Big money on the line at 2022 Zozo Championship, which has produced big-name winners each year

The Zozo is a 78-man, limited field, no-cut tournament.

The PGA Tour heads to Japan for the Zozo Championship this week.

In its first three years, the Zozo has produced big-name tournament champs.

Hideki Matsuyama is back to defend his title. He banked $1.791 million after winning on home soil a year ago. In 2020, Patrick Cantlay earned $1.44 million after the event was moved to Southern California and played at Sherwood Country Club due to COVID restrictions in Japan. In 2019, in the inaugural playing of the first Tour event in Japan, Tiger Woods won his 82nd title while also pocketing $1.755 million. October 27 will mark three years since his last Tour title.

The 2022 version of the event, played again at the Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club in Chiba, will feature its largest first-place prize yet. It’s also one of the largest checks on the PGA Tour. Of course, there are plenty of qualifiers in the pecking order and the Zozo is a 78-man, limited field event with no cut, but it’s still a bigger payday than most events on the schedule.

FedEx Cup Playoffs

Tournament First-place money
Tour Championship $18 million
BMW Championship $2.7 million
FedEx St. Jude Championship $2.7 million

Players

Tournament First-place money
The Players Championship $3.6 million

Major championships

Tournament First-place money
U.S. Open $3.15 million
Masters Tournament $2.7 million
PGA Championship $2.7 million
The Open Championship $2.5 million

WGCs

Tournament First-place money
World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play $2.1 million

Invitationals

Tournament First-place money
Arnold Palmer Invitational $2.16 million
Genesis Invitational $2.16 million
The Memorial $2.16 million

Best of the rest

Tournament First-place money
Zozo Championship $1.98 million
CJ Cup in South Carolina $1.89 million
AT&T Byron Nelson $1.638 million
Wells Fargo Championship $1.62 million

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21 golfers we’d like to see on Golf Channel’s ‘player takeover’

Fans who stayed up late for the Zozo were rewarded with extended golfer visits to the broadcast booth.

Golf Channel spiced things up during the broadcast of the Zozo Championship this past week.

You had to stay up late to see it, but if you did you were rewarded with extended visits to the broadcast booth from Rickie Fowler (Thursday), Charley Hoffman (Friday), Pat Perez (Saturday) and Ryan Palmer (Sunday).

Like this classic Saturday Night Live skit with Christopher Walker – “Needs more cowbell!” – PGA Tour broadcasts can use some more spice. Let’s hope this will become a regular thing in the 2020-21 season and not just a late-night experiment that gets shutdown by some suit.

Here are 21 players that we’d like to see as part of what Golf Channel dubbed its “player takeover” segment. Editor’s note: Players are listed alphabetically.

Shanks and quads: Collin Morikawa, Phil Mickelson provide relatable moments this weekend

Major champions aren’t immune to the rare bad shot. Just ask Phil Mickelson and Collin Morikawa.

Collin Morikawa lacked his A-game at the Zozo Championship last week, but his T-7 finish was good enough to boost him one spot in the Official World Golf Ranking to a career-best No. 2, vaulting over Dustin Johnson and now is only looking up at Jon Rahm.

The two-time major champion and reigning “Champion Golfer of the Year” as the British Open winner seems destined to get to the top of the mountain before too long. But major champions aren’t immune to the rare bad shot. They can look like you and me from time to time – and even laugh about it. On Saturday, in Japan, Morikawa had a relatable moment.

“I did something in my career that I haven’t done yet,” he said after his third round. “I don’t think many people know this. I was in the middle of the fairway on 6, the par 5, and shanked a pitching wedge straight in the trees.”

Oh, no, he didn’t! The sweetest swinger of the irons in the game hit a hosel rocket? We need video proof.

“Really good way to start the day after being 1 under through five,” he said facetiously. “I really had no clue where the ball was going to go, I was kind of just trying to make contact.”

No clue where the ball is going? Just trying to make contact? So relatable, Collin, I feel you. Here’s the difference between Morikawa’s muffed shot and the one’s by Joe Hacker at the local muni: Morikawa still managed to shoot 67.

Morikawa wasn’t the only major winner from this year to experience a brain fart last weekend. At the PGA Tour Champions’ Dominion Energy Charity Classic, Phil Mickelson, the reigning PGA Championship winner, had a case of the quads. His quadriceps were activating and surely he didn’t miss “leg day,” but the 547-yard par-5 ninth hole kept kicking his butt. Mickelson did birdie the hole in his opening round Friday, but on Saturday he pumped not one, but two drives out of bounds and made a quadruple-bogey 9. As Yogi Berra would say, it was déjà vu all over on Sunday – another nine on nine. Mickelson, who has been cleaning up on the senior circuit with three wins in his first four starts, got whipped by ageless wonder Bernhard Langer and finished T-47.

It created a moment of schadenfreude that some social media critics couldn’t help but ignore.

Nine on nine is also very relatable. Good to see Mickelson able to poke some fun at himself. Imagine that’s a lot easier to do when the Wanamaker Trophy is resting on your mantel.

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How much money each PGA Tour player earned at the Zozo Championship

Hideki Matsuyama won on home soil to earn the first-place prize of $1,791,000.

The PGA Tour made its first visit to Asia since the 2019 WGC-HSBC Champions for the 2021 Zozo Championship.

Hideki Matsuyama delighted the fans by winning on home soil to earn his seventh PGA Tour win and the first-place prize of $1,791,000.

Matsuyama made three birdies and an eagle on the back nine to overtake Cameron Tringale and win by five strokes in his homeland, about 30 minutes northeast of Tokyo.

Tringale was searching for his first victory in his 314th Tour start. He already owns the dubious distinction of being the all-time money leader without a victory. The 34-year-old has now surpassed $15 million in career on-course earnings. See the top 18 golfers on the PGA Tour’s all-time money list here.

MORE: Zozo photo gallery | Leaderboard

Prize money, scoring

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Hideki Matsuyama -15 $1,791,000
T2 Brendan Steele -10 $875,600
T2 Cameron Tringale -10 $875,600
T4 Mackenzie Hughes -6 $411,267
T4 Matt Wallace -6 $411,267
T4 Sebastián Muñoz -6 $411,267
T7 Keegan Bradley -5 $259,322
T7 Lanto Griffin -5 $259,322
T7 Takumi Kanaya -5 $259,322
T7 Luke List -5 $259,322
T7 Sam Ryder -5 $259,322
T7 Tommy Fleetwood -5 $259,322
T7 Collin Morikawa -5 $259,322
T7 Branden Grace -5 $259,322
T15 Chan Kim -4 $172,135
T15 James Hahn -4 $172,135
17 Tom Hoge -3 $156,812
T18 K.H. Lee -2 $118,718
T18 Shugo Imahira -2 $118,718
T18 Si Woo Kim -2 $118,718
T18 Henrik Norlander -2 $118,718
T18 Hiroshi Iwata -2 $118,718
T18 Matt Jones -2 $118,718
T18 Alex Noren -2 $118,718
T25 Adam Long -1 $78,870
T25 Maverick McNealy -1 $78,870
T25 Wyndham Clark -1 $78,870
T28 Keita Nakajima (a) E
T28 Troy Merritt E $63,780
T28 Xander Schauffele E $63,780
T28 Charley Hoffman E $63,780
T28 Joaquin Niemann E $63,780
T28 Naoto Nakanishi E $63,780
T28 Adam Schenk E $63,780
T35 Yuki Inamori +1 $50,098
T35 Kyle Stanley +1 $50,098
T35 Tomoharu Otsuki +1 $50,098
T35 Jinichiro Kozuma +1 $50,098
T39 Shaun Norris +2 $40,397
T39 Rikuya Hoshino +2 $40,397
T39 Ryutaro Nagano +2 $40,397
T39 Andrew Putnam +2 $40,397
T39 Harry Higgs +2 $40,397
T44 Pat Perez +3 $31,442
T44 Rickie Fowler +3 $31,442
T44 Ryan Palmer +3 $31,442
T44 Ryuichi Oiwa +3 $31,442
T48 Erik van Rooyen +4 $24,378
T48 Matthew NeSmith +4 $24,378
T48 Chris Kirk +4 $24,378
T48 Sung Kang +4 $24,378
T52 Bill Haas +5 $21,791
T52 Ryo Hisatsune +5 $21,791
T54 Jhonattan Vegas +6 $20,762
T54 Brandon Hagy +6 $20,762
T54 Will Zalatoris +6 $20,762
T57 Satoshi Kodaira +7 $19,900
T57 Kramer Hickok +7 $19,900
T57 Kazuki Higa +7 $19,900
T57 Tomoyasu Sugiyama +7 $19,900
T57 C.T. Pan +7 $19,900
T62 Tyler McCumber +8 $19,005
T62 Robert Streb +8 $19,005
T62 Chesson Hadley +8 $19,005
T62 Brendon Todd +8 $19,005
T66 Ryosuke Kinoshita +9 $18,109
T66 Doug Ghim +9 $18,109
T66 Naoyuki Kataoka +9 $18,109
T66 Scott Vincent +9 $18,109
T66 Sepp Straka +9 $18,109
T71 Roger Sloan +10 $17,413
T71 Wesley Bryan +10 $17,413
73 Emiliano Grillo +11 $17,114
74 Peter Malnati +12 $16,915
T75 Garrick Higgo +14 $16,617
T75 Doc Redman +14 $16,617
77 Ryuji Imada +17 $16,318
78 Carlos Ortiz WD

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Zozo Championship: Tee times and TV info for the final round

After 54 holes, the Zozo Championship heads down the homestretch at Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club.

After 54 holes, the Zozo Championship heads down the homestretch at Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club in Japan, and they’re all chasing Hideki Matsuyama.

The course is a par 70 that is playing 7,041 yards. The venue hosted the inaugural Zozo in 2019 (won by Tiger Woods), while the 2020 edition was played in California (won by Patrick Cantlay). The Zozo is a no-cut event.

This is the Tour’s first tournament in Asia since the 2019 WGC-HSBC Champions. There is 13-hour time difference between Japan and the East Coast. All times listed here are ET.

1st tee

Tee time Players
7:38 p.m. Satoshi Kodaira, Tyler McCumber, Shaun Norris
7:49 p.m. K.H. Lee, Erik van Rooyen, Rickie Fowler
8:00 p.m. Shugo Imahira, Kramer Hickok, Matthew NeSmith
8:11 p.m. Adam Long, Chris Kirk, Si Woo Kim
8:22 p.m. Tomoharu Otsuki, Ryan Palmer, Harry Higgs
8:33 p.m. Lanto Griffin, Hiroshi Iwata, Keegan Bradley
8:44 p.m. Takumi Kanaya, Ryuichi Oiwa, Matt Jones
8:55 p.m. Luke List, Wyndham Clark, Joaquin Niemann
9:06 p.m. Tom Hoge, Sam Ryder, Chan Kim
9:17 p.m. Mackenzie Hughes, James Hahn, Alex Noren
9:28 p.m. Tommy Fleetwood, Collin Morikawa, Adam Schenk
9:39 p.m. Brendan Steele, Matt Wallace, Branden Grace
9:50 p.m. Hideki Matsuyama, Cameron Tringale, Sebastian Munoz

10th tee

Tee time Players
7:38 p.m. Keita Nakajima, Jhonattan Vegas, Pat Perez
7:49 p.m. Xander Schauffele, Troy Merritt, Rikuya Hoshino
8:00 p.m. Ryutaro Nagano, Yuki Inamori, Andrew Putnam
8:11 p.m. Kyle Stanley, Charley Hoffman, Bill Haas
8:22 p.m. Maverick McNealy, Henrik Norlander, Ryosuke Kinoshita
8:33 p.m. Doug Ghim, Brandon Hagy, Jinichiro Kozuma
8:44 p.m. Kazuki Higa, Naoyuki Kataoka, Sung Kang
8:55 p.m. Naoto Nakanishi, Peter Malnati, Scott Vincent
9:06 p.m. Roger Sloan, Wesley Bryan, Will Zalatoris
9:17 p.m. Tomoyasu Sugiyama, Robert Streb, Ryo Hisatsune
9:28 p.m. Emiliano Grillo, C.T. Pan, Sepp Straka
9:39 p.m. Garrick Higgo, Ryuji Imada, Chesson Hadley
9:50 p.m. Brendon Todd, Doc Redman


TV, streaming, radio information

You can watch Golf Channel for free on fuboTV. All times ET.

Saturday, Oct. 23

TV

Golf Channel: 11:30 p.m.-2:45 a.m.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

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Zozo Championship third-round tee times, TV info

We head to the weekend at Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club in Japan.

As we head to the weekend at the Zozo Championship and it feels appropriate that Hideki Matsuyama, Japan’s golf hero, has the outright lead. Matsuyama sits at 8 under after a miserable day of rain and cold.

The PGA Tour’s only stop in Japan is hosted by Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club, a par 70 that plays 7,041 yards. The venue hosted the inaugural event in 2019, while the 2020 edition was played in California. The Zozo is a no-cut event.

For tee times and TV info, see below. There is 13-hour time difference between Japan and the East Coast. All times listed here are ET.

Tee times

1st tee

Tee time Players
7:38 p.m. Carlos Ortiz, Rikuya Hoshino, Keegan Bradley
7:49 p.m. Satoshi Kodaira, Tyler McCumber, Takumi Kanaya
8:00 p.m. Shaun Norris, Ryan Palmer, Harry Higgs
8:11 p.m. Adam Long, Chris Kirk, Yuki Inamori
8:22 p.m. Jhonattan Vegas, Collin Morikawa, Si Woo Kim
8:33 p.m. Sam Ryder, Adam Schenk, Naoyuki, Kataoka
8:44 p.m. Chan Kim, K.H. Lee, Pat Perez
8:55 p.m. Mackenzie Hughes, Luke List, Erik van Rooyen
9:06 p.m. James Hahn, Wyndham Clark, Branden Grace
9:17 p.m. Troy Merritt, Matt Jones, Lanto Griffin
9:28 p.m. Alex Noren, Sebastian Munoz, Hiroshi Iwata
9:39 p.m. Brendan Steele, Joaquin Niemann, Tommy Fleetwood
9:50 p.m. Hideki Matsuyama, Cameron Tringale, Matt Wallace

10th tee

Tee time Players
7:38 p.m. Rickie Fowler, Tomoharu Otsuki, Kramer Hickok
7:49 p.m. Ryuichi Oiwa, Ryosuke Kinoshita, Matthew NeSmith
8:00 p.m. Maverick McNealy, Keita Nakajima, Ryutaro Nagano
8:11 p.m. Doug Ghim, Andrew Putnam, Kyle Stanley
8:22 p.m. Tom Hoge, Charley Hoffman, Henrik Norlander
8:33 p.m. Doc Redman, Sung Kang, Bill Haas
8:44 p.m. Ryo Hisatsune, Xander Schauffele, Naoto Nakanishi
8:55 p.m. Brandon Hagy, Sepp Straka, Peter Malnati
9:06 p.m. Shugo Imahira, Emiliano Grillo, Will Zalatoris
9:17 p.m. Scott Vincent, Tomoyasu Sugiyama, Jinichiro Kozuma
9:28 p.m. Roger Sloan, Wesley Bryan, Ryuji Imada
9:39 p.m. Chesson Hadley, Kazuki Higa, Garrick Higgo
9:50 p.m. C.T. Pan, Brendon Todd, Robert Streb


TV, streaming, radio information

You can watch Golf Channel for free on fuboTV. All times ET.

Friday, Oct. 22

TV

Golf Channel: 11:30 p.m.-2:45 a.m.

Saturday, Oct. 23

TV

Golf Channel: 11:30 p.m.-2:45 a.m.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

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Zozo Championship second-round tee times, TV info

The live golf coverage is on late each night, as there is a 13-hour time difference between East Coast and Japan.

It’s Round 2 of the Zozo Championship, the PGA Tour’s only event in Japan.

Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club is the host once again. The venue hosted the inaugural event in 2019, while the 2020 edition was played in California.

The field includes Olympic gold medalist Xander Schauffele, Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama, Champion Golfer of the Year Collin Morikawa, a revitalized Rickie Fowler and more.

Accordia is a par 70 and will play to 7,041 yards.

For tee times and TV info, see below. There is 13-hour time difference between Japan and the East Coast. All times listed here are ET.

Tee times

1st tee

Tee time Players
7:30 p.m. James Hahn, Tyler McCumber, Takumi Kanaya
7:41 p.m. Wyndham Clark, Matthew NeSmith, Ryo Hisatsune
7:52 p.m. K.H. Lee, Brendon Todd, Charley Hoffman
8:03 p.m. Branden Grace, Sebastián Muñoz, Wesley Bryan
8:14 p.m. Mackenzie Hughes, Matt Wallace, Rikuya Hoshino
8:25 p.m. Chesson Hadley, Hiroshi Iwata, Scott Vincent
8:36 p.m. Brendan Steele, Doc Redman, Ryutaro Nagano
8:47 p.m. Troy Merritt, Doug Ghim, Shaun Norris
8:58 p.m. Keegan Bradley, Tommy Fleetwood, Naoyuki Kataoka
9:09 p.m. Erik van Rooyen, Collin Morikawa, Garrick Higgo
9:20 p.m. Ryan Palmer, Rickie Fowler, Harry Higgs
9:31 p.m. Kyle Stanley, Peter Malnati, Shugo Imahira
9:42 p.m. Emiliano Grillo, Kramer Hickok, Chan Kim

10th tee

Tee time Players
7:30 p.m. Ryuji Imada, Roger Sloan, Ryosuke Kinoshita
7:41 p.m. Alex Noren, Maverick McNealy, Keita Nakajima
7:52 p.m. Carlos Ortiz, Joaquin Niemann, Will Zalatoris
8:03 p.m. Hideki Matsuyama, C.T. Pan, Xander Schauffele
8:14 p.m. Pat Perez, Henrik Norlander, Naoto Nakanishi
8:25 p.m. Sam Ryder, Adam Schenk, Kazuki Higa
8:36 p.m. Cameron Tringale, Brandon Hagy, Yuki Inamori
8:47 p.m. Andrew Putnam, Sepp Straka, Tomoyasu Sugiyama
8:58 p.m. Jhonattan Vegas, Luke List, Jinichiro Kozuma
9:09 p.m. Si Woo Kim, Sung Kang, Adam Long
9:20 p.m. Matt Jones, Robert Streb, Lanto Griffin
9:31 p.m. Satoshi Kodaira, Chris Kirk, Tomoharu Otsuki
9:42 p.m. Bill Haas, Tom Hoge, Ryuichi Oiwa

TV, streaming, radio information

You can watch Golf Channel for free on fuboTV. All times ET.

Thursday, Oct. 21

TV

Golf Channel: 11:30 p.m.-2:30 a.m.

Friday, Oct. 22

TV

Golf Channel: 11:30 p.m.-2:45 a.m.

Saturday, Oct. 23

TV

Golf Channel: 11:30 p.m.-2:45 a.m.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

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Check the yardage book: Accordia Golf Narashino for the Zozo Championship

The PGA Tour moves to Japan for the Zozo Championship this week at Accordia Golf Narashino, a 36-hole facility near Tokyo.

Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club, site of this week’s Zozo Championship on the PGA Tour, was built by Shinya Fujita and opened in 1965 in Chiba, Japan.

Located just east of Tokyo, the private Accordia Golf Narashino will play to 7,041 yards with a par of 70. It is part of a 36-hole facility. It is the same course where Tiger Woods earned his 82nd PGA Tour title in 2019 to tie Sam Snead’s record.

Thanks to yardage books provided by Puttview – the maker of detailed yardage books for more than 30,000 courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges that players face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below.

Will Zalatoris has one last goal to achieve for 2021: winning.

“Most of the time I don’t really reach my goals in the timeline that I’d like just because I set them so high.”

Will Zalatoris is a goal setter. And not just any goals but big, lofty, ambitious goals.

“My goal for really this past year was to try to win three times on the Korn Ferry to get myself to the PGA Tour. Obviously, I got to the PGA Tour a different route,” said Zalatoris, who earned a special temporary membership before graduating to the big leagues by finishing in the top 25 on the Korn Ferry Tour money list en route to earning PGA Tour rookie of the year honors. “Most of the time I don’t really reach my goals in the timeline that I’d like just because I set them so high, but it was nice to actually beat one for the first time really in my career.”

Finally a full-fledged PGA Tour member, Zalatoris threatened to claim his first PGA Tour victory at each of his first two starts of the new season before settling for a T-11 finish at the Fortinet Championship and a T-14 at the Sanderson Farms Championship. (He missed the cut at his most recent start at the Shriners Children’s Open.)

Zalatoris, who enters the week ranked No. 31 in the world, made the trip to Chiba, Japan for this week’s Zozo Championship, which was contested at Sherwood Country Club in California due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Zozo Championship: Tee times | Odds

“I’ve always wanted to come to Japan. My fiancée and I, we’ve had this as No. 1 on our bucket list of places to go,” he said. “I would love to go out and really see Tokyo, but obviously with COVID it’s a little bit of a bummer.”

Zalatoris would like nothing more than another Sunday duel with Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama, who edged him at the Masters to become the first Asian male player to win a major, and a chance to finish atop the leaderboard this time. Zalatoris’s runner-up finish at Augusta National lifted him to No. 27 in the world after finishing the 2019 season at No. 672. Now, he’s being counted among the headliners at tournaments such as this one. On Monday, he played nine holes with fellow Tour pro Harry Higgs and they agreed that Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club reminded them of Augusta National and Olympia Fields in Chicago.

“It definitely fits me,” Zalatoris said of the layout where Tiger Woods triumphed in 2019. “I think the weather kind of reminds me of the Bay area a little bit, where I was born in San Francisco.”

Zalatoris has enjoyed a fruitful season and exceeded his goals. All that’s left is to notch that first win on the PGA Tour. He’s been knocking on the door lately, and said he wouldn’t mind at all if his breakthrough were to be in the Land of the Rising Sun.

“I think Mississippi (at the Sanderson Farms Championship) kind of sums up kind of how I feel over the last couple weeks,” he said, “where I kind of had three marginal days and throwing in a 61 in there. So, the good is definitely there for me to contend and win, especially to come here first time to Asia to hopefully get my first victory would be very cool.”

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Zozo Championship first round tee times, TV info

Here’s everything you need to know for the first round from Japan.

After a one-year trip to California due to the COVID-19 pandemic the Zozo Championship is back in Japan this year.

The 2019 Zozo, the PGA Tour’s first official event in Japan, returns to Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club which hosts a field that includes Olympic gold medalist Xander Schauffele, Japan’s own and Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama, Champion Golfer of the Year Collin Morikawa, a revitalized Rickie Fowler and more. Accordia is a par 70 and will play to 7,041 yards.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the first round of the Zozo Championship. All times ET.

Zozo Championship: Odds, picks, predictions

Tee times

1st tee

Tee time Players
7:30 p.m. Cameron Tringale, Brandon Hagy, Yuki Inamori
7:41 p.m. Andrew Putnam, Sepp Straka, Tomoyasu Sugiyama
7:52 p.m. Jhonattan Vegas, Luke List, Jinichiro Kozuma
8:03 p.m. Si Woo Kim, Sung Kang, Adam Long
8:14 p.m. Matt Jones, Robert Streb, Lanto Griffin
8:25 p.m. Satoshi Kodaira, Chris Kirk, Tomoharu Otsuki
8:36 p.m. Bill Haas, Tom Hoge, Ryuichi Oiwa
8:47 p.m. Ryuji Imada, Roger Sloan, Ryosuke Kinoshita
8:58 p.m. Alex Noren, Maverick McNealy, Keita Nakajima
9:09 p.m. Carlos Ortiz, Joaquin Niemann, Will Zalatoris
9:20 p.m. Hideki Matsuyama, C.T. Pan, Xander Schauffele
9:31 p.m. Pat Perez, Henrik Norlander, Naoto Nakanishi
9:42 p.m. Sam Ryder, Adam Schenk, Kazuki Higa

10th tee

Tee time Players
7:30 p.m. Brendan Steele, Doc Redman, Ryutaro Nagano
7:41 p.m. Troy Merritt, Doug Ghim, Shaun Norris
7:52 p.m. Keegan Bradley, Tommy Fleetwood, Naoyuki Kataoka
8:03 p.m. Erik van Rooyen, Collin Morikawa, Garrick Higgo
8:14 p.m. Ryan Palmer, Rickie Fowler, Harry Higgs
8:25 p.m. Kyle Stanley, Peter Malnati, Shugo Imahira
8:36 p.m. Emiliano Grillo, Kramer Hickok, Chan Kim
8:47 p.m. James Hahn, Tyler McCumber, Takumi Kanaya
8:58 p.m. Wyndham Clark, Matthew NeSmith, Ryo Hisatsune
9:09 p.m. K.H. Lee, Brendon Todd, Charley Hoffman
9:20 p.m. Branden Grace, Sebastián Muñoz, Wesley Bryan
9:31 p.m. Mackenzie Hughes, Matt Wallace, Rikuya Hoshino
9:42 p.m. Chesson Hadley, Hiroshi Iwata, Scott Vincent

TV, streaming, radio information

You can watch Golf Channel for free on fuboTV. All times ET.

Wednesday, Oct. 20

TV

Golf Channel: 11:30 p.m.-2:30 a.m.

Thursday, Oct. 21

TV

Golf Channel: 11:30 p.m.-2:30 a.m.

Friday, Oct. 22

TV

Golf Channel: 11:30 p.m.-2:45 a.m.

Saturday, Oct. 23

TV

Golf Channel: 11:30 p.m.-2:45 a.m.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

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