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Brooks Koepka, Bryson DeChambeau two different styles sit atop Masters leaderboard

AUGUSTA, Ga. – One relies on algorithms. The other, athleticism. Two different roads sharing the same destination: the top of the leaderboard at Augusta National. Brooks Koepka and Bryson DeChambeau are tied for first at Augusta National after an eventful end to the opening round. They played in two of the day’s final three groups, signing their scorecards 11 hours after Gary Player and Jack Nicklaus kicked off the proceedings. It was worth the wait, as both decimated Augusta National’s second nine with 5-under 31s to close a sun-soaked and low-scoring day.  The late-afternoon air density was just right for DeChambeau, who birdied the last four holes, including approach shots to within inches on 16 and 18. His final approach banged into the flagstick for just the fourth birdie of the day on Augusta National’s difficult closing hole. “Too fast. My terminal velocity was too high,â€� DeChambeau said about that final approach. Koepka has no need for polysyllabic words and terminology pulled from a physics textbook. He likes to keep it simple. “I just don’t understand how it takes a minute and 20 seconds … to hit a golf ball,â€� Koepka said recently on the Golf Monthly podcast. “It’s not that hard.â€� He made it look easy Thursday as he established himself as Augusta National’s alpha male. His 66 was the day’s only bogey-free round. Five of his birdies came on the second nine, including four in a row on 12-15. Koepka is seeking his third major in his last four starts. We haven’t seen a run like that since Tiger Woods was in his prime. Related: Tiger cards 2-under 70 | Day receives back treatment | Notebook: Scott off to rare fast start | Tiger accepts Ben Hogan Award | Nicklaus, Player get things started at the Masters | Tee times, Round 2 DeChambeau, who closed 2018 with three wins in his last five PGA TOUR starts, is seeking his first major, at a golf course that he has a deep affection for. It started when he arrived here three years ago as the reigning U.S. Amateur champion. He was in contention through 35 holes and won low-amateur honors in his final start before turning pro. He hasn’t finished better than 15th in a major. Thursday’s round was the fruit of the thorough testing that is his trademark. He spent 14 hours last Wednesday trying to solve his iron-play struggles. This time, he was analyzing his “spin loft.â€� “We didn’t understand how to get it back on the correct side,â€� he said. DeChambeau looks at an endless array of variables when assessing a shot. And he admits that he can be obsessive in the quest for an answer. Koepka scoffs at such analysis. “It’s always between two clubs,â€� he said in that same Golf Monthly interview. “There’s a miss short. There’s a miss long.â€� There was room for both approaches to work Thursday. It was hard not to get on a roll as roars reverberated across Augusta National. At times, it sounded like Masters Sunday. The cheers carried home the final players on the course, several of whom shot the day’s lowest scores. The five players who shot lower than 69 all played in the day’s final half-dozen groups. Phil Mickelson, playing behind DeChambeau, birdied five of his last seven holes to shoot 67. He’s trying to join Tiger, Arnie and Jack as the only players with four or more green jackets. Dustin Johnson shot 68 while playing alongside DeChambeau. Ian Poulter also shot 68. “There is an energy and there is something in science that does talk about that and more and more science is coming out about that,â€� DeChambeau said. “It’s great to have momentum and hear a great atmosphere. It gets you all pumped up, creates some adrenaline flow and allows you to get in a different mind‑set.â€� Koepka came home in the anchor group. He didn’t finish better than 56th in three starts preceding the Masters, but a smoother transition resulted in what he called his best ball-striking round in a major. He missed just three greens and two fairways. That performance provided an answer to those who’ve been critical of Koepka’s recent weight loss. A restricted diet caused him to lose more than 20 pounds. “I lift too many weights, and I’m too big to play golf. And then when I lose weight, I’m too small,â€� Koepka said. “I don’t know what to say. I’m too big and I’m too small.â€� Then he looked at a scoreboard inside the interview room. “Obviously it seems to work,â€� he said. Yes it does.

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RBC Canadian Open
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+450
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Corey Conners+2000
Shane Lowry+2000
Robert MacIntyre+3000
Sam Burns+3000
Sungjae Im+3000
Taylor Pendrith+3000
Harry Hall+3500
Luke Clanton+3500
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ShopRite LPGA Classic
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Nelly Korda+450
Jeeno Thitikul+650
Jin Young Ko+900
Rio Takeda+1100
Chisato Iwai+1600
Mao Saigo+1600
Somi Lee+1800
Ayaka Furue+2200
Miyu Yamashita+2200
Jin Hee Im+2500
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American Family Insurance Championship
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Alker/Langer+550
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Virginia
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Bryson DeChambeau+450
Jon Rahm+550
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Patrick Reed+1600
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Carlos Ortiz+2000
Lucas Herbert+2200
Brooks Koepka+2500
David Puig+2500
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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+500
Jon Rahm+750
Collin Morikawa+900
Xander Schauffele+900
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Rory McIlroy+650
Bryson DeChambeau+800
Jon Rahm+1200
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Collin Morikawa+2500
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Brooks Koepka+4000
Hideki Matsuyama+4000
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The Open 2025
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Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
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Ryder Cup 2025
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USA-150
Europe+140
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Weekley’s cancer scare has him seeing the big pictureWeekley’s cancer scare has him seeing the big picture

The first leg of the bonding trip with his sons last summer was a cruise. But Boo Weekley doesn’t remember the island destination, or any other ports of call, for that matter. “We just went, and we came back,â€� he says with a shrug of his shoulders. After the cruise, Weekley and his boys went to Disney World and Legoland. In total, the trip lasted seven days. Or maybe it was eight. “I can’t remember that either,â€� Weekley grins. What he does remember, though, is the fun he had with Parker (now 17) and Aiden (now 10). But despite all the theme nights and the cartoon characters roaming the decks and those Disney movies shown on board, the trip wasn’t completely carefree. Not after his doctor told him just as the trip started that tissue samples taken after removing that angry cyst from Weekley’s left shoulder had shown signs of cancer. The doctor’s next sentence was just as alarming. You need to come back to the office – now. But Weekley said no. He and the boys were already on their way. The trip would go on as planned. “I ain’t gonna turn around,â€� Weekley told his doctor. Upon his return home to Jay, Florida, Weekley finally met with his doctor. The small incision made to excise the infected cyst was replaced by a bigger scar as the surgeon dug back into his shoulder to remove the cancerous cells. “They cut it all out and here we are — we’re back to normal,â€� says Weekley, who makes just his fourth PGA TOUR start of the season this week at the Charles Schwab Challenge, a tournament he won in 2013. Before you think that Weekley is the ultimate optimist or the master of the understatement all rolled in one, he was concerned. But he knew whatever happened was out of his control, and quite frankly, golf’s ultimate country boy doesn’t particularly like talking about his feelings and the like. “Yeah, it worried me, but I mean what’s the worst thing, I couldn’t play golf again?â€� Weekley wonders aloud. “The good Lord is gonna take care of us the way he wants to take care of us. I believe in him so I’m gonna just have my faith and it is what it is.â€� But still, when they say you have cancer … “It scared me. I was worried,â€� Weekley admits. “But I mean, I don’t know, it’s just kind of like one of them things like all right, how serious is it? I didn’t know how serious it was, and then when he said, ‘Oh, I can cut all this out, and we’ll be done in about a day, about three hours,’ I was like ‘All right.’ “So sure enough, they did it all, and I mean it was over with.â€� Well, not exactly. In reality, the cancer diagnosis was just part of a series of setbacks that kept the three-time champion off the TOUR for 18 months. Weekley has worked hard to get back, though, and he has hopes of more starts this summer that will allow him to get back into a competitive flow. Tendinitis in his right elbow originally forced Weekley off the TOUR after he missed the cut at the RBC Canadian Open in July of 2017. Just a month earlier, he had tied for fifth at the Travelers Championship, his best finish in more than a year. Weekley underwent various kinds of treatment for the next few weeks. But after a month, nothing had worked. Only one option remained – surgery. “We done tried shots,â€� Weekley says. “We done tried everything; iced it, we done just let it rest for a month and that didn’t do nothing. It wouldn’t heal up right. It wouldn’t nothing. “So they went in there and just they did a little old cut. He just jabbed that thing down in there and fixed it all up.â€� Weekly didn’t hit balls for nearly six months. He says it was the longest he’d gone without playing golf since he was about 13 years old. He went to rehab, using a rubber band stretched around his fingers to regain strength and mobility in his tendon. Even hunting on those 400 or so acres he owns in the Florida panhandle was problematic. “I couldn’t do a whole lot cause I had to climb, and I couldn’t climb and stand ‘cause I couldn’t pick nothing up,â€� Weekley says. “You know what I mean? It ain’t that I wasn’t strong enough, I just couldn’t get my hands on it. So I didn’t really do a whole, whole lot.â€� Weekley – who first learned to play golf left-handed — was able to fish, though, transferring the reel to his opposite hand. The bass cooperated, and he was able to spend plenty of time with his sons. “I figured out a way to fish,â€� he says. “I promise you I did do that.â€� Once Weekley started playing golf again, though, the cyst in his shoulder flared up, filling with pus and causing him considerable pain. In truth, the shoulder had bothered him off and on for several years. So he went to the doctor and the decision was made to remove it. “I’d been hitting balls,â€� Weekley says. “I wouldn’t say I was all the way ready to come back out and play but yes I was close enough to where I felt like I go out and should’ve shot even par easily.â€� But then came the cancer diagnosis. Another surgery and a big scar across the top of his shoulder. And another delay in getting back out on TOUR. His future might’ve seemed uncertain, but Weekley also recognized it as a reality check. “I don’t know, adversity is a good thing to have sometimes,â€� Weekley says. “It’s a good thing to have ‘cause you just, it is what it is. It’s how you deal with it. Every day in life, there’s something new, so take your time, be patient, let it happen. I don’t know, it’s been crazy the last two years for me. “The way I look, my outlook on life, it’s different, way different than it used to be. … I guess I have a different outlook on when all this came about and well, the worst thing that can happen if I don’t play golf, then I’ll at least be home every day with my boys.â€� In his lowest moments, Weekley admits that he considered the possibility that he might not play golf again at the highest level. But he missed the grind, and the desire was still there. Whatever happened, he wanted it to be on his terms, so he stayed determined to give himself another shot. “It wasn’t because of an injury — that was gonna be my decision,â€� Weekley says. “It still might be my decision, I might play this year and say ‘You know what, I don’t want to do this no more.’ “This is right now, still in my gut I got a fire and I still want it and that’s the only reason why I’m actually sitting right here right now ‘cause I still want it. I could be sitting at home, just chilling out. I could go get a job down there working as a farmer, whatever, don’t matter to me.â€� But right now, he wants to play golf. For him it’s not very hard because that guy’s one of the greatest ball-strikers that ever lived, you know? Scott Hamilton, who is the director of golf at Cartersville Country Club just north of Atlanta and “instructor to a bunch of cool guys on the PGA TOUR,â€� according to his Instagram account, has taught Weekley since 2010. He considers the pro one of his closest friends and kept in touch during his layoff. “I’d just call him every once in a while, and you know I’ll call and ask him about golf and the next thing were talking about fishing or something,â€� says Hamilton, who also works with Matt Every, Scott Stallings, Hudson Swafford, Peter Uihlein and Harold Varner, to name a few of those “coolâ€� guys. So when Weekley told him the doctors were going to take the cyst out of his shoulder, Hamilton wasn’t particularly concerned. After all, Weekley had his shoulder drained before, so why should this be any different? “I thought he’d go to like a little in-patient thing that they lance it,â€� Hamilton says. “Have you ever watched that ‘Dr. Pimple Popper’ (show)? “I just thought it’d be like something like that when you got in there and found it, they gotta cut that out. And then they found cancer around it and was like, oh s—, you know.â€� Hamilton remembers telling Weekley he was “insaneâ€� when he decided not to delay the Disney cruise and have the surgery. “I mean I know he’s frugal but that’s borderline ridiculous,â€� he says, thankful he’s able to chuckle now. As Hamilton, a kindred spirit to Weekley if there ever was one, puts it, the doctors had to cut a chunk of “meatâ€� out of there to make sure they had removed all the cancer cells. He knows Weekley was frustrated by the second setback. but he rarely let it show. “He was pretty nonchalant about it but I could tell he was pretty nervous about it because … a) it made the heal on the shoulder take so much longer, and he had just been through the elbow thing, you know, (and was finally) feeling good, and then b) he didn’t know what kind of post-op treatments he’d have to have, which he didn’t end up having to have any,â€� Hamilton says. “I think it scared the crap out of him.â€� Once the shoulder healed and Weekley was able to start hitting balls again in November, Hamilton says it didn’t take his student long to get his game back. “For him it’s not very hard because that guy’s one of the greatest ball-strikers that ever lived, you know?â€� Hamilton says. “People just don’t have an understanding of how good of a ball-striker he is. I mean, when he hits balls on the range, other TOUR players will watch him hit.  “If he was a great putter, the guy would’ve won … no telling how many times.â€� Normally when an elite player has been injured and away from the game, Hamilton says the hardest thing is to get his speed back. Weekley came up to Cartersville twice late last year to work on his game, and the results were almost immediate. “We got him back up to 112-113 (mph) or something like that with his driver which is — you know he’s a 115 guy,â€� Hamilton says. “It was really close. The biggest challenge is the shape of his swing and his golf swing stays simple. “I work on it a little bit on the posture stuff and a couple different little small things, but that golf swing he’s got is ingrained. It’s more training — trying to get him on a pressure mat and shifting with the right time limit and that kinda stuff.â€� Hamilton says there’s an added, unexpected benefit. Weekley has lengthened his swing and has more range of motion than he had before the shoulder surgery. In some ways, the surgery may have been a blessing in disguise. “I always equated it to the tendinitis, but I think we really might have had to deal with the impingement that he had in his shoulder,â€� Hamilton says. “But yeah, we didn’t do a ton of stuff to him. He’s got a real strong grip, he’s super rotary, he’s a torque guy, he spins around in real tight circles and he hits way down on it.â€� Weekley admits he missed the game, the grind, while he was sidelined. Not that he watched it on TV or anything. In fact, on the Sunday last month when Tiger Woods won the Masters, Weekley wasn’t even aware of the news until later that day when he arrived at Hilton Head for the RBC Heritage. “My caddy’s like, ‘Did you hear what happened?’â€� Weekley recalls. “I said, ‘No, what happened?’ I was thinking something bad. He was like, ‘Tiger won.’ I said, ‘Tiger won what?’ He said, ‘The Masters’. I said, ‘No way’. He’s like ‘Yes’. I was like ‘No s—? I didn’t even know he was even in the hunt.â€� Weekley tied for 25th that week at a course on which he’s won twice. This week, he’s at the other course he’s experienced success. Colonial Country Club — home to one of the best ball-strikers the game has ever seen and Weekley’s favorite player, Ben Hogan — offers another opportunity to gauge the progress he’s made. He has high expectations for himself, and Weekley won’t be satisfied until he meets them. “I just want to play good golf,â€� Weekley says. “I want to prove to myself. I ain’t worried about proving anything to anybody else. I just want to prove myself that I still got the game first to play. “As long as I get myself in contention, to where at least I can get myself an opportunity to try to win or to try to do something special. The way I look at it, that’s all it is, just being able to do something special.â€�

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The First Look: PGA ChampionshipThe First Look: PGA Championship

The PGA Championship heads to Southern Hills Country Club for the first time since 2007. FedExCup leader and world No.1 Scottie Scheffler leads the field as he looks for his second major championship victory of the season. FIELD NOTES: Tiger Woods is set to return to action. Just 14 months after a horrific car accident Woods teed it up at the Masters in April and made the cut. The PGA Championship will mark Woods’ second start of the season. Woods has won the Wanamaker Trophy four times (including the last time the PGA was hosted at Southern Hills) and has finished runner-up three times – as recently as 2019… FedExCup leader Scottie Scheffler will look to win his second major championship title of the year. Scheffler, who won the Masters by three shots, has won four times on TOUR already this season… Brooks Koepka, a two-time PGA Champion, withdrew from the AT&T Byron Nelson but is set to compete at Southern Hills. Koepka has never missed the cut at the PGA in nine starts… Rory McIlroy is looking to keep some major momentum going at Southern Hills. McIlroy shot an 8-under 64 in the final round of the Masters – tied for the lowest final-round score in tournament history… The reigning FedExCup champion, Patrick Cantlay, is looking to win his maiden major championship… 15 PGA Champions are teeing it up… The final spot in the field is reserved for the winner of the AT&T Byron Nelson if he is not otherwise qualified… Bryson DeChambeau is set to return to action. He missed the cut at the Masters in his last start on TOUR as he recovers from injury… Twenty PGA of America club pros earned their way into the event via qualifiers… TOUR winner Talor Gooch is teeing it up in his own backyard. Gooch is from Edmond, Oklahoma – less than 90 minutes from Tulsa. FEDEXCUP: Winner receives 600 FedExCup points. COURSE: Southern Hills Country Club, par 70, 7,556 yards. Southern Hills, an established major championship venue, was not the original host club of the 2022 PGA Championship but was more than ready to welcome some of the world’s best when it was called upon. The redesigned Southern Hills hosted last year’s KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship (won by Alex Cejka who finished at 8 under). Originally a Perry Maxwell layout that opened in the late 1930s, the course was re-worked by Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner in 2018 and re-opened in 2019. They removed trees, added bunkers, restored fairway widths, and removed rough near the edges of greens. There will be only two par fives in use for the PGA Championship, both measuring more than 630 yards. The course is set to play more than 300 yards longer than it did in 2007. All seven of the previous men’s major championships hosted at Southern Hills all came in the serious heat of July or August (in 2007 the temperature reached triple digits every day) but that’s not set to be a factor this year with the PGA taking place in May. Tiger Woods and Raymond Floyd have the Southern Hills Country Club course record. Floyd shot 63 at the 1982 PGA, while Woods matched the score in 2007. STORYLINES: Phil Mickelson will not defend his title, the PGA of America announced. Mickelson, who has won 45 times on TOUR and has four PGA TOUR Champions victories, has not played competitively since stepping away from the game in late February. He is the third PGA Champion not to defend his title in the last 75 years (Tiger Woods, 2008 and Ben Hogan, 1949)… Will this year’s PGA Championship be won by someone looking for their second major title like Scheffler (two top-10’s in a row at the PGA), Jon Rahm, or Justin Thomas (on the five-year anniversary of his first major win)? Or will one of the game’s top golfers break through for his first like Cantlay, Viktor Hovland, or Xander Schauffele?… RBC Heritage winner Jordan Spieth is again looking to capture the career Grand Slam… Collin Morikawa has played only two PGA Championships in his young career, but so far, so good. He won his debut and finished T8 at Kiawah Island… McIlroy is looking to break a major championship drought that spans eight years. He’s a two-time winner of the Wanamaker Trophy… Woods, Adam Scott, and Justin Rose are the trio of golfers who finished inside the top 15 at Southern Hills in 2007 who are returning in 2022… Americans have won the last six PGA Championships. 72-HOLE RECORD: 264, Brooks Koepka (2018 at Bellerive CC) 18-HOLE RECORD: 63, Bruce Crampton (2nd round, 1975 at Firestone CC), Raymond Floyd (1st round, 1982 at Southern Hills), Gary Player (2nd round, 1984 at Shoal Creek), Michael Bradley (1st round, 1993 at Inverness), Vijay Singh (2nd round, 1993 at Inverness), Brad Faxon (4th round, 1995 at Riviera CC), José María Olazábal (3rd round, 2000 at Valhalla), Mark O’Meara (2nd round, 2001 at Atlanta AC), Thomas Bjorn (3rd round, 2005 at Baltusrol), Tiger Woods (2nd round, 2007 at Southern Hills), Steve Stricker (1st round, 2011 at Atlanta AC), Jason Dufner (2nd round, 2013 at Oak Hill), Hiroshi Iwata (2nd round, 2015 at Whistling Straits), Robert Streb (2nd round, 2016 at Baltusrol), Brooks Koepka (2nd round, 2018 at Bellerive; 1st round, 2019 at Bethpage Black), Charl Schwartzel (2nd round, 2018 at Bellerive). LAST TIME: Phil Mickelson became the oldest major winner in TOUR history as well as becoming the first major champion after age 50 when he lifted the Wanamaker Trophy at Kiawah Island. His 45th TOUR title moved him to T8 on the all-time TOUR wins list, and he became just the fourth player to win TOUR events in four different decades. Mickelson came into the 2021 PGA Championship having not notched a top-10 result in 16 TOUR starts and not contending in a major in about four years. Mickelson, who was paired with two-time PGA Championship winner Brooks Koepka for the final round, started with a struggle. He three-putted for bogey on the first hole while Koepka birdied, giving Koepka a one-shot lead. But Koepka made double bogey on No.2 and Mickelson birdied – jumping back ahead again. On the long par-3 5th Koepka landed safely on the green while Mickelson landed in a waste bunker. But Mickelson’s short-game magic returned again – as it so often does – and he pitched in for a birdie. Despite shooting a 1-over 73 in his final round, Mickelson won by two shots and claimed his sixth major title. Koepka and Louis Oosthuzien finished second at 4 under, while Shane Lowry, Harry Higgs, Paul Casey, and 49-year-old Padraig Harrington finished T4. HOW TO FOLLOW Television: Thursday-Friday, 2 p.m.-8 p.m. ET (ESPN). Saturday-Sunday, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. ET (ESPN), 2 p.m.-7 p.m. (CBS) Bonus: Thursday: ESPN+ broadcast 8 a.m.-2 p.m., 8 p.m.-finish. Featured Groups: 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Featured Holes: 9:30 a.m.-8 p.m. Joe Buck/Michael Collins ESPN broadcast 1 p.m.-2 p.m.. Joe Buck/Michael Collins ESPN2 broadcast: 2 p.m.-5 p.m. Friday: ESPN+ broadcast 8 a.m.-2 p.m., 8 p.m.-finish. Featured Holes: 8:15 a.m.-7 p.m. Featured Groups: 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Joe Buck/Michael Collins ESPN broadcast: 1 p.m.-2 p.m. Joe Buck/Michael Collins ESPN2 broadcast: 2 p.m.-5 p.m. Saturday-Sunday: ESPN+ broadcast 8 a.m.-10 a.m. Featured Groups: 8 a.m.-7 p.m. Joe Buck/Michael Collins ESPN broadcast: 9 a.m.-10 a.m. Joe Buck/Michael Collins ESPN+ broadcast: 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Featured Holes: 12 p.m.-7 p.m. Editor’s note: The PGA of America, which owns and operates the PGA Championship, controls all digital streaming and broadcast rights to this event. PGA TOUR LIVE coverage will resume next week at the Charles Schwab Challenge For outside of the U.S., click here for GOLFTV powered by the PGA TOUR

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Jordan Spieth teasing his little sister at the U.S. Open is too cuteJordan Spieth teasing his little sister at the U.S. Open is too cute

ERIN, Wis. – Of all the many reasons to like Jordan Spieth, his relationship with his sister tops them all. Jordan often talks about the influence his litter sister, Ellie, has on his life. Ellie, who Jordan says is the “best thing that ever happened to his family,� was born with a neurological disorder but is alongside her big brother’s side at most tournaments She cheers him on when he wins and admonishes him — always lovingly, of course — when he loses. She walked alongside Jordan during his final practice around ahead of the 2017 U.S. Open, which led to this adorable clip of the two. Classic sibling shenanigans.

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