Ted Scott, Scottie Scheffler’s caddie, has likely made more money than 80 percent of PGA Tour players in 2024

Ted Scott is living large.

There’s no shortage of money in professional golf right now.

Scottie Scheffler is likely going to set a record this year for most money made in a single PGA Tour season, and after Sunday’s win at the 2024 Travelers Championship, he moved to fifth on the all-time PGA Tour career money list after another $3.6 million hit the bank account.

Yeah, the guy who just turned 28 on Friday has earned more money than all but four PGA Tour players all-time.

Another person who is doing well thanks to Scheffler’s incredible season is his caddie, Ted Scott.

Although all caddies may be paid slightly differently depending on their relationship with a player, the normal scale is as follows: 10 percent of winnings if a caddie’s player wins, 7 percent for a top 10 and 5 percent for making the cut.

Well, this season, Scheffler has won six times, has another seven finishes inside the top 10 and only two finishes outside that. That means Scott has made a lot of money this year. So much so, he has made more than a million more than the Tour average ($1.555,579).

Event Finish Scheffler money Rate Scott money
The Sentry 5 $690,500 7% $48,335
American Express T-17 $132,300 5% $6,615
AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am T-6 $642,500 7% $44,975
WM Phoenix Open T-3 $519,200 7% $36,344
Genesis Invitational T-10 $455,000 7% $31,850
Arnold Palmer Invitational 1 $4,000,000 10% $400,000
The Players 1 $4,500,000 10% $450,000
Texas Children’s Houston Open T-2 $553,735 7% $38,761
Masters 1 $3,600,000 10% $360,000
RBC Heritage 1 $3,600,000 10% $360,000
PGA Championship T-8 $521,418 7% $36,500
Charles Schwab Challenge T-2 $809,900 7% $56,693
Memorial Tournament 1 $4,000,000 10% $400,000
U.S. Open T-41 $72,305 5% $3,766
Travelers Championship 1 $3,600,000 10% $360,000
TOTAL $27,696,858 $2,633,839

As the chart shows, Scott has likely brought in $2,633,839 million, which seems minuscule to Scheffler’s nearly $28 million. It’s an insane amount for a caddie, however.

If Scott were on the PGA Tour’s official money list for 2024, he would be in 46th. This season, 232 players have won prize money from events, meaning Scott has earned more money caddying for Scheffler than 80.1 percent of players who have teed it up this year.

On the money list, he’s in front of players like Jordan Spieth ($2.5 million), Davis Riley ($2.04 million), who beat Scheffler at the Charles Schwab Challenge to win, Adam Scott ($1.67 million), Rickie Fowler (1.09 million) and numerous others.

Scott is just behind 2023 FedEx Cup champion Viktor Hovland and 2024 winners Nick Taylor, Jake Knapp and Austin Eckroat.

Even if you just counted Scott’s winning from the Travelers Championship, he would be 151st on the money list and in front of 81 players. Add in three more signature events, The Players and Masters, it adds up to a whole lot of dough.

As much as the players, and especially Scheffler, are benefiting from increased purse sizes and signature events, it’s helping others, too.

Scott is one of those, and his crazy season alongside the World No. 1 continues.

2024 Travelers Championship prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player

It’s Groundhog Day, again, for Scottie Scheffler.

Not even protestors on the 18th green can stop Scottie Scheffler.

He won for the sixth time this season Sunday, taking home the title at the 2024 Travelers Championship after beating Tom Kim on the first playoff hole with a par. It’s his fifth win in a signature event this season and another $3.6 million prize he’s taking home.

For Tom Kim, while he won’t take home a trophy, he does collect $2.16 million for his best finish since winning at the Shriners Children’s Open in the fall.

Here’s a closer look at how much each player made at the 2024 Travelers Championship from a purse of $20 million.

Prize money payouts

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Scottie Scheffler -22 $3,600,000
2 Tom Kim -22 $2,160,000
T3 Tom Hoge -20 $1,160,000
T3 Sungjae Im -20 $1,160,000
T5 Patrick Cantlay -18 $702,500
T5 Tony Finau -18 $702,500
T5 Justin Thomas -18 $702,500
T5 Akshay Bhatia -18 $702,500
T9 Brian Harman -17 $520,000
T9 Wyndham Clark -17 $520,000
T9 Cameron Young -17 $520,000
T9 Shane Lowry -17 $520,000
T13 Collin Morikawa -16 $400,000
T13 Xander Schauffele -16 $400,000
15 Tommy Fleetwood -15 $360,000
T16 Patrick Rodgers -14 $310,000
T16 Matthieu Pavon -14 $310,000
T16 Adam Svensson -14 $310,000
T16 Robert MacIntyre -14 $310,000
T20 Seamus Power -13 $241,333
T20 Viktor Hovland -13 $241,333
T20 Rickie Fowler -13 $241,333
T23 Sepp Straka -12 $183,500
T23 Christiaan Bezuidenhout -12 $183,500
T23 Hideki Matsuyama -12 $183,500
T23 Taylor Pendrith -12 $183,500
T27 Corey Conners -11 $144,000
T27 Adam Hadwin -11 $144,000
T27 Austin Eckroat -11 $144,000
T27 Ludvig Aberg -11 $144,000
T31 Lee Hodges -10 $117,600
T31 Kurt Kitayama -10 $117,600
T31 Stephan Jaeger -10 $117,600
T31 Denny McCarthy -10 $117,600
T31 Si Woo Kim -10 $117,600
T36 Mackenzie Hughes -9 $97,333
T36 Matt Fitzpatrick -9 $97,333
T36 Brendon Todd -9 $97,333
T39 Adam Scott -8 $85,000
T39 Keegan Bradley -8 $85,000
T39 Michael Thorbjornsen -8 $85,000
T42 Nick Taylor -7 $75,000
T42 Will Zalatoris -7 $75,000
T44 Victor Perez -6 $63,000
T44 Andrew Putnam -6 $63,000
T44 Lucas Glover -6 $63,000
T44 Jason Day -6 $63,000
T48 Eric Cole -5 $49,286
T48 Russell Henley -5 $49,286
T48 Davis Riley -5 $49,286
T48 Webb Simpson -5 $49,286
T48 Cam Davis -5 $49,286
T48 Jake Knapp -5 $49,286
T48 Sahith Theegala -5 $49,286
T55 Adam Schenk -4 $44,750
T55 Billy Horschel -4 $44,750
T55 Emiliano Grillo -4 $44,750
T55 Thomas Detry -4 $44,750
T55 J.T. Poston -4 $44,750
T55 Sam Burns -4 $44,750
T61 Max Homa -3 $42,750
T61 Chris Gotterup -3 $42,750
T63 Harris English -2 $41,500
T63 Jordan Spieth -2 $41,500
T63 Chris Kirk -2 $41,500
66 Nick Dunlap -1 $40,500
67 Ben Griffin E $40,000
T68 Justin Rose 1 $39,250
T68 Taylor Moore 1 $39,250
70 Peter Malnati 3 $38,500

 

Scottie Scheffler wins 2024 Travelers Championship, becomes first player since Tiger Woods to win six times in a season

Incredibly, Scheffler has finished in first or second place in eight of his last 10 starts.

CROMWELL, Conn. — Heading into Sunday, golf fans were faced with a tough question to ponder: On a rain-softened course that yielded a 59 Saturday, who would go low enough to win the $3.6 million prize?

Would it be Scottie Scheffler, who had already won five PGA Tour events, including the Players Championship and the Masters, or maybe Xander Schauffele, who won last month’s PGA Championship? Those stars, along with Collin Morikawa, Tony Finau, South Korea’s Sungjae Im, and rising star Akshay Bhatia, were all chasing Tom Kim, who was trying to be the first wire-to-wire winner at the Travelers Championship since Jordan Spieth did it in 2016.

As the contenders made their way through the early holes on the back nine, the leaderboard was more packed than I-95 on Sunday night leaving Cape Cod. At 2:20 p.m. local time, five golfers were tied for the lead at minus 19, with Tom Hoge just one shot back at minus 18.

In the end, Scheffler defeated Kim in a one-hole playoff to claim his sixth tournament of the season, but the event’s final hole experienced a bizarre twist that had people talking.

Playing the final hole, Scheffler stood at 22 under, with Kim trailing by a shot. The third member of their group, Akshay Bhatia, was four shots back and no longer a threat to win. As the three prepared to putt on the 18th green, protesters ran out and threw white and red powder on the putting surface. They also had devices that created smoke.

“It was definitely a bit weird. I saw one person out of the corner of my eye, and then I saw about five police officers sprinting around,” Scheffler said. “From my point of view, they got it taken care of pretty dang fast, and so we were very grateful for that. It seemed to go by really quickly to us.”

Bhatia added, “I was scared for my life. I didn’t even really know what was happening. All of a sudden, four, five people come out running on the green. I mean, it was kind of weird, but thankfully the cops were there and kept us safe, because that’s, you know, that’s just weird stuff.”

More: Social media reacts to protestors storming the green at the 2024 Travelers Championship

After police officers apprehended the group and took them away, Scheffler nearly holed a 27-foot putt that would have won the tournament in regulation. He tapped into for par to remain at 22 under, Bhatia two-putted for his par and finished T-5, and that left Kim alone to finish. After coming up short on two birdie putts on the 14th and 16th holes, Kim, whose approach shot nearly flew directly into the hole, drained a 10-foot birdie chance to force the playoff with Scheffler.

“That can be a stressful situation, and you would hate for the tournament to end on something weird happening because of a situation like that,” Scheffler said. “So I felt like Tom and I both tried to calm each other down so we could give it our best shot there on 18.”

Replaying the 18th hole, Scheffler, the world’s No. 1 player and the 2024 Masters and Players Championship winner, did what he does so often. He hit a great drive down the middle of the fairway, then hit his approach shot to 11 feet to put pressure on Kim.

Kim found the fairway too, but with mud on his golf ball, his shot from 110 yards out went into a greenside bunker short and right of the hole. His next shot ran past the cup, realistically forcing him to make a 36-foot par-saving putt to extend the playoff. He missed it, and then Scheffler lagged his birdie putt to within a foot of the cup before tapping in for par and the win.

Scottie Scheffler of the United States reacts to his winning putt on the 18th green, the first playoff hole, during the final round of the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands on June 23, 2024, in Cromwell, Connecticut. (Photo by James Gilbert/Getty Images)

“I fought hard,” Kim said. “I’m going to definitely look at this week as a positive, it’s my best finish of the year. Despite almost coming through, having the lead last night, I just, against the best players in the world I fought really hard.”

Scheffler has every shot in the book, but in a pre-tournament press conference, he talked about having an ace up his sleeve in the form of his caddie, Ted Scott.

Before starting to work with Scheffler in 2022 and helping him win two Masters Tournaments, Scott was on the bag for all three of Bubba Watson’s wins at the Travelers Championship. “If there’s a difference of opinion, I’m probably going to lean towards him a little bit more than myself, just because I haven’t had the success on this golf course specifically,” Scheffler said on Wednesday.

Scottie Scheffler of the United States reacts to his winning putt on the 18th green, the first playoff hole, with caddie Ted Scott during the final round of the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands on June 23, 2024 in Cromwell, Connecticut. (Photo by James Gilbert/Getty Images)

When asked if Scott had given him some extra insights this week, Scheffler did not hesitate to give his caddie credit.

“I would say it was his game plan and kind of how he liked to attack the golf course,” Scheffler said. “Bubba (Watson) obviously had a lot of success here, and so Teddy watched him win numerous times and also have chances to win here numerous times, so he knew what we needed to do in order to get in position to have a chance to win the tournament. So, we stuck to our game plan and the way that we wanted to play the golf course, and like I said, he was a huge part of that game plan.”

In conditions that made Southern New England feel like South Louisiana, Scheffler’s win came just a week after he finished T-41 at the U.S. Open, by far his worst performance of 2024. His victory at TPC River Highlands was his sixth of the year and pushed his PGA Tour earnings for the season above $27 million.

Every player on the PGA Tour wants to win, but playing on Sunday alongside his friend Kim, with whom he shares a birthday (June 21), Scheffler admitted that he had mixed feelings at points during the day.

“It’s fun competing against your friends, but at the same time, it’s difficult, because part of me wants him to miss the putt and part of me wants him to make the putt,” Scheffler said. “And then when I see him make bogey in the playoff hole, it hurts because that’s my friend and that’s not a great feeling. But he should remember that putt he made on 18, because it was pretty special and he’s a great player and a great champion.”

Among the players who tried to keep up with Scheffler and Kim, Tom Hoge fired an 8-under 62 to finish tied for third with Im.

“To be honest, I don’t know if I really felt like I had a chance to win at any point,” said Hoge. “I felt like I was trying to make as many birdies as I could.”

Patrick Cantlay shot 65 to finish at 18 under, along with Tony Finau (66), Justin Thomas (66) and Bhatia (69).

Watch: Protesters dragged off after storming 18th green at 2024 Travelers Championship as final group finishes

A wild scene unfolded late Sunday at the 2024 Travelers Championship.

A wild scene unfolded late Sunday at the 2024 Travelers Championship.

Numerous fans stormed the 18th green as the final group was lining up their putts at TPC River Highlands, throwing smoke bombs and other objects on the green. CBS Sports’ Jim Nantz said it looked as if four people had been handcuffed within a few seconds of rushing the green.

Scottie Scheffler was lining up a birdie putt from just off the green, and Tom Kim had a birdie putt from 10 feet away to tie Scheffler when the incident happened.

Police quickly corralled the fans who rushed the green as officials worked quickly to clean up the green.

The group Extinction Rebellion is claiming responsibility for the protest, saying it was not protesting any individual or organization but the worldwide danger of climate breakdown.

The final grouping was able to finish the 18th hole, but before the playoff with Kim and Scheffler, the hole was recut toward the front of the green to avoid the area where the protesters were.

Travelers Championship 2024 Sunday tee times, PGA Tour pairings and how to watch

The purse at the 2024 Travelers Championship is $20 million with $3.6 million going to the winner.

With 18 holes remaining of the PGA Tour’s 2024 Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, Connecticut, Tom Kim holds a one-shot lead at 18 under over Akshay Bhatia and world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler at 17 under.

Xander Schauffele and Sungjae Im round out the top five, tied for fourth at 16 under.

TPC River Highlands is a par-70 layout measuring 6,852 yards. The purse at the Travelers is $20 million with $3.6 million going to the winner. The winner will also receive 700 FedEx Cup points.

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

Sunday tee times

How to watch, listen

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

Sunday, June 23

Golf Channel/Peacock: 1-3 p.m

CBS: 3-6 p.m.

Sirius XM: 1-6 p.m

ESPN+: 7:30 a.m.-1 p.m

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Tom Kim tops a stacked leaderboard as TPC River Highlands yields more low scores at 2024 Travelers Championship

Catch up on Saturday’s action here.

CROMWELL, Conn. — On a day that felt like two thanks to a three-hour and 10-minute rain delay, the Travelers Championship provided golf lovers with exactly what they have come to expect from the only PGA Tour event held in the Northeast: low scores.

In the third round of last week’s U.S. Open, the 74 players who made the cut carded 167 birdies, but this Saturday, the 70 players in the field here made 347 birdies.

Before the storms arrived, Cameron Young provided plenty of electricity by becoming the 12th man to shoot a 59 in a PGA Tour event. Playing in nearly windless conditions on a course softened by rain that fell Friday evening, he started by going 5 under through his first four holes en route to a front-nine 28, then birdied 13, eagled the par-4 15th and stuffed a 9-iron to five feet to set up a final birdie on the 17th hole.

Coming off a 66 in the second round, you might think that Young would be in the lead, but this is the Travelers Championship, where Keegan Bradley won last year at 23 under. Young’s 13 under total was dusted by major winners and several young stars who are eyeing the $3.6 million prize for winning this signature event.

After making his first bogey of the week on the fourth hole Saturday, Tom Kim, who had the lead after both the first and second rounds, made birdies on the fifth, sixth, eighth and 11th holes to reach 16 under. Kim made two more birdies on the back nine as darkness descended on the course to shoot 65 and take a one-shot lead into Sunday.

“The wind kind of died down after the delay, so the greens were really soft and fairways were soft and there’s no wind, so obviously there were a lot of birdies out there,” Kim said. “I didn’t really look at leaderboards, but when you get soft conditions out there like that, it’s definitely gettable and I feel like I executed well enough to have a good round today.”

Kim is trying to be the 12th wire-to-wire winner at the Travelers Championship and the first since Jordan Spieth won in 2017.

With more storms in the forecast to be around TPC River Highlands on Sunday afternoon, the PGA Tour decided on Saturday to group players in three instead of twos and have the first group start at 6:50 a.m. ET. The hope is to conclude play at the Travelers Championship by 4 p.m. ET.

Kim, at 18 under, will be in the final group on Sunday, paired with Akshay Bhatia, who shot 64 on Saturday, while paired with Masters champion and world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, who also shot 64. Bhatia and Scheffler will each start Sunday one shot behind Kim at 17 under.

“I was pretty nervous stepping on that first tee today playing with him, and I think it’s kind of my first time playing in that many, in front of that many people,” Bhatia admitted Saturday evening. “It was really cool. (The fans were) 90 percent Scottie, 10 percent me, which is all right, but it was awesome.”

Scottie Scheffler sinks a putt on the second hole during the third round of the Travelers Championship golf tournament at TPC River Highlands. Mandatory Credit: Gregory Fisher-USA TODAY Sports

It sounds like Scheffler had fun too.

“Sometimes, when you’re in pairs, you can feed off each other the wrong or the right way. Today, especially at the end, we were feeding off each other what I would say in the right way,” Scheffler said. “It’s always a good thing.”

Asked if he anticipated that it would be hard to separate from the crowded leaderboard on Sunday, given the soft conditions and low scores, Scheffler said, “It really depends on the weather. I think I saw that the winds were going to be up a little bit, and it depends if we get more rain overnight. So there will be a few different factors going into it, but I’ll wake up tomorrow, see how the course is playing and go from there.”

Xander Schauffele, who won the Travelers Championship two years ago and quietly shot a pair of 65s to start this year’s event, made birdies at two, three, six and the ninth hole, and then three more on the back-nine before a bogey on 18 left him with a 64. He is at 16 under.

The gold medal winner from the Tokyo Olympics knows that on Sunday, he’ll need to circle a lot of his scores if he wants to contend.

“It feels like, more than ever, you’re going to have to keep your head down,” he said. “It’s kind of been my motto, to stay in my lane, for quite some time and I think tomorrow it’s going to hold pretty true. You might par the first two or three holes and feel like you’re miles behind, but you can get on a run at any point on this golf course.”

Collin Morikawa will start Sunday at 16, tied with Sungjae Im, while Tony Finau, Justin Thomas and Shane Lowry will begin the final round at 14 under.

Three fans involved in lightning strike during weather delay near 2024 Travelers Championship

Both people are conscious and alert and were transported to the hospital.

The third round of the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, Connecticut, was suspended at 3:30 p.m. ET due to a dangerous weather situation — the final group of Tom Kim and Collin Morikawa was through six holes when the horn blew.

During the delay, two people near the tournament were struck by lightning. According to BreakingNowCT on X/Twitter, both people are conscious and alert and were transported to the hospital.

The media were told the tournament would not resume before 5:30-6 p.m. ET. The PGA Tour wants to play golf Saturday to make Sunday a shorter day for the players — this is the third event of a signature event-major championship-signature event stretch.

Update to story at 6:35 p.m. ET: Jason Brade, Cromwell Connecticut Fire Chief, released the following statement on the situation.

On June 22, 2024, at approximately 16:26 hours the Cromwell Police Department began receiving multiple 911 calls of a lightning strike in the area of 6 Pierson Green. Police, Fire and EMS responded to the area within minutes. On arrival, first responders identified a tree struck by lightning and 3 patients near the strike. EMS crew treated two patients who were transported to area hospitals for further evaluation, and one patient who refused treatment. All remaining Police, Fire and EMS units cleared the scene.

The address is of a house behind the fifth green of TPC River Highlands.

Cameron Young shoots 59 during third round of the 2024 Travelers Championship

“It’s crazy, it’s unbelievable.”

CROMWELL, Conn. — Unless a tournament decides to build a dome and allow the best players to compete indoors, this venue, TPC River Highlands, is probably the place where you are most likely to see someone shoot a 59. Hell, Jim Furyk shot a 58 here back in 2016. Sixty-fives warrant passing notice. On Friday, there were two 62s, three 63s and five 64s.

But after Cameron Young, 27, birdied his first two holes and then holed a pitching wedge from 142 yards out on the par-4 third hole for an eagle and rolled in a 19-foot putt for a birdie on the fourth to reach 5 under, experienced eyes took notice. After last evening’s rain, and with no wind, the 6,807-yard course was there to be had, and Young certainly obliged, becoming the 12th player in PGA Tour history to shoot a 59.

“I didn’t think about it too much, kind of the middle that have back nine, just because it didn’t really feel like it,” he said afterward. “All of a sudden, like, everything was going in after kind of 10, 11 and 12. Yeah, then it kind of, all of a sudden, I had a putt for 59 on 18, which was a blast.”

Walking outside the ropes and following Young was a man wearing a Sleepy Hollow Golf Club polo shirt and a wide-brimmed hat that protected his face and neck from the sun. David Young, Cameron’s father, was the head professional at Sleepy Hollow for years, but these days, he’s only giving lessons to one student and on Saturday, that pupil didn’t need any help.

“We’ve just been waiting for the dam to break,” he said after walking up the hill from the 18th green. “It’s been a frustrating stretch because he’s been playing so much better than the scores show.”

That may be true, but consider this: In Cameron Young’s last five starts, his best finish was a tie for 34th at the Wells Fargo Championship back in May. He tied for 63rd at the PGA Championship, missed the cut at the RBC Canadian Open and tied for 50th at The Memorial. Last week at the U.S. Open, Young shot 73-72-75-75 to finish T-67. Before his 66 on Friday, his 10 previous rounds had all been par or worse and his last round in the 60s was a 69 at the RBC Canadian Open three tournaments ago.

So did he do anything differently this morning that translated into great golf?

“Nope. Woke up, would have preferred to go back to sleep,” he said with a wry grin. “Did exactly what I do every day coming to the golf course. Get a coffee, ate, saw the physio, went out there and warmed up. I didn’t feel particularly awesome, but I chunked a few less on the range than I did yesterday. Then, yeah, I came out and was very comfortable. Things just started coming down close to the hole.”

After Young made a 32-foot birdie putt on the ninth hole for a front-nine 28, the crowds on the 10th tee noticeably grew, and after another birdie on 10, they grew more. A pair of pars on the 11th and 12th holes (where Young’s playing partner Jordan Spieth made birdies) were still greeted with cheers by fans who endured sauna-like conditions Saturday throughout the lunch hour.

“Whenever you play with someone like (Jordan), you get some pretty big crowds,” Young said. “I know not many of them out there started out there for me, but by the end, maybe there were half a dozen that were watching me out there, so it was fun,” he added sarcastically. “I enjoy playing with those crowds and playing with a great player like Jordan.”

Before Saturday, Cameron Young’s lowest score in a PGA Tour event was a 62 at Riviera during the 2022 Genesis Invitational. According to his father, he has never shot a 59 in a casual round either.

A 59, which Young said he didn’t really take seriously while he played, became a very real possibility after his 3-iron on the 280-yard, par-4 15th hole bounced near the front of the green and rolled to within five feet of the hole.

“I’ve hit that (3-iron) everywhere, and I finally hit one just straight at it,” Young said. “I think I said something to the effect of, just give me all the right bounces, and it did. I mean, where that ended up would be a great pitch from the front of the green. So it’s, you know, a really good swing and a great strike, but for it to end up somewhere that you can basically tap it in for  two is not likely. You could hit that same shot a hundred more times and you would get two on that plateau right here.”

Young missed a seven-foot birdie putt on the 16th hole before his 9-iron from 161 yards out stopped five feet from the cup to set up his seventh birdie to go along with two eagles.

Father’s Day was six days ago, but David Young got a present from his son on Saturday that he won’t soon forget.

“It’s crazy, it’s unbelievable,” he said. “I mean, getting to come out here like this week after week has been a second dream come true. I feel like this is all too good to believe, but it happens.”

Travelers Championship 2024 Saturday tee times, PGA Tour pairings and how to watch

The purse at the 2024 Travelers Championship is $20 million with $3.6 million going to the winner.

After 36 holes of action, Tom Kim is 13 under and holds a two-stroke lead at the 2024 Travelers Championship.

TPC River Highlands is a par-70 layout measuring 6,852 yards. The purse at the Travelers is $20 million with $3.6 million going to the winner. The winner will also receive 700 FedEx Cup points.

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

Saturday tee times

How to watch, listen

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

Saturday, June 22

Golf Channel/Peacock: 1-3 p.m

CBS: 3-6 p.m.

Sirius XM: 1-6 p.m

ESPN+: 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m

Sunday, June 23

Golf Channel/Peacock: 1-3 p.m

CBS: 3-6 p.m.

Sirius XM: 1-6 p.m

ESPN+: 7:30 a.m.-1 p.m

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Hot take? Wyndham Clark says Olympics is bigger deal than the Ryder Cup: ‘Coolest team I’ve ever made, for sure’

“This probably ranks as the coolest team I’ve ever made, for sure.”

Thanks to three wins in less than a year — 2023 Wells Fargo Championship, 2023 U.S. Open and 2024 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am — world No. 5 Wyndham Clark is set to represent the United States in the Olympics from August 1-4 at Le Golf National in Paris. The course that opened in 1990 previously hosted the Ryder Cup in 2018, an event won by the Europeans 17½-10½.

Clark, who is currently playing in the PGA Tour’s final signature event of the season, the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, Connecticut, told the media Thursday that he thinks the Olympics is “probably even bigger than” the Ryder Cup.

“The Ryder Cup in golf is kind of the biggest thing, but now that golf’s in the Olympics, it’s probably even bigger than that, because you’re representing your country at such a bigger level,” Clark said. “Hopefully, all four of us can go and try to snag some podium spots and give medals to the U.S. to try to win that total medal count. But, yeah, it’s pretty awesome. This probably ranks as the coolest team I’ve ever made, for sure.”

2023 Ryder Cup
Team USA golfer Wyndham Clark reacts after a putt on the 12th green during day one fourballs round for the 44th Ryder Cup golf competition at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club. (Photo: Adam Cairns-USA TODAY Sports)

Clark has represented the U.S. twice in his career: the 2014 Arnold Palmer Cup and 2023 Ryder Cup.

Joining Clark at the Olympics will be world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, No. 3 Xander Schauffele and No. 7 Collin Morikawa.