Best final round pairings to watch Sunday at the 2023 U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club

Sunday’s finale in Beverly Hills features some must-watch pairings.

LOS ANGELES — As soon as your Father’s Day plans are over, find a television, change the channel to the 2023 U.S. Open and enjoy the show.

Or better yet, watch with your dad because neither one of you will want to miss this finish.

After 54 holes at the famed Los Angeles Country Club the leaderboard is loaded with PGA Tour and LIV Golf stars, as well as compelling would-be first-time major winners. Co-leaders at 10 under, Wyndham Clark and Rickie Fowler are in the latter category. Four-time major champion Rory McIlroy is solo third a shot back at 9 under, with 2022 Masters champion Scottie Scheffler three back in fourth at 7 under. Then there’s the likes of Harris English, Dustin Johnson and Xander Schauffele all idling within reach.

And what comes with a packed leaderboard? A handful of must-watch pairings. Here are the groups you won’t want to miss during Sunday’s final round of the 2023 U.S. Open.

U.S. OPENLeaderboard | How to watch | Sunday tee times

Woods and irons used by PGA Tour players ranked in the top 10 in Strokes Gained: Tee to Green

See the woods and irons being used by golfers ranked in top 10 in Strokes Gained: Tee to Green

We are two weeks removed from the PGA Championship at Oak Hill and there are two weeks to go before the game’s best players descend upon Los Angeles Country Club and battle it out for the season’s third major championship, the 2023 U.S. Open.

At this point, every player’s game needs to be sharp as the championship season continues, and while there is no substitute for making putts, avoiding big numbers and creating scoring chances comes from being effective off the tee and from the fairway. The players listed below – the golfers who are currently ranked in the top 10 in Strokes Gained: Tee to Green – are the best in the business when it comes to ballstriking, and many of their names have been on the first page of leaderboards all season.

As a reminder, strokes gained measures how much of an advantage or disadvantage a player typically has over the field, measured in strokes. A positive number means the player has an edge over the average golfer, while a negative number means the golfer is giving away shots. Strokes Gained: Tee to Green includes all non-putts, so it includes a player’s shots off the tee, from the fairway and shots hit from around the green.

See who is on the list and what drivers, fairway woods, hybrid and irons they are using.

Three-way tie for lead, Max Homa’s blistering back nine and Justin Thomas’ new approach to putting highlight a busy Friday at the 2023 Wells Fargo Championship

Here’s what you missed from Friday’s second round at Quail Hollow.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Nobody has separated from the pack after two rounds of play at the 2023 Wells Fargo Championship. In fact, the leaderboard is rather bunched.

While the usual stars may not be in contention, 37 players are within five shots of the lead entering the weekend, setting up for what could be a thrilling finish at Quail Hollow Club.

Everyone’s favorite Angry Golfer Tyrrell Hatton fired a 6-under 65 to tie the low round of the day and claim a share of the lead at 8 under alongside Nate Lashley (66) and Wyndham Clark (67). Six players are all T-4 and just a shot back at 7 under, including Xander Schauffele, Justin Thomas and Adam Scott.

Rain was in the forecast for Saturday’s third round, but it appears to have cleared up for the final stretch in the Queen City. Here’s what we learned from a busy Friday at Quail Hollow.

WELLS FARGO: Leaderboard | Photo gallery | Merchandise

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Tyrrell Hatton can’t figure out his beloved Liverpool FC or his record at Augusta (but he’s working on the latter)

Hatton is uncertain of what can help reverse his personal fortunes at the Masters.

SAN ANTONIO — Amid a stream of questions about his golf game, his first-ever appearance at the Valero Texas Open, and an impending return to Augusta National, Tyrrell Hatton fielded a question about his beloved Liverpool Football Club on Wednesday, a team that faces a mighty challenge in Manchester City this weekend.

A look of bewilderment came over Hatton’s face. Liverpool this season has at times looked the part of a dominating force, routing long-time rival Manchester City but then falling to clubs that have spent far less.

“If the team that played United show up, then absolutely. If the team that played Bournemouth shows up, then it could be another sad week,” Hatton said, looking perplexed.

Hatton is also uncertain of what can help reverse his personal fortunes at the Masters. Next week will mark his seventh appearance at the storied event, yet he’s never even made a dent, only once finishing inside the top 40.

Valero: Photos | Thursday tee times

And to be frank he’s making an appearance here at this last stop before the major season kicks off to shake things up, hoping to put a little Texas two-step into a rhythm that has previously not played well in Georgia.

Tyrrell Hatton of England participates in a press conference prior to the Valero Texas Open at TPC San Antonio on March 29, 2023 in San Antonio, Texas. (Photo by Alex Bierens de Haan/Getty Images)

“Typically, I’ve not played before the Masters and my Masters record is nothing to get excited about,” he said. “We’ve had a nice start to the season and figured it would be nice to add this event into the schedule. We’ll try our best to have a good week and take some momentum into Augusta.”

If Hatton is to finally make a run at the season’s first major, perhaps it’s this year. The Englishman has top-six finishes in three of his last five starts, and even though he didn’t win a single match at last week’s WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play in Austin, he felt pretty good about his game. He felt a weird sensation in his hand prior to his first match, but insisted the pain quickly subsided, and overall he hit the ball well, but just missed a few putts that would have put him in the running to get out of pool play.

And this week he’s making his debut at TPC San Antonio’s Oaks Course, hoping to get firing on all cylinders properly. It might work. It might not.

Hatton seemed about as confident as he is in his Liverpool side.

“Next week will be my seventh Masters, so it’s not like I’m short of experience around there. Generally speaking, I’ve not putted particularly well there, which again going back through stats and stuff throughout the years, putting’s normally a strength of mine,” Hatton said of Augusta. “I’ve just not holed the putts. I’ve broken 70, was it, once in my 17 or 18 tournament rounds. You know, it’s not a record to get excited about.

“Having said that, you don’t always have to shoot low around there to have a great week. Typically scores are pretty … the winning score’s higher than normal weeks. It’s not often where the winning score’s gone lower than 10 under. It’s not really the kind of week that you have to shoot low, so I guess in that sense it’s not too concerning. It’s an interesting golf course.”

This week, Hatton is the betting favorite in a weaker field. Next week he will not be.

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He insists it doesn’t matter either way. He’s simply looking for answers.

“Golf’s a pretty silly game. Just on paper you could say about every week there’s favorites, but it doesn’t often turn out that way,” Hatton said. “I mean, it makes no difference to me where — I don’t feel — world ranking-wise I’m one of the high-ranked players playing this week, like that makes no difference, you’ve still got to go out there and play good golf. Like what’s the field size this week, 144?

“There’s 143 other players that are fantastic at playing golf, like, on their week they can go and win this tournament, there’s no doubt about it.”

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Peaking for Augusta: Here are the 11 players hitting it the best entering the 2023 Masters and their history at ANGC

Several stars are trending in the right direction with the Masters next on the schedule.

PGA Tour pros talk about it all the time, but peaking during the right time of the schedule is incredibly important. No player on Earth wants to peak in October during the wrap-around season.

They want to peak during major season.

With the Masters on the horizon, we wanted to dive into some statistics from January until now and see who’s hitting the ball the best. We wanted to see who has put themselves in a position to feel confident about their game heading to Augusta National Golf Club.

For this list, we’re going to look at Strokes Gained: Ballstriking. SG:BS isn’t an official PGA Tour stat, however, many golf databases use it. It’s a combination of SG: Off the Tee and SG: Approach. Think of it as SG: Tee to Green minus SG: Around the green. It essential tells how well a player is hitting the ball. 

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Here are the top 11 players in SG: Ballstriking since Jan. 1, 2023 (minimum 20 measured rounds).

2023 Masters: Odds for every player in the field

Stats taken from Data Golf and Kyle Porter.

Irons used by golfers ranked in the top 10 in Strokes Gained: Approach the Green

Quality iron play is critical to winning the 2023 Masters, and these 10 golfers rank highest on the PGA Tour for good iron shots.

With all due respect to this week’s PGA Tour event, the Valero Texas Open, and with the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play completed, much of the golf world is focusing its attention on next week’s Masters.

The first men’s major championship of 2023 is shaping up to be an epic event, with stars such Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy and Jon Rahm having played well this year.

Augusta National Golf Club will test every aspect of each player’s game, but precision iron play will be especially important because it can help golfers set up birdie chances while also avoiding card-wrecking big numbers.

Below is the list of the 10 golfers who lead the PGA Tour in Strokes Gained: Approach the Green – a statistic that measures how much of an advantage a golfer has over the field based exclusively on his play from the fairway – along with the irons those players are using.

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Top 50 bubble watch: PGA Tour players currently in and out of next year’s designed events

Here’s a way-too-early look at the top 50 in the FedEx Cup Standings.

For PGA Tour players, being inside the top 50 of the FedEx Cup Standings now comes with more than a spot in the field at the BMW Championship.

The board recently ratified a new approach for the 2024 schedule that will see reduced fields in new designated events, as well as the removal of the 36-hole cut. Fields in designated events will contain between 70 and 78 players and be largely comprised of the top 50 players who qualify for the BMW Championship during the previous season’s FedEx Cup playoffs, adding some extra intrigue to the season-long race that was desperately needed.

While it may seem like it’s too early in the season to be following the top-50 movement, the Players Championship was the 20th tournament of the PGA Tour’s 2022-23 schedule, as well as the fifth designated event. With major season looming, here’s a look at some players who are currently in and out of next year’s designated events.

Bubble watch

Check out the last 10 in and first 10 as the points stand after the 2023 Players Championship, where Nos. 40 and 60 are separated by just 101 points.

Player Current FedEx Cup ranking Previous FedEx Cup ranking FedEx Cup points
Xander Schauffele 40 43 441
Keith Mitchell 41 41 435
Denny McCarthy 42 49 432
Joel Dahmen 43 38 426
Patrick Rodgers 44 39 418
Matthew NeSmith 45 40 418
Nico Echavarria 46 44 388
Adam Hadwin 47 59 388
Robby Shelton 48 45 382
J.J. Spaun 49 46 380
Alex Smalley 50 47 380
Maverick McNealy 51 48 380
David Lingmerth 52 66 378
Wyndham Clark 53 56 365
K.H. Lee 54 50 355
Garrick Higgo 55 53 354
Tyson Alexander 56 51 349
Sam Ryder 57 55 347
Taylor Moore 58 58 347
S.H. Kim 59 52 346
Hideki Matsuyama 60 90 342

Biggest movers

Tyrrell Hatton was the big mover of the day on Sunday after an impressive 7-under 65 at TPC Sawgrass to finish solo second at 12 under and claim $2,725,000. Not only that, he flew 43 spots up the FedEx Cup points list to sit No. 26.

Hideki Matsuyama moved 30 spots up to No. 60 after his fifth-place showing at the Tour’s flagship event.

Notables inside the top 50

The usual suspects this season of Jon Rahm, Max Homa and Players champion Scottie Scheffler are all Nos. 1-3 in the standings, with Keegan Bradley in fourth and Seamus Power in fifth.

Taylor Montgomery, in his first full season on the PGA Tour, is currently 17th thanks to his eight top 25 finishes (four in the top 10) over his 14 events so far this season.

Jason Day (20) and Rickie Fowler (22) are both inside the top 25, while fellow fan favorites Xander Schauffele (40) and Joel Dahmen (43) are just inside the line.

Robby Shelton finished 167th last season after missing 21 cuts over 32 tournament starts, but currently finds himself at No. 48.

Notables outside the top 50

Around 100 points separate Nos. 50 to 72.

David Lingmerth moved up 14 spots to No. 52 after his T-6 showing at the Players, while Maverick McNealy (51) and K.H. Lee (54) have both played their way out.

Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas are Nos. 65 and 66, respectively, but each has yet to play more than seven events this season.

Other notable players currently outside the top 50 (ranking in parentheses):

  • Sam Burns (68)
  • Cameron Young (79)
  • Will Zalatoris (85)
  • Matt Fitzpatrick (92)
  • Shane Lowry (96)
  • Tommy Fleetwood (97)
  • Billy Horschel (115)

As stated before, it’s still relatively early in the season, but certainly not as early as you may think. There’s still plenty of time for players to make their moves up the standings, and we’ll be here to keep you updated on the top 50 storylines for the rest of the season.

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Players Championship: Final-round miscues foiled group of challengers to Scottie Scheffler

A shanked chip. A disappointing drive. A too-close encounter with the lurking liquid at the famed island green.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — For golfers named Hatton, Homa, Hovland or Hideki, happy days were ready to holler hello at the 2023 Players Championship.

But all it took was a hiccup or two to halt their Sunday charges shy of the leaderboard’s peak.

A shanked chip. A disappointing drive. A too-close encounter with the lurking liquid at the famed island green.

One by one, the early challenges to Scottie Scheffler’s dominant final round faded away Sunday against the full force of the Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass.

“That is frustrating because I thought I executed, but that is 17 at The Players Championship,” said Max Homa, who overshot the island green to spoil his bid for victory.

A collection of golfers with 18 combined PGA Tour wins – Tyrrell Hatton, Max Homa, Viktor Hovland, Hideki Matsuyama – started more than an hour and a half before Scheffler teed off. All of them, at one point, seemed set to mount a challenge for the trophy. Whether denied by wind, water or sand, all fell short.

Literally short, in the case of Hatton’s drive at the 603-yard, par-5 ninth. Hatton tried a 3-wood off the tee, but the ball found the water hazard toward the right. He eventually made bogey at the hole.

“I was struggling with a block fade, which it’s just not a nice shot to have on a left-to-right wind. I was trying to be aggressive off the tee,” said Hatton, who at the time was 6 under for the tournament and 1 under for the round.

Hatton transformed into a golf machine thereafter, but never advanced closer than two strokes to Scheffler in spite of a record-shattering close: birdies on 10, 12 and the final five holes, a back-nine 29. Finishing second overall, he tied the back-nine course records of Kevin Chappell, Shane Lowry and Rory McIlroy from the 2016 Players. Lowry notched his mark in the first round, while Chappell and McIlroy achieved theirs in the second.

Matsuyama misfires at 14

The first and apparently most serious early-group threat came from Matsuyama, Masters champion in 2021, and his barrage of birdies at Nos. 3, 6, 8, 9 and then Nos. 11, 12 and 13. At one point he shaved the lead to one stroke.

But on the par-4 14th, he misjudged an approach from 204 yards and the wind made him pay. His ball drifted right, struck a hill and rolled across a cart path into rough.

It got worse. Matsuyama couldn’t clear the rough, whacking the ball barely the length of football chains. He tried again and ended up on the green but 68 feet from the pin, ultimately making double bogey. He later bogeyed 18 as well, finishing fifth at 9-under 279.

“I thought it was in hardpan, but it was soft underneath,” Matsuyama said of his third shot through a translator. “It just went right underneath it.

‘Adrenaline got me’

Matsuyama’s fall was, briefly, Homa’s gain. The second-ranked golfer in the FedEx Cup standings went birdie-eagle-birdie after the turn, even striking the pin from 307 yards on No. 12.

At 10 under and tied for second at the 17th tee, with two chances left to narrow the gap to Scheffler, Homa thought his aim at 17 was on target. He thought wrong.

The ball sailed over the green and splashed into the hazard. Homa made double bogey and finished at 8 under, tied for sixth.

“It’s such a weird hole in that it is kind of a guess,” Homa said. “All the stands, you can’t really feel the wind. We had played the last hole slightly down out of the right, so we were playing that one slightly in out of the left. I thought I hit the shot. I mean, it’s possible adrenaline got me.

“I flighted it really well. I hit a really good shot, maybe a couple paces left of where I was looking. Never thought that was going to go over the green.”

Hovland back in top 10

Less dramatic but still costly was the miscue that foiled Hovland on the front nine.

The 25-year-old from Norway aimed his tee shot on No. 5 onto the fairway, but he misfired on the second. The ball landed in rough short and right of the green, his pitch attempt sailed 16 feet past the hole and Hovland recorded a bogey.

2023 Players Championship
Viktor Hovland walks to the 18th green during the final round of the 2023 Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. (Photo: David Yeazell-USA TODAY Sports)

“It was just one of those where I tried to kind of cut up against the wind to the right pin, and now that I’m actually able to hit cuts, I aimed just too far away from the pin because I was expecting the wind to blow it over to the left,” he said. “But the ball just went dead straight through the wind.”

Like Hatton, Hovland picked up the pace afterward, including four birdies on five holes (9, 11, 12 and 13). Like Hatton, he found it was too late. Hovland came in at 10 under, tied for third.

It’s his second consecutive top-10 finish in Ponte Vedra. But the trophy, for this year, remains outside his grasp.

“I was just able to kind of trust that I can start the ball over water or danger and just curve it away from there. That’s very valuable out here,” Hovland said. “Just haven’t quite put all the pieces together to be at the top, but another good week here.”

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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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