018 exposed holes in Team USA’s master plan for regaining supremacy in the Ryder Cup. Is Immelman the right man for the job? Time will tell, but at least it’s good to know that his father thinks so.

“He’s been a leader ever since he was a young kid,” said Johan Immelman. “He always rose to the occasion.”

That’s a trait shared with Els. Sounds like the International Team has found some continuity.

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