AT&T Byron Nelson: Jordan Spieth in contention to win his hometown event

The Texan is T-3 and in position to earn his best finish at the Tour’s stop in Dallas.

A decade after his coming out party at the AT&T Byron Nelson as a 16-year-old prodigy, Jordan Spieth is in position to win his hometown tournament for the first time.

Or, if nothing less, perhaps record his first top-10 finish in his 10th attempt at this tournament where in 2010 he finished T-16. Amazingly, he’s never done better, but this could be the year. Spieth finished off a third-round 6-under 66 at TPC Craig Ranch in McKinney, Texas, in dramatic fashion, sinking a putt from 31 feet off the green for eagle to climb into a share of third place at 17-under 199, three strokes behind leader Sam Burns (69) and two behind South Korea’s K.H. Lee (67).

“When it got on the green, I thought, ‘Wow, if it has enough, it’s going to get there and it’s going to be electric’ and 4 feet to go I thought it was going to go in,” said Spieth, who lifted his putter to the sky in early celebration.

AT&T Byron Nelson: Leaderboard | Photos

On the day of the Preakness Stakes triple crown race, Spieth was slow out of the gate, making par on his first five holes, including a three-putt par from 64 feet at the par-5 fifth. But then he made his move, recording birdies on four of his next five holes. Just when he seemed poise to make another of his patented Saturday charges, Spieth lost his footing, though he opted for a car racing metaphor.

“I was leaking oil the last few holes,” he said.

Two bogeys at Nos. 15 and 16 – the first when he hung his tee shot at the par 3 to the right and failed to get up and down and the latter the result of an uncharacteristic three-putt from 17 feet – dropped him back to 15 under and four strokes back at the time.

Spieth battled a misbehaving putter on Friday, losing nearly a stroke and half to the field on the greens. So, he made an adjustment in his setup for the third round, widening his stance and bending over slightly more. The results were mixed. He took 29 putts on Saturday and lost ground to the field again (-0.385).

“I opened up a little bit and got worried on a couple missing left, so I ended up pushing them right,” he said. “If I was putting as well as I do in tournaments that I win, we would have a number of strokes better right now. Hopefully I can make up for that tomorrow.”

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He got a head start with the eagle at 18 after sending his second at the par 5 just over the green. Putting through the Zoysia grass had given him fits earlier in the round. Not this time. His latest magic act sent the hometown fans into a frenzy.

“Once it got on the green, it looked good,” Spieth said. “Started the putter raise and I wasn’t positive it was going in because the angle it was coming in at. I wanted to do the no look to the crowd, but, I mean, it was a really cool moment.”

Spieth’s eagle erased the two late bogeys in one fell swoop, climbing into a tie for third with Matt Kuchar (66), Sweden’s Alex Noren (70) and South Africa’s Charl Schwartzel (66).

Spieth still has ground to make up if he’s going to vault past Lee, who is seeking his first PGA Tour title, and Burns, who is trying to win in back-to-back starts. Burns followed up his sizzling 62 on Friday with a workmanlike 3-under 69, which his caddie, Travis Perkins, reminded him wasn’t too shabby at all.

“I told him, ‘Man, I didn’t really have my best stuff today’ and just left a few out there. He’s like, ‘Yeah, but it’s hard to follow up what happened yesterday. It’s important to remember that.’ ”

Spieth, who has won 12 times including three majors since his debut at the Byron Nelson as a teen sensation, knows he’ll have to keep going low to have a chance to win for the second time in his native Texas this year. (He won the Valero Texas Open last month.)

“It’s one of those rounds you want to control your own destiny,” he said of Sunday’s finale at TPC Craig Ranch, “but looks like I’ll be three back, and so you just got to go low or hope that Sam doesn’t go as low, right?”

About as right as his hole-out at 18.

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AT&T Byron Nelson Sunday tee times, TV and streaming info

Everything you need to know for the final round at TPC Craig Ranch.

There are 14 players within five shots of the lead entering Sunday’s final round of the PGA Tour’s AT&T Byron Nelson, and they’ll be battling the elements all day.

The Tour announced midway through Saturday’s third round that tee times would be moved up due to expected heavy storms in the area Sunday. Players will play in threesomes off Nos. 1 and 2. The forecast shook up plans so much that CBS Sports’ final-round coverage will be streamed live from 12-3 p.m. ET on the websites for CBS Sports and the PGA Tour.

Sam Burns sits solo atop the leaderboard at 20 under, with K.H. Lee hot on his heels at 19 under. With an eagle on his final hole, Jordan Spieth joined Matt Kuchar and Charl Schwartzel at 17 under, T-3.

Below you’ll find everything you need to know for the final round of the AT&T Byron Nelson. All times listed are Eastern Standard Time.

AT&T Byron Nelson: Leaderboard | Photos

Tee times

1st tee

Tee Time Players
8 a.m. Talor Gooch, Brian Stuard, Wesley Bryan
8:11 a.m. Hank Lebioda, Patton Kizzire, J.J. Spaun
8:22 a.m. Mark Hubbard, Ryan Armour, Sepp Straka
8:33 a.m. Troy Merritt, Luke Donald, Satoshi Kodaira
8:44 a.m. Roger Sloan, Carlos Ortiz, Wyndham Clark
8:55 a.m. Scott Brown, Daniel Berger, Marc Leishman
9:06 a.m. Ryan Palmer, Brandt Snedeker, Jhonattan Vegas
9:17 a.m. Ben Martin, Joseph Bramlett, Adam Schenk
9:28 a.m. Harris English, Rafa Cabrera Bello, Bronson Burgoon
9:39 a.m. Seamus Power, Doc Redman, Scott Stallings
9:50 a.m. Matt Kuchar, Jordan Spieth, Alex Noren
10:01 a.m. Sam Burns, K.H. Lee, Charl Schwartzel

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10th tee

Tee Time Players
8 a.m. Will Zalatoris, Johnson Wagner, Rob Oppenheim
8:11 a.m. Jon Rahm, Scottie Scheffler, Lee Westwood
8:22 a.m. Vincent Whaley, Rory Sabbatini, Hideki Matsuyama
8:33 a.m. Patrick Rodgers, Pat Perez, Russell Knox
8:44 a.m. Si Woo Kim, Michael Kim, Sean O’Hair
8:55 a.m. Aaron Wise, Charles Howell III, Sebastián Muñoz
9:06 a.m. Ted Potter, Jr., Keith Mitchell, Mark Anderson
9:17 a.m. Sung Kang, Wes Roach, Cameron Champ
9:28 a.m. Dylan Meyer, Martin Laird, Luke List
9:39 a.m. Bryson DeChambeau, Michael Gligic, Nelson Ledesma
9:50 a.m. Bo Hoag, Brice Garnett, D.J. Trahan
10:01 a.m. Michael Gellerman, Austin Cook, Cameron Percy

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Sunday, May 16

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV)10-11:45 a.m.
CBS:
12-3 p.m., streamed live on CBS Sports and the PGA Tour.

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Want to play blackjack while watching the PGA Tour? You can at the new AT&T Byron Nelson venue.

The par-3 17th hole at TPC Craig Ranch is quite the party.

MCKINNEY, Texas – Scoot over, 16th hole at TPC Scottsdale. The PGA Tour might have new royalty when it comes to golf insanity.

The 17th hole at TPC Craig Ranch, the new venue for the AT&T Byron Nelson, is enclosed much like the famous 16th at Scottsdale, but the area comes with a new twist — you can play a hand of blackjack or throw some dice while watching.

This comes courtesy of the Choctaw Club, a massive complex that sits alongside the 16th green with views of Nos. 12, 13, 14, 15 and 17, provided in association with a casino that sits just over the Oklahoma border. The games are simply for fun, however. Tickets start at $425 per day and include an open bar and “premium buffet.”

The club is one of many that line the closing stretch of holes during an impressive array of hospitality choices. Although players are scoring at will this week at the new course, the move was made largely because the Tom Weiskopf design could accommodate larger gatherings.

Developer and course namesake David Craig spent nearly 20 years telling just about anyone who would listen, that one day the AT&T Byron Nelson would be played at his TPC Craig Ranch golf course.

AT&T Byron Nelson: Leaderboard | Photos

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As the golf-inspired, socially-infused chaos spread out before him on a sunny Saturday afternoon, even he had a hard time believing what he was seeing.

“It’s far exceeded my expectations. It’s beyond my wildest dreams. The site is great, the players are outstanding and the fans are having a good time,” he said from his perch of massive sponsor tents behind the 18th green.

If he needed any backup to his observation, he could ask the thousands of eating and drinking fans all around the shaded sponsor tents which backed both the 9th and the 18th greens and totally encircled the par-3 17th. All were sold out for 2021 and most inked to a five-year contract, with individual villas themselves going for an annual sum between starting out at $25,000 and reaching as high as $125,000.

Craig said weekend grounds passes for the Nelson, long since sold out, were going for $400 on the secondary market with rooftop spots with food and drink included going for $800, a first for the Nelson since Tiger Woods arrived here in 1997 fresh off his initial Masters win.

For the annual PGA Tour event, the all-time charity fundraising leader with $167 million raised since 1968, the tagline for this year was, “The Party is Back.” If that’s the case, consider it mission accomplished.

Bryson DeChambeau prepares to hit at the AT&T Byron Nelson at TPC Craig Ranch. The new facility is more fan-friendly.

The PGA Tour limited the Nelson to 12,500 fans, due to COVID regulations, but tournament director Jon Drago said the Nelson could have sold 100,000 tickets this week with no regulations due to the stellar field and new location inside an upscale development in the fastest-growing part of the region.

Craig added the par-3 17th, which he called a “Nelson cathedral of sound,” could hold 10,000. Craig said he and Tour officials, along with the sponsoring Salesmanship Club, agreed to a five-year deal at TPC Craig Ranch with a five-year option after that and he hoped the Nelson and Craig Ranch, plus the party atmosphere would be here for a long time to come.

“He told me almost every day, the Byron Nelson would be here and he could it bigger and better than anybody,” said former general manager Todd Harbour on hand to witness the spectacle. “He told everybody. It turns out he was right.”

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Watch: CBS on-course reporter Dottie Pepper nearly gets hit but stands her ground at AT&T Byron Nelson

It’ll take more than an errant shot to rattle Dottie Pepper, a two-time major champion and 17-time LPGA winner.

McKINNEY, Texas — There’s not much that fazes Dottie Pepper, who has a pair of majors, 17 LPGA titles and decades of broadcast journalism on her impressive resume.

But even Pepper giggled nervously on Saturday after she was nearly struck by a ball during the third round of the PGA Tour’s AT&T Byron Nelson while watching a group that included leaders Alex Noran and Sam Burns.

Noran pushed a drive a bit to the right at TPC Craig Ranch, and the ball nearly clipped Pepper as it went by.

Pepper, who lives in Saratoga Springs, New York, and is married to occasional Golfweek contributor David Normoyle, brushed it off.

“Almost got me,” Pepper said. “Don’t flinch. I didn’t.”

Pepper later joked she might wear a helmet next. She joined CBS Sports as a  reporter and analyst in 2016 and was elevated to the role of lead on-course reporter for the 2020 season. She has also worked for the Golf Channel, NBC, Sports Illustrated and ESPN.

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Watch: CBS on-course reporter Dottie Pepper nearly gets hit but stands her ground at AT&T Byron Nelson

It’ll take more than an errant shot to rattle Dottie Pepper, a two-time major champion and 17-time LPGA winner.

McKINNEY, Texas — There’s not much that fazes Dottie Pepper, who has a pair of majors, 17 LPGA titles and decades of broadcast journalism on her impressive resume.

But even Pepper giggled nervously on Saturday after she was nearly struck by a ball during the third round of the PGA Tour’s AT&T Byron Nelson while watching a group that included leaders Alex Noran and Sam Burns.

Noran pushed a drive a bit to the right at TPC Craig Ranch, and the ball nearly clipped Pepper as it went by.

Pepper, who lives in Saratoga Springs, New York, and is married to occasional Golfweek contributor David Normoyle, brushed it off.

“Almost got me,” Pepper said. “Don’t flinch. I didn’t.”

Pepper later joked she might wear a helmet next. She joined CBS Sports as a  reporter and analyst in 2016 and was elevated to the role of lead on-course reporter for the 2020 season. She has also worked for the Golf Channel, NBC, Sports Illustrated and ESPN.

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A day after Scott Stallings’ caddie asked him if ‘we could break 80,’ he jumps near AT&T Byron Nelson lead

The game slowed down for Scott Stallings during Friday’s round at the Byron Nelson, but it picked up on Saturday.

MCKINNEY, Texas — The game seemed to slow down for Scott Stallings during Friday’s second round of the AT&T Byron Nelson. Usually, when a pro athlete makes that proclamation, it means things have come into focus.

When Stallings, who once had sinus surgery, makes that statement, it’s because he’s in a fog after treating his allergies.

“I tried a different sinus medication yesterday, and after about seven holes my caddie looked at me and said, ‘You think we could break 80?’ ” Stallings said. “So with all the cottonwood and everything blowing around here, after my sinus surgery it kind of messes with me a little bit. So I tried a different one. Thought I was getting used to it.”

He finished the second round with a 71, well back of the leaders.

Conversely, whatever Stallings took prior to the third round he should stick with. Born in Worcester, Massachusetts and later an all-state golfer in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, Stallings got red hot on Saturday, posting six consecutive birdies starting on the fifth hole en route to a 63 that pushed him temporarily into second place at TPC Craig Ranch.

Stallings sits at 15 under heading into Sunday’s final round, and he’ll be looking to break a PGA Tour drought that goes back to 2014, when he won the Farmers Insurance Open.

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Although the course is getting gobbled up a bit by PGA Tour players — the field was more than a combined 900 under par by midday on Saturday — Stallings is feeling fortunate to be in such a position. Halfway through his round on Friday, he was just 1 under.

“Yeah, there is a lot of birdie opportunities out there still. Both the short holes guys can get close to the green. All the par-5s are in great spots for birdies and eagles,” he said. “There are some good pin locations out there. Some par-3s, 17 is super tough and be in between number for most guys. But these guys are great. Just because it’s windy doesn’t mean anything. The golf course is set up great and it’s still soft. I expect this course to improve.”

One key to Stallings’ success is his ability to make putts of late. On Saturday he needed just 23 total putts, and boasted 111 feet in putts holed. He entered the week 134th on the Tour in Strokes Gained: Putting.

“I’ve been working hard. My caddie (Jon Yarbrough) and my short game coach, Tim, after Hilton Head kind of had … and especially with Zurich, kind of all came together,” he said. “But I just tried to learn week in, week out. I’ve gained every week since I started doing it and feel a lot more comfortable on the greens.”

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AT&T Byron Nelson Saturday tee times, TV and streaming info

Here’s everything you need to know for Moving Day at the Byron Nelson.

It’s Moving Day in Dallas.

The PGA Tour is back in the Lonestar State this week as TPC Craig Ranch in McKinney, Texas, hosts this week’s AT&T Byron Nelson for the first time. Sam Burns claimed the 36-hole lead thanks to a bogey-free second-round 62 that featured six birdies on his back nine alone. Burns will play alongside Alex Noren in the final group at 2 p.m.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, below you’ll find everything you need to know for all of Saturday’s third round action at the 2021 AT&T Byron Nelson. All times listed are Eastern Standard Time.

Byron Nelson: Leaderboard | Photos

Tee times

8 a.m. Talor Gooch, Wes Roach
8:10 a.m. D.J. Trahan, Scott Stallings
8:20 a.m. Troy Merritt, Keith Mitchell
8:30 a.m. Luke Donald, Harris English
8:40 a.m. Cameron Champ, Satoshi Kodaira
8:50 a.m. Dylan Meyer, Rory Sabbatini
9 a.m. Brian Stuard, Michael Gellerman
9:10 a.m. Martin Laird, Wesley Bryan
9:20 a.m. Will Zalatoris, Hideki Matsuyama
9:30 a.m. Johnson Wagner, Cameron Percy
9:40 a.m. Rob Oppenheim, Mark Anderson
9:50 a.m. Luke List, Jhonattan Vegas
10:05 a.m. Brice Garnett, Bryson DeChambeau
10:15 a.m. Michael Gligic, Patrick Rodgers
10:25 a.m. Jon Rahm, Pat Perez
10:35 a.m. Scott Brown, Scottie Scheffler
10:45 a.m. Nelson Ledesma, Bo Hoag
10:55 a.m. Mark Hubbard, Adam Schenk
11:05 a.m. Michael Kim, Ryan Armour
11:15 a.m. Ryan Palmer, Russell Knox
11:25 a.m. Sean O’Hair, Aaron Wise
11:35 a.m. Austin Cook, Daniel Berger
11:45 a.m. Si Woo Kim, Sung Kang
11:55 a.m. Rafa Cabrera Bello, Marc Leishman
12:10 p.m. Charles Howell III, Lee Westwood
12:20 p.m. Roger Sloan, Sepp Straka
12:30 p.m. Bronson Burgoon, Hank Lebioda
12:40 p.m. Sebastián Muñoz, Brandt Snedeker
12:50 p.m. Vincent Whaley, Ben Martin
1 p.m. Ted Potter, Jr., Joseph Bramlett
1:10 p.m. Carlos Ortiz, Wyndham Clark
1:20 p.m. Seamus Power, Charl Schwartzel
1:30 p.m. Matt Kuchar, Patton Kizzire
1:40 p.m. J.J. Spaun, Jordan Spieth
1:50 p.m. K.H. Lee, Doc Redman
2 p.m. Sam Burns, Alex Noren

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TV, streaming, radio information

Saturday, May 15

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 16

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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Sam Burns looks suddenly comfortable with the lead at AT&T Byron Nelson

It took nearly four years for Sam Burns to break through on the PGA Tour. He’s hoping the sequel will come in much shorter order.

McKINNEY, Texas — It took nearly four years for Sam Burns to break through and win on the PGA Tour. He’s hoping the sequel will come in much shorter order.

Burns was simply scintillating on a warm, sunny day, bludgeoning TPC Craig Ranch on Friday during the second round of the AT&T Byron Nelson. By day’s end, the 24-year-old rode a 62 to take the lead into the third round.

Sure, Burns had squandered two previous 54-hole leads this season, but he proved he can close — making three birdies on the final nine holes to erase a one-stroke deficit at the turn and win the Valspar Championship by three strokes over Keegan Bradley last month.

On Friday, in front of a rowdy and sizable crowd, Burns posted a career-best 10 under. He’ll enter the weekend attempting to become the first player to win his first two events in consecutive starts since Camilo Villegas did it in 2008.

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“Everything out there felt great. I just feel like we got into a good rhythm throughout the round. I made a run right there on the back nine, and so it was nice to be able to finish it off with two birdies at the end,” Burns said. “A good way to end the day. Just trying to get a good game plan out here for tomorrow and let’s see what happens.”

Giving chase are K.H, Lee, Alex Noren, Doc Redman and J.J. Spaun. Six golfers, including Jordan Spieth and Matt Kuchar, are six bac at 11 under.

AT&T Byron NelsonPhotos | Leaderboard

The understated Burns insisted he’s simply reaping the rewards from some quality work investment.

“The biggest thing for me is just seeing the hard work that we put in it, to start seeing results from that. A lot of times you don’t know how long the results are going to take. Golf is a fickle game,” he said. “It’s cool to see some feedback from the progress we’ve made back home and seeing it in tournament play as well.”

But don’t expect to see much different from the former LSU star on Saturday, even with some potential weather blips on the radar. It’s likely he’ll follow a similar game plan, one that netted four birdies on the front during the second round and six more on the back.

“I think we just continue to do what we been doing. Don’t do anything more than I have to. Don’t try to play outside what I’m capable of,” he said. “Just continue to put ourselves in the right spots and see what happens.”

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Jordan Spieth is cranky in the morning, but he shook it off on Friday at AT&T Byron Nelson

Jordan Spieth followed an opening-round funfest at the AT&T Byron Nelson with a more pedestrian 70 on Friday.

McKINNEY, Texas — Early to bed, early to rise, makes a man … well, grumpy.

At least that was the case for Jordan Spieth, who followed an opening-round funfest at the AT&T Byron Nelson with a more pedestrian 70 on Friday, although it was good enough to keep him near the top of the leaderboard after the second round’s early wave.

After having the opportunity to sleep in a bit on Thursday before enjoying a rousing 63 alongside ol’ buddies Scottie Scheffler and Will Zalatoris, Spieth heard the alarm go off well before sunrise in advance of Friday’s second round. Yes, this week at TPC Craig Ranch is something of a home game for the three-time major champ, as he’s a Dallas native and lives in the area, but  it’s never fun to get out of bed too early. Even if it’s your own.

“When I wake up at 4:30, I’m in a bad mood just as most people probably are and I needed to kick that today,” Spieth said. “I think yesterday even when I wasn’t playing a good hole I was kind of laughing at the miss or chunked it and laughed. Today I had a shorter fuse. So hopefully. … I’ll just get some better rest tonight.

“There is no reason for me not to trust everything I’m doing. At this point, I’ve got an opportunity to contend here, and if I can get myself a chance on Sunday, that is the best prep for this tournament and also next week.”

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For Spieth — who tested positive for COVID about 10 days after leaving Augusta in April and was forced to quarantine in his Dallas home away from his wife, Annie — a lack of scoring had to do with a lack of putting success.

While making seven birdies and an incredible eagle on Thursday, Spieth needed 26 putts and holed 121 feet, 7 inches total. On Friday, the former Longhorn made 61 feet, 3 inches over the entire round. He did end on a high, however, posting a birdie on No. 9, his final hole of the day.

AT&T Byron NelsonPhotos | Leaderboard

“I just had plenty of looks. I didn’t make many putts at all today. It was nice to cap off a birdie on the last hole to really feel like I had … within three is certainly a lot better as you head into a weekend when you got to score,” Spieth said.

With difficult weather conditions in the weekend forecast, Spieth knows he’ll need to tighten things up a bit heading into Saturday’s third round. He’s hoping to build on a recent resurgence, one that’s seen him post six top-10 finishes in his last eight events, including a victory at the Valero Texas Open and a T-3 at the Masters.

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“I just have got to kind of get a little more compact with my golf swing. Just throw out today, go to the range, and just go back to yesterday’s feels and see if I can get a little more compact,” he said. “Then I really got to get dialed in with a putting feel. I’ve missed six or seven putts inside of 10 feet the last two days. That’s just kind of that, you know, when you get to playing more and more, instead of being a little uncomfortable you just start to … they’re just another putt.

“Tomorrow will be a really good test. Tomorrow the golf course will be more difficult than any other day, and I think that’ll be a test on where I’m at.”

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Lanny Wadkins on winning the ’73 Byron Nelson, the one that slipped away and why he stopped playing the Colonial

Wadkins, a 21-time winner on Tour, takes a trip down memory lane to relive some of his finer moments.

The old saying for those who’ve relocated to the Lone Star state is “I wasn’t born in Texas, but I got here as fast as I could.”

That’s certainly the case for Lanny Wadkins, a Virginia native who has maintained a residence in the Dallas-Fort Worth area for decades.

It’s no surprise Wadkins has felt at home in the DFW — his second PGA Tour victory, one that solidified his standing as one of the game’s great emerging players, came at the 1973 Byron Nelson Classic when he edged Dan Sikes in a playoff.

We caught up with Wadkins earlier this week in Dallas at a Golfweek Raters event at Las Colinas Country Club.

Golfweek: Tell us your memories of that 1973 victory at the Byron Nelson (then played at Preston Trail Golf Course):

Lanny Wadkins: I won in ’72, which was my rookie year. I won in Las Vegas, and for my first win, I’d beaten Arnold Palmer by a shot, so then here at the Nelson, I was playing well coming in. I’d finished fifth the week before the Tournament of Champions in La Costa. So, I knew I was playing well. I came here and had a great week driving the ball. The last day was really windy. I was three back then I think I birdied five of the last seven holes on the last day and thought I’d won the thing, but Dan Sikes holed about a 40-footer from just off the back edge of the green on 18 to tie me.

Then I won on the first sudden-death hole, which was 15 back then. They went to 15 because that’s where TV started. 

GW: What did that win mean for you?

LW: I was playing really well. In fact, I went to Houston next week and finished third, so I had a fifth, a first and a third right in a row as a 23-year-old.

So it kind of put me up there. I finished fifth on the money list that year. I finished 10th my first year, which was technically supposed to be my senior year at Wake Forest, since I left a year early. I was 10th on the money list and so it worked out well. But like with anything — you go through something where you’re feeling your way through.

Lanny Wadkins talks to a group of Golfweek Raters during an event at Las Colina Country Club. Wadkins won the 1973 Byron Nelson Classic. (Photo by Tim Schmitt/Golfweek)

GW: To win in your sophomore season on the Tour, did you kind of feel like, “hey, wait a minute, this isn’t a fluke. I belong here.”

LW: I mean, I felt I did anyway. I was runner-up at the Heritage in 1970 when I was U.S. Amateur champ. So I had finished second at a PGA Tour event as an amateur. I finished 13th in a U.S. Open as an amateur. So, I knew I could play before I got out there — that’s why I went out there. So I was settled in.

GW: So, now let’s come full circle. In 1983, you think you’re going to win at the Nelson again. What happened?

LW: Yeah, well that was the first year they moved it (to TPC-Las Colinas). I played well there a number of times. And when it went to Las Colinas, I finished top two or three several times.

I lost to Payne Stewart by a shot one year (in 1990) and in ’83, the first year we moved the Nelson to Las Colinas. I actually had the 54-hole lead. I’d won at La Costa in the Tournament of Champions. I won that so I was coming in here thinking, you know, I was playing well, they just moved the tournament.

I knew the course. I had the 54-hole lead. You know, I thought I might take down back-to-back wins, but I didn’t do it. Ben Crenshaw played great on the final day and I think I ended up finishing third. That’s one I really thought I had.

GW: So when a tournament like this keeps moving — and it’s in its first year at TPC Craig Ranch — does that lose its luster for you, personally? Or doesn’t it really matter?

LW: I think they’ve been trying to figure it out. I think, you know, they had to move away from Preston Trail. We didn’t have the room for anything out there anymore. We had no room for parking. The neighborhood was growing up. The size of the venue wasn’t large enough and the footprint got much larger at Las Colinas because eventually, they had 36 holes of this so that gave them ample room and they even used both courses during the tournament several times. It gave them other venues for pro-ams and they had plenty of room out there for corporate hospitality, so it all worked, you know. The corporate hospitality is a big part of it today, you’ve got to take that into consideration when you’re planning a PGA Tour event.

I was surprised by the move to Trinity Forest and I’m not surprised by the move out to Craig Ranch. I believe Craig Ranch — it’s a Tom Weiskopf course — it’s a very good straightforward golf course. I think it’s going to be an excellent venue for the tournament. I think the players will love it. Right down the road in Frisco there’s hotels, there’s restaurants, there’s, you know, 10 to 15 minutes away there’s everything in the world you could want, so I think all in all it’s a wonderful spot for the tournament.

Lanny Wadkins on the range on Wednesday during the PNC Father/Son Challenge at The Ritz Carlton Golf Club of Orlando.

GW: You now have an interesting perspective, you were a player at a time when it was all about the golf course, pure and simple. People came to tournaments for the course. Now, it’s much more about the staging and the hospitality and TV. Do you see a difference in the way players treat their schedules?

LW: The players are still coming because of the golf course and how they how the course suits them. The players themselves aren’t coming because of the hospitality, right? I mean now this with the Nelson, it’ll be a bigger venue, a bigger show on Tour, if you will. Like Phoenix, for example, is sometimes it’s a show. It’s a happening.

GW: Would you have changed your schedule if you played today?

LW: My schedule always revolved around if I liked the golf course. Did I play it well? I mean when you get down to the bottom line, it’s a business and you’ve got to make money. I’m not going to go someplace where I miss the cut every year. That doesn’t make sense to go spend $5,000 of your own money to make nothing, right?

So I mean even here in Dallas when I was living here, I was having a run at Colonial where I just played horribly. I love the golf course, but I played terrible at Colonial. I missed the cut every year. So finally, in ’86 and ’87, I just didn’t play Colonial. Even though I was here, I didn’t play Colonial. I went back in ’88 and won. I hadn’t made the cut there in forever but I needed a break from it. And I went back an ’88 and won, and then played good there from then on.

GW: How come?

LW: I have no idea. I love the course. I like the grasses. I mean, I’m here. I just went over there the first year back in ’88 and had a good first round, I think I shot a 67, and was like now I can shoot a score here. And that’s all I needed. I just needed to know that I could and then it was OK. 

I shot a 65 in the last round and won it.

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