Matt Kuchar returns alone for Monday finish at 2024 Wyndham Championship with par on 18

The one-man Monday finish puts an official end to the tournament.

In what was likely the loneliest Monday finish ever, Matt Kuchar returned to Sedgefield Country Club at 8 a.m. Monday to complete his final round.

The lone golfer to not finish Sunday at the 2024 Wyndham Championship, Kuchar was in a tie for 12th when he hurriedly teed off on the 18th hole. Minutes later, he informed a rules official he was done for the day, electing not to complete the round in the growing darkness. Everyone else did, including tournament winner Aaron Rai, playing in the group ahead.

Tour rules official Orlando Pope explained that rather than blow the horn to suspend play due to darkness, all three players in Kuchar’s group were given the option to finish Monday but only Kuchar opted to do so, reversing course after driving left into trouble.

Rai went ahead and celebrated on the 18th green Sunday with the trophy but the victory was not deemed official until Monday, nor was the final top 70 for the FedEx Cup Playoffs official till then.

After Kuchar’s drive Sunday left him way left of the fairway, the first ball he struck Monday flew 189 yards, according to ShotLink, and ended up in front of the green. From there, he hit his third from 34 yards away onto the putting surface to 2 feet, 4 inches and then he made his par.

“Listen, nobody wants to be that guy, which I feel I turned into, the one guy that didn’t finish. I can’t tell you how many times I have been finished with a round thinking, bummed out that somebody didn’t finish, that we didn’t get to make the cut because somebody didn’t finish. Here it’s me now as the guy that didn’t get to finish the tournament,” Kuchar said Monday after playing the final hole as a single with a Tour official as a marker. “Again, it stinks to, nobody wants to be that guy that’s showing up today, one person, one hole. Not even one hole, half a hole to putt. So apologies to the tournament, to everybody that had to come out. I know it stinks, I know the ramifications, I know it stinks. Certainly I apologize to force everybody to come out here.”

In terms of dollars, a tie for 12th earned Kuchar $144,965. Had he ended up with bogey at the last, his payday would’ve shrunk to $77,025, while a birdie would’ve netted him $223,833. Kuchar’s all-time on-course earnings on the PGA Tour now stands at $59,932,212.

Asked if he had heard any of the reaction to his decision, Kuchard said, “Thankfully, I avoid that stuff. I did get a call from my agent, said ‘Hey, you’re causing quite a stir,’ so that was the little I heard. I’m grateful to not be a part of the social media thing.”

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak contributed to this article.

2024 Wyndham Championship prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player at Sedgefield Country Club

In his 89 start, Rai finally takes home a first-place check.

In 88 starts on the PGA Tour, Aaron Rai accrued $6.7 million in on-course earnings. Sunday at the Wyndham Championship, Rai banked $1.422 million for winning his first PGA Tour event.

Rai also earned a two-year exemption on Tour and made a big jump from 53rd to 25th in the FedEx Cup Playoff standings. Only the top 70 make the playoffs, which he was already in but now he’s also earned a spot in the second leg of the playoffs, the BMW Championship.

Rai’s best finish before the Wyndham was a tie for second at the Rocket Mortgage Classic five weeks ago. Since then he’s posted a T-7, T-4 and T-75.

Amateur Luke Clanton placed solo fifth, his fifth made cut in five tries this year but his status bars him from collecting paychecks.

Matt Kuchar still has to finish the 18th hole. He’s the lone golfer who chose not to finish his round Sunday, leaving his spot in a bit of flux. He’s tied for 12th now, which is good for $144,965. A birdie would move him into a six-way tie for seventh, and that would mean he’d pocket $223,833. Should he bogey the last hole, he’d drop into a seven-way tie for 21st and the payday for that is $77,025.

Pos. Player Score Money
1 Aaron Rai -18 $1,422,000
2 Max Greyserman -16 $861,100
T3 J.J. Spaun -15 $466,100
T3 Ryo Hisatsune -15 $466,100
5 Luke Clanton (a) -14 $0
6 Austin Eckroat -13 $323,900
T7 Eric Cole -12 $249,245
T7 Trace Crowe -12 $249,245
T7 Billy Horschel -12 $249,245
T7 Adam Svensson -12 $249,245
T7 Ben Griffin -12 $249,245
T12 Brendon Todd -11 $144,965
T12 Chan Kim -11 $144,965
T12 Mac Meissner -11 $144,965
T12 Charley Hoffman -11 $144,965
T12 Keith Mitchell -11 $144,965
T12 Beau Hossler -11 $144,965
T12 Roger Sloan -11 $144,965
T12 Jacob Bridgeman -11 $144,965
T12 Davis Thompson -11 $144,965
T12* Matt Kuchar -11* $144,965*
T22 Chris Gotterup -10 $79,658
T22 Nico Echavarria -10 $79,658
T22 Rico Hoey -10 $79,658
T22 Keegan Bradley -10 $79,658
T22 Christiaan Bezuidenhout -10 $79,658
T22 Cameron Young -10 $79,658
T28 Mackenzie Hughes -9 $56,485
T28 Seamus Power -9 $56,485
T28 Matt Wallace -9 $56,485
T28 Gary Woodland -9 $56,485
T28 Adam Hadwin -9 $56,485
T33 Denny McCarthy -8 $45,109
T33 Victor Perez -8 $45,109
T33 Zach Johnson -8 $45,109
T33 Justin Lower -8 $45,109
T33 Patrick Rodgers -8 $45,109
T38 Chandler Phillips -7 $37,525
T38 Nick Hardy -7 $37,525
T38 Davis Riley -7 $37,525
T41 Brice Garnett -6 $31,995
T41 K.H. Lee -6 $31,995
T41 Sungjae Im -6 $31,995
T41 Doug Ghim -6 $31,995
T45 Ryan Moore -5 $23,711
T45 Zac Blair -5 $23,711
T45 Brian Harman -5 $23,711
T45 Cameron Champ -5 $23,711
T45 Daniel Berger -5 $23,711
T45 Maverick McNealy -5 $23,711
T45 Martin Trainer -5 $23,711
T52 Jorge Campillo -4 $18,881
T52 Andrew Novak -4 $18,881
T52 Kevin Tway -4 $18,881
T52 Taylor Moore -4 $18,881
T52 Ben Taylor -4 $18,881
T52 Justin Suh -4 $18,881
T52 Chad Ramey -4 $18,881
T59 Emiliano Grillo -3 $18,012
T59 Nate Lashley -3 $18,012
T61 Jhonattan Vegas -2 $17,696
T61 Pierceson Coody -2 $17,696
63 Vince Whaley -1 $17,459
T64 Matti Schmid E $17,222
T64 Joel Dahmen E $17,222
66 S.H. Kim 6 $16,985

 

FedEx Cup Playoffs are set as Victor Perez hangs on to 70th and final spot

The bubble didn’t burst for Perez.

GREENSBORO, N.C. – The bubble didn’t burst for Victor Perez.

He lived on the edge all week at the Wyndham Championship, the final event of the FedEx Cup regular season with the top 70 in the standings advancing for the FedEx St. Jude Championship.

Perez, a Frenchman in his first season as a PGA Tour member, entered the week as the Bubble Boy, but when it was all said and done, no player moved in from outside the bubble to qualify. It was just the second time and first since 2013 that there was no volatility at all.

Perez shot 2-under 68 on Sunday, saving a 6-foot par putt at 18 to finish T-33 and finish seven points clear of Davis Riley.

A week ago, Perez shot a final-round 63 in his native country to finish fourth in the Olympics. A week later, he had to play 36 holes on Sunday and then wait to see what Riley, whose only top-10 finish was a win at the Charles Schwab Challenge, and Japan’s Ryo Hisatsune would do behind him.

“I think you’re always nervous. This was probably a little bit closer to like a chance of winning a tournament because you’re trying to really stretch as much as you can, whereas usually you’re 25th place, you’re just trying to improve but it’s not as do or die,” Perez said.

He shot 69 in his third round in the morning and explained he didn’t know where he stood despite a friend at lunch asking him about it.

“I looked at Joe, my agent, and he had the biggest poker face going and he didn’t give me any clue, so I actually didn’t know where I was,” he said.

Riley, who battled sickness earlier in the week and called the postponement of play on Thursday a blessing in disguise, had good looks at birdie on the final three holes but couldn’t get any of the putts to drop.

“I gave myself a chance, I hit some really good shots coming down the stretch, I just couldn’t make the putts,” said Riley, who shot 70 and finished T-38. “Proud of the way I hung in there on a long day and a week when I was a little under the weather. Having to cap it off with a 36 day took about every ounce of energy I had in me.”

Hisatsune was the last player with a chance to burst Perez’s bubble. He needed a solo second but made a bogey at the last to shoot 67 and finish a career-best T-3. He improved from No. 107 to No. 83, which should lock up his card for next season but he’s officially off until the FedEx Cup Fall begins in September.

Here’s the last five in and out

66. Seamus Power (T-28)

67. Nick Dunlap (MC)

68. Jhonattan Vegas (T-61)

69. Emiliano Grillo (T-59)

70. Victor Perez (T-33)

71. Davis Riley (T-38)

72. Andrew Putnam (MC)

73. Kurt Kitayama (MC)

74. Luke List (MC)

75. Adam Svensson (T-7)

Full FedEx Cup Playoffs field

Pos. Player
1 Scottie Scheffler
2 Xander Schauffele
3 Rory McIlroy
4 Collin Morikawa
5 Wyndham Clark
6 Ludvig Aberg
7 Sahith Theegala
8 Hideki Matsuyama
9 Sungjae Im
10 Shane Lowry
11 Patrick Cantlay
12 Byeong Hun An
13 Russell Henley
14 Tony Finau
15 Akshay Bhatia
16 Matthieu Pavon
17 Robert MacIntyre
18 Sepp Straka
19 Justin Thomas
20 Brian Harman
21 Tom Hoge
22
Christiaan Bezuidenhout
23 Billy Horschel
24 Davis Thompson
25 Aaron Rai
26 Jason Day
27 Taylor Pendrith
28 Chris Kirk
29 Sam Burns
30 Corey Conners
31 Cameron Young
32 Tommy Fleetwood
33 Stephan Jaeger
34 Thomas Detry
35 Max Homa
36 J.T. Poston
37 Adam Hadwin
38 Si Woo Kim
39 Keegan Bradley
40 Matt Fitzpatrick
41 Austin Eckroat
42 Alex Noren
43 Tom Kim
44 Cam Davis
45 Denny McCarthy
46 Adam Scott
47 Max Greyserman
48 Mackenzie Hughes
49 Will Zalatoris
50 Jake Knapp
51 Harris English
52 Nick Taylor
53 Patrick Rodgers
54 Eric Cole
55 Justin Rose
56 Ben Griffin
57 Viktor Hovland
58 Erik van Rooyen
59 Maverick McNealy
60 Taylor Moore
61 Peter Malnati
62 Min Woo Lee
63 Jordan Spieth
64 Mark Hubbard
65 Brendon Todd
66 Seamus Power
67 Nick Dunlap
68 Jhonattan Vegas
69 Emiliano Grillo
70 Victor Perez

 

Here’s why Matt Kuchar curiously elected to be the only player to finish final round on Monday at Wyndham Championship

Kuchar will return to play the final hole as a single on Monday at 8 a.m ET.

GREENSBORO, N.C. — There will be a Monday finish on the PGA Tour after all.

That’s because Matt Kuchar elected to mark his ball in the pine straw 212 yards from the flag on the 18th hole and wait to finish his round at the Wyndham Championship on Monday due to darkness. That means the tournament and Aaron Rai’s first victory on the PGA Tour technically isn’t official, though Kuchar’s score can’t impact that result.

Kuchar, who was the 36-hole leader at 12 under and playing in the final group, needed to win to remain the only player to qualify for every FedEx Cup playoff since it debuted in 2007. He was out of the running at 11 under and in a 10-way tie for 12th. Curiously, he had teed off on the 18th hole and unknowingly hit into the group in front of him, which included Rai, who was nursing a one-streak lead at the time. With the sun having set, Kuchar seemed to rush to make sure the group got done. Tour rules official Orlando Pope explained that rather than blow the horn to suspend play due to darkness, all three players — Chad Ramey was the third in the group — were spoken to and given the option to finish on Monday but only Kuchar opted to do so, reversing course after driving left into trouble.

Golf Channel’s Todd Lewis spoke to Kuchar, who said, “I was trying to set an example for Max. We were so far past where we should’ve stopped playing. We saw what Max did on hole 16; they should’ve blown the horn there. I feel bad, the poor kid should’ve won this tournament. By me not playing, it may show Max he has an important shot to hit.”

Kuchar can be heard on the TV broadcast saying to Tour rules official Ken Tackett, the chief referee this week, “Horn’s been theoretically blown?” Kuchar informed Tackett of his decision to wait to finish before Rai made birdie at 18 when Greyserman was only one shot back and Greyserman could’ve still tied him.

Lewis said that Kuchar went over to Greyserman and said, “I’m done maybe you should follow my lead.”

However, Shelby Swanson, a reporter with the Raleigh News & Observer who witnessed the exchange between Kuchar and Greyserman, didn’t hear Kuchar directly tell him to slow down and wait until Monday.

“It was more wink-wink, nod-nod,” she said. “He said something along the lines of ‘Hey, I’m finishing tomorrow.’ Greyserman walked closer and said, ‘OK, if I finish do I have to come back tomorrow?’ Kuchar said no. Greyserman didn’t say anything, walked back to his ball and played his second shot.”

Golf Channel’s Paige Mackenzie and Brandel Chamblee said they were perplexed and sharply criticized Kuchar’s decision.

“Why did he tee off on 18 when the fairway wasn’t clear? To me that was the egregious error,” she said. “It was completely disrespectful.”

“That was more surprising to me than seeing Max Greyserman make a quadruple bogey,” Chamblee said of Greyserman’s costly eight on the 14th hole. “I’ve seen people do what Max did. I’ve never seen anything happen like what happened on the 18th tee.”

Weather wreaked havoc with the Wyndham Championship all week making Sunday a race against daylight to complete the tournament. Tropical Storm Debby dumped more than five inches on Sedgefield Country Club on Thursday, postponing the first round until Friday. An overnight storm on Friday delayed the resumption of play on Saturday.

A 36-hole cut wasn’t made until Sunday morning. The 67 players who made it had to play at least 36 holes on Sunday — they didn’t regroup after the third round, were given only a short break between rounds and utilized a split-tee start. Kuchar’s group didn’t tee off in the final round until 3:21 p.m. ET.

It was touch and go whether a winner would be determined before darkness and while that goal was met, Kuchar will return to play the final hole as a single (with a Tour official as a marker) on Monday at 8 a.m ET.

CBS’s Jim Nantz noted the surprise decision and said, “I don’t think there will be anyone here to watch it and I don’t suspect we’ll be bringing you that coverage tomorrow.”

Matt Kuchar incredulously walked off the course before finishing Wyndham Championship final hole due to darkness

This was incredibly bizarre from Matt Kuchar.

While the Wyndham Championship in Greensboro, North Carolina officially has declared its victor after the weekend’s tournament, Matt Kuchar will play half a hole on Monday due to some strange circumstances.

As the final golfers were making their way through the course on Sunday, Kuchar suddenly walked off after his tee shot on No. 18. Tied for 12th with no way to win the tournament or advance to the FedEx Cup playoffs with this result, Kuchar decided to mark his ball and finish the hole on Monday.

Why? Because the sun had set in Greensboro and it was apparently too dark for him to continue.

What a strange sequence of events. It’s quite incredulous that Kuchar would decide the course was too dark for him to continue when every other golfer finished that day.

A possible reasoning for Kuchar’s walk off might have to do with his payout depending on where he places. The difference between his two possible placements is a measly $58,000, a mere drop in the bucket of the $59.8 million he’s made in his career.

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Aaron Rai wins first PGA Tour title at Wyndham Championship as Max Greyserman collapses

Max Greyserman blew a four-stroke lead in one hole and Aaron Rai took advantage.

GREENSBORO, N.C. — Aaron Rai was the last man standing in near darkness at Sunday’s 36-hole endurance test, winning his first PGA Tour title at the Wyndham Championship thanks to a back-nine blow-up by Max Greyserman.

Rai, a 29-year-old Englishman who last won in 2020 on the DP World Tour, shot a bogey-free 6-under 64 in the final round at Sedgefield Country Club to claim a two-stroke victory.

“Truly a dream come true,” said Rai who signed for a 72-hole aggregate of 18-under 262. “An amazing achievement.”

But Greyserman was in the driver seat after holing out his wedge from 91 yards for eagle at the 13th hole to build a seemingly commanding four-stroke lead with five holes to go. Not so fast as it turned out. His tee shot at the 14th hole sailed right and bounced off the cart path and over a fence out of bounds.

“If that doesn’t hit the cart path, we’re probably in a different situation,” Greyserman said. “I’m probably making five at worse.”

Instead, he compounded his error with another blunder and his lead vanished in one fell swoop with a ghastly quadruple-bogey 8. Afterwards, he still managed to make light of the situation, telling reporters he’d done the same thing once before when he was in contention at a Korn Ferry Tour event and cracking, “I’ve got to ask people not to put the cart paths on the right side.”

Greyserman, a 29-year-old Tour rookie who shot 60 in the second round, regained the lead at 18 under with a two-putt birdie at No. 15 but despite leading the field in putting for the tournament to that point, he took four putts — three of them from 3 feet — at the par-3 16th to make a double bogey and drop back to 16 under. He closed in 69 and finished alone in second.

“I played good enough to run away with it,” said Greyserman, who was also seeking his first win. “I’m just going to walk away with more confidence, look at the positive things and learn from the mistakes.”

Rai, who opened with a pair of 65s and added a third-round 68, chased Greyserman with four birdies in a row starting at the third to climb to 16 under. He tacked on a birdie at No. 12 and then strung together five straight pars. He said he was oblivious to Greyserman’s highs and lows because he avoided looking at the leaderboards.

“I thought it would be best not to really look at what was going on during the fourth round,” Rai said. “I think that was probably a good thing, that helped me just to focus on the golf. I was playing well and I knew that if I finished off well, then you never know what can happen.”

On the 18th tee, Billy Horschel, who was playing alongside Rai, asked him if he wanted to know where he stood. Rai declined and Horschel told him to stay strong. Thirty seconds later,  Rai changed his mind and consulted his caddie, who told him everything he needed to know when he advised, “just focus on playing a good hole here.”

Rai sank an 8-foot birdie putt at the last to seal the win. Ranked 48th in the world, Rai has been knocking on the door with Top-20 finishes in five of his last six starts and three of them top 10s, including a T-2 at the Rocket Mortgage Classic and a T-4 at the Genesis Scottish Open. This season, Rai ranks fourth in Strokes Gained: Total, which measures the per round average of the number of strokes the player was better or worse than the field average on the same course and event, behind only world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, No. 2 Xander Schauffele and No. 3 Rory McIlroy. Rai credited adding putting coach John Graham as the difference that finally helped him get over the line and win, though he’s always had a knack for getting the ball in the hole. As a teen, he once holed 207 consecutive 10-foot putts during a span of 90 minutes to set a world record.

“I think the previous record was 136,” Rai recalled. “I probably wouldn’t be able to make 207 in a row now. That was when I was 15, so that’s quite a long time ago now.”

 

J.J. Spaun fired a 64, matching Rai for the low score of the final round, and finished T-3 with Japan’s Ryo Hisatsune.

Victor Perez, who started the week as the “Bubble Boy” at No. 70 in the FedEx Cup standings, shot 68 and finished T-33 to hang on to the last spot in the 70-man playoffs, which begin next week in Memphis at the FedEx St. Jude Championship.

It was a marathon Sunday after Tropical Storm Debby dumped more than six inches of rain on the course on Thursday postponing the start of the tournament to Friday. Play was suspended due to darkness the next two days, preventing the 36-hole cut from being made until Sunday morning and forcing the 67 players who advanced to play at least 36 holes. Amateur Luke Clanton, who finished fifth, played 39 and signed scorecards for three different rounds in one day. Only Matt Kuchar, who was in the last group and drove left at 18, elected to wait to complete his round on Monday. He’s 11 under and failed to make the FedEx Cup playoffs for the first time since the playoffs debuted in 2007.

It was one final wrinkle in a wild week at the Wyndham Championship that may be remembered more for the man who lost than the one who rode off with the trophy.

“It kind of feels like my own 2006 Phil Mickelson moment,” Greyserman said of the left-handers infamous collapse on the final hole of the 2006 U.S. Open. “So, hopefully that equals good things to come as it did for him.”

Amateur Luke Clanton records third top-10 on PGA Tour this season, matching an all-time great, will take private jet to U.S. Amateur

Clanton had to play 39 holes Sunday, a day before he’s set to tee it up in the U.S. Amateur.

GREENSBORO, N.C. — Amateur Luke Clanton signed scorecards for three different rounds on Sunday at the PGA Tour’s Wyndham Championship en route to finishing fifth and recording his third top-10 finish of the summer. In doing so, he joined Jack Nicklaus as the only amateurs since 1961 to notch three top-10s in a Tour season.

Clanton began the day waking up at 4:50 a.m. ET to play three holes when play resumed at 6:50 a.m and complete his second round and make the cut. When play was suspended on Saturday due to darkness, he was on the cut line at 4 under. He made two pars and a birdie at No. 9, his last hole, to sign for 67 at Sedgefield Country Club.

“It’s probably the most stressful three holes I played in a while,” he said.

Clanton relaxed and went on a roll in the third round, making a pair of eagles and shooting 8-under 62, his third score of 63 or better, the most on Tour since he made his debut at the U.S. Open in June.

Clanton had a share of the lead as he played the 11th hole, his second hole of his final round, when Matt Kuchar made bogey at 14 in his third round.

 

Clanton was bidding to become the second amateur to win this season on Tour. Nick Dunlap won the American Express earlier this season, the first amateur to do so since Phil Mickelson in 1991. But Clanton, who said he was exhausted by the end of his 39-hole endurance test, posted a final-round 69 after bogeys on his last two holes.

“It’s just that confidence builder knowing I can compete out here and it’s awesome,” he said.

Asked if his success against the pros this week might change his mind about turning pro, he reiterated that he wanted to win a national championship with his teammates after losing in the match-play final this season to Auburn.

“It’s pretty plain and simple. I keep saying it over and over, and I will say it because it’s been pretty hard to lose the way we did,” he said. “I’ve got that in the back of my mind for a while.”

With another top-10 finish, Clanton earned his 13th point in PGA Tour U so it’s just a matter of time before he clinches a Tour card while at FSU. But first, he’s scheduled to compete in the U.S. Amateur at Hazeltine National in Edina, Minnesota, 1,162 miles away.

Asked about how he’s was going to handle all this golf, he said, “It’s going to be pretty brutal, no doubt, but again, like I signed up to do this. It’s cool to be busy, I’m excited to be out here. To play 36 on the PGA Tour, never complain.”

After the tournament the rising 20-year-old junior at Florida State dubbed the U.S. Amateur his favorite championship and added, “These pro events are no joke for sure, but as an amateur you want to win the U.S. Am. Going to try to get some rest and go out and play tomorrow.”

The stroke-play portion of the U.S. Amateur begins on Monday, and Clanton has a 3:09 p.m. ET tee time. Speaking Sunday, Clanton said he would be flying later that night.

“I’m actually taking a private airline to Minnesota, which is very nice,” he said. “It’s pretty expensive, but whatever.”

Photos: The best merchandise at the 2024 Wyndham Championship

Here’s a look at some of our favorite merchandise on sale this week.

GREENSBORO, N.C. — The Wyndham Championship is celebrating its 85th anniversary this week and the tournament, formerly known as the Greater Greensboro Open or simply the GGO for short, is leaning into its history —as it should.

That goes for the merchandise shop too. One of the best shirts on sale features the faces of Hall of Famers Sam Snead, an eight-time winner of the tournament, Byron Nelson, Ben Hogan, Billy Casper, Seve Ballesteros, Lanny Watkins and Davis Love III, Hall of Famers one and all, as well as champions of more recent vintage in two-time winner Brandt Snedeker, local product Webb Simpson and defending champion Lucas Glover.

The Wyndham Championship and host Sedgefield Country Club have a pretty good mix of merchandise, including a strong belt game, some fun head covers playing off the state’s First in Flight license plate and an impressive mix of tumblers.

Here’s a look at some of our favorite merchandise on sale this week at the 2024 Wyndham Championship.

Wyndham: Photos

They named a daughter after the Wyndham Championship and this week Webb Simpson will have wife Dowd on the bag

“I don’t know how to do addition, subtraction. I don’t even know what a yard is…I’m so bad with numbers.”

GREENSBORO, N.C. – Webb Simpson’s wife, Dowd, knows the caddie mantra: show up, keep up, shut up.

“I’ve been reciting all of the things that a caddie does every night before I go to bed,” she said. “So it’s now just a matter of taking what I know and putting it into practice. You stay still, you keep quiet, don’t step in anyone’s line, and never pick up the ball.”

Dowd will be on the bag for her husband this week at the Wyndham Championship when it eventually gets under way – the first round was postponed until Friday due to Tropical Storm Debby.

Dowd has lugged Webb’s luggage at Augusta National in the Par-3 Contest before but this will be her first time in an official PGA Tour tournament.

“He’s not gonna ask me any numbers,” Dowd told PGA Tour.com on Tuesday. “I don’t know how to do addition, subtraction. I don’t even know what a yard is, so not gonna happen. I’m so bad with numbers. I’m terrible at math.

“I’m really hoping he doesn’t get in any bunkers. I don’t want to rake too many of those.”

Simpson, who was born in Raleigh, went to college down the road at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem and lives in Charlotte, has a long-running love affair with Sedgefield Country Club and the Wyndham. This is where he played his first big AJGA event, where he earned his first PGA Tour title in 2011, where his father, Sam, presented him the trophy, and where he’s been a veritable ATM, recording 10 top-10s, highlighted by a stretch of four consecutive top-three finishes. No wonder he and wife Dowd named their third of five children Wyndham Rose.

“This feels like another home tournament for me,” Simpson said. “A lot of flashbacks happen this week, just of junior golf, my development in high school and then in college.”

Dowd Simpson the wife of Webb Simpson during the Par 3 Contest before the Masters golf tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. (Rob Schumacher/USA TODAY Sports)
Dowd Simpson the wife of Webb Simpson during the Par 3 Contest before the Masters golf tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. (Rob Schumacher/USA TODAY Sports)

Simpson is going to need a little of his Sedgefield magic. He’s recorded just one top-25 finish this season and enters the week at No. 147 in the FedEx Cup Playoffs. As a matter of fact, he’ll need a win to leap into the top 70 and qualify for the playoffs. But having his wife on the bag brings a new experience.

“We’re really excited,” said Webb. “We talk about how so often my job pulls me away from her and the kids, but this week she gets to come inside the ropes and really see what it’s about from that perspective.”

And you never know, having Dowd on the bag could be just the spark his game needs: in 2013 Patrick Reed won this tournament with wife Justine on the bag in a playoff.

Photos: 2024 Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club

Check out some of the best photos from the Wyndham Championship here.

The 2024 Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina, was the final event of the PGA Tour’s regular season. The top 70 in the FedEx Cup Standings earned a spot in the FedEx St. Jude Championship in Memphis, Tennessee, the first of three playoff events.

The Wyndham field featured defending champion Lucas Glover as well as Jordan Spieth, Will Zalatoris, Cameron Young, Sungjae Im, Min Woo Lee, Brian Harman and Keegan Bradley.

But it was Aaron Rai who came out on top after posting 18-under 262 to win by two shots. It’s his first PGA Tour victory.

The purse at the 2024 Wyndham Championship was $7.9 million with $1.422 million going to the winner. The champion also earned 500 FedEx Cup points.

Check out some of the best photos from the Wyndham Championship below.