Zurich Classic of New Orleans: Thursday tee times, TV and streaming info

Players are teaming up this week for the Zurich Classic of New Orleans. Check out the first round tee sheet.

It’s Zurich Classic week on the PGA Tour, and that means it’s time for players to partner up. An 80-man field of two-player teams will do battle at TPC Louisiana in what is arguably the most unique event on Tour.

Jon Rahm and Ryan Palmer are back to defend their 2019 title, after the 2020 event was canceled, but several young teams have formed, too. Count Collin Morikawa and Matthew Wolff are among the hottest young players teaming up, while Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele bring a proven Ryder Cup pairing to the tee sheet.

Looking for bombs? Look no further than Cameron Champ and Tony Finau.

Here are a few more entertaining pairings to keep and eye on.

Pairings and tee times for the first round are below.

Zurich Classic: Yardage book | Betting odds

All times in eastern.

1st tee

Tee time Players
8:00 a.m. Ryan Blaum/Jonathan Byrd, Andrew Putnam/Scott Harrington
8:13 a.m. Jhonattan Vegas/Andres Romero, Hunter Mahan/Bill Haas
8:26 a.m. Woody Austin/Rocco Mediate, C.T. Pan/Xinjun Zhang
8:39 a.m. Kevin Stadler/Johnson Wagner, Martin Laird/Nick Taylor
8:52 a.m. Brendon Todd/Chris Kirk, Chez Reavie/Lucas Glover
9:05 a.m. Troy Merritt/Robert Streb, Sung Kang/K.J. Choi
9:18 a.m. Viktor Hovland/Kris Ventura, Graeme McDowell/Matt Wallace
9:31 a.m. Kyoung-Hoon Lee/Kyle Stanley, Matthew NeSmith/Chase Seiffert
9:44 a.m. Tim Wilkinson/George McNeill, Sepp Straka/Josh Teater
9:57 a.m. Robby Shelton/Kramer Hickok, Bo Hoag/Wes Roach
1:05 p.m. Cameron Percy/Greg Chalmers, Rob Oppenheim/Grayson Murray
1:18 p.m. Charley Hoffman/Nick Watney, Chesson Hadley/Ben Martin
1:31 p.m. Louis Oosthuizen/Charl Schwartzel, Peter Malnati/Chris Baker
1:44 p.m. Marc Leishman/Cameron Smith, Collin Morikawa/Matthew Wolff
1:57 p.m. Henrik Stenson/Justin Rose, Jon Rahm/Ryan Palmer
2:10 p.m. Kevin Kisner/Scott Brown, Jason Kokrak/Pat Perez
2:23 p.m. Max Homa/Talor Gooch, Matt Jones/J.J. Spaun
2:36 p.m. Alex Noren/Henrik Norlander, Cameron Tringale/Roberto Castro
2:49 p.m. Hank Lebioda/Bronson Burgoon, Wyndham Clark/Erik van Rooyen
3:02 p.m. Thomas Pieters/Tom Lewis, Harry Higgs/Michael Gellerman

10 tee

Tee time Players
8:00 a.m. Jason Dufner/Dominic Bozzelli, Kevin Tway/Kelly Kraft
8:13 a.m. Danny Lee/Sangmoon Bae, D.J. Trahan/Ricky Barnes
8:26 a.m. Michael Thompson/Will Gordon, Michael Kim/Brandon Hagy
8:39 a.m. Bubba Watson/Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele/Patrick Cantlay
8:52 a.m. Billy Horschel/Sam Burns, Cameron Champ/Tony Finau
9:05 a.m. Keith Mitchell/Brandt Snedeker, Keegan Bradley/Brendan Steele
9:18 a.m. Sungjae/Byeong Hun An, Danny Willett/Tyrrell Hatton
9:31 a.m. Doc Redman/Sam Ryder, David Hearn/Zack Sucher
9:44 a.m. Matt Every/Charlie Beljan, Tom Hoge/Beau Hossler
9:57 a.m. Mark Hubbard/Sebastian Cappelen, Maverick McNealy/Joseph Bramlett
1:05 p.m. Kiradech Aphibarnrat/Arjun Atwal, Nelson Ledesma/Fabian Gomez
1:18 p.m. Bo Van Pelt/Luke List, Tyler Duncan/Adam Schenk
1:31 p.m. Scott Piercy/Akshay Bhatia, Richy Werenski/Peter Uihlein
1:44 p.m. Russell Knox/Brian Stuard, Martin Trainer/James Hahn
1:57 p.m. Brice Garnett/Scott Stallings, Austin Cook/Andrew Landry
2:10 p.m. J.B. Holmes/Robert Garrigus, Dylan Frittelli/Kevin Streelman
2:23 p.m. Joel Dahmen/Lanto Griffin, Branden Grace/Harold Varner III
2:36 p.m. Rasmus Hojgaard/Vaughn Taylor, Roger Sloan/Aaron Baddeley
2:49 p.m. Michael Gligic/Vincent Whaley, Justin Suh/Doug Ghim
3:02 p.m. Rhein Gibson/Ben Taylor, Rafael Campos/Mark Anderson

TV, streaming, radio information

Thursday, April 22

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 3:30-6:30 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 8-6:30 p.m. (featured groups)

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6:30 p.m.

Friday, April 23

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV): 3:30-6:30 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 9:15-6:30 p.m. (featured groups)

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6:30 p.m.

Saturday, April 24

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV):3:30-6:30 p.m.
CBS:
3-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 9-3 p.m. (featured groups); 3-6 p.m. (featured pairings)

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

Sunday, April 25

TV

Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV):3:30-6:30 p.m. 
CBS: 
3-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 9-3 p.m. (featured groups); 3-6 p.m. (featured pairings)

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

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Teams to watch at the PGA Tour’s Zurich Classic of New Orleans at TPC Louisiana

These are the teams to watch at the PGA Tour’s Zurich Classic of New Orleans at TPC Louisiana.

Get ready for one of the most unique events on the professional golf schedule.

Established in 1938, the PGA Tour makes its annual stop in Louisiana this week for the 2021 Zurich Classic of New Orleans, held April 22-25 at TPC Louisiana in Avondale.

The Zurich Classic became a team event in 2017, with Jonas Blixt and Cameron Smith as the inaugural winners of the new format. Billy Horschel and Scott Piercy won in 2018. Ryan Palmer and Jon Rahm are back to defend their 2019 title after the 2020 event was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Here are eight teams worth watching this week in Louisiana.

Ryder Cup stalwarts Justin Rose, Henrik Stenson giving it one more try at Zurich Classic of New Orleans

Ryder Cup stalwarts Justin Rose and Henrik Stenson are giving it one more try at the PGA Tour’s Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

Justin Rose and Henrik Stenson have a unique, shared history in golf.

The two go way back to their amateur days, but are most known for their dominant partnership in the Ryder Cup, where they boast an impressive 6-2 record. Rose won the gold medal in the 2016 Olympic Games, beating Stenson, the silver medalist. Both players have won 20-plus professional events worldwide and each has earned a FedEx Cup title, Stenson in 2013 and Rose in 2018.

But that shared history and past success has yet to make its way to TPC Louisiana and the Zurich Classic of New Orleans. In two previous appearances together, the pairing missed the cut in 2017 and finished T-19 in 2018, poor performances by their lofty standards.

“Teamed up the first two years and we didn’t have much success, so we obviously are hoping and looking to turn that around this time,” said Stenson in the team’s pre-tournament press conference. “It’s like a bit of a fresh air to see something slightly different compared to the regular 72-hole tournaments that we play most of the time. So really fun week and looking forward to teaming up with Justin and turning that fabulous record that we have here around this week.”

“I actually feel like there’s a lot of pressure on us because reading between the lines, Henrik phoned me up and said, ‘Hello, partner, should we give it one more try?’” joked Rose, a Zurich ambassador who won the event in 2015 before it became a team event in 2017.

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If anything, the two less-than-stellar performances at the Zurich are somewhat of a benefit for Rose and Stenson.

“I think that is always that temptation to say ‘sorry’ or that temptation to try to be too perfect or that temptation, yeah, it’s not wanting to let your partner down, but we have let each other down multiple times already, so I think we’re over that hurdle,” explained Rose.

“There’s certainly that element that you don’t want to let your partner down, but you do that by trying to do your best and trying to play as freely as you can,” added Stenson. “And, yeah, we are both going to miss and no one’s doing that intentionally, so it’s just to move on and get on with it, and I think a key part is that we know each other so well for many years, both playing together in the Ryder Cups but also playing amateur golf, and kind of, yeah, going way back, as they say.”

“So we know each other and trust each other and I think that’s been obviously key to our success as well in the Ryder Cups and having that comfort. And we also play a very similar game, I would say, when we play our finest and that makes it kind of easy out of a strategic and tactical standpoint as well.”

As Michelle Wie West launches her #HoodieforGolf initiative to grow the women’s game, it’s worth noting the work that both Rose and Stenson do to increase the opportunities for women to play the game.

Rose and his wife, Kate, founded the Rose Ladies Series in 2020 to provide playing opportunities while the Ladies European Tour was suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Stenson and LPGA legend Annika Sorenstam will host the Scandinavian Mixed, a co-sanctioned event by the European Tour and Ladies European Tour, June 10-13 at Sweden’s Vallda Golf & Country Club. The tournament will feature 78 men and 78 women on the same course, competing for one prize fund and one trophy for the first time.

“It’s a unique one, the first of its kind having both men and women playing together in the same tournament for the same prize check,” Stenson said of the mixed event. “And it is going to be interesting to see, I’m sure we are going to have some little challenges getting the setup and getting all that to work out perfectly the first year, but it’s innovative and inclusive concept and it’s not just going to be a celebration of golf in Sweden on the men’s and women’s side, it’s, I think it’s going to be an event that’s going to be seen and heard around the world, really, and that’s really the part where you can get those benefits and really spread the word around.”

Rose said he doesn’t see an even pay structure happening in golf without the women’s game being highlighted to the point where fans at home have the chance to get to know the players as more than a name on a leaderboard.

“And obviously that’s sort of been what the Rose Ladies Series is all about, creating a platform for them to play through lockdown and also try to support times of the year where their schedule isn’t as strong,” said Rose. “So just giving – like as an athlete you got to keep your skill set sharp, so we’re trying to support the playing opportunities, but at the same time very cognizant of telling the stories and trying to create the upward profile so the journey towards a better pay equality is possible and that’s why (the Scandinavian Mixed) is amazing.”

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Zurich Classic of New Orleans odds, predictions and PGA Tour picks

We take a look at the 2021 Zurich Classic odds and make our PGA Tour picks and predictions to win.

The 2020-21 PGA Tour super season takes a brief interlude this week for the Zurich Classic of New Orleans. TPC Louisiana hosts the partner event once again. Below, we look at the 2021 Zurich Classic odds and make our PGA Tour picks and predictions to win.

This event was skipped last season due to COVID-19 but will be played in teams of two for its fourth consecutive running. The format has teams play fourball for the first and third rounds and switching to alternate shot for the second and fourth rounds. The top 35 teams and ties make the cut.

Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay, ranked second and 12th, respectively, by the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings, enter as the betting favorites at +600. Defending champions Jon Rahm and Ryan Palmer are right behind at +700.

2021 Zurich Classic picks – Favorites

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Monday at 12:15 p.m. ET.

Cameron Smith and Marc Leishman (+1200)

Smith is coming off a T-9 finish at the RBC Heritage which was his third top-10 finish through nine events this year. He’s seventh on Tour in total strokes gained on the field per round at 1.90 through 41 measured rounds.

Leishman’s T-5 finish at the Masters was his second top-10 result through nine events. He was off last week. Smith won this event with partner Jonas Blixt in 2017. The two are also playing for consideration on future Presidents Cup teams.

The two Aussies are the first team offering better than a 10-1 return on investment and are a much better value play than the aforementioned favorites. Smith has been better on and around the greens this year but Leishman has the superior approach game.

Place your legal, online 2021 Zurich Classic bets in CO, IA, IN, MI, NJ, PA, TN, VA and WV at BetMGM. Risk-free first bet! Terms and conditions apply. Bet now!

2021 Zurich Classic picks – Contenders

Joel Dahmen and Lanto Griffin (+5000)

Dahmen recently won the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship against an opposite field while Griffin comes off a missed cut at the Masters. His top finish of 2021 is a T-7 at the Farmers Insurance Open in late January.

Griffin’s an excellent putter who also averages 0.71 Strokes Gained: Approach per round. Dahmen’s strength is his play off-the-tee with 0.32 strokes gained per round.

Play our new free daily Pick’em Challenge and win! Play now!

2021 Zurich Classic picks – Long shots

Richy Werenski and Peter Uihlein (+8000)

Uihlein enters as the hot name in this pairing off a win at the MGM Resorts Championship on the Korn Ferry Tour. Werenski has missed three straight cuts on the PGA Tour, but he has a top finish this year of T-4 at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, and he won the Barracuda Championship last summer.

Take the value and run with Uihlein’s recent victory powering this duo. A $10 bet would return a profit of $800.

Get some action on the 2021 Zurich Classic 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. Please gamble responsibly.

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Ryan Palmer wishes he was dining on jambalaya this week, but optimistic for home-cooking at re-start in Texas

Palmer says PGA Tour will be ready to return at the Charles Schwab Challenge if it can figure out testing protocol.

Ryan Palmer’s internal clock tells him that this week he should be dining on crawfish, shucked oysters and other Cajun delicacies. This week should be the PGA Tour’s Zurich Classic of New Orleans, aka the best eats on the PGA Tour.

It’s a tradition unlike any other that on Tuesday of tournament week at TPC Louisiana’s driving range a wooden canoe is filled with boiled crawfish, shrimp, and potatoes. That’s just a warmup for Wednesday’s pro-am, which includes food stations at nearly every tee serving up some of the best dishes in town.

Dining is a sport for pros, who juggle reservations at French Quarter Institutions such as Acme Oyster House, Drago’s, Mr. B’s and Commander’s Palace. It’s just not right to come here without tasting the jambalaya, etouffees, and muffulettas.

Funny, though, in a city where the pros feast on fine dining almost as much as on birdies and you practically can’t go wrong picking a place to eat, Palmer and his partner in the two-man team event, Jon Rahm, stopped at, of all places, Popeyes for their victory celebration and walked in wearing their winner’s belts.

“We were both flying home that night and ordered fried chicken for the plane ride home,” Palmer explained on a conference call Tuesday.

For Palmer, it marked his fourth Tour title and first victory in more than nine years. His defense will have to wait another year as the Tour’s annual visit to The Big Easy was canceled due to the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Palmer, to his credit, has launched a fundraising platform called Pros for a Purpose to benefit charities behind each of the nine canceled or postponed PGA Tour events. Along with wife, Jennifer, he donated $20,000 to the events he was committed to (Valspar Championship, Valero Texas Open, RBC Heritage, Zurich Classic of New Orleans and AT&T Byron Nelson). Moreover, Meiomi Wine ponied up $100,000 and promised to contribute $5 to the charity for every person participating in the Meiomi Pinot Putt Off that is seen making a putt with a glass of pinot in their hand, up to an additional $50,000 for charity.

Palmer is counting the days to June 11, when the PGA Tour is expected to resume the 2019-20 season at the Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth, Texas. Palmer is a member at host club Colonial Country Club and has played the event every year since 2004, notching three top-5 finishes and a T-6 last year. He said he didn’t get too excited because he knows he still has to wait all of the month of May, adding, “I think I’ll be ready in a week,” and that he plans to play the first three events out of the gate.

The Charles Schwab Challenge was originally scheduled for May 21-24, but was pushed back two weeks into June. Palmer is a member of the Tour’s Player Advisory Council, and he said he expects guidelines for testing to be released following a call with the Tour’s PAC scheduled in 10 days.

“This all depends on testing, assuming it’s available to everyone,” Palmer said. “I’m very positive and optimistic we will be playing in June. We’ll know more in the next few weeks as the Tour begins their testing protocols.”

And Palmer is confident if proper measures for testing and social distancing are put in place and the first events go off without a hitch – there will be no fans for at least the first four events – then he doesn’t see why the season won’t be able to resume and why the three remaining scheduled majors, beginning with the PGA Championship, wouldn’t be played too.

“If we start in June at Colonial, I’d expect to see everyone at the PGA in August, for sure,” he said.

For Palmer, playing without a gallery will be an adjustment, but one he’s experienced on a few occasions before, most recently at the 2019 Zozo Championship in October.

“It’s going to feel like college again,” he said. “The funny part is them announcing you on the first tee with no one around and the habit of raising your hand and tipping your cap. Who are you raising your hand to?”

PGA Tour cancels more events due to coronavirus

The PGA Tour canceled the RBC Heritage, Zurich Classic of New Orleans, Wells Fargo Championship, and AT&T Byron Nelson Championship.

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The PGA Tour announced that it is canceling all tournaments through the PGA Championship, which was expected to be played May 14-17, due to concerns with the coronavirus.

The decision means that the following tournaments now have been called off: the RBC Heritage in Hilton Head, South Carolina; Zurich Classic of New Orleans; Wells Fargo Championship in Charlotte; and AT&T Byron Nelson Championship in Dallas.

In a separate announcement, the PGA of America postponed the PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park until a later date, just as Augusta National announced for the Masters on Friday, meaning neither of the first two majors of the golf season will go off as planned.

The Tour’s announcement comes five days after it scrapped the Players Championship after one round and also said that the Valspar Championship in Tampa, WGC Dell Matchplay in Austin and Valero Texas Open in San Antonio would be canceled.

As a result, the Charles Schwab Challenge, scheduled for May 21-24, is the earliest the Tour could play again.

“As we receive more clarity in the coming weeks, the Tour will be working with our tournament organizations and title sponsors, in collaboration with golf’s governing bodies, to build a PGA Tour schedule for 2020 that ensures the health and safety for all associated with our sport and a meaningful conclusion to the season. We will provide further updates when those plans come into focus,” the Tour said in its press release.

The announcement also means that two more PGA Tour Champions events have been wiped out too: the Mitsubishi Electric Classic in Atlanta, Insperity Invitational in Houston and The Tradition in Birmingham, which was originally slated for May 7-10 will now be played September 24-27.

PGA Tour Champions previously announced on March 16 that the Mastercard Japan Championship (June 12-14) will not be contested due to the current travel advisories in place from the CDC, the WHO and the U.S. Department of State.

The following events on the Korn Ferry Tour are also canceled: the Veritex Bank Championship in Dallas, Huntsville Championship in Alabama, Nashville Golf Open, Digital Ally Open in Overland Park, Kansas, while Savannah Golf Championship and the News Sentinel Open in Knoxville have been postponed.

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