2023 Zurich Classic Friday 5 takeaways: Wyndham Clark is F&B director, ‘very fun’ for Sungjae Im and the defending champs heat up

Beau Hossler and Wyndham Clark have known each other since they were 10.

AVONDALE, La. — Beau Hossler and Wyndham Clark have known each other since they were 10 years old, but that doesn’t mean their partnership was years in the making.

It turns out neither player had a partner lined up for the Zurich Classic of New Orleans when they were paired together for the first two rounds of the Genesis Invitational in Los Angeles.

“We kind of were talking it through, and by the end of the first two days, we were like, all right, let’s play together,” Hossler said.

That decision has paid off so far. Clark, 29, and Hossler, 28, carded a bogey-free 5-under 67 in foursomes at TPC Louisiana to claim the 36-hole lead.

“We didn’t do anything crazy, but we also didn’t really make any mistakes,” Hossler said. “It was a really clean round.”

The first-round co-leaders are bogey-free so far this week, improving to 16-under 128, one stroke better than their nearest competitors. Hossler did do one crazy thing Friday, burying a 60-foot birdie putt at the fourth hole. Otherwise, they kept it pretty simple.

“I’ll hit it pretty far off the tee and then he’ll have a wedge and he’s been stacking it,” Clark said. “It’s made it pretty easy.”

Zurich: LeaderboardPhotos

Play was suspended due to inclement weather for more than 2 and a half hours, but even that didn’t bother Hossler.

“I was pretty thrilled about it, to be honest. Standing on the sixth tee, it was raining pretty good, and it’s probably the most demanding tee shot out here, so I was happy to not have to hit it at that moment,” he said.

And Team Clark-Hossler has been enjoying not just the golf but the cuisine this week in the Big Easy. Hossler said Clark has been the director of food and beverage since they hit the town.

“We’ve gone to some really good spots,” Hossler said. “After tonight [Friday] we’ll have hit the best four (restaurants) in town, so it’s been really cool.”

Here are four other really cool things to know from the second round of the Zurich Classic.

Fitzpatrick brothers ‘dovetailed’ it around, a bromance brewing on Team Im/Mitchell and more from Thursday at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans

Catch up on Thursday’s action here.

The opening round of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans at TPC Louisiana is in the books, and it was a doozy.

Matt Fitzpatrick and his brother Alex got off to a hot start, signing for a best-ball 10-under 62 and were tied for the clubhouse lead when they walked off the golf course.

The unlikely pairing of Keith Mitchell and Sungjae Im, a story you have to read to believe, was another team that crossed the double-digit threshold and finished the day 10 under alongside David Lipsky/Aaron Rai and Henrik Norlander/Luke List.

However, after 18 holes, Beau Hossler/Wyndham Clark and Brandon Matthews/Sean O’Hair lead at 11 under.

If you missed any of Thursday’s action, no worries, have you covered. Here are several takeaways from the first round of the Zurich Classic.

Zurich: LeaderboardFriday tee timesPhotos

2023 Zurich Classic: The unlikely story behind how Keith Mitchell and Sungjae Im teamed up

“I’ve always been his best friend,” Mitchell said. “I just wanted him to like me back.”

AVONDALE, La. – Did Sungjae Im and Keith Mitchell just become best friends at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans?

“I’ve always been his best friend,” Mitchell said. “I just wanted him to like me back.”

The first-time partners in the PGA Tour’s only two-man team event sure played like bosom buddies during the first round on Thursday at TPC Louisiana, carding nine birdies, an eagle and a chip-in par by Im at the last to shoot a best-ball total of 10-under 62, one stroke of the pace set by Wyndham Clark and Beau Hossler and Sean O’Hair and Brandon Matthews.

“He hit a bunch of laser beams and smiled, and I just tried to help when I could,” Mitchell said.

Im, a 25-year-old two-time winner on the PGA Tour, and Mitchell, 31, first played together in the third round of the 2019 Honda Classic, which Mitchell went on to win for his lone Tour title.

“All he did was just smile and high five and stripe it. I was like, man, this guy is going to be really good,” Mitchell recalled. “So jokingly one day, I was like, hey, we need to play Zurich.”

Unfortunately, Im already had committed to playing with Whee Kim that year. Mitchell figured that was that. In 2020, the tournament was canceled due to COVID-19 and the past two years Mitchell has partnered with Brandt Snedeker, who has been sidelined most of the season with an injury, while Im played with fellow South Korean native Ben An.

“After I’d asked him the first time and he said no, I wasn’t going to ask him again,” Mitchell told Golf.com last week.

About a month ago, Im texted his interest in teaming up this week through his agent and Mitchell, who is playing his 11th tournament in the last 14 weeks, couldn’t resist the opportunity to pair with the No. 18 player in the world.

“When you have the opportunity to play with such a superstar, you say yes,” Mitchell said.

In the lead up to the tournament, Im and Mitchell made a humorous video that was posted to social media, where Im left an invite to be his partner in Mitchell’s locker. Mitchell checked the ‘yes’ box in red Sharpie and wrote in capital letters, “DUH!”

In the comments section to the Instagram post, Im wrote, “Let’s Goooo.”

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They did just that racing to the top of the leaderboard. Starting on the back nine at the Pete Dye-designed layout, Im and Mitchell made five birdies before they both made bogey at the first hole. But they rebounded by playing the next six holes in six under, including a 31-foot eagle at the par-5 seventh by Mitchell, who called it his biggest contribution of the round.

That and teaching Im about college football and in particular his alma mater, the defending national champion Georgia Bulldogs.

“He’s now the biggest Georgia fan in South Korea. He’s a Georgia resident now. That helps,” Mitchell said.

But when Mitchell asked him if he’d join him at a Georgia game this fall, Im demurred.

“Busy,” he said.

“He’d come,” Mitchell said. “He plays golf every week. I don’t think he has time.”

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Scottie Scheffler runs away with 2023 Players Championship, returns to world No. 1

“He’s a freak athlete that has this mental capability that he can go into a tunnel vision and shoot low numbers.”

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Scottie Scheffler’s game is made for Pete Dye’s House of Horrors.

One day after he shot 65 to seize control of the tournament, Scheffler withstood a windswept Sunday and shot 3-under 69 at the Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass to win the Players Championship by five strokes over Tyrrell Hatton and returned to World No. 1.

“He an artist,” said Scheffler’s longtime instructor Randy Smith, “and when you give him this canvas he wants to paint on it.”

The 26-year-old reigning Masters champion and PGA Tour Player of the Year crafted a masterpiece after a sluggish start in which he didn’t make a birdie in his first seven holes, but once he did the floodgates opened and he reeled off five in a row to blow the tournament wide open.

Australian Min Woo Lee, whose sister Minjee is the reigning U.S. Women’s Open champion, grabbed a share of the lead with a birdie at the first and a bogey by Scheffler at the third, but it was short-lived. His third shot at the fourth hole spun off the green and into the water and he made triple bogey.

“It happened really quick,” Lee said. “It’s one of those things where it’s Sunday and you just make a couple bad decisions and it all kind of falls down.”

He was hanging around after rolling in a 28-foot birdie putt at the seventh to cut the deficit to two strokes, the same amount he trailed by at the start of the day. The golden trophy was still up for grabs. But then Scheffler chipped in for birdie at the par-3 eighth and low-fived with caddie Ted Scott.

“I knew he was going to chip that in,” Smith said later. “When he gets up on the green, he’s sitting there looking at the break and the landing point and kind of smiling at Ted, there’s a good chance it’s going to go in.”

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Scheffler stood in the bunker left of the green but his ball was sitting pretty on the grass and when it disappeared in the hole, he pumped his right fist.

“He’s got great hands,” said Jordan Spieth.

Max Homa compared Scheffler’s short game wizardry to Spieth.

“It looks just kind of homegrown, which I always feel like works pretty well,” Homa said. “Obviously they have great mechanics, but it feels like they do it a different way, which means they typically own it a bit more. So I feel like he just knows what he’s going to do. He has this stabbing spinner. He’s got the really good kind of soft one out of the rough. I feel like he’s just very artistic in that way. I feel like he sees them going into the hole. I’ve played a lot more with Jordan, and you can just kind of see him painting that picture and making them, and they make a lot of them. So that would be my guess. But he’s obviously just really good at pretty much every aspect of golf.”

It was Scheffler’s 11th hole-out of the season on the PGA Tour, which no less than Spieth, one of the game’s foremost wedge-game wizards, declared “pretty darn good,” considering the calendar says it’s only March. A day earlier Scheffler let it be known that his chip-in for eagle at the second hole won him a season-long bet with Scott.

“I think that Teddy made a very bad bet,” Spieth said. “I had it with Michael (Greller) and we’ve had it at 15 or 16 before. So I think Teddy will probably reevaluate considering we’re not even midway through March. So I don’t know if Scottie – it actually might be a good bet because it’s already over and he’ll make a new one and win the press.”

Scott equated the chip-in birdie to an interception in a football game.

“It shifted the momentum,” he said. “It just felt like good things were about to happen.”

Lee missed a 6-foot par putt at eight, made another seven at the par-5 11th and was out of the picture, tumbling to a share of sixth with a final-round 76.

“It’s funny how yesterday I felt like I had the best swing in the world, and then today I just felt like nothing could go right,” Lee said.

As Lee began to sputter so did Hideki Matsuyama (68), who made a final-round charge until a double bogey at 14 and finished fifth. Hatton was the only one to mount a charge and not run into trouble but he ran out of holes, tying the back-nine scoring record of 29 and signing for 65 and a 12-under total. That was good for second and a check for $2.725 million, with Viktor Hovland (68) and Tom Hoge (70) T-3 at 10 under. But just as Hatton climbed within a stroke of the lead, Scheffler went on the offensive and pulled away for good with his birdie binge to win $4.5 million, the richest prize on the Tour.

“I mean, he hits it long, he hits it high, he’s going to be able to play any golf course,” said Hoge, who set the course record on Saturday with a 62. “There’s no weaknesses.”

Scheffler poured in a 20-foot par putt at 18, lifted his putter to the sky with his left hand and then pumped his fist with his right as he capped off his sixth win in his 27 starts over the last 13 months.

“You can’t limp in on this golf course,” he said. “You’ve got to hit the shots.”

He posted a 72-total of 17-under 271 and joined Tiger Woods and Jack Nicklaus as the only players to hold both the Masters and Players titles simultaneously.

Scheffler’s former college teammate at Texas Kramer Hickok has watched as Scheffler has blossomed into the best golfer on the planet.

“The best way I can put it is he’s always been so confident,” Hickok said. “I think if you asked him, it’s no surprise that he’s No. 1 in the world.”

Hickock echoed Smith in describing Scheffler’s creativity as one of his super powers.

“Golf courses where he can be creative show off his best attributes because he’s such a great athlete,” Hickok said. “I don’t know if people know this but Scottie’s unbelievable at everything he does. Pickle ball, basketball, he’s a freak athlete that has this mental capability that he can go into a tunnel vision and shoot low numbers.”

And what better place to show his gifts to the world than on the great canvas that is Dye’s TPC Sawgrass.

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Five prop bets for the Arnold Palmer Invitational, including a Rory McIlroy vs. Jon Rahm matchup

Rahm or Rory at Bay Hill. Who are you taking?

It’s almost time for the third designated event on the PGA Tour in four weeks.

The best players in the world are in Orlando for the second stop of the Florida swing at Bay Hill Club and Lodge for the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

Overall, 23 of the world’s top 25 players will tee it up Thursday, including defending champion Scottie Scheffler looking to defend a title for the second time this season (WM Phoenix Open). Jon Rahm and Rory McIlroy — the 2018 champ —are looking to spoil Scheffler’s plans.

The latter two are matched up this week on many sportsbooks and are included in this list of five prop bets for the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

More API betting content: Expert picks | Sleeper picks

Photos: 2023 Honda Classic at PGA National

Check out some of the best photos from Palm Beach Gardens here.

The PGA Tour is in Florida for the next month after spending most of early 2023 on the west coast. The Honda Classic at PGA National in Palm Beach Gardens is the first of four consecutive events in the Sunshine State.

Sungjae Im, Billy Horschel and Shane Lowry are a few of the big names in the field as Sepp Straka returns to defend his title.

PGA National is a par-70 track measuring 7,125 yards.

This year will mark the end of Honda’s sponsorship of the event as the Tour narrows down the list of potential replacements.

Check out some of the best photos from Palm Beach Gardens below.

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Top 20 players, five past champions headline early commits for PGA Tour’s 2023 Honda Classic

With a purse of $8.4M, the Honda is sandwiched between four designated events with at least $20M in prize money.

Billy Horschel isn’t going to back down from playing five consecutive weeks. Neither is Sungjae Im, although Im never has meet a tournament he did not want to play.

Both players are ranked in the top 20 in the world and both are among those who have committed so far to play the Honda Classic at PGA National.

“There’s a lot of goals I haven’t checked off and I’ve always wanted to win in the state of Florida, obviously more than once, but before my career is over,” said Horschel, a graduate of the University of Florida and Jacksonville Beach resident.

“I would love to win and hope it is the Honda Classic this year that gets me that first one.”

If it is Horschel’s first, it would come in the last Honda Classic. Honda Motors is ending its sponsorship of the tournament after this year’s event, which runs Feb. 23-26. The tournament will find a new title sponsor.

Joining Horschel, No. 19 in the world, and Im, the 2020 Honda Champion ranked 18th in the world, are defending Honda champion and 27th-ranked Sepp Straka; and former Honda champions Padraig Harrington (2015, 2005), Michael Thompson (2013), Rory Sabbatini (2011) and Camilo Villegas (2010).

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Honda’s purse this year is $8.4 million. It is sandwiched between four events with at least $20 million in prize money. Those are the PGA Tour designated elevated events and require the best players in the world to play: the Phoenix Open and Genesis Invitational the two weeks prior and followed by the Arnold Palmer Invitational and Players Championship.

Those who play all four and chose to enter Honda will be playing five consecutive weeks.

Horschel has seven career PGA Tour victories, the most recent the 2022 Memorial. He decided in October he would play Honda.

“I like playing a lot of the same places,” Horschel said. “I like going to places that I enjoy the course, enjoy the fans and support I get, enjoy the tournament directors and the staff that puts on the tournament.”

Horschel has played Honda 10 times. He has two top 10 finishes, including tied for fourth in 2017, five shots behind champion Rickie Fowler. He never has backed down from the challenges of playing the Champion Course.

“It requires a player who is on top of their game,” he said. “You can’t fake it around PGA National. I’ve always enjoyed playing that golf course. It requires a little bit extra than other PGA Tour courses that we play.”

Im has averaged more than 30 tournaments in his four years on the PGA Tour, playing Honda each of those. He followed his 2020 title with an eighth-place in 2021 before missing the cut last year.

Im’s 2020 Honda title is one of two on the PGA Tour along with winning the Shriners Children’s Open in 2021.

Straka held off Shane Lowry last year for his lone win on the PGA Tour.

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First-round co-leader Jordan Spieth, Tom Kim highlight group of players headed back to mainland early at the 2023 Sony Open in Hawaii

Jordan Spieth made history Friday, and not for a good reason.

No one wants a stay in Hawaii cut short, but Friday brought an end for a number of golfers at the Sony Open. This doesn’t mean some won’t hang around the island of Oahu for a couple more days, but their work week is done after 36 holes.

The first full-field event – and therefore first cut – of 2023 featured 19 of the 39 players who competed in the Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua last week.

A number of notable names failed to advance to the weekend at the Sony, including one of the first-round co-leaders.

Check out the full list below.

Cut line: 2 under

Tiger Woods announces field for 2022 Hero World Challenge, including seven of the world’s top-10 players

Seventeen of the world’s top 21 players will tee bound for the Bahamas this winter.

Professional golf’s best will be bound for the Bahamas once again this winter as Tiger Woods announced the initial field for his 2022 Hero World Challenge on Tuesday morning.

Seventeen of the world’s top 21 players will tee it up Dec. 1-4 in Albany, Bahamas, including defending champion Viktor Hovland, world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler and past champions Jon Rahm (2018), Hideki Matsuyama (2016) and Jordan Spieth (2014). Will Zalatoris, Cameron Young, Sungjae Im, Max Homa and Tom Kim will all make their Hero World Challenge debut, with three further exemptions to be announced at a later time.

Check out the initial field for the 2022 Hero World Challenge below (official world ranking as of Oct. 2 in parentheses).

2022 Hero World Challenge field

  • Scottie Scheffler (1)
  • Xander Schauffele (5)
  • Jon Rahm (6)
  • Will Zalatoris (7)
  • Justin Thomas (8)
  • Collin Morikawa (9)
  • Matt Fitzpatrick (10)
  • Viktor Hovland (11)
  • Sam Burns (12)
  • Jordan Spieth (13)
  • Tony Finau (14)
  • Cameron Young (15)
  • Billy Horschel (16)
  • Max Homa (17)
  • Hideki Matsuyama (18)
  • Sungjae Im (19)
  • Tom Kim (21)

Golf Channel will broadcast the event for all four rounds, with the third and final rounds airing on NBC. Tickets are available here, with proceeds benefitting the TGR Foundation, Tavistock Foundation and Bahamas Youth Foundation.

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Sungjae Im dusted off a viral YouTube dance during the Presidents Cup after-party and it was fantastic

Sam Burns commented on the video: “You’re my favorite golfer Sungjae.”

Sungjae Im went 2-2-1 during last week’s Presidents Cup at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina, including a Sunday singles win over Cameron Young, 1 up.

His highlight moment of the week, however, came after the event was over.

During the after-party, Im dusted off the viral YouTube dance “Gangnam Style” and to say the players loved it would be an understatement.

On a video originally posted to Tony Finau’s Instagram account, the International team captain Trevor Immelman commented “HAHA.” Justin Thomas, one of the USA team leaders, chimed in, “You’re a legend!”

Sam Burns said, “You’re my favorite golfer Sungjae.”

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