In holing latest Phoenix Open ace, Webb Simpson makes the feat look easy

On Saturday at the Phoenix Open, Webb Simpson finished the day at 15-under par, good for second, thanks in part to a hole-in-one on No. 12.

[jwplayer i8SSsGfe-9JtFt04J]

Webb Simpson has a super power, and he does not want other golfers to mimic it, so if you play on the PGA Tour, please stop reading this article now.

On Saturday at the Waste Management Phoenix Open, Simpson finished the day at 15-under par, good for second, thanks in part to a hole-in-one on No. 12. To do that, to have an ace, to log one of the most exciting things in golf, he needed to do just one thing: talk about it.

“I was just talking to Scott Piercy this morning about his hole-in-one yesterday on 7, so I think it was just in my mind, I guess,” Simpson said.

That’s right — getting a hole in one for Simpson is like yawning for plebeian humans. Simply talk about it, think about it, and it comes naturally. It becomes contagious.

Phoenix Open: Updates | Scores | Photos | Tee times, TV info

“I guess so,” he said. “I’m not going to tell anybody about my hole-in-one. I don’t want to help anybody else for tomorrow. But yeah, it was cool how we were talking about it this morning, and I think there’s been a few this week.”

So far there have been three across the whole field, with one each day. J.B. Holmes did it Thursday on 4. Piercy did it Friday on 7. And Saturday brought Simpson on 12. He will now enter Sunday’s final round just one stroke behind the leader, Tony Finau.

Simpson shot a 7-under 64 on Saturday at TPC Scottsdale, after going 8 under the previous day. Simpson entered Round 3 tied for eighth, and on the back nine, he strung together three birdies and the hole-in-one in a stretch of five holes. It was his third ace on tour, and while memorable, he’ll need to watch some highlights later to know exactly how it happened.

“As soon as I hit it, I knew I hit a good shot,” he said. “I quit watching it because I can’t see the green, I can’t really see that well to gauge how far it was from the hole.

“I was looking at the crowd, and they got more excited, and then their hands went up. And first, my first thought was, ‘That couldn’t have gone in.’ And then it dawned on me they were really excited, so it was fun.”

Simpson generally tries to compartmentalize, but naturally here, the excitement continued. He made par on 13, one of three par-5s on the course, before back-to-back birdies.

“13 was fun because that crowd’s still big on 13 tee,” he said. “I hit a great drive, really bad second shot, but, yeah, you ride the momentum for a little bit, but it’s back to work on the next hole, you got to keep focusing.”

If the holding pattern continues of one hole-in-one per day, and if the hole location keeps advancing— from 4 to 7 to 12 — perhaps if fans are lucky, Sunday will bring a late-round ace on No. 16. Certainly, any ace will do, but some spots bring a little more fanfare. Piercy, tied for fifth after Saturday at 13-under, learned that the hard way this week.

“I guess whenever you make a hole-in-one in Phoenix it’s pretty awesome. But I just did it on the wrong side, where everybody didn’t see it,” he said Friday.

Either way, people still heard about it. But the game of telephone may end with Simpson, who spent Saturday afternoon recounting all the aces of his career.

“On tour, three — (overall) it might be 10. Might be 10,” he said, smiling. “I don’t know. Which is sad, I’m sorry. Maybe nine. 10 sounds better than nine. We’ll go with 10.”

So we can go with 10 for now. If anyone can simply speak a hole in one into existence, it’s Simpson.

[opinary poll=”who-comes-out-on-top-at-the-2020-waste-m” customer=”golfweek”]

[lawrence-related id=778023988,778023971,778023983,778023910]

Tony Finau shoots 62, takes Phoenix Open lead with ‘most enjoyable round of my career’

Tony Finau vaulted up the leaderboard behind seven birdies and an eagle as he tries to win for the first time since 2016.

SCOTTSDALE – Two weeks ago, Tony Finau moved his family from his native Utah to just up the road from TPC Scottsdale, approximately a 6-minute drive door-to-door. He will head into the final round of the Waste Management Phoenix Open sleeping in his own bed on a one-stroke lead after tying his career-low round on the PGA Tour with a blistering bogey-free 9-under 62.

“That’s about as good as you can play out here,” said Jon Rahm, who played in Finau’s threesome at TPC Scottsdale.

Finau got off to a quick start with birdies at the first and third and then drilled a 21-footer at No. 8 and a 9-footer at No. 9 to turn in 31. His putter stayed hot on the back as he rolled in a 27-foot birdie putt at 12 and then surged into a tie for the lead with an eagle at the par-5 13th.

“That was the first time he hit a driver into the fairway this week,” said Finau’s caddie Greg Bodine. “That made all the difference in the world.”

Phoenix Open: Updates | Scores | Photos | Tee times, TV info

Finau, who has power to burn averaging 309 yards off the tee, hit 12 out of 14 fairways, a day after hitting only six and he took advantage. He drilled a 5-iron to 20 feet and rolled in the eagle putt. Finau smoked his approach from 230 yards even closer at the par-5 15th, but missed the 6-foot eagle putt and settled for birdie.

He had one more birdie left in his arsenal, his seventh of the day, sticking a sand wedge from 129 yards to 5 feet at the par-3 16th hole while donning a Kobe Bryant jersey in homage to the NBA legend he idolized.

“Damn near made it,” Finau said. “That would have been pretty sweet with the Kobe jersey on. But I like that shot. That was pretty nice.”

As was signing for 62 and becoming the first player this season with three rounds of 62 or better. Finau posted a 54-hole total of 16-under 197 and one stroke better than Webb Simpson, whose 64 on Saturday included an ace at the 196-yard 12th hole. Hudson Swafford (66) and J.B. Holmes (70), who is seeking his third WMPO title, are tied for third another stroke behind.

Bryant’s death on Jan. 26 hit Finau, who lost his mother to a car crash and is the father of four, particularly hard. For three days, he has been channeling the “Mamba Mentality,” which he described as “hard work and love for your craft.”

“I think that’s his lasting legacy,” Finau added.

Finau’s coach, Boyd Summerhays, said that his star pupil found something in his swing three weeks ago — he’s 43-under in his last 11 rounds — and credited it for Finau’s strong showing the first three rounds. When asked to explain what he found on the range, Finau demurred.

“It’s helped, no question,” he said. “I think I need to keep that to myself for now, but sometimes one swing thought seems to work for a while and this one has worked for three weeks and we’ve got one more day and hopefully it’s still there.”

The question for Finau is can he close the deal on Sunday? Despite being ranked No. 13 in the world and representing Team USA in the last Ryder Cup and Presidents Cup team competitions, Finau has only one career victory on the PGA Tour at the 2016 Puerto Rico Open. (He’s 0-2 with the 54-hole lead.)

When asked to identify what has held Finau back, Golf Channel commentator Brandel Chamblee didn’t hesitate: “Nothing,” he said. “At any minute he could go off. He is more on the cusp of breaking out that any player in golf right now. He may do a David Duval and win three, four times this season.”

Finau has been vocal that a good season for him has to include ending his victory drought, and he didn’t shy away from addressing its importance in his post-round press conference.

“If I want to accomplish the things I feel like I can accomplish, I have to put those type of expectations on myself,” Finau said. “So, I look forward to tomorrow. My game’s in a good place and I always tell myself whatever happens, you’re going to learn from it and get better and stronger. As long as it doesn’t kill you, you know, I’m still standing here punching and I’m going to do that for the rest of my career. So, I got 18 holes to try and win this golf tournament and my expectation is exactly that.”

[jwplayer i8SSsGfe-9JtFt04J]

[opinary poll=”who-comes-out-on-top-at-the-2020-waste-m” customer=”golfweek”]

[lawrence-related id=778023971,778023983,778023930,778023910]

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.

[jwplayer i8SSsGfe-9JtFt04J]

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.

[lawrence-related id=778023895,778023880,778023385]

Cameron Smith wins the Sony Open in a sudden-death playoff

Cameron Smith closed with a 2-under 68 and won the Sony Open in Hawaii with a par in a sudden-death playoff over Brendan Steele.

Cameron Smith waited until the 72nd hole to catch Brendan Steele and then made par to win a sudden-death playoff for his first individual title on the PGA Tour.

“That’s one I’ve wanted to tick off for some time,” Smith told Golf Channel.

Smith rallied from three strokes behind entering the final round and canned a 9-foot birdie putt at 18 to shoot 2-under 68 and force extra holes.

On a rainy, soggy day, Steele closed with a 1-over 71 and squandered a two-stroke lead with three holes to go, missing a 6-foot-par putt at 17 and then a 28-foot birdie putt for the win.

On the first playoff hole, Smith blocked his tee shot right, but he drew a decent lie and punched an approach under a tree that chased to within 10 feet of the hole. With the pressure applied, Steele’s wedge from 87 yards away in the fairway flew the green and he pitched past the hole and missed his par putt to the right.

Smith, a native of Brisbane, Australia, was among the Aussie players in the field who pledged to donate $500 per birdie and $1,000 per eagle to aid the Australian wildlife effort.

Smith previously had won the 2018 Zurich Classic of New Orleans, a team event with Jonas Blixt.

Smith and Steele finished regulation with a 72-hole total of 11-under 269.

 

Sony Open odds, predictions, picks and PGA Tour best bets

Analyzing the 2020 Sony Open in Hawaii, with PGA Tour betting odds, picks, predictions and best bets.

This week’s Sony Open in Hawaii sees the PGA Tour’s first full-field event since the RSM Classic in late November. The 7,044-yard, par-70 Waialae Country Club hosts the tournament yet again in Honolulu, Hawaii.

The key stats for this week are:

  • Strokes Gained: Approach
  • Bogey Avoidance
  • Good Drives Gained
  • Eagles Gained
  • Strokes Gained: Par 4s

My model at Fantasy National is set to the most recent 36 rounds for each golfer in the field played on par-70 courses under 7,200 yards in length and featuring Bermuda grass greens.

Sony Open – Tier 1

(Photo Credit: Adam Hagy – USA TODAY Sports)

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Tuesday at 8:45 a.m. ET.

Webb Simpson (+1200)

Simpson leads my stat model and is the best in the field in both SG: Approach and SG: Par 4s. He’s third in the field with an Official World Golf Ranking of No. 12, and he shares the second-best odds with Patrick Reed. The five-time PGA Tour champ didn’t play here last year, but he was T-4 in 2018 and T-13 each of the three previous three years.

Marc Leishman (+4500)

Leishman tied for third here a year ago, and he hasn’t finished worse than T-47 in any of his last five tries. He ranks seventh in the field by the OWGR measure, but he’s 13th by the odds at BetMGM. He’s a good value pick following last year’s top finish and a solo third at the Safeway Open in September early in his 2019-20 campaign.

Sony Open – Tier 2

(Photo Credit: Kyle Terada – USA TODAY Sports)

J.T. Poston (+5000)

Poston is coming off a T-11 finish in the 30-man field at last week’s Sentry Tournament of Champions. He has missed just one cut in nine events since vaulting into the top 100 of the OWGR with his first career win at last season’s Wyndham Championship. He leads the field in Bogey Avoidance, and he ranks seventh in Good Drives Gained and fourth in SG: Par 4s.


Looking to place a bet on this tournament? Get some action on it at BetMGMSign up and bet at BetMGM now!


Rory Sabbatini (+8000)

Sabbatini is one of many in the field returning to competitive play for the first time since the RSM Classic. He’s coming off a 2019 calendar year in which he had six top 10s against just four missed cuts for his most successful season since his last PGA Tour win in 2011 at The Honda Classic. This is a similarly short venue, and he’s made the cut in four of his last five appearances with a T-6 result in 2015.

Sony Open – Longshots

(Photo Credit: John David Mercer – USA TODAY Sports)

Luke List (+15000)

List didn’t play this event last year following a missed cut in 2018, but he did finish T-13 in 2017. He enters the week ranked 145th in the world following three missed cuts to start his 2019-20 season, but he did have two runners-up last year. He also finished second at the 2018 Honda Classic amid a stronger field.

Mackenzie Hughes (+25000)

Hughes isn’t much of a course fit (49th in Eagles Gained and 57th in SG: Approach), but this number is far too high for a former PGA Tour champ. A $1 sprinkle at these odds returns a profit of $250.

Get some action on this tournament by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com.

Follow @EstenMcLaren and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

[lawrence-newsletter]

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1363]

Most memorable, bizarre rules controversies of 2019

When the new Rules of Golf were implemented on Jan. 1, 2019, it took player a while to adjust. Here are some of the memorable violations.

[jwplayer 6iN1p3CP-9JtFt04J]

The USGA announced major changes to the Rules of Golf which went into effect on Jan. 1, 2019.

It didn’t take long for the new rules to create headlines.

Thirty-seven major clarifications are divided into eight different categories— ball at rest, ball in motion, taking relief, areas of the course, equipment, playing a ball, when to play during a round (including pace of play) and player behavior.

The specifics involving the new rules and their revised language compared to the previous rule can be read on the USGA’s website.

Over the year, we tracked the most surprising and controversial rules violations in all competitive levels of golf. Here are a few of the most memorable rules violations from 2019.

Be sure to vote for the most bizarre rules violation of the year at the end of the story.

Presidents Cup: Patrick Reed hears it from fans, goes down to defeat

MELBOURNE, Australia – When Patrick Reed arrived at the first tee at Royal Melbourne, the partisan crowd pelted him with catcalls that referenced his recent rules infraction for improving his lie in a waste bunker at the Hero World Challenge. “Are …

[jwplayer qXOe4NRA-9JtFt04J]

MELBOURNE, Australia – When Patrick Reed arrived at the first tee at Royal Melbourne, the partisan crowd pelted him with catcalls that referenced his recent rules infraction for improving his lie in a waste bunker at the Hero World Challenge.

“Are you really going to make your caddie carry 14 clubs and a shovel?” one shouted.

That one even made Reed crack a smile.

Standing near the first tee as an observer on Day One was American Matt Kuchar, who said he expected the jeers to fire up Reed.

“I think he really enjoys that,” Kuchar said. “I saw that as being a thing where, man, this is going to get Patrick in the state he wants to be in; he needs to be in; plays better in that state. When I heard it, I thought, ‘Can’t wait to see how he does. This is his element.’ ”

But Reed didn’t shush the crowd as he had done at the 2014 Ryder Cup at Gleneagles. Nor did it lead to inspired play. He and partner Webb Simpson never led in their Four-ball match and lost 1 up to Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama and C.T. Pan of Chinese Taipei. It was Reed’s first loss in four Presidents Cup Four-ball matches.

PRESIDENTS CUPScores | Viewer’s guide | Photos

Reed received a chorus of boos when his name was announced, the only player to receive such a welcome. Two days after a fan dubbed him “The Excavator,” Reed stepped to the first tee and belted his tee shot down the right side and watched in disgust as it rolled into a bunker. The crowd erupted in cheers.

“I’ll have the shovel, thanks,” one fan said.

From the you can’t make this up department: Reed hit into bunkers on the first three holes. There were catcalls of “get in the bunker” and “stay out of the bunker.” Seemingly every hole, a spectator or two made some crack but it was rarely over the top.

When Reed drove into the hay right of the seventh fairway, a spectator declared it a bad lie and joked, “Go ahead and fix it. Take a foot wedge.”

Reed was heckled with “Mr. Sandman,” and there were a few cries of “cheat,” most vocally from a boozy group of fans holding Heinekens in a chalet bordering the 10th hole.

“It’s exactly what I expected,” Reed later said.

“Undeserved,” Simpson said. “Undeserved.”

But overall, the fan reaction was subdued and while it likely will continue throughout the event, it didn’t seem to impact Reed negatively. If anything, it failed to provide Reed with the boost that Kuchar expected.

The Internationals came out punching, as Matsuyama and Pan combined to birdie Nos. 2-5 and take an early 2-up lead. Reed drove the sixth green, but it was Simpson who canned the birdie putt to win the hole. That was the only hole they won on the first nine. They fell 2-down when the American team both drove into trouble on No. 9 and made bogey to lose the hole.

“That hole alone, you know, is the difference of being all-square than down,” Reed said. “You know, in a format like this, you just can’t make bogeys and unfortunately neither of us was able to convert.”

Reed didn’t go down without a fight. He cut the deficit in half at No. 12 by knocking a short iron from 134 yards to inside 4 feet. At 16, with Captain Tiger Woods looking on, Reed holed an 11-foot birdie putt to tie the match and yelled, “Come on!”

That was the closest we came to seeing the fist pumps and hijinks that earned Reed the nickname “Captain America” other than a supporter at the first tee dressed in a Captain America onesie.

But one hole later, Matsuyama buried a 27-foot birdie putt to regain the lead and that proved to be the difference.

“How good was that putt?” Pan said later.

Reed had one last chance to make birdie and salvage half a point but his putt didn’t even scare the hole.

“We brought it back,” Simpson said. “But we just didn’t get it done.”

[jwplayer 2qdjwiem-9JtFt04J]

[opinary poll=”after-day-1-who-do-you-think-wins-the-20″ customer=”golfweek”]

[lawrence-related id=778016065,778016003,778015957,778016020]

2019 Presidents Cup odds, lines, picks and best bets: Which side wins at Royal Melbourne?

Previewing the 2019 Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne Golf Club, with golf betting odds and picks for outright winner and the best props.

[jwplayer Hew3fZFR]

The 2019 Presidents Cup takes place this week at The Royal Melbourne Golf Club in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Twelve of the top golfers from the United States tee off against 12 of the best from outside of Europe. Below, we analyze the tournament odds and prop bets, with golf betting picks and tips.

The first round will start Wednesday, Dec. 11, at 5:30 p.m. ET.


Looking to place a bet on this tournament? Get some action on it at BetMGM. Sign up and bet at BetMGM now!


Presidents Cup Teams

Captains Tiger Woods (USA) and Ernie Els (International) selected the following teams:

Team USA International Team
Dustin JohnsonJustin Thomas Hideki MatsuyamaAdam Scott
Matt KucharXander Schauffele Louis OosthuizenMarc Leishman
Webb SimpsonPatrick Cantlay Abraham AncerHaotong Li
Bryson DeChambeauTiger Woods C.T. PanCameron Smith
Gary WoodlandTony Finau Joaquin NiemannAdam Hadwin
Patrick ReedRickie Fowler Sungjae ImByeong Hun An

The entire US team ranks in the top 25 of the Official World Golf Ranking, while only three members of the International side are in the top 25.

Presidents Cup Tournament Winner

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Monday at 1 p.m. ET.

Team USA has won the past seven Presidents Cups and leads the all-time series against the International side at 10-1-1. Fortunately for the global squad, which is led by three Australians, its only Presidents Cup victory was at this venue in 1998.

The INTERNATIONALS are getting juicy +250 odds for the tournament victory. Team USA is a -250 favorite. Look for Adam Scott (No. 18), Marc Leishman (No. 28) and Cameron Smith (No. 52) to lead the Internationals to victory on home soil.

Presidents Cup Prop Bets

Internationals +3.5 Points (-125)

After losing 19-11 in 2017, look for the Internationals to keep it closer this time out. Their previous two losses in 2015 and ’13, were decided by one and three points, respectively.

Top Combined Points Scorer: Adam Scott (+1200)

Scott will have the crowd behind him as the top golfer from the host nation. He didn’t play in 1998 (when the Internationals got their lone win in the event, also in Melbourne), but he has won both the Australian Open and Australian PGA Championship and has spoken highly of wanting to win at the famed Royal Melbourne as a potential career highlight.

Who will score the most points for the USA? Patrick Reed (+900)

Expect the best from Reed, who has excelled in the Ryder Cup format against Europe, and in the 2017 Presidents Cup. He’s coming off another controversy at last week’s Hero World Challenge in which he was penalized two strokes for improving his line of play in a waste bunker.

Get some action on this tournament by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com.

Follow @EstenMcLaren and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

[lawrence-newsletter]

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1363]

Hero World Challenge odds, predictions, picks and PGA Tour best bets

Analyzing the 2019 Hero World Challenge and which golfers are the best options for the event. Who will win at Albany?

Host Tiger Woods and 17 more of the top golfers in the world are in The Bahamas this week for the Hero World Challenge. The condensed field consists of six of the top 10 golfers from the Official World Golf Ranking, including Woods and defending champ Jon Rahm. It is played at Albany which measures 7,302 yards and plays as a par 72.

The showcase tournament is the final standard stroke-play event on the PGA Tour in 2019. The Presidents Cup and QBE Shootout will run next week. There’ll then be a brief hiatus before the Sentry Tournament of Champions and Sony Open kick off the 2020 portion of the schedule in the first two weeks of January from Hawaii.


Looking to place a bet on this tournament? Get some action on it at BetMGMSign up and bet at BetMGM now!


The small field and champion pedigree of each of those in attendance means bettors need to adjust their strategies this week. Make fewer, larger wagers while focusing on those at the top of the board. Only three golfers — Bubba WatsonKevin Kisner and Chez Reavie — have odds greater than +3000. Don’t go chasing higher payouts, as each of the past four champions entered the week ranked inside the top 10 of the OWGR.

Hero World Challenge – Odds, picks and best bets

Photo Credit: Adam Hagy – USA TODAY Sports

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Monday at 3:15 p.m. ET.

Tiger Woods +900

Woods has won this event five times but not since 2011 and never at this venue. He claimed his first victory of the season at the Zozo Championship in Japan in late October but hasn’t played a pro event since. He finished second-to-last here last year, but he has since climbed to No. 7 in the world. Woods has the fourth-best world ranking among those in attendance and is fourth by the odds at BetMGM in a rare case of him not being overpriced as a public favorite.

Xander Schauffele +900

Schauffele enters the week ranked ninth by the OWGR. He most recently finished as the runner-up at the WGC-HSBC Champions following a T-10 at the Zozo Championship. He debuted at this event with a T-8 finish last year. He has been an excellent early-season performer over his young career and looks to stay hot ahead of his defense of the Tournament of Champions next month.

Webb Simpson +1200

Simpson is the second-best putter in this field behind Jordan Spieth (+2500), who will not be winning. He is coming off a solo runner-up finish at the RSM Classic and sits at No. 11 in the world ranking. This is his debut at Albany, but Rahm won in his debut a year ago.

Get some action on this tournament by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com.

Follow @EstenMcLaren and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

[lawrence-newsletter]

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1363]

How much money each golfer earned at the RSM Classic

We list the payouts for each player who made the cut at the 2019 RSM Classic at Sea Island Golf Club.

[jwplayer D5efVDHC-9JtFt04J]

The fall portion of the 2019-20 PGA Tour season wrapped with the RSM Classic at Sea Island Golf Club on Sunday.

Tyler Duncan earned his first PGA Tour victory after making a 12-foot birdie putt in the second hole of a playoff, defeating Webb Simpson. The loss for Simpson marks the second time in his career he lost in a playoff at Sea Island.

RSM CLASSIC: Scores | Gallery | Schedule, results | Trophies

Brendon Todd fell short of winning three PGA Tour events in a row after he shot a final-round 72. Todd finished in fourth place at 16 under.

Below is a breakdown of how much each player earned in Sea Island this week:

Position Player To par Earnings
1 Tyler Duncan -19 $1,188,000
2 Webb Simpson -19 $719,400
3 Sebastián Muñoz -18 $455,400
4 Brendon Todd -16 $323,400
T-5 Henrik Norlander -15 $244,200
T-5 Scottie Scheffler -15 $244,200
T-5 Kyoung-Hoon Lee -15 $244,200
T-8 Denny McCarthy -14 $199,650
T-8 D.J. Trahan -14 $199,650
T-10 Will Gordon -13 $160,050
T-10 Brian Stuard -13 $160,050
T-10 Vaughn Taylor -13 $160,050
T-10 Alex Noren -13 $160,050
T-14 J.T. Poston -12 $110,550
T-14 Matthew NeSmith -12 $110,550
T-14 Keith Mitchell -12 $110,550
T-14 Scott Brown -12 $110,550
T-14 Brian Harman -12 $110,550
T-14 Nick Watney -12 $110,550
T-20 Russell Knox -11 $80,850
T-20 Cameron Tringale -11 $80,850
T-20 Ricky Barnes -11 $80,850
T-23 Chase Seiffert -10 $57,420
T-23 Ryan Armour -10 $57,420
T-23 Talor Gooch -10 $57,420
T-23 Fabián Gómez -10 $57,420
T-23 Jim Furyk -10 $57,420
T-23 Davis Thompson -10 Amateur
T-23 Doc Redman -10 $57,420
T-30 Kyle Stanley -9 $43,230
T-30 David Hearn -9 $43,230
T-30 Hank Lebioda -9 $43,230
T-30 Troy Merritt -9 $43,230
T-30 Tim Wilkinson -9 $43,230
T-35 Alex Cejka -8 $32,257.50
T-35 Jim Herman -8 $32,257.50
T-35 Dylan Frittelli -8 $32,257.50
T-35 Brandon Hagy -8 $32,257.50
T-35 Adam Long -8 $32,257.50
T-35 Harry Higgs -8 $32,257.50
T-35 Bill Haas -8 $32,257.50
T-35 Scott Stallings -8 $32,257.50
T-43 Stewart Cink -7 $22,147.72
T-43 Mark Anderson -7 $22,147.72
T-43 David Lingmerth -7 $22,147.72
T-43 Scott Harrington -7 $22,147.71
T-43 Rhein Gibson -7 $22,147.71
T-43 Kyle Reifers -7 $22,147.71
T-43 Luke Donald -6 $22,147.71
T-50 Chesson Hadley -6 $17,006
T-50 Ryan Brehm -6 $17,006
T-50 Anirban Lahiri -6 $17,006
T-53 Mark Hubbard -5 $15,493.50
T-53 Luke List -5 $15,493.50
T-53 Maverick McNealy -5 $15,493.50
T-53 Kramer Hickok -5 $15,493.50
T-53 Rory Sabbatini -5 $15,493.50
T-53 Tim Herron -5 $15,493.50
T-53 Tyler McCumber -5 $15,493.50
T-53 Rob Oppenheim -5 $15,493.50
T-61 Wes Roach -4 $14,652
T-61 Ben Crane -4 $14,652
T-61 Austin Cook -4 $14,652
T-61 Zach Johnson -4 $14,652
T-65 Mackenzie Hughes -3 $14,190
T-65 Doug Ghim -3 $14,190
T-65 Vincent Whaley -3 $14,190
T-68 Shawn Stefani -2 $13,728
T-68 Patton Kizzire -2 $13,728
T-68 Michael Thompson -2 $13,728
T-68 Adam Hadwin -2 $13,728
T-72 Peter Uihlein -1 $13,332
T-72 Matt Jones -1 $13,332
74 Satoshi Kodaira Even par $13,134
75 Bo Hoag +1 $13,002
76 Davis Riley +1 $12,870

[lawrence-related id=778013497,778013348,778013357,777994064,778003930,778013503]