Scottie Scheffler makes PGA Tour history with 2024 Players Championship win, title defense

“He found a way, which is what the great players do.”

[anyclip-media thumbnail=”https://cdn5.anyclip.com/UjPLTo4BbRh1Kj5Qvxor/1710719004274_248x140_thumbnail.jpg” playlistId=”undefined” content=”PHNjcmlwdCBzcmM9Imh0dHBzOi8vcGxheWVyLnBvcHRvay5jb20vYW55Y2xpcC13aWRnZXQvbHJlLXdpZGdldC9wcm9kL3YxL3NyYy9scmUuanMiIGRhdGEtYXI9IjE2OjkiIGRhdGEtcGxpZD0ia3Z2ZmF0Y3VuNDJlZXlzc25heXV3MnJ2a2YzaHEzM3MiIHB1Ym5hbWU9IjE5OTgiIHdpZGdldG5hbWU9IjAwMTZNMDAwMDJVMEIxa1FBRl9NODMyNyI+Cjwvc2NyaXB0Pg==”][/anyclip-media]

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Scottie Scheffler refused to relinquish the Players Championship trophy.

It didn’t matter if he suffered from neck pain, or if he fell as many as nine strokes off the pace in the third round, Scheffler made no excuses. He persevered until his neck improved on Sunday and fired a final-round 8-under 64 at the Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass to edge Wyndham Clark, Brian Harman and Xander Schauffele, three of the top-10 players in the world, and become the first player to repeat as champion in the 50-year history of the Players.

“It’s tough enough to win one Players,” said Scheffler, whose final-round 64 tied for the lowest for a Players champion, joining Fred Couples in 1996 and Davis Love III in 2003, and he tied Justin Leonard in 1998 with his five-shot comeback. “So to have it back-to-back is extremely special.”

The final round played out under glorious sunshine at the Pete Dye-designed masterpiece and turned into great theater on Sunday. Schauffele, the reigning Olympics champion, entered the final round with a one-stroke lead and remained in front with six holes to go thanks to a splendid short game. But he made back-to-back bogeys at Nos. 14 and 15 to drop two back. He bounced back with a birdie at 16 but missed a golden opportunity from 7 feet at 17. When his second shot at 18 flew 62 feet past the hole to the back ridge of the green, he placed his hands on his knees in disappointment as if he knew he’d let the title get away. Schauffele, who closed in 70, is winless the last six times he’s been in the final pairing.

“When I went to bed last night, it’s not exactly how I envisioned walking off the 18th green,” Schauffele said.

Harman, the reigning British Open champion, rallied from an opening-round 72, and made four birdies in a five-hole stretch starting at No. 7 to join the fray. He closed to within one with a birdie at 15 but managed just pars on the closing three holes. His 17-foot birdie putt to force a playoff at 18 never had a chance and he closed in 68.

“I had my chances,” he said, “just didn’t cash in.”

Clark, the reigning U.S. Open champion, made bogey at 14 and fell to 17 under, but he added a birdie at 16 and stuffed his approach to 4 feet at 17 for another one. His 17-foot birdie putt at 18 was the last-ditch effort to force overtime and it caught the left lip and cruelly spun out the right side. Clark covered his mouth with his right hand in disbelief.

“I don’t know how that putt doesn’t go in,” said Clark, who shot 69. “It was kind of right center with like a foot to go, and I knew it was going to keep breaking, but it had speed and I thought it was going to go inside left, and even when it kind of lipped, I thought it would lip in. I’m pretty gutted it didn’t go in.”

Scheffler, who was warming up on the range in case of a playoff, heard a collective groan from the gallery that said it all. He won for the second straight week but this one was a pain in the neck – literally. On his second hole of his second round, he strained his neck while hitting a long iron that required two separate mid-round sessions with his personal physical therapist to continue and shot 69.

“I told my wife Friday night, I don’t see him playing this weekend,” said Scheffler’s caddie, Ted Scott. “His mobility was maybe 10 degrees.”

The 27-year-old Scheffler received treatment on his injury after the round, which also radiated pain to his right shoulder, and woke up the next day feeling a touch better. It hurt to finish his swing and he took one more club on most shots. As he put it, he “slapped it around,” somehow closing with four birdies in his final five holes on Saturday to stay in the trophy hunt.

“He found a way, which is what the great players do,” Scott said.

Scheffler said he felt “close to normal” on Sunday, though Scott isn’t buying it. On the range before the final round, Scheffler, who wore two strips of KP tape on the left side of his neck, asked Scott to check his alignment.

“When he opened up to hit the shot and looked at the shot, his hips opened up 20 degrees. He couldn’t turn his head (left),” Scott said. “I didn’t know how today would go. Adrenaline is a crazy thing.”

The juices were flowing when Scheffler holed out from 92 yards for eagle at the fourth hole. Scheffler clenched his fist, then slapped hands with Scott who flashed six fingers to Scheffler, noting it’s his sixth hole out of the season. Scheffler followed with an 18-foot birdie putt on 5. He caught fire around the turn making four birdies in a five-hole span beginning at No. 8.

“Maybe this could be our day,” Scott recalled thinking.

It didn’t hurt that Scheffler played bogey-free over his last 31 holes. At No. 11, Clark eyed the leaderboard for the first time all day and there was confirmation that Scheffler, who’d beaten him the week before too at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, had made his move. He chuckled and said, “Of course.”

Schauffele noticed the charge in front of him, too. “Just another week,” he said.

“He’s the best player in the world, and this is a championship golf course,” Harman said.

Indeed, Scheffler is going to be a pain in the neck to beat for some time. Scheffler splashed out of a pot bunker to a foot at 16 to set up his final birdie and reach 20 under, the lowest winning score at the Players since Greg Norman’s record 24 under aggregate in the 1994 Players.

Scheffler became the seventh man to win the Players multiple times, joining Jack Nicklaus, Hal Sutton, Davis Love III, Fred Couples, Steve Elkington and Tiger Woods. It marked Scheffler’s eighth wins in 26 months, and he’s got an iron-clad hold on world No. 1. But Scheffler isn’t the type to let any of it go to his head. He recalled that just last month he hit a tee shot at the Genesis Invitational and a fan yelled out, “Congrats on being No. 1 Scottie. Eleven more years to go.”

That’s all it will take to match Woods’s reign at the top of the mountain of men’s professional golf. He did note that he already matched Woods with two wins at the Players. After the trophy ceremony, Scheffler was prepping to take photos with his family and gripped the golden trophy loosely with one hand. His sister, Callie, offered to help him, but Scottie would hear none of it. “I’ve got it, I’ve got it,” he said.

He most definitely does – and for a second straight year.

[pickup_prop id=”35320″]

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 category=451205006]

Wyndham Clark’s laser-focus has him putting out of his mind and leading the Players Championship

Scottie Scheffler isn’t the only one who has figured out his putting.

[anyclip-media thumbnail=”https://cdn5.anyclip.com/eJtzQ44BqNyVd1U-RiPT/1710528674169_248x140_thumbnail.jpg” playlistId=”undefined” content=”PHNjcmlwdCBzcmM9Imh0dHBzOi8vcGxheWVyLnBvcHRvay5jb20vYW55Y2xpcC13aWRnZXQvbHJlLXdpZGdldC9wcm9kL3YxL3NyYy9scmUuanMiIGRhdGEtYXI9IjE2OjkiIGRhdGEtcGxpZD0ibXZmaGk2c3JncTJlZTRrb3BmbGdpbWt2ZnZqZ3N1Y3UiIHB1Ym5hbWU9IjE5OTgiIHdpZGdldG5hbWU9IjAwMTZNMDAwMDJVMEIxa1FBRl9NODMyNyI+Cjwvc2NyaXB0Pg==”][/anyclip-media]

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Scottie Scheffler isn’t the only one who has figured out his putting.

Earlier this year, Wyndham Clark was so desperate for help with his short stick that en route to the airport he phoned a friend — Drew Kittleson, a former pro who lives near him in Scottsdale, Arizona – and asked if he could borrow his putter and take it to the Sentry in Hawaii at the PGA Tour’s season-opening event. By the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in February, the reigning U.S. Open champion was losing sleep at night over his putting woes and so he flew in early ahead of the signature event and laid out nine different putters on the practice green at Pebble Beach Golf Links and worked with putting coach Mike Kanski for the first time.

“Even if he doesn’t change anything, we need confirmation how good you are,” said Clark’s mental coach Julie Elion, who has helped him unlock his potential. “He had to break up the scar tissue.”

Consider it broken. Clark switched to gripping the club left-hand low, removed the alignment aid and shortened his Odyssey Jailbreak putter a bit and has become a wizard on the greens. He putted out of his mind in the final round at Pebble, shooting a course-record 60 to win the title and hasn’t slowed down. Coming off a runner-up at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, Clark may be putting even better at the Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass this week.

Through 36 holes, he’s leading the field in Strokes Gained: Putting (+7.727) en route to shooting a pair of 65s, the first player in tournament history to open with two consecutive rounds of 65 or better, and a 36-hole total of 14-under 130. In doing so, he grabbed a four-stroke lead over Xander Schauffele at the 2024 Players Championship.

A year ago, Clark was winless on the Tour and the two-week stretch of the Players and Valspar Championship in Tampa last March were the low point for his putting. That’s when he discovered the Jailbreak model that Rickie Fowler had been using to great effect.

“I started really seeing a lot of putts go in, and then all the work that I did off the course in my mental game I started seeing it on the course because I started making putts,” Clark said. “So that’s probably the biggest thing is a combining the mental game with making putts and now I’ve been shooting some good scores.”

In early May he broke through at the Wells Fargo Championship and then in June won the U.S. Open. Not surprising that his game headed south after winning the U.S. Open and the obligation he felt to play up to that lofty title. Elion had seen this before with other clients and she reminded him to focus on what got him to be the U.S. Open champ. This week’s tip is to play with “extreme focus” and she used the visual of an old-school photo lens zooming in on a camera.

“I don’t know if he’s old enough to know what I meant,” she said with a laugh.

Clark’s zoomed in on making birdies. He described Thursday’s opening round 65 as “point and shoot,” whereas Friday’s first nine was a bit more of hanging around with just his second bogey of the week at No. 14 and a pair of birdies, including at No. 17 where he buried an 18-foot putt, on his first nine holes. After a par at 18, he made the turn and birdied five of the first six holes. The lone par illustrated his putting brilliance as after three subpar shots he stepped up and poured in the 22-foot putt.

2024 Players Championship
Wyndham Clark pumps his fist as he sinks his putt on the ninth hole at the 2024 Players Championship PGA at TPC Sawgrass. (Photo: Corey Perrine/Florida Times-Union)

“Are you kidding me?” said PGA Tour Radio’s Dennis Paulson of Clark who had taken just 20 putts in his first 14 holes and has already made nearly 206 feet of putts this week. “This guy is on some run.”

Proof that the mind is a powerful thing.

“When I’ve been out there I’ve been really focused at what I’m trying to do. So I haven’t really been focused on anything else. I haven’t been seeing any of the other noise, and I’ve just kind of been, all right, this is what we’re doing,” he said.

That includes not letting the little things get to him such as having to move hotel rooms. Was it bed bugs, he was asked?

“No, they gave my girlfriend and me a room with two twin beds,” he explained.

Enough to throw off anyone’s day if not tournament. Good thing Clark is laser-focused on the prize.

Why the highlight of Wyndham Clark’s week had nothing to do with his $2.2 million paycheck (Hint: it’s Masters-related)

Clark will make his debut at Augusta National next month.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — In honor of Players Championship week on the PGA Tour and with a tip of the cap to Gary Koch’s most famous call here, Wyndham Clark’s last week was better than most.

Sure, the reigning U.S. Open champion drained a 26-foot birdie to win the B flight of the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill Club & Lodge. That timely putt earned him $2.2 million for finishing a distant five strokes behind Scottie Scheffler, but the difference between a solo second and what otherwise would have been a T-2 with Shane Lowry was worth a cool $400,000. That alone would make for a very good week, right, and good work if you can get it.

But the highlight of Clark’s week had nothing to do with Arnie’s Place. To borrow the slogan of API presenting sponsor Mastercard, Clark’s best round of the week was priceless. His week, which began last Monday with an appearance at Wells Fargo Championship media day in Charlotte, soon got a whole lot better when Quail Hollow founder and Augusta National Golf Club member Johnny Harris flew with Clark — private, of course — to Augusta, Georgia, for his first trip around the famed Alister MacKenzie layout.

MORE: Wyndham Clark absolved of rules violation at Arnold Palmer Invitational, but not everyone agrees

“It was amazing,” Clark said. “That’s a place I always dreamed of playing at and then to do it with my dad and brother was awesome. We were walking the first couple of holes and we were just looking at each other and saying this is so cool.”

Clark already has plans to return to Augusta National with his caddie John Ellis after the Players and ramp up his preparation for his Masters debut next month.

“We’re going to play one fun round together, probably have a good bet, and then we’ll get down to business,” Clark said.

He’s not the only wide-eyed Masters rookie who has already made his maiden voyage around the course ranked third in Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses in the U.S. list. Nick Dunlap, the reigning U.S. Amateur champ and winner of The American Express in January, paid a visit late last month during the Mexico Open at Vidanta, playing for two days with another pair of first-timers Lee Hodges and Denny McCarthy and veteran Chris Kirk.

“In my opinion, it’s the most special place in the world as far as golf courses go,” Dunlap said. “There’s a different feeling about it and it took me a day and a half to where I would stop just looking around and be like, man, I’ve got to play golf here. There’s such an awe factor, I mean, just driving down Magnolia Lane and then the golf course is just perfect. It’s the most nervous I’ve been for a shot that means nothing. It’s just different.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 category=451191917]

Scottie Scheffler rolls hot putter to 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational win

“It would be borderline unfair if he starts putting really good”

ORLANDO – Scottie Scheffler punched a short-iron from 150 yards that climbed over the water and to the back of the 18th green and stopped 16 feet past the flag. Cheers from the grandstands and along the ropes for the gift the world No. 1 had presented to the spectators this week at the Arnold Palmer Invitational reverberated throughout as a chorus of “Scott-ie! Scott-ie!” broke out. Basking in the late-afternoon sunshine, Scheffler made the champion’s walk on Sunday with an insurmountable lead and raised his putter, the new club in his bag that has been under great scrutiny, in triumph for the way it shined brightly for him this week.

“That was a heckuva round of golf,” said Ireland’s Shane Lowry, who played alongside him in the final pairing.

Scheffler, who switched from a blade to mallet putter this week, led the field in Strokes Gained: Putting in the final round, shooting a bogey-free 66 at Bay Hill Club & Lodge to win in a rout. It was shades of Tiger Woods, who won a record eight times at Arnie’s Place. Seeing Scheffler leading the field in SG: Off-the-Tee, SG: Tee-to-Green and SG: Around the Green has become old hat for the 27-year-old Texan, but when he ranks as one of the best putters it’s not a fair fight. In Tiger fashion, Scheffler cleaned up on the par-5s, combining to play those 16 holes in a total of 12 under and he played his final 25 holes without a bogey to claim a five-shot win over Wyndham Clark (70) with a 72-hole total of 15-under 273.

It was the largest margin of victory at Arnie’s Place since Woods won by five in 2012, and marked the second time Scheffler has won this tournament in the last three years. In doing so, he notched his seventh career Tour title and his first official win since the Players Championship nearly a year ago. (He did win the unofficial Hero World Challenge in December.)

“It would be borderline unfair if he starts putting really good,” said Clark. “I never want to wish ill on anybody, but if he starts putting positive each week it’s going to be really hard to beat (him).”

Lowry, who finished third, echoed the sentiment.

“There’s probably only a couple of players in the world that can live with him playing like that. Not sure I’m one of them,” said Lowry (72). “I was obviously just disappointed I didn’t put any pressure on him early.”

The big pre-tournament news of the week was that Scheffler inserted a TaylorMade Spider Tour X mallet putter into the bag. He’d ranked 144th in SG: Putting entering the week (after ranking 162nd last season), and the struggle continued in the opening round despite the club change. According to stats man Rick Gehman, Scheffler lost more than 1.5 strokes putting in a round for the seventh time in his first 20 rounds this season. When a reporter broached him about the putter change, Scheffler declined to offer an explanation.

“You know, man, I really need to go get some work in, if that’s all right,” he said.

Much was made about the emergency putting session that Rory McIlroy received after the first round from his putting coach Brad Faxon, which lifted his putting performance nearly from worst-to-first the next day. Scheffler’s post-round session on Thursday made a world of difference too.

“When I got to the practice range after, the discussion was not what are we going to fix. It was how well that I did,” Scheffler explained. “And that all goes back to the process that we’re working on and it’s not results-based.”

On Friday, Scheffler posted 5-under 67 to join a record-setting six-way tie at the top of the leaderboard after 36 holes. The lead group was whittled to two – Scheffler and Lowry, a sponsor invite – after 54 holes but after being a bunched board of big names, the final round wasn’t much of a contest as Scheffler rolled in a 13-foot birdie at the first and never relinquished the lead. He lobbed a pitch to 7 feet at No. 6 for another birdie and wedged to 8 feet at No. 10 and hit another short iron to 6 feet at No. 11 to open up a commanding lead. At 15 his early raise of the putter followed by fist-pumping after drilling a 35-foot birdie putt into the heart of the hole was Tigeresque. Scheffler recorded his best putting round on Tour since the second round of the 2021 Shriners Children’s Open.

“It’s super impressive, but we all knew that he had this in him,” McIlroy said. “His ball striking is, honestly, on another level compared to everyone else right now. We knew if he started to hole putts, then this sort of stuff would happen.”

The win was especially meaningful for Ted Scott, who has been on Scheffler’s bag for all of his victories and called it his favorite one after seeing what he termed too much emphasis on Scheffler’s shortcomings with the putter and not enough celebration of his other skills. Faxon, for one, noted on NBC that “We’re examining (Scheffler) like he’s going to the doctor’s office.”

“The noise gets so loud it can distract you,” Scott said.

In his previous caddie role, Scott worked for Bubba Watson and he recalled how after winning the Masters in 2012, Watson struggled to handle his new-found attention and his game suffered. “It was so noisy,” Scott said.

Then, Watson settled down and in 2014 won the Masters again.

“The key for Scottie being at the top of his game is how do you deal with all the noise and play with what’s inside his heart. He’s really special,” Scott said. “Maybe now we can talk about the best golfer in the world and enjoy his skills. He’s going to miss some more putts but this guy can putt and we saw it today.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 category=1375]

Wyndham Clark absolved of rules violation at Arnold Palmer Invitational, but not everyone agrees

“I don’t need to see video evidence. I saw it live and I knew the ball moved.”

ORLANDO – Wyndham Clark finds himself in the thick of the hunt for the Arnold Palmer Invitational title on Sunday and also in the thick of a rules controversy.

Clark was tied for the lead playing the 18th hole of the third round on Saturday at Bay Hill Club & Lodge when he fanned his tee shot into the right rough. Clark punched out to the fairway, but in doing so he forcefully placed his club behind the ball several times, even having his caddie clean the face of the club before hitting his shot. Video evidence brought into question whether the ball moved, which would have resulted in a one-stroke penalty.

“He needed to be more careful,” said Luke Donald, serving as an analyst this week on NBC’s broadcast.

The network didn’t waste time addressing the matter, calling in PGA Tour rules official Mark Dusbabek, who told NBC’s Dan Hicks, “That makes my heart flutter as well.” Dusbabek did an admirable job breaking down the Rules of Golf regarding ball movement, which say, “If the ball only wobbles (sometimes referred to as oscillating) and stays on or returns to its original spot, the ball has not moved.”

“When I watch the tape, it looks like it comes back,” Dusbabek said.

As for the whether Clark, the reigning U.S. Open champion, tried to improve his lie, Dusbabek argued there wasn’t enough evidence to suggest that Clark had changed the conditions of the shot.

“A player is allowed to ground his club with the weight of the club against the ground. That’s basically what he’s doing right there,” he said, concluding, “I feel his ball didn’t move and he did nothing to affect his stroke.”

According to Golf Channel’s Todd Lewis, Clark confirmed that he had a conversation after the round with API’s chief referee Ken Tackett and that Scottie Scheffler, who played in the same pairing and signed Clark’s card, was involved in that discussion. Tackett told Lewis that the rules committee voted unanimously that Clark’s actions didn’t deserve to be penalized. Clark, who went on to make a bogey at 18 that dropped him back to 8 under and one stroke back of the lead heading into the final round after a 1-under 71, wasn’t asked about the potential rules infraction during his post-round press conference but Euro Sport tracked him down later.

“I’m not cheating or anything like that or trying to improve my lie,” Clark said. “Obviously they zoom in, and it makes it look worse. We all talked about it and Scottie and the rules official didn’t think it moved, so fortunately that didn’t happen.”

While stating that he wasn’t claiming there was intent on Clark’s part, Golf Channel’s Brandel Chamblee disagreed with the ruling, and during the post-game show Golf Channel drew a circle around the the golf ball to indicate that it had in fact moved.

“By the way, I don’t need to see video evidence. I saw it live and I knew the ball moved,” Chamblee said. “Why was he putting his club into the ground so forcibly. Why he did that is beyond me?”

“Boy, that was a little sketchy, if you ask me,” Golf Channel’s Mark Rolfing concurred. 

“You begin to wonder, what does a Tour player have to do to get a penalty?” Chamblee added. “I think he should have been penalized.”

Justin Thomas leads list of 7 big names to miss the cut at 2024 Genesis Invitational

Gone after 36.

The PGA Tour’s third signature event of the season has reached its midway point, meaning the 36-hole cut has been made at the Genesis Invitational in Pacific Palisades, California, at Riviera Country Club.

The top 50 and ties, plus anyone within 10 shots of the lead, earned Saturday tee times.

Tiger Woods withdrew from the event Friday afternoon due to illness (and as you’d expect, social media went into a frenzy).

Patrick Cantlay, who last won at the 2022 BMW Championship, leads the way at 13 under, five shots clear of a group at 8 under that includes Jason Day, Luke List and Mackenzie Hughes.

Here are 7 players who are leaving the Los Angeles area a few days early.

10 of the best players at the Genesis Invitational over the last 5 seasons

These players love Riviera.

The PGA Tour’s third signature event of the year has arrived, and a loaded field is in Los Angeles for the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club.

Tiger Woods, who hasn’t played an official Tour event since the Masters, last teed it up at the PNC Championship in December. Before that, he placed 18th at the Hero World Challenge.

World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, Viktor Hovland, Patrick Cantlay, Xander Schauffele, Max Homa and Justin Thomas are among the players who will join Woods.

Reigning champion Jon Rahm is unable to defend his title due to his move to LIV Golf.

Genesis: Picks to win, odds

Here are 10 of the best players at the Genesis Invitational over the past five seasons.

How did Wyndham Clark celebrate his AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am win during a shelter-in-place edict? He did it in style

Social media was abuzz with the photo of Clark enjoying an ice cream sundae.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — With power and wifi out in much of the Monterey Peninsula, and trees downed and roads closed around Pebble Beach, Wyndham Clark still managed to have himself a celebration after being informed late Sunday that he final round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am had been canceled due to dangerous conditions and he had been declared the champion of the 54-hole shortened signature event.

Social media was abuzz with the photo of Clark enjoying an ice cream sundae.

“He enjoyed his evening,” CBS’s Colt Knost said on his podcast “Subpar.”

After Clark got word that it was official that he had won for the third time on the PGA Tour, he called his caddie John Ellis, who came over to the house where Clark was staying near the course. Visalia pistachio magnate, Chuck Nichols, has hosted Clark in his home for the last four AT&Ts.

Nichols was having dinner at his neighbor’s house when Clark found out he had won. Clark knocked on the door and insisted they all go with him and his girlfriend to celebrate, as their guests, at Pebble Beach Resort’s famous Tap Room.

Off they all went in the rain and wind and dark, dodging felled trees and downed power lines while scofflawing the county’s shelter-in-place edict. Knost noted that Ellis got there first.

The Tap Room was jammed and raucous and included CBS’s Jim Nantz, Dottie Pepper and executive producer Sellers Shy.

“My table was right by the door,” Knost recounted. “I started clapping, the whole place went nuts, standing ovation for him. He signed a thousand autographs.”

Winner’s Bag: Wyndham Clark, AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

A complete list of the golf equipment Wyndham Clark used to win the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

[anyclip-media thumbnail=”https://cdn5.anyclip.com/VldhFo0Bw5FJFJUVhvk0/1705477892606_248x140_thumbnail.jpg” playlistId=”undefined” content=”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”][/anyclip-media]

A complete list of the golf equipment Wyndham Clark used to win the PGA Tour’s 2024 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am:

DRIVER: Titleist TSR3 (9 degrees), with Project X HZRDUS Smoke Green 60 6.5 shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Wyndham Clark’s driver” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/k0Xaqx”]

FAIRWAY WOOD: TaylorMade Qi10 (15 degrees), with Project X HZRDUS Smoke RDX Black shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Wyndham Clark’s fairway wood” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/rQxXGR”]

IRONS: Mizuno Fli-Hi (3) with Mitsubishi Tensei AV Raw White 100HY X shaft, Titleist 620 CB (4-9), with True Temper Dynamic Gold X7 shafts

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM10 (46, 52, 56, 60), with True Temper Dynamic Gold S400 shafts

PUTTER: Odyssey Ai One Jailbird Cruiser

BALL: Titleist Pro V1x

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Wyndham Clark’s golf ball” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/5g3nAL”]

GRIPS:  Golf Pride Tour Velvet Cord / Superstroke Zenergy 1.0P  Claw 13” (putter)

Wyndham Clark dishes on why he rejected LIV payday: ‘I chose my legacy over LIV’

Clark confirmed rumors that he had met with LIV officials.

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – Wyndham Clark’s decision to stay with the PGA Tour and reject an enormous payday from LIV bore quick fruit with his victory at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, and $3.6 million deposited into his bank account.

Clark confirmed rumors that he had met with LIV officials and “did his due diligence,” speaking with representatives from both sides.

“I wanted to see what they could bring to the table,” he said Sunday during a virtual press conference after the AT&T was shortened to 54 holes and he was declared the champion. “I ultimately declined going to LIV because I felt like I still have a lot of things left in the tank on the PGA Tour and I wanted to chase records, I wanted to chase world ranking. My dream is to try to be one of the top players in the world if not the top player. I just grew up always imagining winning PGA Tour events. So I ultimately, I chose my legacy over LIV. … that’s really what it came down to.”

Clark, 30, won the U.S. Open in June, which makes him eligible for that major for the next 10 years and the other three majors for the next five. Like major winners Jon Rahm, Cameron Smith and Bryson DeChambeau before him, Clark didn’t have to worry about his world ranking falling outside of the cut off for an automatic exemption into the majors.

He was rumored to be in line to join Rahm’s new team for this season and give LIV three of the four reigning major winners.

“I felt like if I was going to make a life-changing decision, I wanted to make sure I did all the right things and call the right people, get the right information, understand what both tours are doing, what I should do, et cetera,” he explained.

He credited player directors Adam Scott, Patrick Cantlay and Jordan Spieth on the PGA Tour policy board with helping him come to the conclusion that the Tour was the right place for him – at least for the time being.

2023 WM Phoenix Open
Wyndham Clark and Jordan Spieth walk across the 18th green during the third round of the 2023 WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo: Sarah Stier/Getty Images)

“And Tiger Woods, sorry, and Tiger Woods, please put that in there,” Clark said of the oversight while failing to mention player directors Webb Simpson and Peter Malnati. “They put so much effort in making sure that the PGA Tour is going to make the right moves to continue to try to be the best tour.

“And they also really gave me some great advice and some counsel. I didn’t want them to sway me in a certain way, but I definitely wanted their counsel and I just wanted to honor them and the amount of time and work and effort they have put into this agreement now with SSG (Strategic Sports Group) and where the Tour is going.”

Clark seemed to leave the door slightly ajar that his commitment to the Tour could change in the future. He wouldn’t be the first pro to make the jump after proclaiming their fealty to the Tour.

“You know, I don’t know what the future holds with my career and what the PGA Tour and LIV is going to do, but at least for this season I am 100 percent set on the PGA Tour and I want to try to get to as high in the world as I possibly can.”

Clark, who entered the AT&T at a career-best No. 10 and leaped to No. 6 with his win on the Monterey Peninsula, is off to a great start.

[pickup_prop id=”35246″]

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 tag=2868]