How much each golfer won at the Waste Management Phoenix Open

Check out how much each golfer won this weekend at the PGA Tour’s Waste Management Phoenix Open.

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The Waste Management Phoenix Open went to a playoff for the fourth time in the last five years on Sunday at TPC Scottsdale.

Webb Simpson rallied from two strokes down with two to go with birdies on Nos. 17 and 18 to catch Tony Finau and force the extra action.

Simpson then birdied the first playoff hole to win it, his sixth PGA Tour victory and first since the 2018 Players Championship. He’s now 2-5 in playoffs.

Simpson will take home a first-place check for $1,314,000.

MORE: Scores | Photos | Trophies | Money | Winner’s bag

Check out what the rest of the field earned.

Position Player To Par Earnings
1 Webb Simpson -17 $1,314,000
2 Tony Finau -17 $795,700
T-3 Justin Thomas -14 $386,900
T-3 Bubba Watson -14 $386,900
T-3 Nate Lashley -14 $386,900
T-6 Max Homa -13 $255,500
T-6 Scott Piercy -13 $255,500
8 Adam Long -12 $228,125
T-9 Daniel Berger -11 $170,767
T-9 Billy Horschel -11 $170,767
T-9 Branden Grace -11 $170,767
T-9 Jon Rahm -11 $170,767
T-9 Mark Hubbard -11 $170,767
T-9 Byeong Hun An -11 $170,767
T-9 Hudson Swafford -11 $170,767
T-16 Patrick Rodgers -10 $97,211
T-16 Hideki Matsuyama -10 $97,211
T-16 Brandon Hagy -10 $97,211
T-16 Keith Mitchell -10 $97,211
T-16 Matt Kuchar -10 $97,211
T-16 Harris English -10 $97,211
T-16 Russell Knox -10 $97,211
T-16 J.B. Holmes -10 $97,211
T-16 Xander Schauffele -10 $97,211
T-25 Bud Cauley -9 $52,600
T-25 Carlos Ortiz -9 $52,600
T-25 Danny Lee -9 $52,600
T-25 Harry Higgs -9 $52,600
T-25 James Hahn -9 $52,600
T-25 Xinjun Zhang -9 $52,600
T-25 Collin Morikawa -9 $52,600
T-25 Luke List -9 $52,600
T-25 Tom Hoge -9 $52,600
T-34 Doc Redman -8 $39,785
T-34 Sungjae Im -8 $39,785
T-34 Wyndham Clark -8 $39,785
T-37 Kevin Tway -7 $34,675
T-37 Rickie Fowler -7 $34,675
T-37 J.T. Poston -7 $34,675
T-40 Gary Woodland -6 $28,835
T-40 Adam Hadwin -6 $28,835
T-40 Charley Hoffman -6 $28,835
T-40 Aaron Baddeley -6 $28,835
T-40 John Huh -6 $28,835
T-45 Andrew Landry -5 $23,725
T-45 Corey Conners -5 $23,725
T-47 J.J. Spaun -4 $20,951
T-47 Sebastian Munoz -4 $20,951
T-49 Brian Harman -3 $18,809
T-49 Keegan Bradley -3 $18,809
T-49 Nick Taylor -3 $18,809
T-52 Sung Kang -2 $17,593
T-52 Bryson DeChambeau -2 $17,593
T-52 Brice Garnett -2 $17,593
T-55 Grayson Murray -1 $16,936
T-55 Sam Ryder -1 $16,936
T-55 Martin Laird -1 $16,936
T-55 K.J. Choi -1 $16,936
T-59 Chesson Hadley E $16,498
T-59 Denny McCarthy E $16,498
T-61 Talor Gooch 1 $16,206
T-61 Patton Kizzire 1 $16,206
T-63 Jimmy Walker 3 $15,841
T-63 C.T. Pan 3 $15,841
T-63 Dylan Frittelli 3 $15,841
66 Beau Hossler 5 $15,841

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PGA Tour honors Kobe Bryant with flag at 16th hole at TPC Scottsdale

The 16th hole location at TPC Scottsdale will be 24 paces on and 8 left in honor of Kobe Bryant on Sunday.

SCOTTSDALE — The tributes to Kobe Bryant keep coming at the Waste Management Phoenix Open. On Sunday, the PGA Tour said it plans to get into the act, too.

There have been shoes and hats decorated with Bryant’s number by the likes of Gary Woodland and Bryson DeChambeau, stamped wedges by Justin Thomas, who also sported a white-and-red Lower Merion No. 33 jersey, Bryant’s high school jersey, while playing the par-3 16th every day.

Tournament leader Tony Finau has rocked Bryant’s Los Angeles Lakers jersey while playing 16 in 2 under this week. He nearly aced it in the third round.

On Saturday night, the PGA Tour tweeted out the hole location for Sunday’s final round, 24 paces on and 8 from the left, highlighting the two numbers that Bryant wore during his illustrious career. Bryant was killed along with his daughter, Gianna, and seven other people in a helicopter crash one week ago.

PHOENIX OPEN: Scores | Updates | Photos

The flag is embroidered with No. 8 on one side and No. 24 on the other.

Finau said he will definitely don the Bryant jersey, which he has put on in the tunnel leading to the 16th tee each day, on Sunday as he tries for his first win since 2016.

“I’m pretty happy with being a couple under in that Kobe jersey,” Finau said. “Looks like I’ll be wearing it tomorrow.”

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Watch: Webb Simpson makes hole-in-one, ties lead at Waste Management Phoenix Open

Webb Simpson made his third career hole-in-one to take a share of the lead on Saturday at the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

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Making a hole-in-one is impressive enough, let alone making an ace to claim a share of the lead at a PGA Tour event.

That’s exactly what Webb Simpson did when he made his third career hole-in-one, and first since 2010, during Saturday’s third-round action at the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

The 34-year-old major champion aced the par-3 12th hole at TPC Scottsdale, playing at 196 yards. Simpson moved to 6 under on his round and 14 under overall to tie Tony Finau and Billy Horschel for the lead at “The People’s Open.”

It’s the third hole-in-one made this week. The first was Thursday on No. 4, the second was Friday on No. 7 and now Simpson’s on Saturday. No. 16, the famous party hole, is the only par 3 to not be aced this week.

Phoenix Open: Updates | Scores | Photos

Note: The tweet inaccurately states the ace is Simpson’s first.

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Course marshals on 16th hole at Waste Management Phoenix Open welcome the noise

At “The People’s Open,” course marshals welcome the noise brought on by patrons at the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

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There is something to be said for preparing to do something when you know you most certainly that you will fail. To know there is no chance you will succeed. To have all the odds against you. But this is not a story strictly about failure. Not exactly.

On Saturday, 67 golfers will roll through the famed 16th hole at the Waste Management Phoenix Open, and each time one prepares to tee off or putt, course marshals will raise their arms to the sky, stretched out to the heavens, in the international golf symbol of “Oh, would you please just be quiet?” They will hold signs that ask directly, albeit politely: Quiet, please.

The crowd never, ever will. The small ask of the signs will fail. Again and again and again. And the marshals know that.

“It’s just a suggestion,” Bob Julien said, smiling, on the low success rate of the signs. “It’s something to wave, probably to keep the bugs off.”

It seems at first like a doomed mission from the start, to try to insert too much semblance of decorum into The People’s Open. But here’s the thing: It’s only failure when you do not achieve your goal. And the goal on 16 is never, ever silence.

Phoenix Open: UpdatesScoresPhotos

“I’ll borrow a cliché,” says Jock Holliman, who will whisper “Quiet, please,” into the mic ahead of each golfer. “‘Perfect is the enemy of good.’ We don’t want it perfectly quiet. We like a little white noise buzz.”

The measuring stick for success on 16 is not silence. They don’t want to stop the crowd, the heartbeat of the tournament. They just … want to guide them.

The golfers who come through know that this tournament is unique. And that the job here of course marshals varies slightly from anywhere else.

“It’s a pointless job,” Billy Horschel joked. “I mean, there is no reason to make your shoulder tired by holding up a sign all day. Just go ahead and keep it down because no one’s going to listen. But, I mean, they have got a great spot to watch some really exciting shots be hit in and also see some unique things in the crowd throughout the week.”

Rickie Fowler uses the word pointless too. Wyndham Clark calls it “a formality.” Tony Finau says he would spend his time dancing instead of worrying about holding the sign. And Bubba Watson, a father of two, has some idea of what it’s like to attempt to tame 16.

“It’s probably like a parent, where the kids don’t listen,” he said.

Holliman opts to use the analogy of a coach instead of a parent. But successful coaching and parenting overlap in many ways. It’s about building a relationship. There is some trust and some leeway. There is still some noise.

“I think we come out here with the whole idea that they’re not gonna listen,” said Julien, a co-captain of the hole. “But they’re gonna look at (the signs). They’re gonna look at it, and, at least, they’re gonna think about it. But not necessarily do anything about it.”

The musicians on the Titanic knew that their mission was doomed. No amount of orchestral tunes could reverse course. They knew what was about to happen. They played anyway. Sometimes you can do your job perfectly with chaos all around.

And that chaos has grown every year. With it, the job of the marshals has shifted too. No one can speak to that change like Mary Anderson. An optometrist outside this weekend, Anderson has been volunteering for 28 years, the longest-tenured marshal on 16. She was there for Tiger’s hole-in-one. She relishes the chance to watch everything up close.

In her early days on the hole, the head marshal would come by and watch them. He would make sure they were more regimented. They could only face the crowd, and they were expected to monitor them. It did not particularly work.

When Holliman took on the 16th hole 23 years ago, he had a new approach. He wanted to educate the crowd, to empower them.

“He dealt with them in a civil way,” Anderson said. “He didn’t belittle them. He didn’t scream or yell at them. He was just respectful. He’d go over and talk to them.”

And that is what the thousands of fans at TPC Scottsdale now see. Marshals who chat with them between rounds. Marshals who want to know where they came from and who they’re rooting for. Marshals who know that you can’t stop the cheers and the jeers, but you can.

“I think you have to be a people person because you really get involved with people,” Julien said. “I mean, you start becoming – you’re a marshal, but you start becoming part of the crowd. If you try to get involved in them, let them know you’re not against them.”

And sometime they feed into the crowd. A lot of players welcome the noise. They want to pump the crowd up, and the marshals follow suit. Then, the signs become more like the lighted wands of air traffic control – Fans, you have been cleared for takeoff!

The Greek king Sisyphus was sentenced to spend eternity pushing a boulder up a hill, only to get close to the top and to have it roll back down. Again and again and again. Each time he would square up for the task. Each time he would fall short.

But sign holders at 16 are not there out of punishment. They love what they do. They come back year after year. They are volunteers, doing already thankless work for free. And they have fun with it.

The most memorable moments to the marshals are often still golf-centered. Anderson and Ben Maglio, a co-captain, both recall witnessing multiple holes-in-one over the years. But they all have spectator stories that they love to share, too. On Friday, they watched a fan chug a beer from a shoe. They’ve all been offered money for their highly coveted “Quiet, please” signs, but those are not for sale. (TPC Scottsdale does now sell shirts with the slogan in the shop outside 16, as a separate option.) The fans will come up with all sorts of offers for the signs, only to be routinely rejected.

So they get creative. Anderson’s been offered hundreds of dollars for her poncho on rainy days. One time, on a Sunday, a fan offer Julien $20 for his socks, just for the sake of a scavenger hunt.

“So I made 20 bucks,” he said.

Even with a few drinks in them, the fans on 16 are observant. One of them sees Anderson’s Penn State lanyard – she is a proud alumnae – and he starts yelling at her about it. She gives a “We Are!” in return, and the section goes nuts.

“See!!” he shouts, eager to prove a point. “We’re polite!”

As Friday winds down, Julien tosses water bottles to the crowd. Everyone is just here to have fun and to hydrate, after all.

And the marshals are observant, too. They know what to watch for. They know signs for when someone is about to cross the line. The main thing they want to avoid is getting security or police involved. That is their standard of success.

Holliman also applies his eagle eye to the golfers. For this whole symbiotic relationship of fans and golfers and marshals to work, he has to time his ask just right.

“The key is calling the ‘Quiet,’ at the right moment,” he explains. “If you call it too early, the crowd starts to buzz again, and you lose their attention. If you call it too late, the player has an address sequence and each player is a little bit different.

“So I actually study the address sequences, so I’ll know when to call the quiet. If I call it too late. I interrupt them and they start again. So there’s a little bit of art form to it.”

He finds his job is actually easier on Saturdays, as compared to Thursday and Friday. Sure, the crowd is the biggest, the loudest, and, more than likely, the drunkest. But the shorter day after cuts on Friday balances that out.

Still, his job, and the intriguing dynamic of taming or containing the crowd, will be most clearly on display Saturday. No matter what happens around him, the marshals will raise their signs as he leans into the mic.

Quiet, please! Quiet on the tee.”

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Rickie Fowler talks second round at Waste Management, hole 16

Rickie Fowler discusses his second round at the Waste Management Phoenix Open and what he thinks of the noise levels at hole 16.

Rickie Fowler discusses his second round at the Waste Management Phoenix Open and what he thinks of the noise levels at hole 16.

Billy Horschel in contention at Phoenix Open, but says ‘no’ to tattoo if he wins

Billy Horschel is in the hunt for his first victory since 2018 at the Waste Management Phoenix Open, but won’t get a tattoo if he wins.

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SCOTTSDALE – If any PGA Tour player could be the poster child for loving the party atmosphere and rowdy behavior at TPC Scottsdale’s par-3 16th hole, Billy Horschel would be your guy.

When Horschel backed off his tee shot at 16, the boos rained down. But he didn’t buckle under the pressure and knocked an adrenaline-laced 9-iron to 18 feet. When he rolled in the putt for birdie, he egged the crowd on to cheer louder and tipped his cap. When a male voice screamed out, “I love you, Billy,” Horschel couldn’t resist breaking into a smile.

“I love making birdie at 16 and getting the crowd going,” Horschel said. “I like to play up to the crowd a little bit. I’ll chatter back to them once in a while if they say something, but it’s a fun event. I love coming to it and will be coming for a long time.”

PHOENIX OPEN: Scores | Tee times, TV info | Updates | Photos

Horschel also continued to own the 16th hole. He entered the week tied for first with Chris Stroud and J.B. Holmes for the best score in relation to par at the hole since 2013 at 6 under. (He now trails them by one as both Stroud and Holmes birdied it both days.)

At 11-under 131 through 36 holes, Horschel is in contention for his first victory since the 2018 Zurich Classic (with Scott Piercy) after making birdie at 18 on Friday to shoot 3-under 68.

Horschel credits a range session with his instructor Todd Anderson on Tuesday for his stellar play this week.

“If you would have seen the way I hit it the last couple weeks and putted it, the tweaks were beneficial, a really big benefit to playing well,” Horschel said. “I know where my golf ball is going. My good swings are really good and my bad ones aren’t; they’re inside the golf course boundaries now.”

Horschel, ranked No. 40 in the world, poured in nearly 196 feet of putts on Thursday, including four putts of more than 25 feet en route to an 8-under 63. But he got off to a shaky start on Friday. A birdie at No. 1 and an eagle at No. 3 were offset by two bogeys.

“Scotty, my caddie, congratulated me on No. 5 when I finally made a par,” Horschel said.

“He didn’t have his best stuff, but he stayed patient,” caddie Scott Veil said.

That may be the biggest different between Horschel the 2014 FedEx Cup champion and the golfer he is today.

“As you get older, you learn not to get so worked up when things may not be going well or things feel off, you just keep plodding your way around the golf course and that’s what I did today,” Horschel said. “I think today, the start I had, maybe the Billy of six, seven years ago would have, you know, go birdie, bogey, eagle, bogey, you know, would have been a little more flustered. But I just stayed patient and worked it out to do some good stuff going in.”

Horschel is alone in third place, one behind Wyndham Clark and two behind the leader J.B. Holmes (13 under through 13 holes on Friday). What Horschel won’t be doing is getting a tattoo if he wins on Sunday. Horschel is an ambassador of PXG golf clubs and recounted a bet he made with Bob Parsons, the company’s founder, that if he won the Waste Management Phoenix Open in 2016, the first year that he used PXG clubs, he would get a tattoo.

“The bet was only good for one year. It wasn’t for the lifetime of our contract,” Horschel said. “But he can go ahead and get himself a PXG tattoo if he wants.”

 

Billy Horschel talks Waste Management second round, game improvements

Billy Horschel talks about his second round at the Waste Management Phoenix Open and how his golf game has improved over the years.

Billy Horschel talks about his second round at the Waste Management Phoenix Open and how his golf game has improved over the years.

Waste Management Phoenix Open: Round 2 tee times, TV information

Here’s everything you need to know for the PGA Tour’s stop in Arizona at the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

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The PGA Tour stop is Arizona this week for the 2020 Waste Management Phoenix Open.

Among those who are there were three who paid tribute to Kobe Bryant.

But for those pro golfers who dislike the vibe in Phoenix and particularly the 16th hole, they vote with their feet and stay home.

Friday’s featured groups are: Justin Thomas, Hideki Matsuyama and Jon Rahm; Bryson DeChambeau, Tony Finau and defending champ Rickie Fowler; Xander Schauffele, Cameron Smith and Gary Woodland; Andrew Landry, Jordan Spieth and Bubba Watson.

MORE: Scores | Updates | Photos

From tee times to television/streaming information, here’s what you need to know for the second round action in Phoenix.

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Second-round tee times

1st Tee

(All tee times Eastern)

Tee time Players
9:20 a.m. Aaron Baddeley, Danny Lee, Harry Higgs
9:30 a.m. Chesson Hadley, Bud Cauley, Kyoung-Hoon Lee
9:40 a.m. Peter Malnati, Scottie Scheffler, Scott Harrington
9:50 a.m. Tyler Duncan, Keegan Bradley, Zach Johnson
10 a.m. J.T. Poston, Austin Cook, Kevin Chappell
10:10 a.m. Billy Horschel, Ted Potter, Jr., Daniel Berger
10:20 a.m. Kevin Tway, Andrew Putnam, Rory Sabbatini
10:30 a.m. Kevin Na, Sebastián Muñoz, Xinjun Zhang
10:40 a.m. Emiliano Grillo, Cameron Tringale, Patrick Rodgers
10:50 a.m. Sam Ryder, Mark Hubbard, Wyndham Clark
11 a.m. Viktor Hovland, Marty Jertson, Patrick Flavin
1:35 p.m. Brian Harman, Russell Henley, Harold Varner III
1:45 p.m. Nick Taylor, Bo Van Pelt, Kiradech Aphibarnrat
1:55 p.m. Charley Hoffman, Branden Grace, J.J. Spaun
2:05 p.m. Cameron Smith, Gary Woodland, Xander Schauffele
2:15 p.m. Justin Thomas, Jon Rahm, Hideki Matsuyama
2:25 p.m. Max Homa, Keith Mitchell, Brice Garnett
2:35 p.m. C.T. Pan, Jimmy Walker, K.J. Choi
2:45 p.m. Troy Merritt, Brendan Steele, Ryan Moore
2:55 p.m. Vaughn Taylor, Luke List, Denny McCarthy
3:05 p.m. Harris English, Byeong Hun An, Talor Gooch
3:15 p.m. Joel Dahmen, Sepp Straka, Doc Redman

10th Tee

Tee time Players
9:20 a.m. Brian Gay, Jason Kokrak, Sam Burns
9:30 a.m. Chris Stroud, Matt Every, Brandon Hagy
9:40 a.m. Charl Schwartzel, Kevin Streelman, Beau Hossler
9:50 a.m. Andrew Landry, Bubba Watson, Jordan Spieth
10 a.m. Rickie Fowler, Bryson DeChambeau, Tony Finau
10:10 a.m. Matthew Wolff, Chez Reavie, Brandt Snedeker
10:20 a.m. Dylan Frittelli, Ryan Palmer, Adam Long
10:30 a.m. Lanto Griffin, Si Woo Kim, Hudson Swafford
10:40 a.m. Brian Stuard, Carlos Ortiz, Roger Sloan
10:50 a.m. James Hahn, Martin Laird, Trey Mullinax
11 a.m. Seung-Yul Noh, Adam Schenk, Sebastian Cappelen
1:35 p.m. Matt Jones, Sean O’Hair, Tom Hoge
1:45 p.m. Adam Hadwin, Jamie Lovemark, Colt Knost
1:55 p.m. Mackenzie Hughes, Chris Kirk, Lucas Bjerregaard
2:05 p.m. Collin Morikawa, Sung Kang, Webb Simpson
2:15 p.m. Ryan Armour, Russell Knox, Kevin Stadler
2:25 p.m. Nate Lashley, Matt Kuchar, Scott Piercy
2:35 p.m. Martin Trainer, Aaron Wise, Satoshi Kodaira
2:45 p.m. J.B. Holmes, Greg Chalmers, Luke Donald
2:55 p.m. Corey Conners, Patton Kizzire, Grayson Murray
3:05 p.m. Kyle Stanley, John Huh, Sungjae Im
3:15 p.m. Zack Sucher, Alex Smalley, Kyle Westmoreland

TV information

(All times Eastern)

Friday

TV: 3 – 7 p.m. (Golf Channel)
PGA Tour Live: (Featured Groups, Featured Holes), 9:15 a.m. – 7 p.m.
PGA Tour Live on Twitter: 9:15 a.m. – 10:20 a.m. ET
Radio: 1 – 7 p.m. ET, PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio.

Saturday

TV: 1 – 2:45 p.m. (Golf Channel); 3 – 6 p.m. (CBS)
PGA Tour Live: (Featured Groups, Featured Holes), 10:45 a.m. – 6 p.m.
PGA Tour Live on Twitter: 10:45 a.m. – 11:45 a.m. ET
Radio: 1 – 6 p.m. ET, PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio.

Sunday

TV: 1 – 2:45 p.m. (Golf Channel); 3 – 6 p.m. (CBS)
PGA Tour Live: (Featured Groups, Featured Holes), 10:45 a.m. – 6 p.m.
PGA Tour Live on Twitter: 10:45 a.m. – 11:45 a.m. ET
Radio: 1 – 6 p.m. ET, PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio.

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Justin Thomas talks Kobe jersey at Waste Management Phoenix Open

Justin Thomas discusses why he wore a Kobe Bryant jersey on the 16th hole at the first round of the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

Justin Thomas discusses why he wore a Kobe Bryant jersey on the 16th hole at the first round of the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

Jon Rahm talks about honoring Pat Tillman on his golf shoes

Jon Rahm talks about his first round at the Waste Management Phoenix Open and how he is honoring Pat Tillman with his golf shoes. Both went to Arizona State.

Jon Rahm talks about his first round at the Waste Management Phoenix Open and how he is honoring Pat Tillman with his golf shoes. Both went to Arizona State.