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Live leaderboard: Round 1 of Safeway Open

Coming off an impressive performance at the Presidents Cup, Phil Mickelson is among the golfers competing in the opening event of the 2017-18 season.

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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
Ludvig Aberg+400
Collin Morikawa+450
Jon Rahm+450
Justin Thomas+550
Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
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PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+450
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+850
Justin Thomas+1800
Jon Rahm+2000
Xander Schauffele+2200
Collin Morikawa+2500
Ludvig Aberg+2500
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Patrick Cantlay+4000
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AdventHealth Championship
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Kensei Hirata+1800
Mitchell Meissner+2200
SH Kim+2200
Neal Shipley+2500
Seungtaek Lee+2800
Hank Lebioda+3000
Adrien Dumont De Chassart+3500
Chandler Blanchet+3500
Pierceson Coody+3500
Rick Lamb+3500
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Regions Tradition
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Stewart Cink+550
Ernie Els+700
Steve Stricker+700
Steven Alker+750
Miguel Angel Jimenez+1100
Jerry Kelly+1400
Bernhard Langer+1600
Alex Cejka+1800
Retief Goosen+2500
Richard Green+2500
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Xander Schauffele+1200
Jon Rahm+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Brooks Koepka+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Viktor Hovland+2000
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Q&A: Padraig Harrington talks PGA TOUR Champions, his greatest round, moreQ&A: Padraig Harrington talks PGA TOUR Champions, his greatest round, more

Padraig Harrington might have made his PGA TOUR Champions debut earlier, but he was busy. You may have heard about a certain event up at Whistling Straits, in Wisconsin, where the U.S. Ryder Cup Team cruised past Harrington’s European team 19-9. We’ll leave the second-guessing and analysis for others, for as Harrington says, “Better to let sleeping dogs lie.” Besides, the Irish star has already shifted his focus, looking ahead to this week’s SAS Championship in Cary, North Carolina, the second start of his second career. “Obviously I was 50 a month ago,” Harrington said at last week’s Constellation FURYK & FRIENDS in Jacksonville, Florida, where he would finish T55 in his PGA TOUR Champions debut. “It’s probably the only birthday as you’re getting older that you look forward to.” Harrington tied for fourth at the PGA Championship at Kiawah in May, so he can clearly keep up with the big boys even now. How much will he play on PGA TOUR Champions? As with Phil Mickelson, who won that PGA as well as the Constellation FURYK & FRIENDS, the answer may be a little here, a little there. “I’ve certainly got the distance to keep me competitive on the main tours for another five years, anyway,” Harrington said. Here, the six-time PGA TOUR winner – including The Open Championship in 2007 and ’08, and PGA Championship in ’08 – talks about shots he wishes he had back, being the youngest of five sons, the trait that defined his career, and why it’s good to feel nervous. (Questions and answers have been edited for clarity and length.) PGATOUR.COM: What’s the once facet of your game that is most responsible for your success? PADRAIG HARRINGTON: Oh, my mental game, followed by my short game. Chipping. Not necessarily putting, but chipping. I was always a demon bunker player. But my mental game would be my No. 1 trait. PGATOUR.COM: You made two double-bogeys in the last round of The Honda Classic in 2015 and won. It was the first time anybody had done that on the PGA TOUR in 11 years. Does that sum you up as a player? PH: That does sum me up; I’m stubborn and pig-headed, and if you gave me a superstition, I’d want to prove the superstition wrong. If you think I’m out of it, that makes me more dangerous. PGATOUR.COM: You grew up the youngest of five boys. Is that what toughened you up? PH: You’d have to think so. We’re a competitive family. The brother just older than me, 20 months older, everything I did was to compete against him and beat him. Fergal. If I treated him as my equal, that pushed me on. Golf. Cards. Snooker. Anything. It was competitive. All four of my older brothers started working when they were 13. They all took jobs in bars, cleaning tables, you would call it a busboy. Because of the money they earned trickling down into the family, I didn’t work. I got to play golf as a teenager. I got the opportunities. PGATOUR.COM: What artifacts from your career are on display at Stackstown G.C. in Dublin? PH: There’s an Open trophy, a replica. There’s a replica of the PGA trophy. And a lot of personal stuff from when I was an amateur all the way through. Some nice stuff. I must update it now. It was a serious party club. Legendary drinking and partying and card games and golf games. PGATOUR.COM: How old were you when you won the club championship? PH: There was one guy with a lower handicap than me, but by 14 or 15 I was the best player there. PGATOUR.COM: What’s the one facet that held you back in your career? PH: Too much practice on the range, not enough time on the course. I didn’t have a range when I was a kid; I had 100 yards to practice. Once I got on TOUR, it was the draw of trying to hit the next shot better. Unfortunately, I’m a really good range player. PGATOUR.COM: What do expect from playing PGA TOUR Champions? PH: I’m fascinated with how environments change the same person, so I’m curious to see how I change out here, and how this environment changes me if I go back to playing PGA TOUR, European Tour. Does coming out here into a smaller pond make me feel bigger and better, and then can I carry that back to the PGA TOUR and the majors? PGATOUR.COM: What do you make of Rory McIlroy? He changed coaches, won the Wells Fargo Championship, but it seemed like an odd season. PH: Yeah, but every player evolves. You’re never the same player. Clearly the field has caught up with Rory. He had a driving advantage and now there are lots of guys who are up there with him. So, in some ways he’s searching for a different advantage. PGATOUR.COM: Other than Tiger, who is in a class by himself, have you ever seen such excitement as there was after McIlroy won the 2011 U.S. Open at Congressional? PH: That and the PGA Championship. Because he did it with the driving. Here was this small guy who just hit it like nobody else. I remember Phil saying at Abu Dhabi around that time, like, how could you compete against him, where he hit it off the tee? Rory was a great player all the way through, but the driving put him over the top. His attitude, his youth – in some ways Viktor Hovland reminds me of him. Nothing like a bit of innocence. PGATOUR.COM: Greatest round you’ve ever played? PH: The last round (of The Open Championship) at Birkdale, 2008. I swung the club well, hit some incredible shots. There was no drama. All my other wins, you kind of look back on and go, I recovered here, I saved myself here. Winning (the PGA Championship three weeks later) at Oakland Hills was completely different. I got sick. I lost my swing and couldn’t get it back. That was pure tenaciousness. PGATOUR.COM: How did you get sick? PH: I got dehydration, not because I wasn’t drinking but because of the hype from The Open coming into that PGA. On the 36th hole I missed the green by 80 yards with a 4-iron. I missed by 80 yards off the tee on a par 4 before that. I would not have made the cut if there was one more hole to go; I had lost all coordination. It was the rain delay the next day that let me back into that tournament. It gave me an extra 24 hours to get myself together. I made the cut on the mark and shot 66-66. PGATOUR.COM: If you could have one career mulligan, where would it be? PH: The last three holes at (the 2006 U.S. Open at) Winged Foot. I had three pars to win, and hit three good tee shots, and went bogey, bogey, bogey. I bogeyed 16 and panicked. I thought I needed to make birdies. But Winged Foot won me Carnoustie, Birkdale and Oakland Hills. Because I needed the experience of Winged Foot to realize what it was like to have a tournament, a major, that was within my grasp. I learned a huge amount. PGATOUR.COM: Any others you’d like to have back? PH: I bogeyed the last at Olympic Club (to tie for fourth at the 2012 U.S. Open). I needed birdie but was maybe a foot short of being on the upslope for my approach, and from the downslope I hit it long-left into the bunker. I was leadin’ after 59 holes at The Open in 2015 and lost a ball in the gorse; everybody knew where it was, nobody told me. The cameras knew. I was lookin’ in the wrong place. I’d turn on my phone now and ring someone. PGATOUR.COM: You had five top-10s in the U.S. Open, but no wins. PH: The U.S. Open is my best major. It suits me. I’ve done nicely in it and feel very competitive. I haven’t played in it in 10 years or something, but you need a lot of resilience to win on a U.S. Open golf course. I would like to have a few more goes at that one. PGATOUR.COM: You had four top-10s at the Masters. PH: I couldn’t care less about top-10s, but I could tell you where I had a chance of winning and felt nervous, and that’s the most important thing. I had two Masters where, had I shot 31 or 32 on the back nine … One year (in 2007) I hit the most perfect hybrid into 15 and it pitched five yards onto the green and rolled back off the front and in the water. I thought I holed the shot. It was ridiculous. They changed the green the following year. Now they have a pin position where my ball landed, that’s how much they changed it. PGATOUR.COM: You weren’t just aiming for a nice finish. PH: I knew I needed to make eagle to have a chance. When you feel nervous, that qualifies as a good week.

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Power Rankings: Corales Puntacana Resort & Club ChampionshipPower Rankings: Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship

Do not adjust your monitor or screen. Indeed, the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship is in its second edition of the 2020-21 season. And yes, we're only at the halfway point of 50 tournaments. The PGA TOUR has been proclaiming a super season and this qualifies as evidence, yet it's just the first of three tournaments with scheduled encores. The Masters and the U.S. Open will return to their traditional stages in April and June, respectively. Similarly, the 2021 edition of the Corales retreats into his customary position as an additional event contested concurrently with the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play. For a breakdown of what the 132-man field on the eastern edge of the Dominican Republic faces and what's at stake, scroll past the projected contenders. RELATED: Tee times POWER RANKINGS: CORALES PUNTACANA RESORT & CLUB CHAMPIONSHIP OTHER TO CONSIDER Justin Suh ... Rapidly making noise to remind fans that he's the forgotten fourth of the Class of 2019 headlined by Collin Morikawa, Viktor Hovland and Matthew Wolff. Suh is 4-for-5 on the PGA TOUR this season with a pair of top 15s, including a T14 at Corales. Pat Perez ... His reputation on paspalum is worthy and it paid off for a T21 in his Corales debut in September - he ranked sixth in putts per GIR — but it's still his most recent top 25 despite 15 starts in the interim. Thomas Detry ... The 28-year-old from Belgium has a pair of T33s in as many starts at Corales, so he's no stranger. Also strides in on the confidence buoyed by a pair of T9s in his last four starts abroad. Kelly Kraft ... Chasing the same Major Medical Extension magic that Hudson Swafford rode to victory in September. Kraft's track record here is superb. He's gone 3rd-T5-T14 with a scoring average of 68.83. The Honda Classic runner-up Brandon Hagy, 2019 Corales champion Graeme McDowell, Charles Howell III and Joel Dahmen will be among the notables reviewed in Tuesday's Fantasy Insider. When the PGA TOUR was in Punta Cana on the last weekend of September, a field of 144 was assembled for a stand-alone competition that rewarded 500 FedExCup points to champion Hudson Swafford, who also secured an exemption into the 2021 Masters. This time around, the top man of 132 entrants will bank 300 FedExCup points and will require another way to get into the Masters if he's not already eligible because that exemption is not on the table this week. However, spots in the 2021 PGA Championship, 2022 Sentry Tournament of Champions and the 2022 PLAYERS, among other invitationals, will be reserved in his name. This is to say that the revised version of the 2020 version was a bonus after it was among the casualties of the three-month shutdown due to the pandemic. And while obvious, it's nonetheless significant that we're far enough removed from the unscheduled break that this week's Corales marks the first time a tournament has been held a second time since. No, it hasn't been a full year since the start of the return to golf, but the cycle of the return visits starts in the Dominican Republic. En route to his winning pace of 18-under 264, Swafford ranked fifth in putts per greens in regulation and 10th in putting: birdies-or-better. Those are old-school-and-still-relevant measurements of efficiency and scoring with the putter when ShotLink technology isn't used. It won't be again this week. While thoroughly impressive and aligned with expectations for a champion in a shootout, he was the first of the winners at Corales not to lead his respective field in both putting metrics. Part of that has to do with its statistical inevitability, but it also can't be ruled out that the field was 12 larger as a stand-alone contest. Incidentally, as of Monday evening, 88 golfers in this week's field competed here in September. Swafford finished T14 in fairways hit and T26 in GIR, so he limited the stress to allow for a special week on the greens, but he also capitalized on the four par 5s by averaging 4.25 to rank T2. For the week, Corales yielded a scoring average of 71.118. That's a fair target again as the weather forecast essentially is identical. Mostly sunny skies will make room for passing clouds and the sight of a sprinkle, maybe. Daytime temperatures will eclipse 80 degrees with ease, while steady easterly breezes will favor lower ball flights and course management. But make no mistake, Corales is a resort course, so stockpiling the par breakers will present as an easy and early Easter egg hunt. Further fostering low scoring are the paspalum greens governed to measure just 11 feet on the Stimpmeter due to their exposure to the coastal breezes. Even shots struck from the thickest of the two-inch rough will have room to hold most greens. Still, as par 72s are concerned, this is as fair and consistent a test as the players will navigate. It will penalize the foolish. Corales' longest walk is 7,670 yards and, like PGA National last week, it features its own recognizable three-hole stretch. The par-4 16th, par-3 17th and par-4 18th are known affectionately as The Devil's Elbow. As a trio, they averaged 0.185 strokes over par in September. However, the par 3-4-3 swing of Nos. 9, 10 and 11 have been a bumpier road in each of the first three editions of the tournament. ROB BOLTON'S SCHEDULE PGATOUR.COM's Fantasy Insider Rob Bolton recaps and previews every tournament from numerous angles. Look for his following contributions as scheduled. MONDAY: Power Rankings (Match Play) TUESDAY*: Power Rankings (Corales); Fantasy Insider SUNDAY: Qualifiers, Reshuffle, Medical Extensions, Rookie Watch * – Rob is a member of the panel for PGATOUR.COM's Expert Picks for PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf, which also publishes on Tuesday.

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