Rock star Sean Mackin on parallels between golf and the violin, stories from rounds on the road and more

“If you have the golf sickness like I have, you’ll go to great lengths to play.”

It’s rare for an entertainer to admit to performance anxiety, but Sean Mackin isn’t like most entertainers. I mean, how many rock band violinists can you name?

Mackin doesn’t get anxious when he’s on the stage performing for thousands of fans with his longtime band, Yellowcard. After decades on tour that’s the easy part. But after more than 40 years on the golf course, it’s the par 3s that make him a little nervous at times. After all, Mackin has played some of the country’s best courses and has teed it up with some of the best musicians of the 2000s, but he still hasn’t made that elusive hole-in-one.

He has, however, made a pair of double eagles. Like I said, he’s not like most entertainers.

Mackin doesn’t remember the name of the course where he made his first albatross, after all it was in the early 2000s and he was just tagging along with some members of NOFX and Bad Religion while on the Vans Warped Tour in Chicago. He does remember hitting a pretty good push-draw 2 iron about 220 yards uphill to the green on a par 5, though. But after five minutes, the group couldn’t find his ball.

“I go, ‘Oh I’ll just drop’ and Jay Bentley from Bad Religion, like one of my heroes, he’s like, ‘Hey, just check the hole man.’ And it was in the hole,” said Mackin. “They’re hooting and hollering, I didn’t even see it go in. The rest of the day was a blur. To this day, like 20 years later, that whole crew still calls me double eagle or deuce. So that’s pretty awesome.”

The second came at Cimarron Hills, a Jack Nicklaus course north of his home near Austin, Texas. Mackin cut the corner with a 3-wood and hit a sawed-off 9-iron from 140 yards that slam-dunked in the hole.

“I hear it from the fairway and I tried to be cool about it too, but I heard it and the club went in the air and I did the run around thing and I’m just like, ‘Man, I got two double eagles, no aces, that’s just perfect for my story,’” he recalled with a laugh. “So I think they only come once every 20 years, so hopefully I’m ready for the next one and I’ll play it cool then.”

Growing up in Florida, Mackin’s family had a membership at Marsh Landing in Ponte Vedra Beach, just down the street from TPC Sawgrass. He plateaued as a teenager in both tennis and soccer, but really found his groove with golf. A back-to-back junior club champion, he then played for the golf team at Fletcher High School while he attended nearby Douglas Anderson School of the Arts. He was raised to play the violin inside, and golf outside.

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“My mom didn’t really care if it was cool, which is funny because later it turned out to be pretty cool,” said Mackin, who still goes home to play the member-guest with his dad. The pair even won the thing in 2018, when the final day was on his father’s birthday.

Despite his day job, Mackin isn’t the guy that throws a speaker on while he plays. For him, “golf is a community thing.” But his job does often remind him of his favorite hobby. Both require discipline and each features a learned section and a performance section.

“Violin is pretty discipline-focused. The way that you place your hand or your technique, your bowing and your fingering, your shifts and your positioning, I have to do all these drills warming up with a violin,” he explained. “I think it’s the same way with golf.”

While on stage Mackin can tell when he’s out of tune or just off tempo. The same happens in golf; you must play your way through it. All of those experiences have made Mackin quite the player in both disciplines. He’s been as low as a +3 handicap and due to rust and an injured shoulder from swing speed training – that’s how much of a golf nut he is – he’d probably shoot somewhere in the mid-70s right now.

Last summer, Yellowcard went on tour to celebrate the 20th anniversary of “Ocean Avenue,” their fourth album and hit single that has amassed 347 million streams on Spotify and 55 million music video views (remember those?). This summer the band is riding that wave of momentum into yet another tour, this time with fellow stars of the 2000s, Third Eye Blind. Mackin couldn’t afford to play golf on the road in the van-and-trailer Yellowcard years, but these days he loves getting on the course while out on tour.

“It’s great because I get up early, get to hydrate, get to be in the sun. It gives the guys some space away from me, gives me my own thing, but a lot of times it’s just a network of friends and people that I’ve played golf with over the years that I rarely get to see,” said Mackin of his rounds on the road. “As soon as tour dates are announced, friends are texting me, ‘Hey, what’re you doing on this day?'”

He once bought a scooter on tour that he would ride on with his golf clubs strapped to his back so he didn’t have to worry about getting a lift to the course or range. In 2015 the band got stuck in Southern California traffic and he had a tee time at the South Course at Torrey Pines. He took an Uber from a Shell gas station, jumped out and ran to the third hole to meet his group. On last summer’s tour he tipped the bus driver to drop him off at a truck stop where his buddy picked him up so they didn’t miss a tee time.

“If you have the golf sickness like I have, you’ll go to great lengths to play,” said Mackin.

Mackin is brand loyal to TravisMathew and Callaway, so much so that he refers to his Callaway rep connections as his “fairy godfathers.” So, what’s better: a new golf club or instrument?

“I’m gonna cheap out, I’m gonna say it’s a tie,” he said. “I get so much joy when I get a new golf club. I told my wife she can’t buy me golf clubs because I don’t want it to be the wrong thing. I’m crazy like that. (Clubs and instruments) are the two things like in my life that are so special.”

“When I have a chance to be graced by the fairy godfathers and I see a Callaway club, there’s so much joy that comes from that. It is the same because my love for music started from my family,” he explained. “It was a gift from my mom. My love for golf is the same thing.”

If you’re a fan of music, go see the Summer Gods Tour later this year, and if you’re looking for a fourth when the show is in town, hit up Mackin on social media. He’ll have his clubs with him and he’s ready to play.

Farmers Insurance Open champ Matthieu Pavon draws inspiration from tattoo on his hand

Pavon’s hand tattoo gives him a visual reminder every time he addresses the ball.

Matthieu Pavon is not the only golfer on the PGA Tour with a tattoo but he might be one of the few with one that gives him a visual reminder every time he addresses the ball.

Pavon, a 31-year-old rookie who won the Farmers Insurance Open for his first win on Tour, has an inscription on his right hand that reads: “The saliva that flows now will become the tears of joy tomorrow.”

Pavon is a native of France, and the first from his country to win on the PGA Tour. Notably, the tattoo on his hand is written in English.

It’s not just the tattoo that inspires him. He says he often writes things down and then refers back to those thoughts often.

“It’s all about motivations. For me, it’s really important to have everything clear in my mind,” he said. “Since I won in Spain last year, I write down some notes in my book which bring me back to the present moment. You know how it is on the golf course, sometimes your head flies away a little bit and you have to get back to the present moment to refocus yourself. Sentences like they are telling me why I play golf, why I’m here. … they give me a little extra confidence.”

2024 Farmers Insurance Open
Matthieu Pavon of France speaks to the media after winning the 2024 Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines in San Diego. (Photo: Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)

That confidence has been flowing so far in 2024. Pavon tied for seventh two weeks ago at the Sony Open in Hawaii and then tied for 39th at the American Express before breaking through at Torrey Pines, the longest course on the PGA Tour and the most difficult non-major venue from last season.

What added to Pavon’s challenge of seeing the golf course for the first time were the wet and foggy conditions early in the week.

“When I showed up, it was foggy. I mean, I couldn’t see 100 yards away from me, so I was like, ‘OK, nice, welcome to California,'” he said. “When we get to Friday [for the third round] it as like, oh, there is a fairway, there is the rough, there is a cliff. So everything was kind of brand new for me. … I just discovered the golf course totally on Friday.”

And then he discovered how to win on the PGA Tour.

2024 Farmers Insurance Open prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour. Just ask Matthieu Pavon.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour. Just ask this week’s winner, Matthieu Pavon.

The 31-year-old rookie became the first player from France to win on the PGA Tour with his 72nd hole birdie on Saturday at the 2024 Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines. Pavon had five birdies in his closing 3-under 69, none more important than his great putt on the 18th hole for his first Tour victory and second worldwide win in the past four months.

Pavon will take home $1.62 million for his efforts. Meanwhile, 22-year-old Nicolai Hojgaard, who was on the 2023 European Ryder Cup team, made birdie on the final hole to take solo second and a check for $981,000.

With $9 million up for grabs, check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned this week at the 2024 Farmers Insurance Open.

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Prize money payouts

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Matthieu Pavon -13 $1,620,000
2 Nicolai Hojgaard -12 $981,000
T3 Nate Lashley -11 $477,000
T3 Jake Knapp -11 $477,000
T3 Stephan Jaeger -11 $477,000
T6 Kevin Yu -10 $303,750
T6 Beau Hossler -10 $303,750
T6 Tony Finau -10 $303,750
T9 Patrick Rodgers -9 $236,250
T9 Ludvig Aberg -9 $236,250
T9 Xander Schauffele -9 $236,250
T9 Taylor Pendrith -9 $236,250
T13 Doug Ghim -8 $156,536
T13 Hideki Matsuyama -8 $156,536
T13 Tom Whitney -8 $156,536
T13 Max Homa -8 $156,536
T13 Akshay Bhatia -8 $156,536
T13 Will Zalatoris -8 $156,536
T13 Taylor Montgomery -8 $156,536
T20 Mark Hubbard -7 $102,330
T20 Rafael Campos -7 $102,330
T20 Ryan Brehm -7 $102,330
T20 Emiliano Grillo -7 $102,330
T20 Thomas Detry -7 $102,330
T25 Shane Lowry -6 $66,263
T25 Adam Schenk -6 $66,263
T25 Scott Stallings -6 $66,263
T25 Chesson Hadley -6 $66,263
T25 Joseph Bramlett -6 $66,263
T25 Robby Shelton -6 $66,263
T25 Parker Coody -6 $66,263
T25 Trace Crowe -6 $66,263
T33 Ryo Hisatsune -5 $50,175
T33 Hayden Springer -5 $50,175
T33 Aaron Rai -5 $50,175
T33 Joe Highsmith -5 $50,175
T37 Aaron Baddeley -4 $40,050
T37 Ben Martin -4 $40,050
T37 Michael Kim -4 $40,050
T37 Austin Eckroat -4 $40,050
T37 Nick Hardy -4 $40,050
T37 Maverick McNealy -4 $40,050
T43 Erik Barnes -3 $28,530
T43 Justin Lower -3 $28,530
T43 Keegan Bradley -3 $28,530
T43 Min Woo Lee -3 $28,530
T43 Sam Stevens -3 $28,530
T43 Alejandro Tosti -3 $28,530
T43 Sami Välimäki -3 $28,530
T50 Kevin Dougherty -2 $21,990
T50 Dylan Wu -2 $21,990
T50 Bronson Burgoon -2 $21,990
T50 Chris Gotterup -2 $21,990
T50 S.H. Kim -2 $21,990
T50 Luke List -2 $21,990
T56 Ben Silverman -1 $20,340
T56 Tom Hoge -1 $20,340
T56 Tyson Alexander -1 $20,340
T56 Charley Hoffman -1 $20,340
T56 Justin Rose -1 $20,340
T56 Patrick Cantlay -1 $20,340
T56 Carson Young -1 $20,340
T56 Vincent Norrman -1 $20,340
T64 Taiga Semikawa E $19,080
T64 Ben Taylor E $19,080
T64 Sahith Theegala E $19,080
T64 Harris English E $19,080
T64 Mackenzie Hughes E $19,080
T64 Lanto Griffin E $19,080
T70 Alexander Björk 1 $18,270
T70 Jacob Bridgeman 1 $18,270
T70 Taylor Moore 1 $18,270
T73 Francesco Molinari 2 $17,820
T73 Zac Blair 2 $17,820
75 Adrien Dumont de Chassart 3 $17,550
76 Chandler Phillips 4 $17,370
77 Justin Suh 5 $17,190
T78 Brandt Snedeker 6 $16,920
T78 Chad Ramey 6 $16,920

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PGA Tour rookie Matthieu Pavon makes history with 2024 Farmers Insurance Open victory

Pavon is the first player from France to win on the PGA Tour.

SAN DIEGO — Matthieu Pavon took one step closer to qualifying for the Olympics in his home country and made a little history at the same time.

The 31-year-old from Toulouse who now resides in the wine region north of Bordeaux became the first Frenchman to win on the PGA Tour with his victory at the 2024 Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines on Saturday. Pavon shot a 3-under 69 in the final round to finish at 13 under, one shot clear of Nicolai Hojgaard (70). Nate Lashley (67), Jake Knapp (69) and 54-hole leader Stephan Jaeger (72) all finished T-3 at 11 under.

“Yeah, I still can’t believe it. As I said, it feels like there is another round to play tomorrow because we’re only Saturday,” joked Pavon. “That is special. I can’t thank the PGA tour enough to give us the opportunity to come from Europe and compete here in America against the best players in the world. That’s always been the dream for me. I got finally a shot and I took it. I mean, it’s a dream come true and it’s a little bit hard to believe.”

Ranked No. 78 in the world, the victory will move Pavon inside the top 60 in the Official World Golf Ranking and put him in prime position to represent France at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris.

“Yeah, that’s big. Olympics is huge. Since I’m kid I’m watching it,” said Pavon. “I have a good friend of mine, Julien Quesne, was my mentor and is still my mentor to be fair, he did that Olympics in Rio and told me how cool was it. Yeah, it’s definitely one of my goals this year to qualify and represent my country in Paris. Looks like I’m on a pretty good shot right now.”

Farmers: Best shots from Torrey Pines

Success in professional sports is nothing new for Pavon’s family. His father, Michel Pavon, had a lengthy and successful career playing professional soccer in France for Toulouse, Montpellier and Bordeaux, where he was also a coach. His grandfather, Ignacio “Pepito” Pavon, also played professional soccer for French giants Olympique de Marseille.

Pavon won for the first time on the DP World Tour at the 2023 Spanish Open and has two previous wins on both the Alps and French tours. With his top-10 finish in the DP World Tour season-long standings in 2023, Pavon earned his PGA Tour card for 2024 and won in just his third start as a member. He finished T-7 at the Sony Open in Hawaii and T-37 at last week’s American Express.

“I come from a very sports family background. My mom is a golf teacher, my dad, football professional. Should I say probably soccer in America, but it’s football,” he said with a smile. “I think we had a VHS tape with all the highlights of his seasons. We probably watched that 100 times with my brothers. This is how inspiring is my family. Yeah, I mean, all they could really do with me is like teach great values, the taste of the effort and the grind and just trying to be as humble as you can and do your best every time you show up.”

Pavon was as smooth as a fine French red for most of the final round but began the day with a bogey, which allowed Jaeger to increase his lead to three shots thanks to a pair of early tap-in birdies on the second and third greens. As Jaeger began to mellow out midway through the front nine, Pavon caught fire with four birdies over his closing six holes before the turn.

His first blemish since the opening hole nearly came courtesy of a wayward tee shot on the par-3 16th into a greenside bunker, but Pavon escaped with a 23-foot par save. The leaky tee shot on 16 foreshadowed a brutal bogey after a missed 3-footer for par, which brought a whole host of players into contention.

Lashley was already in the clubhouse lead at 11 under and despite a rollercoaster round, Hojgaard stayed in the periphery and had a shot at the end after a perfect tee shot on the 72nd hole.

“I just saw Nicolai striping down the drive 300-plus yards in the middle and I was like, ‘OK, it’s going to be spicy now, I might have to do a birdie or something special'” Pavon said of the situation.

With Pavon in a fairway bunker, both Jaeger and Hojgaard found the green in two. The Frenchman then failed to find the fairway with his second and was left with a thick lie in the rough. From there he clutched up, stuffed his approach shot to 7 feet and made the birdie putt to seal the deal.

“I had to dig deep, I had to grind. It’s part of it,” Hojgaard said of his week. “Obviously love the grind when you’re out there and you can feel the nerves and you miss a couple things and you try to work on stuff.”

“I’ve got a bigger picture here. We’re on the right path, we’re doing some good things. There’s a lot of things we can do better, that’s a good thing,” he continued. “We’re going to regroup now, we’ve got a few more days now preparing for Pebble next week. I’m excited for the future. I’m sure I’m going to get it over the line at some point. It’s about being patient and just stay calm.   And obviously you’ve got to enjoy this as well. You’ve got to take your losses with a smile sometimes because it makes you stronger. I definitely, I’ll definitely do my best to get a couple shots better.”

“I didn’t have my best stuff golf game wise. I battled, you know. That was the story of my weekend here,” added Jaeger. “But I didn’t have enough to really get going. I felt like if I putted decent, I’d have had a better chance of winning.”

Fan-favorite Tony Finau (69) finished T-6 at 10 under, with San Diego native Xander Schauffele (70) T-9, a shot back at 9 under. Defending champion Max Homa (69) finished T-13 at 8 under.

“Yeah, I was proud of the fight. I didn’t really have it with much of anything the first couple days, just wasted a bunch of shots. Then today played very solid, had it going for a little bit but then kind of got bit, but such is the South Course at Torrey Pines,” said Homa. “So pretty happy with my game going into next week. Glad I finished on a bit of a better note. Yeah, game feels very well rounded, just needs to clean up a little bit.”

The victory will qualify Pavon for the Masters, as well as next week’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, the Tour’s second signature event of the season. Pavon doesn’t know what the rest of his year will look like now, and he’ll meet with his team next week to plot out the schedule.

“Matthieu Pavon knows he’s going to go eat at Nobu tonight, that’s all I know,” he said with a laugh, “and playing in Pebble next week.”

Bon Appétit, Matthieu.

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Watch: Shane Lowry makes albatross at the 2024 Farmers Insurance Open

What a shot from the Irishman!

Thanks to three bogeys over his first four holes Saturday, Shane Lowry was 2 over through five holes during the final round of the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines’ South Course in San Diego, California.

However, his round turned around quickly after a perfect 303-yard drive on the par-5 sixth.

Lowry, with a fairway metal in hand, went for the green in two from 256 yards out.

His ball just cleared the front-left greenside bunker, took a few hops, hit off the flagstick and went in for an albatross!

The mega-bird vaulted him from 2 under for the tournament to 5 under, tied for 31st. It’s the second double eagle on Tour this season (Jake Knapp/Round 2/No. 11/Nicklaus Tournament Course/the American Express).

Farmers: Photos

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The toughest courses on the PGA Tour in 2023 were three major venues, then Torrey Pines South

Torrey Pines South is no joke.

It’s no secret but the stats do bear out that Torrey Pines South is no joke.

One of two golf courses – along with the North – that hosts the PGA Tour’s Farmers Insurance Open, the South is proving once again to be one of the toughest tests in golf.

So far in 2024, the Farmers field was 3 under during the first round Wednesday. In Thursday’s second round, the field of 156 was a combined 18 over, according to the PGA Tour’s ShotLink.

The South is the lone course in play for the final two rounds of the Farmers, so whoever reaches the finish line first there has earned his stripes.

Looking at the entire course stats from last season, Torrey Pines South was the highest non-major venue on the most difficult courses list.

2024 Farmers Insurance Open Saturday tee times, how to watch PGA Tour at Torrey Pines

Everything you need to know for the final round from Torrey Pines.

There’s a good chance someone gets their first PGA Tour win on Saturday.

After 54 holes of the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines in San Diego, California, it’s German Stephan Jaeger out in front at 11-under 205. He shot 1-over 73 in the third round on Friday, but he maintained a lead heading into the final round.

Fellow Europeans Matthieu Pavon and Nicolai Hojgaard are tied for second at 10 under. Thomas Detry is at 9 under, and there’s a big group at 8 under.

A common theme among the top nine on the leaderboard? None of them have won on the PGA Tour. However, the last two years, the winner has come from five shots behind on the final day to win.

The total prize money for the event is $9 million with $1.62 million going to the winner. The winner will receive 500 FedEx Cup points.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for Saturday’s final round of the 2024 Farmers Insurance Open. All times listed are ET.

Saturday tee times

1st tee

Tee time Players
11:47 a.m.
Min Woo Lee, Ben Martin, Luke List
11:58 a.m.
Aaron Rai, Shane Lowry, Patrick Cantlay
12:09 p.m
Kevin Yu, Scott Stallings, Chesson Hadley
12:20 p.m.
Max Homa, Austin Eckroat, Nick Hardy
12:31 p.m.
Carson Young, Sam Stevens, Adam Schenk
12:42 p.m.
Patrick Rodgers, Joseph Bramlett, Alejandro Tosti
12:53 p.m.
Beau Hossler, Sami Valimaki, Akshay Bhatia
1:04 p.m.
Rafael Campos, Vincent Norrman, Nate Lashley
1:15 p.m.
Ryan Brehm, Tony Finau, Will Zalatoris
1:26 p.m.
Maverick McNealy, Xander Schauffele, Emiliano Grillo
1:37 p.m.
Robby Shelton, Parker Coody, Ludvig Aberg
1:48 p.m.
Jake Knapp, Taylor Montgomery, Joe Highsmith
1:59 p.m.
Thomas Detry, Taylor Pendrith, Trace Crowe
2:10 p.m.
Stephan Jaeger, Matthieu Pavon, Nicolai Hojgaard

10th tee

Tee time Player
11:47 a.m.
Tom Whitney, Keegan Bradley, Mark Hubbard
11:58 a.m.
Michael Kim, Hayden Springer, Ryo Hisatsune
12:09 p.m
Hideki Matsuyama, Justin Lower, Bronson Burgoon
12:20 p.m.
Chris Gotterup, Doug Ghim, Justin Rose
12:31 p.m.
Aaron Baddeley, S.H. Kim, Lanto Griffin
12:42 p.m.
Erik Barnes, Taylor Moore, Dylan Wu
12:53 p.m.
Sahith Theegala, Harris English, Mackenzie Hughes
1:04 p.m.
Chandler Phillips, Tyson Alexander, Francesco Molinari
1:15 p.m.
Jacob Bridgeman, Kevin Dougherty, Ben Silverman
1:26 p.m.
Tom Hoge, Charley Hoffman, Ben Taylor
1:37 p.m.
Zac Blair, Taiga Semikawa, Chad Ramey
1:48 p.m.
Adrien Dumont de Chassart, Alexander Bjork
1:59 p.m.
Brandt Snedeker, Justin Suh

How to watch, listen

ESPN+ is the exclusive home of PGA Tour Live. You can also watch Golf Channel free on Fubo. All times ET.

Saturday, Jan. 27

Golf Channel/Peacock: 2-4 p.m.

CBS: 4-8 p.m.

Sirius XM: 3-8 p.m.

ESPN+: 12 p.m.-8 p.m.

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First-time winners lead, Will Zalatoris finds his form and more from moving day at the 2024 Farmers Insurance Open

Someone forgot to tell the players moving day came early this week at the 2024 Farmers Insurance Open.

SAN DIEGO — Someone forgot to tell the players moving day came early this week at the 2024 Farmers Insurance Open.

Just 18 of the 79 players who made the cut were under par on Friday on the South Course at Torrey Pines, and the low rounds of the day were a pair of 4-under 68s from Ryan Brehm and Will Zalatoris.

The third round featured the return of the CBS walk-and-talk with a San Diego native, a new swing analysis tool, the return of a rising PGA Tour star and a gritty golf course fit for a testy Saturday finale. Here’s what you missed from the third round of the 2024 Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines.

Farmers Insurance Open: Photos

David Skinns’ second-round results at Torrey Pines

Former Vol David Skinns’ second-round results at Torrey Pines.

The Farmers Insurance Open is taking place Wednesday-Saturday at Torrey Pines Golf Course (South Course and North Course) in San Diego, California.

Former Vol David Skinns is part of the field. He qualified after being ranked 2-30 on the prior season’s Korn Ferry Tour points list.

Skinns finished the second-round -2 (142). He did not make the cut. Stephan Jaeger -12 (132) is leading the Farmers Insurance Open after second-round play.

Skinns played for the Vols from 2001-05, appearing in 46 tournaments. He came to Tennessee from Lincoln, England.

The former Vol has appeared in 31 PGA TOUR events during his career. He has made 13-of-31 cuts on the PGA TOUR. Skinns has appeared in 151 events, including three wins, on the Korn Ferry Tour during his career.

Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images

Farmers Insurance Open 2024 Friday third round tee times, how to watch

Everything you need to know for the third round from Torrey Pines.

Some big names missed the cut at Torrey Pines at the only Thursday 36-hole cut on the PGA Tour’s 2024 schedule.

That list includes Collin Morikawa and Jason Day.

At the other end of the leaderboard, it’s a Euro takeover.

Germany’s Stephan Jaegar in the solo lead at 12 under. In solo second a shot back is Norway’s Nicolai Hjogaard. Tied for third at 10 under is Belguim’s Thomas Detry and France’s Matthieu Pavon.

Tony Finau and Michael Kim, tied for fifth at 9 under, are the highest Americans on the board.

The total prize money for the event is $9 million with $1.62 million going to the winner. Five-hundred FedEx Cup points will be awarded to the champion on Saturday.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for Friday’s third round of the 2024 Farmers Insurance Open. All times listed are ET.

South Course

1st tee

Time Players
12:20 p.m. Alejandro Tosti, Bronson Burgoon, Chris Gotterup
12:30 p.m. Robby Shelton, Doug Ghim, Vincent Norrman
12:40 p.m. Jacob Bridgeman, Taiga Semikawa, Sam Stevens
12:50 p.m. Patrick Cantlay, Adam Schenk, Parker Coody
1 p.m. Chad Ramey, Jake Knapp, Alexander Björk
1:10 p.m. Taylor Montgomery, Luke List, Nick Hardy
1:20 p.m. Tom Whitney, Kevin Yu, Beau Hossler
1:30 p.m. Scott Stallings, Sami Valimaki, Joe Highsmith
1:40 p.m. Maverick McNealy, Hideki Matsuyama, Mackenzie Hughes
1:50 p.m. Chesson Hadley, Xander Schauffele, Charley Hoffman
2 p.m. S.H. Kim, Patrick Rodgers, Zac Blair
2:10 p.m. Aaron Rai, Emiliano Grillo, Joseph Bramlett
2:20 p.m. Matthieu Pavon, Tony Finau, Michael Kim
2:30 p.m. Stephan Jaeger, Nicolai Hojgaard, Thomas Detry

10th tee

Time Players
12:20 p.m. Rafael Campos, Tyson Alexander, Taylor Pendrith
12:30 p.m. Carson Young, Francesco Molinari, Shane Lowry
12:40 p.m. Trace Crowe, Nate Lashley, Hayden Springer
12:50 p.m. Max Homa, Min Woo Lee, Austin Eckroat
1 p.m. Dylan Wu, Sahith Theegala, Ben Martin
1:10 p.m. Ludvig Aberg, Justin Rose, Brandt Snedeker
1:20 p.m. Harris English, Kevin Dougherty, Ro Hisatsune
1:30 p.m. Aaron Baddeley, Justin Suh, Ben Silverman
1:40 p.m. Akshay Bhatia, Adrien Dumont de Chassart, Tom Hoge
1:50 p.m. Justin Lower, Lanto Griffin, Erik Barnes
2 p.m. Keegan Bradley, Mark Hubbard, Ben Taylor
2:10 p.m. Taylor Moore, Ryan Brehm
2:20 p.m. Will Zalatoris, Chandler Phillips

How to watch, listen

ESPN+ is the exclusive home of PGA Tour Live. You can also watch Golf Channel free on Fubo. All times ET.

Friday, Jan. 26

Golf Channel/Peacock: 3-5 p.m

CBS: 5-8 p.m.

Sirius XM: 3-8 p.m

ESPN+: 12 p.m.-8 p.m

Saturday, Jan. 27

Golf Channel/Peacock: 2-4 p.m.

CBS: 4-8 p.m.

Sirius XM: 3-8 p.m.

ESPN+: 12 p.m.-8 p.m.

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