So much for Tyrrell Hatton’s Augusta warmup. He leads our list of 7 big names to miss the cut at the Valero Texas Open

Hatton had six bogeys in a sloppy second-round 75 and was the biggest name sent packing from the tournament.

SAN ANTONIO — Organizers of the Valero Texas Open can’t be thrilled with the fate of the top players who’ve traveled to the Alamo City over the last few years, each hoping to fine-tune their game before the Masters.

In 2022, Rory McIlroy came to TPC San Antonio, hoping to break his Augusta drought. He left early after missing the cut.

This year, Tyrrell Hatton tried the same move, saying on Tuesday that he’s been pleased with the beginning of his season, but still felt adding this tournament might be the springboard to better results at the year’s first major.

Unfortunately, Hatton’s game plan worked about as well as McIlroy’s did the year before.

The Brit had six bogeys in a sloppy second-round 75 and was the biggest name sent packing from the tournament, one that saw some players finish their second round Saturday because of inclement weather early in the week.

The cutline is the top 65 players plus those tied at the end of that group, and the number settled at even par. Here’s a look at the biggest names who fell on the wrong side of the cutlist after two rounds at the Oaks Course:

Masters survey 2023: What are the personal Masters traditions of Jack, Jordan, JT, Collin and other pros?

Here’s a list of traditions unlike any other for more than two dozen pros.

No matter whether you’re a contestant or a fan, everyone seems to have their own Masters tradition.

It could be as simple as playing the Par-3 contest or skipping it across the pond at 16. But part of what makes the Masters so special to so many of us is it is the same course every year and we know it like the back of our hand and we count the days until the week of the Masters in April so that we can enjoy all the things that make the Masters matter to us. To each his own, right? Here’s a list of traditions unlike any other for more than two dozen pros.

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Stewart Cink played No. 16 at the Phoenix Open with a Kevin Durant Suns’ jersey and fans loved it

That’s how you win over the crowd on Day 1.

Stewart Cink has given himself quite the opportunity to run away as the fan favorite at this year’s WM Phoenix Open.

The tournament known as the People’s Open for its loose rules on decorum, party atmosphere and stadium design has players showing off their personalities more and more. Cink wasted no time buying in.

As he prepared to take on the famed 16th hole at TPC Sawgrass, the tour veteran donned a brand new Kevin Durant Phoenix Suns jersey and got the crowd hyped.

The coliseum style par-three 16th hole has seen players pull out different jerseys for quite a few years now, but kudos to Cink for keeping track of the NBA trade deadline while focusing on his game.

Also credit to Cink for finishing the hole with a par after hitting his first shot short of the green. Nothing would’ve been more disastrous than missing a layup in a Durant jersey on Day 1.

Cink moved to two-under par by the time play was called for the day due to darkness.

The fans at No. 16 will have to wait to see what he pulls off in Round 2 on Friday.

Stewart Cink wears Kevin Durant Phoenix Suns jersey on No. 16 at 2023 WM Phoenix Open

Cink donned the jersey the day after the Phoenix Suns pulled off a blockbuster trade.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — The day after the Phoenix Suns pulled off a blockbuster trade for Kevin Durant, Stewart Cink played to the crowd at the 2023 WM Phoenix Open.

Cink, who went to Georgia Tech, lives in Atlanta and is a self-described die-hard Hawks fan, managed to get his hands on a No. 35 Suns jersey with DURANT across the back and wore it while playing the 16th hole at TPC Scottsdale.

So how did he manage to get his hands on that, just hours after the trade went down?

“I didn’t know anything about the trade until I woke up. And I’m a Hawks fan, die-hard. So I’ve been paid attention to trade deadline, every couple hours, first thing I do is check to see what the Hawks have done,” he said. “And I read that [Durant trade] and then it just kind of occurs to me that it’s a pretty good opportunity.

“Here we are, the first day the Waste Management Phoenix Open, and Kevin Durant just got traded to the Suns. I wonder if I could get my hands on Kevin Durant?

“So I called around a couple places, the usual places that you would think of and all of them send off their embroidery couldn’t do it. And then I called another place and it happened to be, the lady just said, ‘I’m sorry, sir. But I’m not really a store, I’m the embroidery company that actually makes the team jerseys for the team. I don’t sell to the public. I only work with the team.’

“So I’m like, ‘Well, this is perfect.’ And I explained to her what I was wanting to do. … and she said ‘I’m sorry, but it’s a great idea. But we can’t do it because we have like regulations. There’s a lot of restrictions what we’re allowed to do with jerseys to keep our relationship with team we just can’t do anything. We can’t give or sell any jerseys.’

“And I thought was dead in the water. And 45 minutes later, she called me back and said that she spoke to the equipment manager and the manager for the Suns who set it up the flagpole. … she got it ready in about 30 minutes.

“And when I walked in, she had two jerseys ready for me to go. We threw one on, it was too big. Threw the next one on it was perfect. I signed the one that was too big, they kept it and then drove straight here.

“It was it was awesome. It was great. I was glad to do it. I love the NBA.”

Cink isn’t the first to don a jersey on the famous par-3 hole. Max Homa and Tony Finau both wore a Kobe Bryant jersey in 2020. Homa wore the No. 24 version, while Finau had the No. 8.

Jon Rahm and Billy Mayfair, both Arizona State grads, wore the No. 42 ASU jersey of Pat Tillman.

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Padraig Harrington predicts Tiger will win another major: ‘I’m not saying he could be, I actually believe he will be a danger’

“He looked better physically at that Match and the speed … he might be even in a better place than I had thought.”

ORLANDO – As a keen observer of the golf swing, Padraig Harrington, like so many other lovers of golf, tuned in to watch The Match last Saturday expressly to see what Tiger Woods looked like in his first public performance since the British Open in July. Suffice it to say, Harrington came away impressed.

“You never doubt Tiger’s mental ability, and it’s always one where is he able to come back, and you don’t want to give up,” Harrington said on Thursday during a press conference ahead of the PNC Championship, where he will compete alongside son Paddy in the 20-team event. “He looked better physically at that Match and the speed … I’m interested in that stuff. You know, you’d never run Tiger off, but I actually think he might be even in a better place than I had thought.”

To hear Harrington tell it, Woods, who played just nine competitive rounds this year and will turn 47 later this month, showed him enough in The Match, where he partnered with Rory McIlroy and lost to Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas, to believe there are better days ahead for the 15-time major winner, especially at the majors.

“I’m not saying he ‘could be,’ I actually believe he will be a danger,” Harrington said. “I think he’ll win another major. The way I looked at him, I genuinely think he will be in contention.”

Harrington, who has trained obsessively to improve his ball speed and hit 193 mph this year while leading PGA Tour Champions in driving distance, marveled at Tiger’s numbers on Saturday, which hit 178 mph on two occasions at The Match.

The Match VII
Tiger Woods of the United States plays his second shot on the seventh hole during The Match 7 at Pelican at Pelican Golf Club on December 10, 2022 in Belleair, Florida. (Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images for The Match)

“I want to go and see it in person and see,” said Harrington when asked if he would go watch Tiger on the range at the PNC. “I think he needs a little bit of physicality as in that ball speed. It’s just tough if you go out there against these young guys, there’s so many of them that they’re hitting it and they’re overpowering golf courses. If you’re not somewhat able to keep up there, initially, I don’t think I would – you’re not doubting Tiger being good down the last nine holes, but the little bit of extra speed will help him in the first 63 holes. That last nine holes, you know, who would want to be coming down the stretch against Tiger, all these young guys, you know. You know he’s capable of doing anything at that stage. And, yeah, I think he’s in a better position to get himself into that last nine holes.”

Woods had to withdraw from the Hero World Challenge earlier this month due to plantar fasciitis and suggested that even in a best-case scenario he only will attempt to play the majors and a very limited schedule beyond that. Woods was able to use a golf cart at The Match and will do so again this week at the PNC Championship at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club, which is played under the rules of PGA Tour Champions and allows carts. The question for Tiger is will his body hold up and allow him to turn back the clock once more and break a tie with Sam Snead for most wins on the Tour and claw closer to Jack Nicklaus and the record of 18 men’s major titles.

“When I’ve seen him hit balls he looks a lot like the Tiger Woods of pre-accident,” Stewart Cink said. “But it’s just more of the getting around for consecutive days and walking up and down hills. I would not even pretend to know what he’s going through. But he’s told me about some of the pre-round stuff he has to do. He’s not really big on letting you in on a lot but he’s told me some, and I don’t know if I would still be out here trying. I don’t know. He’s just got a fascinating drive inside him and I don’t think that the swing hitting balls on the range will tell you much. It’s more about how he feels at the end of the day getting around on foot.”

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PGA Tour Champions 2023 schedule features return to Coachella Valley and Morocco — and a record $66 million in prize money

The 2023 PGA Tour Champions schedule features the first event in Coachella Valley since 1993.

Bigger and better.

That’s the theme of the 2023 PGA Tour Champions schedule, which features the return of an overseas stop and as well as the first event in Coachella Valley since 1993.

The headliner, though, is another record amount of prize money as there will be $66 million up for grabs in 2023 at 28 events — 25 during the regular season and three tournaments that make up the Charles Schwab Cup Playoffs. That’s up $4 million from the 2022 season.

“Thanks to the strength of our tournament and title sponsors, the future and stability of PGA Tour Champions has never been more secure,” PGA Tour Champions president Miller Brady said in a statement. “We are thrilled to have the highest purses in PGA Tour Champions history and to be able to bring the game of golf to the many wonderful venues on this Tour.”

In all, the 2023 slate will see tournaments in 20 states and three countries.

There is one new tournament on the schedule in 2023, the Galleri Classic, which will be held in Rancho Mirage, California, at the historic Mission Hills Country Club. In 2022, Mission Hills hosted an LPGA major for the last time.

Now the southern California desert will sub in the Champions tour, which was last in the area in 1993 when the Gulfstream Aerospace Invitational — won by Raymond Floyd — was played for the final time at Indian Wells Golf Resort.

There will be five majors once again. The first two are back-to-back events (with a week off in between) on the schedule in May. The remaining three are also consecutive events on the schedule but they will also have a week off in between.

  • May 11-14: Regions Tradition, Greystone Golf & Country Club, Birmingham, Alabama
  • May 25-28: KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship, Fields Ranch East, Frisco, Texas
  • June 29-July 2: U.S. Senior Open Championship, SentryWorld, Stevens Point, Wisconsin
  • July 13-16: Kaulig Companies Championship, Firestone Country Club, Akron, Ohio
  • July 24-30, The Senior Open Championship presented by Rolex, Royal Porthcawl Golf Club, Bridgend, Wales

The playoff events will be:

  • Oct. 19-22: Dominion Energy Charity Classic, The Country Club of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia
  • Nov. 2-5: TimberTech Championship, The Old Course at Broken Sound Club, Boca Raton, Florida
  • Nov. 9-12: Charles Schwab Cup Championship, Phoenix Country Club, Phoenix

Each event in 2023 will be televised by Golf Channel, with NBC picking up weekend coverage of three majors: KitchenAid Senior PGA, the U.S. Senior Open and the Senior Open.

2023 schedule

Date Tournament Host Location
Jan. 18-21 Mitsubishi Electric Championship at Hualalai Hualalai Golf Course Ka’upulehu-Kona, Hawaii
Feb. 8-11 Trophy Hassan II Royal Golf Dar Es Salam Rabat, Morocco
Feb. 16-19 Chubb Classic Tiburon Golf Club Naples, Florida
March 2-5 Cologuard Classic Omni Tucson National Tucson, Arizona
March 16-19 Hoag Classic Newport Beach Country Club Newport Beach, California
March 23-26 Galleri Classic Mission Hills Country Club Rancho Mirage, California
April 20-23 Invited Celebrity Classic Las Colinas Country Club Irving, Texas
April 27-30 Insperity Invitational The Woodlands Country Club The Woodlands, Texas
May 4-7 Mitsubishi Electric Classic TPC Sugarloaf Duluth, Georgia
May 11-15 Regions Tradition Greystone Golf & Country Club Birmingham, Alabama
May 25-28 KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship Fields Ranch East Frisco, Texas
June 1-4 Principal Charity Classic Wakonda Club Des Moines, Iowa
June 8-11 American Family Insurance Championship University Ridge Golf Course Madison, Wisconsin
June 22-25 Dick’s Sporting Goods Open En-Joie Golf Club Endicott, New York
June 29-July 2 U.S. Senior Open SentryWorld Stevens Point, Wisconsin
July 13-16 Kaulig Companies Championship Firestone Country Club Akron, Ohio
July 27-30 The Senior Open Royal Porthcawl Golf Club Bridgend, Wales
Aug. 10-13 Boeing Classic The Club at Snoqualmie Ridge Snoqualmie, Washington
Aug. 17-20 Shaw Charity Classic Canyon Meadows Golf & Country Club Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Aug. 24-27 The Ally Challenge Warwick Hills Golf & Country Club Grand Blanc, Michigan
Sept. 7-10 Ascension Charity Classic Norwood Hills Country Club St. Louis, Missouri
Sept. 14-17 Sanford International Minnehaha Country Club Sioux Falls, South Dakota
Sept. 21-24 Pure Insurance Championship Pebble Beach Golf Links Pebble Beach, California
Oct. 5-8 Constellation Furyk & Friends Timuquana Country Club Jacksonville, Florida
Oct. 12-15 SAS Championship Prestonwood Country Club Cary, North Carolina
Oct. 19-22 Dominion Energy Charity Classic The Country Club of Virginia Richmond, Virginia
Nov. 2-5 TimberTech Championship The Old Course at Broken Sound Boca Raton, Florida
Nov. 9-12 Charles Schwab Cup Championship Phoenix Country Club Phoenix, Arizona

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What will the PGA Tour’s fall events look like in 2023? No one seems to know

“We’re picking from the bottom of the barrel. It doesn’t actually make our product better. It makes it worse.”

NAPA, Calif. – Thanks to Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy (and Greg Norman and Phil Mickelson to some extent), change is coming to the PGA Tour.

While the best players have agreed to play against one another in a minimum of 20 events between January and August starting in 2024, the Tour’s nine official fall events are about to receive a demotion, beginning in 2023.

The top 70 in the FedEx Cup regular season points race will qualify for the playoffs and retain their cards for the next season. Numbers 71-125? They will have to duke it out during the fall to retain their playing privileges in what will essentially become eligibility events. Without FedEx Cup points at stake or any punishment for not playing during the fall, the top players have been given the option of an extended vacation from September through December. It’s the off-season some of them have long been asking for, but PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan and his business development team have their work cut out explaining to title sponsors why fields will be watered down.

“The Tour knows this isn’t awesome for the sponsors of the fall events to tell them that the guys who finish top 70 don’t have to play your events and probably won’t,” said Tour veteran Peter Malnati, co-chairmen of the Player Advisory Council. “They say they are going to make them stronger and I’m just taking them at their word for now.”

Malnati said he spoke to Monahan at the RBC Heritage.

“He looked me right in the eyes and said these events are going to be stronger,” Malnati said.

Fall events have always been the red-headed stepchildren, airing exclusively on Golf Channel during a time of year when college football and the NFL rule the roost. That’s baked into the sponsorship price. But current sponsors, such as Fortinet, which this week drew five of the top 30 that made it to the Tour Championship including Hideki Matsuyama, have to be wondering whether that will ever happen again. What is the future of the fall events?

“I had that same question myself,” said Stewart Cink, a former PGA Tour policy board member. “It’s hard for them to thrive if they’re not getting top players. We’ve been down this road before. There’s a reason we went to the wrap-around schedule.”

A veteran Tour pro, who asked for anonymity, didn’t mince words, saying that the fall events are going to become a glorified Korn Ferry Tour Finals.

“The Tour’s top question to us is always would you rather not have an event? It’s a pretty fair question now because it might not be a good idea to have an event,” he said. “Some events are going to go so far down the (player priority) list that it’s going to be embarrassing. We’re picking from the bottom of the barrel. It doesn’t actually make our product better. It makes it worse.”

Webb Simpson, the other co-chairmen of the PAC, also expressed concern that the number of fall events could be impacted.

“I don’t know how far the Tour is going to go with the plan that Tiger and Rory proposed. I just don’t know. I hope they don’t go away,” he said of the fall events. “I love the opportunities to play.”

How many of the nine fall events would he likely play next year if he were to finish in the top 70?

“Probably two or three,” he said. “I don’t want to take four months off after Atlanta, not everybody does. Playing two or three still feels like downtime.”

One tournament director, who asked for anonymity, said purses likely will flatline and expected more tournaments to follow the RBC and Zurich model of signing top-ranked players as ambassadors in which part of the deal will require tournament participation.

“What I don’t want to see is us lose title sponsors. If we start to lose titles in certain cities, LIV is going to go in behind them,” said the tournament director, noting LIV already laid down roots in Boston, Chicago and NY/NJ metropolitan area, cities where the Tour no longer has annual events.

Both the Fortinet Championship and Cadence Bank Houston Open are rumored to be angling to move into the main portion of the schedule, but there may not be room for them. Could a Tour event jump ship to LIV?

“God, I hope not, but it could happen,” said the tournament director. “Tournaments now have another option.”

As the final year of the wraparound season kicks off, it’s worth noting that the fall events have factored into determining the FedEx Cup champion: Of the last six Cup winners, four have won a tournament in the fall portion of the season before going on to win the season-long race. (Most recently, Rory McIlroy won the CJ Cup last fall.)

Agents and their players are still waiting to understand exactly how the fall series events will work.

“I don’t think it’s a lack of transparency, I don’t think they know what they’re doing,” said an agent of multiple players. “They’re making decisions by the seat of their pants. You could ask 10 people out here from players to reps to agents what’s happening in the fall, and you’d get seven different answers. That’s not good.”

“I honestly don’t know,” said Kevin Streelman, a Tour board member from 2017-19 and who was added to the Player Advisory Council for the remained of the year in an August vote to replace a player that went to LIV Golf. “The storyline will be the top 125, but we’re going to have to do something to incentivize the top players to show up.”

Malnati is trusting that Monahan will be good to his word and that the fall events will find a way to be stronger.

“Change is never easy. It always feels difficult. A lot of times it works and it’s great but right now it’s a wait and see for me,” he said.

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Father-son caddie duo of Stewart and Reagan Cink calls it a day; veteran looper John Wood filling in for Napa

“He threw in his Jani-King towel,” Stewart Cink said of son Reagan.

NAPA, Calif. – As Stewart Cink made his way to the practice tee at the Fortinet Championship, he confirmed a change to begin the 2022-23 PGA Tour season – son Reagan is off the bag.

“He threw in his Jani-King towel,” Stewart Cink cracked.

It was here at Silverado Resort’s North Course that son Reagan subbed as his dad’s caddie at the 2020 edition of the tournament formerly known as the Safeway Open and guided his old man to his first victory in more than nine years. A few tournaments later, at the RSM Classic that November, they made it official as a permanent relationship. At the time, Reagan, an industrial engineering graduate of Georgia Tech, put on hold a technology product management job with Delta Airlines.

The caddie gig began on a lark when Reagan, who had been living at home with his parents during COVID-19, told his dad he’d like to caddie for him at an event.

“I said, ‘How about the Safeway?’” Stewart recalled.

Fortinet: Tee times and TV info | PGA Tour on ESPN+ | Yardage book

He credited his son with being a calming influence, as at age 47, he shot a final-round 7-under 65 to win the tournament by two strokes over Harry Higgs.

“He’s a great caddie, he’s doing a great job, but I don’t think I want him to become a caddie,” Stewart said at the time. “He’s just a little bit too good at doing this to where I think if he keeps going, he might find a home out here.”

The duo went on to win again at the 2021 RBC Heritage, but this is Cink’s first start at the Fortinet as he missed his title defense to attend Reagan’s wedding last year. Cink, who will turn 50 in May and become PGA Tour Champions eligible, said he wasn’t sure what was next for his son.

“It’s changing on a daily basis,” he said.

And who will be on the bag this week?

Veteran caddie turned NBC/Golf Channel analyst John Wood, who last caddied for Cameron Champ 18 months ago, is hoping to repeat the magic at Silverado as a one-week wonder on the bag. But first Stewart made him walk on a treadmill to make sure the retired caddie could still handle lugging a bag.

Stewart Cink practices ahead of the 2022 Fortinet Championship with fill-in caddie John Wood. (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

“I was going to ask if he needed all 20 of those tees in there,” quipped Wood, a Northern California native who has caddied for the likes of Kevin Sutherland, Hunter Mahan and Matt Kuchar.

Asked if he’s settled on a permanent replacement for his son, Stewart said, “I’ve got a couple of guys in mind.”

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Brian Harman witnessed the two most amazing aces in golf this year in Scottsdale, Augusta National

Brian Harman: “I’ve been watching a lot of holes-in-one lately.”

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Brian Harman’s second round at the 2022 Masters on Friday started on a spectacular note.

He holed out from the right bunker for an eagle 3 on the 575-yard, par-5 second hole. That shot, per Masters tradition, earned him a pair of Crystal Glasses.

However, it wasn’t enough to get Harman to the weekend, as his scores of 74 and 75 kept him one stroke from making the cut.

Along the way, though, Harman was witness to a hole-in-one. On the 16th hole, playing partner Stewart Cink made an ace at the par-3, 170 yard hole. He did it on his son/caddie Reagan’s 24th birthday. It was the 24th ace in Masters history at the 16th, and the sixth for Cink in his PGA Tour career.

Harman witnessed another, much more raucous, hole-in-one earlier this season at TPC Scottsdale.

It also happened on the 16th hole at the wet and wild WM Phoenix Open. You remember that one: Sam Ryder’s Saturday ace ignited a beer-can launch sequence that would certainly never happen at Augusta National.

In Phoenix, Harman was next to hit but had to wait about 15 minutes for the grounds crew to pick up the thousands of aluminum beer cans and bottles.

“The rules official asked me if I wanted to hit with all the beer cans out there,” he said. “I declined and asked them to go clean it up.”

At Augusta, Harman said: “I was there in Phoenix for that shot Sam hit. I’ve been watching a lot of holes-in-one lately.”

Dennis Knight of  the Savannah Morning News contributed to this article.

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Stewart Cink drains hole-in-one at No. 16 in second round of Masters

He does this a lot. It never ceases it amaze.

Two of the most exciting things in golf are the Masters Tournament and the hole-in-one.

Stewart Cink knows both of these things very well. Entering his 19th Masters this week, Cink had made a hole-in-one on five occasions in his career — only 13 players had more since the PGA Tour began tracking hole-by-hole in 1983.

But he had never hit an ace at the Masters…until Friday.

With his son as his caddy, Cink nailed his first shot off the tee on the par-3 16th for the sixth hole-in-one of his career. He’s the 24th player in Masters history to ace the 16th hole and first since Tommy Fleetwood in 2021.

The 16th is by far the most aced hole in tournament history. Odds that a hole-in-one would be hit this week were -160 on Tipico Sportsbook. Still, the list of players to do it is short.

With his sixth hole-in-one, Cink climbs into a tie with six others for the eighth most in TOUR history. Truly a special moment.