Ben Griffin gave up PGA Tour dream; it came true anyway

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — “I thought I was done,’’ Ben Griffin said.

Just two years ago at age 24, Griffin was finished with his life as a fledgling professional golfer. He had given it a go, trying to qualify for the PGA Tour and its minor league circuit, the Korn Ferry Tour, and he hadn’t been able to crack it.

So, he felt it was time to get on with his life, find a real job.

“I didn’t want to be a golfer anymore,’’ Griffin recalled Friday after he closed out the second round of his first Players Championship as the leader in the clubhouse at 6-under.

Yes, you read that right. Two years after giving up on his dream — temporarily as it turned out — Griffin has his PGA Tour card and, through 36 holes in the Tour’s signature event, is very much in contention to win it.

When play was suspended due to dangerous weather Friday evening, Griffin stood two shots out of the lead. The leaders, Christiaan Bezuidenhout and Adam Svensson, were at 8-under, but still have to finish their second rounds Friday morning.

In the spring of 2021, Griffin left pro golf behind, went through accreditation tests and became a loan officer at CIMG Residential Mortgage in Chapel Hill, N.C.

A true moment of fate changed that trajectory. So much for interest rates and mortgages.


Ben Griffin
USA TODAY Sports

Griffin met a man named Doug Sieg, the managing partner of Jersey City-based investment firm Lord Abbett. Griffin was paired up for a random nine holes with Sieg and his daughter, Taylor, at Sea Island Golf Club on St. Simons Island, Ga. Sieg had taken his daughter there during the COVID-19 pandemic to play some golf.

Sieg was so impressed with Griffin after those nine holes, he offered to back him financially to help him realize his PGA Tour dream. Griffin, his mind made up, politely told Sieg he was sticking to his desk job.

“If anything ever changes, let me know,’’ Sieg told Griffin.

Months later, Randy Myers, a Sea Island-based golf trainer who works with Griffin and was a graduate-assistant strength coach at Penn State when Sieg played football there, called Sieg and said, “Ben is coming back, and he’s going to be great.’’

Sieg then spoke to Griffin.

“Ben told me, ‘I can’t see myself doing anything else in the world but playing on the PGA Tour, and I want to go do it,’ ’’ Sieg told The Post on Friday. “I said, ‘Why don’t you come up [to New Jersey], and we’ll meet.’ He got in a car and drove up, and I took him out to Baltusrol. He was 3-over after three holes and birdied nine of the next 11 holes, and I was like, ‘OK, let’s do this.’

“I’ve never been around a guy who represents himself so well and dreams so big.’’


Ben Griffin
Ben Griffin
AP

On Friday, Griffin led the Players at 8-under and hadn’t bogeyed a hole in his second round before he double-bogeyed No. 18. Yet as he walked off the course, you’d have thought he had birdied the hole.

Sieg said: “The text he sent me right after the round said, ‘You can’t believe what a great round this was. I can’t wait for this weekend. At least I’m not going to sleep on the lead. I’ll be ready to go.’

“Nothing bothers him. He’s got such a great attitude.’’

Sieg had a similarly profound exchange with Griffin in October after the young golfer finished tied for third at the Butterfield Bermuda Championship after he had led the tournament with seven holes to play.

“About 20 minutes afterward he called me and said, ‘I wake up every day and go to a golf course. I’m the luckiest guy in the world,’ ’’ Sieg said. “His perspective from taking the time away, in my mind, just really allowed him to center himself and understand what was important.’’

The only thing that wiped the perpetual smile from Griffin’s face on Friday came when he recounted those who’ve helped make this all possible for him, beginning with Sieg and including two other angels in the fairway, Jesse Ahearn and Mike Swann.

Griffin met Ahearn and Swann while playing a Korn Ferry event in Springfield, Mo. Like Sieg, they were so moved by him that they, too, wanted to help. They paid for his Q School entry, and damned if he didn’t earn his PGA Tour card.

“They’re the only reason I’m playing golf right now,” Griffin said. “I will always have that perspective the rest of my PGA Tour career and it will benefit me going forward.’’

Griffin had tears in his eyes now.

When I relayed that poignant scene to Sieg, I could feel his emotion over the phone.

“It’s incredibly rewarding,’’ Sieg said. “We have 750 people at Lord Abbett who get the benefit of watching this incredible dream play out. He’s not afraid to dream big.’’

Now, they dream big together.

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Sergio Garcia rips Rory McIlroy over ‘sad’ end to friendship

In a fatal blow to irony, Sergio Garcia says it was Rory McIlroy’s lack of “maturity” that brought a “sad” end to the once close friendship between the two golf stars.

McIlroy, who was a groomsman at Garcia’s 2017 wedding, and the Spaniard have been at odds since last summer when the two had a testy text exchange during the U.S. Open over LIV Golf, the controversial Saudi-backed circuit that McIlroy has been outspoken against and Garcia split for last year.

Garcia slammed his former Ryder Cup teammate and blamed the Northern Irishman for the fractured relationship.

“I think it is very sad,” Garcia told The Telegraph. “I think that we’ve done so many things together and had so many experiences that for him to throw that away just because I decided to go to a different tour, well, it doesn’t seem very mature; lacking maturity, really.


Sergio Garcia ripped Rory McIlroy over the end of their friendship.
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“Rory’s got his own life and he makes his own choices, the same way that I make mine. I respect his choice, but it seems like he doesn’t respect the ones I make. So a one-way street.”

Earlier this year, McIlroy said simply there was “no way” he would rekindle his friendship with Garcia after the Spaniard told him in the aforementioned text messages to “shut up” about LIV.

It’s also not the first time that Garcia has fired back over what has often turned into golf’s un-civil war.


Rory McIlroy has been outspoken against LIV Golf.
Getty Images

In December, the former Masters champion took a shot at PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan after Tiger Woods said LIV Golf’s CEO and commissioner Greg Norman had to go in order for the two sides to try to reach a compromise.

“They say that Greg Norman has to go; and Monahan has to stay or go?” Garcia said. “It’s very easy to say those on the other side have to go. And those on your side? There are also people who have done things wrong.”

Garcia, 43, also has had his share of wrongdoing in his career.


Rory McIlroy, left, talks with Sergio Garcia, right, and Garcia’s wife Angela Akins at a dinner before the Nedbank Golf Challenge in 2018.
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Last year, he had a contentious run-in with a rules official at the Wells Fargo Championship, barking at the official, “I can’t wait to get off this tour.” At the 2019 Saudi International, he went ballistic in a bunker, damaged as many as five greens and was disqualified from the tournament. At a 2013 awards dinner, he made a racist fried chicken “joke” about Tiger Woods. And at the 2007 WGC-CA Championship at Doral, he spit into a cup after missing a short putt.

Other missteps by Garcia through the years have included hurling his driver in anger on multiple occasions, complaining that Woods would’ve gotten favorable treatment from officials during a rainy 2002 U.S. Open at Bethpage Black and throwing his shoe at a sign after having slipped while hitting a drive during the 1999 World Match Play Championship.

As for his once close relationship with McIlroy, Garcia said he’s open to the two talking before taking another dig at the four-time major winner.


Rory McIlroy, left, and Sergio Garcia embrace during the 2018 Ryder Cup.
Getty Images

“I don’t have a problem with him. He’s the one that has a problem,” Garcia said of McIlroy on Thursday. “So if he wants to reconcile, then I’m willing to talk, but I’m not sure he’ll pull himself down to that level.”

The next tournament both players will tee it up is at the Masters in April.

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Rory McIlroy wins CJ Cup, returns to world No. 1

RIDGELAND, S.C. — The final steps on Rory McIlroy‘s long road back to No. 1 go down on the scorecard as bogeys, which made him laugh. All that mattered Sunday was winning the CJ Cup in South Carolina, and that about made him cry.

McIlroy reclaimed the No. 1 ranking for the ninth time by holding off Kurt Kitayama and enduring a nervous moment at the end with a three-putt bogey that gave him a 4-under 67 and a 1-shot victory.

More than the ranking, it was realizing how far he had come with so much support behind the scenes that made his voice slightly choke with emotion.

“This tournament last year was the start of me trying to build myself back up to this point,” McIlroy said. “I had a really rough Ryder Cup. I think I was outside the top 10 in the world — it’s not a position that I’m used to being in.”

McIlroy went 1-3 in a Ryder Cup loss. He was outside the top 10 for 15 consecutive weeks, the longest stretch of his career since first getting to No. 1 a decade ago. For a player of his caliber, that made him feel further behind than he really was.

“I think just the steady climb back up to the summit of world golf and what it takes,” he said. “And it’s not just me, it’s everyone that’s a part of my team. I just think about everyone that’s made a difference in my life, not over the last 12 months, but ever.”

Inside the ropes, it was vintage McIlroy.

Tied with Kitayama with five holes to go at Congaree, McIlroy ran off three straight birdies to seize control. The pivotal run began with a 5-iron from 227 yards to 15 feet on the par-3 14th, only the fifth birdie on the hole in the final round.

“I think that the birdie on 14 was really … that’s what separated … the birdie on 14 was big,” McIlroy said. That was followed by another key moment on the 348-yard 15th hole, where he got up-and-down for birdie and Kitayama three-putted for par from 40 feet.

McIlroy followed with a 20-foot birdie putt on the 16th.

McIlroy, who finished at 17-under 267, won for the 23rd time on the PGA Tour and 31st time worldwide.

It was his ninth time reaching No. 1 in the world, behind only Tiger Woods and Greg Norman (both 11) in getting to the top of the ranking the most times.

This felt like a long time coming.

He won the CJ Cup for the second straight time. The South Korea-based tournament was held in Las Vegas last year, when McIlroy was No. 14 in the world.

So began his climb back to No. 1, with victories in the Canadian Open and the Tour Championship to capture the FedEx Cup, and with help from Scottie Scheffler cooling from his torrid stretch through the Masters.

“I’ve worked so hard over the last 12 months to get back to this place,” McIlroy said. “I feel like I’m enjoying the game as much as I ever have. I played with that joy and it’s definitely showed over these last few months.

“It’s a big achievement. I’m really proud of myself right now.”

McIlroy was No. 1 when golf shut down for three months at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, and he lost the ranking to Jon Rahm when the Spaniard won the Memorial in mid-July 2020.

Scheffler finished in the middle of the pack at Congaree, meaning McIlroy could have been runner-up and still reclaimed the No. 1 ranking. He wanted the trophy, and it was harder work than he imagined.

McIlroy was staked to a 1-shot lead going into the final round and never trailed, though he didn’t have it easy until he walked toward the 18th green, and even that made him sweat. He had a 2-shot lead and gunned his 40-foot putt some 8 feet by, while Kitayama had a 20-footer for birdie. They both missed.

Rahm, coming off a win at the Spanish Open, tied McIlroy on three occasions early while playing in the group in front of him. Rahm was still in the mix until his tee shot on the long par-3 14th caught a plugged lie in the face of the bunker, leading to bogey.

He wound up with 69 to tie for fourth.

The real threat was Kitayama, three times a winner while playing in Asia and Europe. The 29-year-old Californian overcame an early 2-shot deficit and was tied for the lead until McIlroy took over with big putts and he couldn’t answer.

Kitayama played bogey-free and closed with a 67 for his third runner-up since joining the PGA Tour last year, behind McIlroy, Xander Schauffele in Scotland and Rahm in Mexico. He made $1,134,000.

“That’s a tough group of guys to beat,” Kitayama said. “I just have to keep improving.”

K.H. Lee had a 68 and finished third, with Rahm and Tommy Fleetwood (65) another shot behind.

McIlroy has three wins this year, closing with a 62 in the Canadian Open to outlast Tony Finau and Justin Thomas, a 66 in the Tour Championship to beat Scheffler and a 67 at Congaree with two closing bogeys, just enough to celebrate two big moments.

Another trophy and, finally, another trip to the top of golf.

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Trevor Immelman mocks LIV’s Greg Norman over Presidents Cup tweet

Trevor Immelman didn’t have much patience for Greg Norman wishing his International Team well at the Presidents Cup.

Immelman, the captain of the group that’s been ransacked by Norman and LIV Golf, had a one-word response to Norman’s tweet saying he hoped the International Team would hoist the cup for the first time since 1998: “LOL.”

That, Immelman explained, was a literal response.

“Look, any of you that have known me for the longest time know that I’m an extremely open and honest person,” Immelman told reporters Friday. “I pretty much say it exactly as I’m thinking it. What I said was exactly what I was doing when I read that tweet. I was laughing out loud.

Trevor Immelman
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Greg Norman
USA TODAY Sports

“I learned long ago that lying is dangerous because you’ve got to have a good memory. So I’d rather just tell the truth.”

The Internationals lost Friday’s session 4-1 to fall behind 8-2 in the biennial event. After a number of their players defected to Norman’s LIV Golf — including World No. 2 and reigning British Open and Players champ Cam Smith — Immelman’s roster is a shell of itself and not surprisingly playing accordingly.

“Outside of all this angst — golf is golf, competition is competition; something every golfer thrives on,” Norman, the CEO and commissioner of LIV Golf, tweeted on Thursday. “As a former player & Captain of the International Team, I wish @TrevorImmelman & his entire team the very best in repeating our only 1998 @PresidentsCup success in Melbourne.”

Norman was a part of the 1998 International Team that won at Royal Melbourne, the only time the International Team has won the competition.

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Scottie Scheffler chokes up receiving PGA Tour Player of Year surprise on ‘GameDay’

Scottie Scheffler went 58 tournaments over more than two years between getting a PGA Tour card and getting his first win at the Phoenix Open. That turned out to be just the beginning of a year that topped all others in golf.

A month later, Scheffler went to No. 1 in the world. Two weeks after that, he became a major champion by winning the Masters. And on Saturday, he capped off his remarkable rise when he was announced as the PGA Tour player of the year.

Scheffler can do a lot in a short amount of time once he gets going.

Scottie Scheffler won the Masters in April for his first career major.
AP

He became the first player since the awards began in 1990 to win player of the year on the Korn Ferry Tour, rookie of the year on the PGA Tour and the PGA Tour player of the year, all in a span of four seasons.

The award is a vote of PGA Tour members who played in at least 15 tournaments. Scheffler received 89 percent of the vote over British Open champion Cam Smith and FedEx Cup champion Rory McIlroy, both of whom won three times and trail him in the world ranking.

The only surprise belonged to Scheffler. He received the Jack Nicklaus Award during an appearance on ESPN’s “College GameDay” in Austin, Texas. Scheffler graduated from the McCombs School of Business at Texas with a finance degree in four years without going to summer school.

He was on stage with the Texas golf team, which won the NCAA title this year, when Longhorns coach John Fields brought him what was described as a special gift. It was the bronze trophy, and the fans began chanting his name.

“That’s pretty cool,” Scheffler said, choking up. “I don’t have much to say. I definitely was not expecting that. But it means a lot to me.”

Scottie Scheffler on “College GameDay”

The Masters was Scheffler’s fourth win in six tournaments, and while he didn’t win the rest of the season, he was never far away. His close friend, Sam Burns, beat him in a playoff at the Colonial. He finished one shot behind Matt Fitzpatrick in the U.S. Open.

And then he nearly finished the season with the FedEx Cup until McIlroy tracked him down in the final round of the Tour Championship.

Scheffler had to settle for a tie for second and a $5.75 million bonus. He also won a $4 million bonus for leading the FedEx Cup in the regular season — he was No. 1 the final 23 weeks of the season — and $1 million bonus from the Aon Risk-Reward Challenge.

His earnings in the regular season were a record $14,046,910, giving him total income from his performance at just short of $25 million.

“Undoubtably, one of the highest compliments a player can receive is the endorsement from his peers, and the fact that Scottie’s season was both dominant and consistent spoke volumes to the membership,” PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan said in a statement.

Smith’s three victories came at the Sentry Tournament of Champions, The Players Championship and the British Open at St. Andrews, where he shot 30 on the back nine.

McIlroy won the CJ Cup in Las Vegas last fall, the RBC Canadian Open in June and the Tour Championship. He was the only player to finish in the top 10 in all four majors. He captured the FedEx Cup for the third time.

Even then, McIlroy could appreciate the year Scheffler had.

“He deserves this maybe more than I deserve it. He played an unbelievable season,” McIlroy said. “Hell of a player, hell of a competitor. Even better person. Love his family.”

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Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy launching TGL virtual golf league

The NFL playing on Monday nights helped transform football. Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy hope it does the same for golf.

The two stars are teaming up to launch a tech-infused golf league in partnership with the PGA Tour that will feature two-hour, three-on-three 18-hole matches on a virtual course that will take place on Monday nights beginning in January 2024.

The new league, dubbed TGL, will include 15 regular-season matches and a postseason made up of the league’s top four teams. McIlroy and Golf Channel president Mike McCarley, who partnered with Woods on the venture, revealed the details on Wednesday at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta, the site of this week’s Tour Championship.

“We’ve been working on this for two years,” McIlroy said. “I think it’s a great opportunity for PGA Tour players to show a different side of themselves, primetime on Monday night. I think it’s great for brand exposure to try to engage a different audience.”

McIlroy also said that Woods, who has competed sparingly since suffering a debilitating leg injury in a car wreck in February 2021,  planned to play in the matches.

“Who knows where we’re going to see Tiger Woods play golf next, right?” McIlroy said. “We don’t know what his schedule is going to be. We don’t know how his body is going to be. But to be able to see him still showcase his skills on prime time, on TV without really any wear and tear on his body, I think to be able to see Tiger hit golf shots and still sort of provide people with a glimpse of his genius — I think it is a really good use of his time.”

The location of the venue hasn’t been announced, but renderings show a stadium-like atmosphere that’s similar to Topgolf, with players hitting into a simulator that has a screen similar in size to IMAX for longer shots and using a real green complex for chipping and putting. The playing area will be about three-quarters of the size of a football field.

The events will be scheduled to compliment the Tour’s schedule, with the idea being to play various Tour courses, depending on where the Tour is in a given week.

Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy
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Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy and Mike McCarley.
TMRW Sports Group/MEGA

It is also viewed as another way to try to thwart the controversial Saudi-backed LIV Golf Series, which features team and individual competition as well as music playing on course during its tournaments.

Woods, who has been blunt in his criticism of LIV, said in a statement that the new virtual league is the “next evolution within professional golf.”

“We all know what it’s like to be in a football stadium or a basketball arena where you can watch every play, every minute of action unfold right in front of you,” Woods said. “It’s something that inherently isn’t possible in traditional golf — and an aspect of TGL that will set it apart and appeal to a new generation of fans.”

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Pebble Beach becomes third U.S. Open anchor site for USGA

Pebble Beach is the third course to become an anchor site for the U.S. Open, with the USGA announcing Wednesday four U.S. Opens and four U.S. Women’s Opens over the next 26 years.

Pebble Beach joins Pinehurst No. 2 and Oakmont Country Club as anchor sites, a strategy that allows the USGA to return to its most famous U.S. Open courses more frequently.

The USGA made sure the women were not left behind.

The U.S. Women’s Open will be held on America’s most famous seaside course for the first time next year, and then it will return three more times in 2035, 2040 and 2048.

Pebble Beach, which opened in 1919 and first hosted a USGA event in 1929 with the U.S. Amateur, was the first public course to host the U.S. Open in 1972. That Open was famous for Jack Nicklaus hitting the pin with a 1-iron on the par-3 17th on his way to victory.

Other big moments include Tom Watson chipping in on the 17th to beat Nicklaus in 1982, and Tiger Woods delivering his greatest performance when he won the 2000 U.S. Open by 15 shots, the widest margin in major championship history.

It most recently held the U.S. Open in 2019, when Gary Woodland chipped from one end of the 17th green to the other for a remarkable par save on his way to his first major.

John Bodenhamer, the USGA’s chief championships officer, recalled a conversation with three-time major champion Nick Price, who told him it matters where a player wins a U.S. Open.

“There are certain places you go and stand out on them, they’re meant for a U.S. Open or a U.S. Women’s Open. You play Pebble Beach, it is a bit of a religious experience,” Bodenhamer said at a news conference overlooking the 18th hole. “We’re going where players want to win.”

Pebble Beach also hosts a PGA Tour event every February dating to 1947. It once held a PGA Championship (1977) and the precursor to the Tour Championship (1988).

“This relationship with Pebble Beach, long considered a national treasure, is a historic step forward for golf,” said Mike Whan, the CEO of the USGA. “In addition to elevating our Open championships, the USGA and Pebble Beach are committed to working together to ensure a more diverse, welcoming and accessible game.”

Spyglass Hill, regarded as the toughest of the Pebble Beach courses in relatively calm conditions, will host the U.S. Senior Women’s Open and the U.S. Senior Open in consecutive weeks in 2030.

The U.S. Open now has only 10 open slots through 2051, with the next available year in 2028.

Of the current anchor sites, Oakmont has hosted the U.S. Open nine times, the most of any club, and the U.S. Open returns to the Pittsburgh-area course in 2025, 2033, 2042 and 2049.

Pinehurst No. 2 in North Carolina is the newcomer, first holding the U.S. Open in 1999 and returning in 2005 and 2014. It has the U.S. Open in 2024, 2029, 2035, 2041 and 2047. Pinehurst also was chosen as a secondary headquarters for the USGA.

The USGA still could have a fourth anchor site. Among the clubs said to be under consideration are Shinnecock Hills and Winged Foot, both in New York. Shinnecock Hills is hosting its sixth U.S. Open in 2026.

“There so many exciting things to come down the road,” Bodenhamer said. “Every one of these long-term relationships are different. You’ll see more.”

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How to watch the PGA Tour’s Zurich Classic of New Orleans on ESPN+

PGA Tour action is usually about one player. Not this week. In a brief break from the usual routine, players will pair up in two-man teams for the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, beginning Thursday at TPC Louisiana.

Get ESPN+ here | Download the app | WatchESPN

As always, this event will have four feeds from which to choose:

  • Main feed: Primary tournament coverage featuring the best action from around the course.

  • Marquee group: Showcasing every shot from each player in a specified group.

  • Featured groups: Coverage of two concurrent featured groups.

  • Featured holes: A full look at a scenic, pivotal or iconic hole.

Additionally, more than 50 hours of The Masters Films (1960-2020) are available to watch on ESPN+. The year’s second major, the PGA Championship, will have more than 200 hours of live coverage and 30 hours of library and classic content.

Here is how to watch the Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

All times ET.

Thursday

Main feed
8 a.m.-3:30 p.m. | Watch here
Marquee group
8:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. | Watch here
Featured holes (Nos. 3, 9, 11 and 17)
8:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. | Watch here
Featured groups
8:45 a.m.-3:30 p.m. | Watch here
Featured group 1
3:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. | Watch here
Featured group 2
3:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. | Watch here
Featured hole (No. 17)
3:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. | Watch here
Featured hole (No. 14)
3:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. | Watch here

Friday

Main feed
9:15 a.m.-3:30 p.m. | Watch here
Featured holes (Nos. 3, 9, 11 and 17)
9:45 a.m.-3:30 p.m. | Watch here
Featured groups
10 a.m.-3 p.m. | Watch here
Marquee group
10:15 a.m.-3:30 p.m. | Watch here
Featured group 1
3:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. | Watch here
Featured group 2
3:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. | Watch here
Featured hole (No. 17)
3:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. | Watch here
Featured hole (No. 14)
3:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. | Watch here

Saturday

Main feed
8:45 a.m.-1 p.m. | Watch here
Featured holes (Nos. 3, 9, 11 and 17)
9:15 a.m.-1 p.m. | Watch here
Featured groups
9:30 a.m.-1 p.m. | Watch here
Marquee group
9:45 a.m.-1 p.m. | Watch here
Featured group 1
1 p.m.-6 p.m. | Watch here
Featured group 2
1 p.m.-6 p.m. | Watch here
Featured hole (No. 17)
1 p.m.-6 p.m. | Watch here
Featured hole (No. 14)
1 p.m.-6 p.m. | Watch here

Sunday

Main feed
8:45 a.m.-1 p.m. | Watch here
Featured holes (Nos. 3, 9, 11 and 17)
9:15 a.m.-1 p.m. | Watch here
Featured groups
9:30 a.m.-1 p.m. | Watch here
Marquee group
9:45 a.m.-1 p.m. | Watch here
Featured group 1
1 p.m.-6 p.m. | Watch here
Featured group 2
1 p.m.-6 p.m. | Watch here
Featured hole (No. 17)
1 p.m.-6 p.m. | Watch here
Featured hole (No. 14)
1 p.m.-6 p.m. | Watch here

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