Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting How to watch Sanderson Farms Championship, Round 1: Tee times, leaderboard, TV times

How to watch Sanderson Farms Championship, Round 1: Tee times, leaderboard, TV times

Round 1 of the Sanderson Farms Championship begins Thursday. Here’s how to follow the action. Tee times Leaderboard HOW TO FOLLOW Television: Thursday-Sunday, 4 p.m.-7 p.m. ET (Golf Channel). PGA TOUR LIVE: Thursday-Friday, 8 a.m.-7 p.m. (Featured Groups). Saturday-Sunday, 9:30 a.m.- 7 p.m. (Featured Groups). Radio: Thursday-Friday, 1 p.m.-7 p.m. Saturday-Sunday, 2 p.m. - 7 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio). FEATURED GROUPS (All times CT) Sebastian Munoz, Ryan Armour, Corey Conners (R1: 12:55 p.m., R2: 8 a.m.) Sergio Garcia, Adam Long, Henrik Stenson (R1: 1:06 p.m., R2: 8:11 a.m.) Scottie Scheffler, Sungjae Im, Keegan Bradley (R1: 8 a.m., R2: 12:55 p.m.) Stewart Cink, Hudson Swafford, Zach Johnson (R1: 8:11 a.m., R2: 1:06 p.m.) MUST READS Power Rankings Expert Picks TOUR Insider: Munoz’ evolution since Sanderson win Zalatoris’ switch that changed his career One qualifier’s incredible survival story Stats: Hispanic players’ growing impact

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Carlos Ortiz shoots 65 to win first PGA TOUR title at Vivint Houston OpenCarlos Ortiz shoots 65 to win first PGA TOUR title at Vivint Houston Open

HOUSTON — Carlos Ortiz held off Dustin Johnson and Hideki Matsuyama by closing with a 5-under 65 to win the Vivint Houston Open on Sunday, becoming the first player from Mexico to win on the PGA TOUR in 42 years. RELATED: Final leaderboard | Old driver helps Koepka finish strong | Winner’s Bag: Carlos Ortiz He earned every bit of it, caught in a tight battle on the back nine with the defending FedExCup winner and Japan’s biggest star. Ortiz delivered the winner with a 6-iron to 8 feet on the par-5 16th. He had to settle for a two-putt birdie, and it held up when Johnson and Matsuyama narrowly missed birdie chances coming in. Ortiz finished in style. Needing two putts to win, the 29-year-old holed a 20-foot birdie putt for a two-shot victory. Ortiz held back tears as he waited for his playing partners to putt. The victory sends him to the Masters Tournament next April. He was there a year ago to watch his brother, Alvaro, who qualified by winning the Latin American Amateur. "It feels awesome," said Ortiz, who grew up in Guadalajara and played at North Texas with Sebastian Munoz of Colombia, the most recent Latin American winner on TOUR. "This is like my second home. There was a bunch of people cheering for me, Latinos and Texans. I’m thankful for all of them." It was the loudest cheer for a winner since March. The Vivint Houston Open was the first domestic PGA TOUR event that allowed spectators, with 2,000 tickets sold daily. They were treated to a good show. The last Mexico-born player to win was Victor Regelado, who captured the Quad Cities Open in 1978. Johnson was making his first start since the U.S. Open after a positive coronavirus test knocked him out of THE CJ CUP @ SHADOW CREEK and ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP @ SHERWOOD. After opening with a 72, Johnson rallied with two rounds of 66 and a closing 65. His one regret would be the 16th hole. Tied for the lead, Johnson fanned a 7-iron for his second shot on the par 5, leaving a tough chip to 18 feet and a birdie putt that grazed the left edge of the cup. Johnson had another birdie putt catch the lip on the next hole. Matsuyama briefly tied for the lead with birdies on the 16th and 17th, making a 15-footer on the 17th just moments before Ortiz made his birdie on the 16th. Ortiz finished at 13-under 267. Sam Burns, the 54-hole leader, had a 72 and Jason Day closed with a 71. Neither was a factor for much of the day. This was about Ortiz holding off two players with plenty of experience winning and tasting it for the first time.

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Jimmy Powell passes away at the age of 85Jimmy Powell passes away at the age of 85

Jimmy Powell played golf in high school and graduated in 1953 from Dallas' Sunset High, the same school that produced major winner Don January. When it came time for Powell to choose a college, he elected to play for North Texas State's powerhouse golf program, the same one January helped win four consecutive NCAA titles from 1949 and 1952. While Powell didn't enjoy the same college or professional golf success as his fellow Bison and Mean Green alum, he did make it to the PGA TOUR and enjoyed a strong career as a PGA club professional before breaking through to win four times on PGA TOUR Champions. Powell, a Dallas native who spent most of his adult life living in California, passed away in La Quinta on January 16 of kidney failure. He was a day short of his 86th birthday. As a senior, Powell was part of a trio that made North Texas a favorite to win another national title in 1957. Alongside Harold Sexton and Dick Whetzle, who both went on to short PGA TOUR careers, North Texas State battled all week for the NCAA Championship at The Broadmoor in Colorado Springs before the team finished third, four shots behind champion Houston. Powell fell short of the Cougars' Ron Baxter in the individual competition. Following college, Powell turned pro and played in his first PGA TOUR tournament, the 1959 U.S. Open. He made his first cut five months later, at the Lafayette Open, where he tied for 23rd. Powell earned conditional TOUR status for 1960, playing in 12 events but only making three cuts. His only full seasons on TOUR came in 1962 and 1963, combining for 43 starts during those two years. He had two top-10s in 1962 but waited until 1968, when he overcame a second-round 76 at the Andy Williams-San Diego Open to post his career-best showing, a sixth-place performance. He finished five shots behind winner Tom Weiskopf. The long-time Riverside, Yorba Linda and La Quinta resident had considerable success playing PGA section events in California while serving as the head pro at Indian Hills Golf Club—a course Powell co-designed with Harold Heers—and Via Verde Country Club. Powell won the Southern California PGA Championship three times, beginning in 1968. That year, he routed Ron Reif, 9 and 8, in the match-play finale. Powell won again two years later, defeating Pinky Stevenson, 2 and 1. He added a third title, in 1975, defeating Denny Meyer, 1-up, coming back over the final 18 holes, a rally that included a 45-foot chip-in and back-to-back birdies that allowed him to pull ahead for good. During the time leading up to his 50th birthday, Powell was the head pro at Stevens Park Golf Course in Dallas. Powell, born January 17, 1935, waited patiently to turn 50, knowing he not only would have access to PGA TOUR Champions for the 1985 season but that he had the game to compete. He appeared in nine tournaments in his rookie season, serving notice of what fellow competitors might expect—with a fourth-place finish at The Greenbrier American Express Championship in West Virginia, his best outing. Powell was a regular Tour presence after that, piling up 127 starts before finally breaking through and winning at the 1990 Southwestern Bell Classic at Oklahoma City's Quail Creek Golf and Country Club. Powell entered the final round tied for sixth, four shots off Terry Dill's leading pace. All Powell did on the final day was shoot a bogey-free, tournament-best, 7-under 65 to cruise past the field and win by three shots. Powell won his second tournament in 1992, and 65s were again a major part of his storyline. After opening with a 5-under 67 at The Vineyards in Naples, Florida, Powell posted a pair of 65s on the weekend to defeat Lee Trevino by four shots. Over his final 37 holes, Powell made 17 birdies. Perhaps Powell's two most impressive wins came after he had turned 60. He won the 1995 First of America Classic, routing Babe Hiskey by five shots. He then showed that winning past age 60 was no fluke when he captured the weather-shortened Brickyard Crossing Championship in Indianapolis at age 61. Powell opened the final round with four birdies on his first six holes and became, at the time, the second-oldest winner in PGA TOUR Champions history, behind only Mike Fetchick (age 63). "At my age, you don't go out expecting to win. But after the fast start, I started thinking I could win this," Powell said to the assembled Indianapolis media after the victory. Powell was always a regular participant in the Legends of Golf, joining forces with long-time friend Orville Moody to win the Legendary Division at PGA West's Stadium Course in 1995. The duo became a formidable pairing, losing the overall Legends of Golf title to Trevino and Mike Hill in 1996 but successfully defending its Legendary Division title. Powell and Moody won one more Legendary Division title, in 1999, defeating three other teams in a playoff. In 2014, the Southern California PGA inducted him into its hall of fame. Powell is survived by his wife, Delores, and the couple's five children, daughters Holly, Sharla, Marla and Leann and son Tommy. He is also survived by 16 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. Because of COVID-19 restrictions, there was no service, and Powell was cremated.

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