Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting How to watch THE PLAYERS Championship, Round 2: Live scores, TV times, tee times

How to watch THE PLAYERS Championship, Round 2: Live scores, TV times, tee times

Round 2 of THE PLAYERS Championship begins Friday from Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. The star-studded field includes Dustin Johnson, Rory McIlroy, Bryson DeChambeau, Justin Thomas, Jordan Spieth, Patrick Reed, Jon Rahm, Webb Simpson, Viktor Hovland and Collin Morikawa. Here’s everything you need to know to follow the action. Leaderboard Full tee times HOW TO FOLLOW (All times ET) Television: Thursday-Friday, 12 p.m.-6 p.m. ET (Golf Channel). Saturday-Sunday, 1 p.m.-6 p.m. (NBC) Every Shot Live: Live streaming of every shot hit at THE PLAYERS Championship will get underway Thursday morning from TPC Sawgrass. Nearly 100 cameras will capture roughly 31,000 strokes taken over approximately 430 rounds played. It will be available free through PGA TOUR LIVE on NBC Sports Gold on Thursday. See schedule below. PGA TOUR LIVE: Thursday-Friday, 6:30 a.m.-6 p.m. (Featured Groups), 8 a.m.-6 p.m. (Featured Holes), 6:40 a.m.-8 p.m. (Every Shot Live). Saturday, 7:45 a.m.-6 p.m. (Featured Groups), 12 p.m.-6 p.m. (Featured Holes), 7:50 a.m.-8 p.m. (Every Shot Live). Sunday, 7:45 a.m.-6 p.m. (Featured Groups), 12 p.m.-6 p.m. (Featured Holes), 7:50 a.m.-6 p.m. (Every Shot Live) Radio: Thursday-Friday, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday-Sunday, 12 p.m.-6 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio). TOURCast: Get shot-by-shot info in real time with shot tracks and video with TOURCast. TOUR Pulse: Get the PGA TOUR app to utilize TOUR Pulse, which provides users the ability to experience a mix of content, such as video highlights, written hole summaries and stat graphics on every player after every hole they complete. FEATURED GROUPS Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau, Collin Morikawa Viktor Hovland, Patrick Cantlay, Justin Thomas Sergio Garcia, Webb Simpson, Rory McIlroy Patrick Reed, Jon Rahm, Jordan Spieth For the Featured Groups roundtable, click here. MUST READS Round 1 review: THE PLAYERS Championship McIlroy's title defense in tatters after early carnage at THE PLAYERS Mickelson sees positives at THE PLAYERS Stricker's wild day ends with 2-under 70 By the numbers: No. 17 at THE PLAYERS Championship Cut prediction: THE PLAYERS Championship Hovland assessed two-shot penalty at THE PLAYERS ‘Every Shot Live’ returns 20-year anniversary of Tiger’s ‘Better Than Most’ putt Inside THE PLAYERS’ greatest comeback Five things to remember from the 2019 PLAYERS CALL OF THE DAY

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Scott Langley, Brian Gay share lead at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-AmScott Langley, Brian Gay share lead at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – Certainly, surprises are as much a part of the landscape at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am as surf crashing to the shore and celebrity frolics. Think Ted Potter Jr. as your 2018 winner, and this year’s co-leaders after 7-under 64s in Thursday’s first round, Scott Langley and Brian Gay. Potter, after all, hadn’t won since 2012. So, with that in mind, the surprise carried over to yesterday’s first round with Langley, who is winless in 123 PGA TOUR starts, and Gay, who hasn’t won since 2013 and doesn’t have much of a track record here on the Monterey Peninsula, posting stellar efforts at Monterey Peninsula Country Club’s Shore Course. “I’ve always enjoyed this course, so it was nice to come out here and play a good one,� said Gay, whose only top 10 in this tournament came a year ago. But five straight birdies, starting at the par-4 fifth, got him to the turn in 29 and birdies on three of his final four holes easily offset one long bogey to polish his lowest score in the 36 rounds he’s now played in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Langley, who had eight birdies in a 12-hole stretch, was introduced to the golf world with a share of 16th place as an amateur at Pebble Beach in the 2010 U.S. Open, has never quite carried that amateur success into the pro ranks. So, yes, it would be considered a surprise to see his name atop the leaderboard, but it’s not like Thursday’s opening round didn’t offer up a serious sense of norm. In fact, there were familiar faces everywhere, most notably two of those in a six-way tie for second at 6-under – Phil Mickelson and Jason Day. Like Gay and Langley, Mickelson and Day, played at Monterey Peninsula, which had the lowest field average (68.904). But unlike Gay and Langley, Mickelson and Day have layers of success in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am – four wins for Lefty, plus two seconds, two thirds and two other top 10s, while Day was T-2 a year ago and has finished top 10 five times. When you factor in two-time champion Dustin Johnson and 2017 winner Jordan Spieth both firing 5-under 66 at Monterey Peninsula and the season’s only two-time winner, Matt Kuchar, posting 67, also at MPCC, there is no shortage of star power. You just might have to look beneath a few umbrellas and several layers of clothing to recognize it the next few days. “When you have four or five layers on over the next few days with a lot of wind and rain, that’s very hard to play some good golf,� said Day, emphasizing the need to get off to a fast start. “So, you just tried to get something low and propel yourself up there.� No surprise that Mickelson opened strong, given his brilliant resume here. It’s just that he played MPCC in a fashion that even made him laugh. “History was made today,� said Mickelson. “To the best of my knowledge, it’s taken me 27 years and a few months to hit all the fairways in a single round of competition.� Truth is, Lefty has done that a few times in his career, but not for a long while, but forget the specifics; truth is, he did play beautifully, especially on his homeward nine with five birdies for 32. In unison with Johnson and Spieth and Day and all those who started quickly at Monterey Peninsula, Mickelson said it was imperative, given the forecast. “This was a day that we had great weather, the courses were very scoreable and so you need to take advantage of that.� On a day when the field averaged 72.00 at Spyglass, 71.404 at Pebble, and 86 players broke par, there were surprising names who did take advantage. But it was no surprise that some expected heavyweights did, too.

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Tiger shoots 1-over 72, sits at even parTiger shoots 1-over 72, sits at even par

Tiger Woods was two holes away Friday from recording his first bogey-free round at the U.S. Open since his final winning round 19 years ago at Pebble Beach. But what appeared to be a solid, if unspectacular, second round instead ended with two bogeys, a sour finish that leaves Woods even par through 36 holes and well off the pace going into the weekend. Unlike the previous round, when clutch putting balanced out some poor iron play, Woods struggled to make anything of length, failing to take advantage of his birdie opportunities. After his lone birdie on his second hole of the day, Woods reeled off 14 consecutive pars before those two late bogeys at holes eight and nine had him signing for a 1-over 72. RELATED: Leaderboard | Tee times | Tiger ‘trending in right direction’ | Chase for 82 continues  | Tiger’s Jedi mind tricks in 2000 And unlike yesterday, this was not a successful grind, but an unsuccessful bid to make up some ground on the leaders, namely playing partner Justin Rose, who shot a 1-under 70 to move to 7 under. Here’s a hole-by-hole look at Tiger’s second round. ROUND 2: TIGER HOLE-BY-HOLE HOLE 9 (526 yards, par 4): Tiger’s final tee shot of the day with driver is not a good one. It’s sailing left of the fairway, and Tiger hangs his head as the ball bounds into the bunker. Using 8-iron off the sand 236 yards from the pin, Tiger lays up but his ball finds the rough on the left side. With 54 yards to the pin, he hits a terrific shot that touches down on the green just past the bunker and rolls to within 7 feet. But he can’t convert the par save. A solid, if yet unspectacular, day through 16 holes ends on a couple of sour notes, leaving Woods with plenty of work to do this weekend. Fairway: Missed (11 of 14) | Green: Missed (13 of 18) | Putts: 2 (32) | Score: Bogey (1 over 72, Even for the championship through 36 holes) HOLE 8 (432 yards, par 4): Tiger’s iron off the tee finds the heart of the fairway, near Spieth’s tee ball at about the 205-yard mark No need to get it anywhere close to the cliff that’s 50 yards further up the fairway. Left with a 212-yard approach shot, Tiger is caught between the 6- and 7-irons. He opts for the 7 and comes up short, his ball finding the thick rough near the greenside bunker. He hacks out onto the green, but he’s 16 feet away from the pin. He misses the hole right, ending his bid for his first bogey-free round at the U.S. Open since his final round here at Pebble Beach in 2000 when he won by 15 strokes. It’s his first bogey in his last 30 holes. Fairway: Hit (11 of 13) | Green: Missed (13 of 17) | Putts: 2 (30) | Score: Bogey (Even for round, 1 under for the championship) HOLE 7 (116 yards, par 3): With the pin in the back left, Tiger’s tee shot hits the middle of the green and spins back just outside of 28 feet away. Someone in the crowd boos; hey, is this the 16th at TPC Scottsdale? Tiger’s birdie attempt is on a great line but runs out of steam. A tap-in par. That’s 14 straight pars in a round that remains bogey-free. Fairway: N/A (10 of 12) | Green: Hit (13 of 16) | Putts: 2 (28) | Score: Par (1 under for round, 2 under for the championship) HOLE 6 (529 yards, par 5): Tiger opts for 3-wood on a tee shot that he has said is among his least favorite in major championship golf. He carves out a 260-yard drive that safely finds the fairway. With 5-wood on his second shot, he comes up just short of the green. His chip rolls to inside 10 feet, but the putter lets him down this time, as he can’t convert the birdie attempt despite some help from caddie Joe LaCava. A frustrated Woods walks off the green. Fairway: Hit (10 of 12) | Green: Hit (12 of 15) | Putts: 2 (26) | Score: Par (1 under for round, 2 under for the championship) HOLE 5 (186 yards, par 3): Now to the nemesis hole from the first round, where Tiger suffered a double bogey when his wayward tee shot hit the cart path; it’s his only hole over par thus far this week. No trouble this time for Woods off the tee, as his 7-iron finds the back-left portion of the green, 30 feet away from the pin. His birdie attempt loses steam at the end and fades a little left, but it’s another stress-far par. That’s a dozen consecutive pars, one more than his 11 straight to end the first round. Fairway: N/A (9 of 11) | Green: Hit (11 of 14) | Putts: 2 (24) | Score: Par (1 under for round, 2 under for the championship) HOLE 4 (334 yards, par 4): Tiger with iron off the tee on this short par 4, and he safely finds the fairway – unlike Rose, whose tee shot bounds over the edge of the fairway and nestles next to an ice plant past the hazard line. From 112 yards, Woods’ approach with a gap wedge bounces past the pin and spins back, leaving him inside 8 feet for birdie. Spieth has a longer birdie attempt along a similar line and makes it, but Tiger’s attempt clips the right edge. Yes, par again. Fairway: Hit (9 of 11) | Green: Hit (10 of 13) | Putts: 2 (22) | Score: Par (1 under for round, 2 under for the championship) HOLE 3 (394 yards, par 4): Unlike Rose and Spieth, who took aggressive lines to successfully cut the corner on the dogleg-left hole, Tiger’s 3-wood is aimed right of the bunkers. He avoids them, but the ball flies into the thick rough near a couple of marshals. It’s just his second missed fairway of the round. He’ll have 159 yards to flag, compared to 85 for Rose and 106 for Spieth. Tiger’s approach with a 9-iron comes up just short of the green. He opts for putter from off the green, and his 30-foot birdie attempt comes up a bit short. Another par. Fairway: Missed (8 of 10) | Green: Missed (9 of 12) | Putts: 1 (20) | Score: Par (1 under for round, 2 under for the championship) HOLE 2 (516 yards, par 4): Opting for 3-wood off the tee, Tiger cuts a shot down the left side that veers back toward the middle of the fairway and uses the slope to run out to 314 yards. That leaves him 207 yards to the pin. An excellent 6-iron lands on the front of the green and rolls toward the pin, finishing 14 feet away. Another firm putt doesn’t pick up the break, the ball skimming the left edge of the cup and leaving another short par putt that he converts. Fairway: Hit (8 of 9) | Green: Hit (9 of 11) | Putts: 2 (19) | Score: Par (1 under for round, 2 under for championship) HOLE 1 (380 yards, par 4): Time to make a move, now that Tiger has reached the scoring portion of his round with the next seven holes, including three of the easier par 4s on the course. He starts off with a solid iron shot off the tee, his low trajectory ball finding the center of the fairway. With a 9-iron from 154 yards, his approach ends up pin-high, inside 21 feet right of the flagstick. A firmly struck birdie attempt, but the ball broke too late toward the hole, and he makes the 3-foot comebacker for par. Still, he picks up a stroke on the leader Rose, who suffers bogey after his errant tee shot found the thick stuff. Fairway: Hit (7 of 8) | Green: Hit (8 of 10) | Putts: 2 (17) | Score: Par (1 under for round, 2 under for the championship) HOLE 18 (543 yards, par 5): Woods takes 5-wood off the tee and slips a little on the downswing. Ball pops up a little and he’s not impressed. But it finds the middle of the fairway. Will be a three-shot hole for him given he sits 288 yards back. Clearly, he has a plan to lay up at a number he can be aggressive with thanks to the front right pin location. Leaves 125-yards and takes his wedge a little left of the flag to leave a 20-foot look at birdie. This time, he manages to keep the ball high enough, but it burns the left edge. Tap in par and it’s a 1-under 35 on this side of the course. Eight pars and one birdie could have been better, but ultimately he said he wanted to grind the back side out before making moves in the first seven holes on the front side. Rose makes birdie to extend the lead out to 8-under leaving Woods six back at the turn.  Fairway: Hit (6 of 7) | Green: Hit (7 of 9) | Putts: 2 (15) | Score: Par (1 under for round, 2 under for the championship) HOLE 17 (208 yards, par 3): Spieth is first to play and goes left on the difficult par-3 heading back towards the Pacific Ocean. Rose feels he’s got his shot pure and it drops short into the sand. “Not in a million years would I think that was short,â€� he says. With that information, Woods’ caddie Joe LaCava asks if Woods wants one more club. “No, I like this,â€� he says. The 2000 U.S. Open champ then hits a sensational draw to 15 feet. Unfortunately, his birdie try grazes the low side edge of the hole and rolls out some 5 feet past. Woods steadies though and secures another par. Fairway: N/A (5 of 6) | Green: Hit (6 of 8) | Putts: 2 (13) | Score: Par (1 under for round, 2 under for the championship) HOLE 16 (407 yards, par 4): Another safe iron off the tee from Woods who spends some time before the shot trying to get a better understanding of the intermittent changing winds. From 191-yards, Woods pulls his 7-iron left and it bounces off the putting surface and into the rough leaving a short-sided chip. But he makes it look easy and nestles it up to a tap in for par.  Fairway: Hit (5 of 6) | Green: Missed (5 of 7) | Putts: 1 (11) | Score: Par (1 under for round, 2 under for the championship) HOLE 15 (397 yards, par 4): Playing safe off the tee with iron and it’s another fairway checked off. From 144-yards with a 9-iron, Woods tries to shape a big draw, but it hangs out to the right. Finds the putting surface, but it is some 32 feet away. The birdie try just slides under the hole and he taps in for par. Meanwhile, Rose makes a birdie and takes the lead to 7-under leaving Woods five back. Fairway: Hit (4 of 5) | Green: Hit (5 of 6) | Putts: 2 (10) | Score: Par (1 under for round, 2 under for the championship) HOLE 14 (580 yards, par 5): The first par-5 of the round for Woods represents an opportunity to get some more momentum. A solid tee shot finds the fairway, but as the misty rain continues there is very little roll and Woods has some 314-yards uphill left. As such he pulls iron and hits a solid layup down the right side of the fairway to leave 124-yards. Spieth from similar range makes the big error of not getting over the false front on the front right portion of the green and says it’s a “full shot penaltyâ€�. Amazingly, Woods does the same, spinning the ball back down off the green into a tight lie that brings a tricky chip over the right edge of a bunker with very little green to work with before the flag. Plays it beautifully to 4 feet to set up a chance to save par. Yesterday, his par putt on this green produced a fist pump… this time, it’s just a polite wave as it sneaks in the right side of the cup.  Fairway: Hit (3 of 4) | Green: Missed (4 of 5) | Putts: 1 (8) | Score: Par (1 under for round, 2 under for the championship) HOLE 13 (445 yards, par 4): Crisp strike off the tee and the ball gets out there some 281 yards into the middle of the fairway. From 173-yards, Woods once again finds the green and keeps the ball under the hole. It lands softly and trickles back a little on a soft ridge some 22 feet, 7 inches from the hole. Rose has a putt on the same line from further back, but he powers it through the break and as such doesn’t add much information for Woods to use. It’s a right to left swinger and Woods is unable to provide enough pace to hold the high line. It dives under the hole and leaves a little 3-foot tester. But from there he secures par. Spieth by the way makes a third birdie in four holes to join Woods at 2-under and Rose cleans up par to remain the tournament leader at 6-under.  Fairway: Hit (2 of 3) | Green: Hit (4 of 4) | Putts: 2 (7) | Score: Par (1 under for round, 2 under for the championship) HOLE 12 (202 yards, par 3): Woods takes his 6-iron as some rain falls softly again. Safe shot to the front right of the green. It’s the best of the group. His birdie putt will come from 26 feet, 11 inches. After watching some nice recovery shots from playing partners Justin Rose and Jordan Spieth, Woods gives his lengthy chance a healthy stroke. It tracks towards the hole the entire way, but pulls up just a few inches short. He taps in for a safe par.  Fairway: N/A (1 of 2) | Green: Hit (3 of 3) | Putts: 2 (5) | Score: Par (1 under for round, 2 under for the championship) HOLE 11 (390 yards, par 4): After a tee ball finds the intermediate cut on the left side of the fairway, Woods gets aggressive with his approach shot going over the pin and sucking the ball back under the hole. It’s another great look for birdie this time from 10 feet, 10 inches and this time he pours it in with authority. He’s in the red for the round with a birdie.  Fairway: Missed (1 of 2) | Green: Hit (2 of 2) | Putts: 1 (3) | Score: Birdie (1 under for round, 2 under for the championship) HOLE 10 (495 yards, par 4): On a fresh morning at Pebble where there has been some rain to soften the course, Woods comes to his first hole of the day off a lengthy shuttle ride trying to shake out some of the cold. The 81-time PGA TOUR winner is in dark grey pants, navy sweater and blue cap. Playing with overnight leader Justin Rose, he’s acutely aware of the number to catch. Woods smokes driver down the fairway some 297 yards. His approach from 204 yards is a great one to 8 feet, 5 inches. But his putt is a little weak and trickles away from the cup on the low side. Taps in for a par.  Fairway: Hit (1 of 1) | Green: Hit (1 of 1) | Putts: 2 (2) | Score: Par (Even for round, 1 under for championship) Rd. 2 preview notes STARTING ON 10. The 493-yard par-4 10th ranked as the toughest hole on Thursday, playing to a stroke average of 4.449. With the back nine at Pebble Beach considered the tougher of the two nines, Tiger hopes to hang on for the first part of his round as he tees off on the 10th. “Right away we’ve got a tough par 4 right from the get-go,â€� Woods said. “And we have the harder side to start off on, and hopefully I can finish up on the front side and have the full seven holes where I can get it going.â€� On Thursday when he teed off on No. 1, Woods made three birdies in the first seven holes (and also suffered a double bogey at the par-3 fifth) before finishing with 11 consecutive pars. IRON PLAY. Woods ranks first on the PGA TOUR in greens in regulation, and also in proximity from 200 yards and out, but he was not happy with his irons in the opening round. “I didn’t hit my irons as crisp as I’d like,â€� Woods said. One of the keys to success at Pebble Beach, he says, is making sure his misses are in the correct spots – specifically below the pin. That’s what he’ll try to do on Friday in order to avoid having as many lengthy par putts as he faced (and converted) on Thursday. “If I happened to not feel comfortable with a number, dump the ball 30, 40 feet, move on about my business,â€� Woods said. SCORING BY ROUND. It shouldn’t be a complete surprise that Woods started off slowly on Thursday. He ranks just 68th on Round 1 scoring average on the PGA TOUR this season. The good news? He progressively gets better throughout the week. His Round 2 scoring average ranks 52nd on TOUR, his Round 3 scoring average ranks 20th, and his final round scoring average ranks 14th.

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