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Travelers Championship, Round 2: Leaderboard, tee times, TV times

The PGA TOUR’s Return to Golf continues Friday in Round 2 of the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands. Here’s everything you need to know to follow the action. Round 2 leaderboard Round 2 tee times HOW TO FOLLOW Television: Thursday-Friday, 3 p.m.-6 p.m. ET (Golf Channel). Saturday-Sunday, 1 p.m.-3 p.m. (Golf Channel), 3 p.m.-6 p.m. (CBS). PGA TOUR LIVE: Thursday-Friday 6:45 a.m.-6 p.m. ET (featured groups), Saturday-Sunday 8 a.m.-3 p.m. ET (featured groups). Saturday-Sunday 3 p.m.-6 p.m. ET (featured holes). Radio: Thursday-Friday, 12 p.m.-6 p.m. Saturday-Sunday 1 p.m.-6 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio). FEATURED GROUPS Dustin Johnson, Collin Morikawa, Jordan Spieth Friday: 7:25 a.m. (No. 10) Xander Schauffele, Justin Thomas, Tim Wilkinson Friday: 7:35 a.m. ET (No. 10) Jon Rahm, Chez Reavie, Tyler McCumber Friday: 12:40 p.m. ET (No. 1) Bryson DeChambeau, Rory McIlroy, Phil Mickelson Friday: 12:50 p.m. ET (No. 1) MUST READS Hughes shoots 60, leads the Travelers Championship Mickelson begins golf life after 50 with silky 64 Cut Prediction: Travelers Championship Chase Koepka receives spot in 2021 Travelers Championship Pepperdine’s Theegala rides a wave of momentum onto PGA TOUR Travelers has history of giving future stars big breaks CALL OF THE DAY

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How to watch Wells Fargo Championship, Round 2: Featured Groups, live scores, tee times, TV timesHow to watch Wells Fargo Championship, Round 2: Featured Groups, live scores, tee times, TV times

Round 2 of the Wells Fargo Championship takes place Friday at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm. In recent years, it has been played at Charlotte’s Quail Hollow Club, but that venue is hosting the Presidents Cup in September. Two-time FedExCup winner Rory McIlroy headlines the field as he looks to defend his title from last season. Abraham Ancer returns to both an event (runner-up last season) and golf course (shares the course record) where he has displayed strong form. The winner of the event will pocket 500 FedExCup points. Here’s everything you need to know to follow the action, including Featured Groups for PGA TOUR LIVE and newly expanded and extended coverage on ESPN+. Click here for more details. Leaderboard Full tee times HOW TO FOLLOW Television: Thursday-Friday, 2 p.m.-6 p.m. ET (Golf Channel). Saturday-Sunday, 1 p.m.-3 p.m. (Golf Channel), 3 p.m.-6 p.m. (CBS) Radio: Thursday-Friday, 12 p.m.–6 p.m. ET. Saturday-Sunday, 1 p.m.–6 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio) For outside of the U.S., click here for GOLFTV powered by the PGA TOUR PGA TOUR LIVE PGA TOUR Live is available exclusively on ESPN+ • Main Feed: primary tournament-coverage featuring the best action from across the course • Marquee Group: new “marquee group” showcasing every shot from each player in the group • Featured Groups: traditional PGA TOUR LIVE coverage of two concurrent featured groups • Featured Holes: a combination of par-3s and iconic or pivotal holes FEATURED GROUPS FRIDAY Marquee Group Rickie Fowler, Jason Day, Max Homa Featured Groups Sergio Garcia, Gary Woodland, Luke List Patrick Reed, Paul Casey, Joel Dahmen Featured Holes: No. 3 (par 3), No. 9 (par 3), No. 12 (par 3), No. 17 (par 3) MUST READS Jason Day rides new swing to first-round lead in Wells Fargo Championship ‘I’m just trying to be better’ Marc Leishman: Shank was good, but not his best Rory McIlroy soaks up good D.C. vibes on birthday Tips from Denny McCarthy, arguably the TOUR’s top putter Five Things to Know: TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm

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Dustin Johnson is the champion of championsDustin Johnson is the champion of champions

Dustin Johnson fires a final-round 65, the best of the week, to lap the field at the Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua, moving from 25th to second in the FedExCup. Welcome to the Monday Finish, where we are still struggling to blink as we stare at Johnson’s incredible near albatross in Maui. Here are some observations after Johnson solidified his place at the top of the world with a commanding eight-shot win at the Sentry TOC. FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1. Johnson’s power has always been scary, but scarier still is how he has developed finesse and precision, drilling down on his wedge game and tidying up around the greens. We’re seeing the results. His putting, greatly improved, still comes and goes, but he didn’t have a single three-putt at the Sentry, and his pair of eagles on the 430-yard, par-4 12th on the weekend further illustrate his greatness. The first came with a wedge from 72 yards, the second with a nuked driver that bounded onto the green and stopped just inches from going in. He says he feels unbeatable at his best. He might be right. 2. One of the oft-used superlatives for Johnson has been consistent. At Kapalua, he ran his win streak to 11 seasons with at least one victory since his rookie year in 2008. Only Tiger Woods with 18 victories has won more than Johnson (17) in that time span. But lately the better term for D.J. is dominant. His romp at Kapalua, the biggest blowout on TOUR since Jordan Spieth also won by eight at the 2016 Sentry TOC, was Johnson’s eighth win since the start of 2016. He said before the tournament that he could envision a monster season with seven, eight or even nine victories. Given what happened at the Plantation Course, Johnson could indeed be on the verge of that kind of year.    3. Jon Rahm (69, 16-under) was trying to become the third first-timer, after Daniel Chopra (2008) and Sergio Garcia (2002), to win the Sentry TOC since it moved to Kapalua in ’99. As it was, Rahm’s solo second-place finish marked his fourth runner-up on TOUR (and second to Johnson), further suggesting Rahm is on the fast track to greatness. It took Johnson a few years to learn to harness his talents; might Rahm be on a similar trajectory? If so, who will have the better career, Rahm, 23, who has one win, or Johnson, 33, who has 17? 4. Pat Perez’s T4 finish puts him in pole position in the FedExCup. His performance at the Sentry marked his third top-five finish in five starts this season, and suggests still feels like he’s playing with the house money after surviving 2016 shoulder surgery. “I definitely know my game better,� Perez, 41, said for an upcoming feature on PGATOUR.com. “But the short game has definitely gotten a lot better. I don’t know how many shots I’ve picked up over the last year and a half.� At Kapalua, Perez hit 80 percent of the fairways (T1) and was +1.283 in strokes gained putting, third best. 5. At a career-high 12th in the Official World Golf Ranking, Marc Leishman continues to impress as he builds towards becoming one of the top 10. The Australian led the tournament through the first two rounds only to struggle mightily in round three to a 76. It was an ugly Saturday, particularly on the greens, but to his credit he shot a 6-under 67 on Sunday, one of only two bogey-free rounds on the day (Hideki Matsuyama, 66) to finish T7. Don’t be surprised if Leishman adds a fourth PGA TOUR title soon – the Farmers Insurance Open is one event to pencil for this guy. FIVE INSIGHTS 1. Johnson tied Ernie Els for the most eagles in a career at Kapalua (eight), but missed tying another record. After making his only bogey of the final round at the par-3 11th hole, Johnson’s 430-yard drive at the 12th stopped inches from the cup, leading to a tap-in eagle. Andrew Magee is the only player to ace a par-4 in TOUR history, doing so at the 332-yard 17th hole at the 2001 Waste Management Phoenix Open. 2. Johnson’s statistical line makes for pretty impressive reading. Strokes gained: off the tee: +8.902 (1st); strokes gained: tee to green: +13.989 (1st); strokes gained: approach the green: +2.777 (1st); strokes gained: around the green: +2.310 (4th); strokes gained: putting: +2.894 (6th). In other words, your basic demolition derby. 3. Brian Harman (72, solo third) now has four top-10 finishes in four starts this season. And as if that weren’t reason enough for good cheer, Harman’s alma mater, Georgia, made it to college football’s National Championship game against Alabama. 4. Rickie Fowler (70, T4) finished 10 behind the winner, but he has finished in the top four of both his starts this season, after a runner-up at the OHL Classic at Mayakoba in early November. And his line at the Sentry TOC (T6 in 2013, 5th 2016, T4 2018) also seems to suggest he’s heading in the right direction. 5. Strange but true: In registering yet another top-10 finish, Jordan Spieth (69, -12, solo ninth) put together his worst result at Kaplua. In three previous starts at the Sentry TOC, the 2016 champion hadn’t finished out of the top three.   TOP THREE VIDEOS

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Monday Finish: Collin Morikawa finishes in style at PGA ChampionshipMonday Finish: Collin Morikawa finishes in style at PGA Championship

Like Jordan Spieth in 2015, Collin Morikawa is riding too much confidence, skill and mojo to be bothered by nerves, history and learning curves. Like Justin Thomas, Morikawa has the kind of enviable swing that looks incapable of producing a bad shot. And like Rory McIlroy, Tiger Woods and Jack Nicklaus, Morikawa, 23, joins an elite club of players to capture the PGA Championship before his 24th birthday. His final five holes won’t soon be forgotten. Drawing upon exquisite skill and perfect timing, Morikawa chipped in for birdie on the par-4 14th hole before hitting possibly the shot of the year – a perfect, left-to-right drive that bounded to seven feet for eagle at the par-4 16th – to rise above an impossibly crowded leaderboard. For more on Morikawa’s eagle, click here. Now second in the FedExCup, behind Thomas, Morikawa will be a favorite in the Playoffs and beyond. Welcome to the Monday Finish. THREE KEYS TO SUCCESS 1. Morikawa is comfortable in California. Actually, comfortable is an understatement. While he can win anywhere – the PGA was his third PGA TOUR victory – he has really impressed others on the West Coast, as a lengthy profile on PGATOUR.COM detailed earlier this year. “There are no holes in his game – at all,” said Maverick McNealy, a rival when he was at Stanford and now a friend with whom Morikawa plays and practices at home in Las Vegas. In a way, Walter Chun, Morikawa’s coach at Cal, predicted this back in January. “I think he’ll win at Torrey Pines or Riviera to start the year,” said Chun. “He’s a West Coast kid, he knows poa annua greens, and he’ll be motivated to win. When he wants to accomplish something, he tends to do it.” Chun was not quite right with the timing, but the rest of it looks about right. 2. He has the head of a caddie. Steve Desimone, who recruited Morikawa to Cal, said he never saw Morikawa pull the wrong club. J.J. Jakovac, who worked for Ryan Moore before landing Morikawa’s bag last year, considers Morikawa so golf-smart it’s like he’s another caddie. “It’s unbelievable,” Jakovac said at TPC Harding Park. “It really is. I’m in awe still watching him play. All my caddie friends say the same thing. They’re like, ‘I just cannot get over how mature your guy is.’ He’s like an old soul or something. He’s just plodding along and he just knows what he needs to do. The confidence is a quiet confidence but it’s super confident, you know.” Said runner-up Paul Casey of his first impressions of Morikawa last year: “Instant maturity was probably the one thing that stood out.” 3. He learned to be a player, not just a swing. Morikawa’s first lessons, when he was 5, came at a junior camp at Scholl Canyon in Glendale, California. Rick Sessinghaus, who focused on the mental game, taught the better players there. You could say it was a fruitful partnership. Sessinghaus, who has a doctorate in sports psychology and is the mental performance coach for UCLA’s golf team, recognized Morikawa’s excellent fundamentals but didn’t stop there. Their lessons came to include copious on-course problem-solving. What was the percentage shot? Where was the best miss? How could he play to his strengths? “There’s a lot of great swings out there but not many golfers,” Sessinghaus told PGATOUR.com earlier this year. “He learned to play at a high level. Collin’s been wired that way; I’ve tried to cultivate it, raise his golf I.Q. by putting him in different situations. “He’s going to look at a golf course and create a strategy based on his capabilities. He’s not going to overpower it but can plot his way around based on his strengths.” OBSERVATIONS Casey, Koepka pull reversal The cameras were on Brooks Koepka, not Paul Casey. Just a few shots back as he eyed a potential third straight PGA title, Koepka came in with ample swagger. Alas, Casey (66) thumped Koepka (74) by eight shots, and by the end of their rounds the cameras were on the Englishman, a flip of the script that was more than a little surprising. “Today was just sort of cruise around the golf course and have a great time,” Casey said. “I’ve not played great golf so far this season, so anything was going to be a bonus on where I was a week ago or two weeks ago. So I was just out there kind of having a good time. “But I do think I’m in a sweet spot,” he added. “It’s taken me 43 years to get there, but yeah, pretty chilled out, know what I’m capable of, and enjoying my golf.” As for Koepka, he shrugged and smiled and said he was just there to cheer Casey on. “You know, hey, wasn’t meant to be,” said Koepka, who finished T29 at 3 under par. “Three in a row, you’re not really supposed to do two in a row looking at history, but that’s all right.” DeChambeau, Finau put on show They hit epic tee shots, but they didn’t win. No matter. Bryson DeChambeau was unphased. For one thing, he shot a final-round 66, and for another, his T4 was his best finish in a major. “It’s super validating,” he said. “I don’t know how else to put it. Very excited for the future for me. Look, my driving I think is only going to get stronger and farther, golf-course-dependent, obviously. But I hope in due time there’s going to be an advantage that’s out there that, you know, hopefully – I don’t know how else to put it in a nicer way, but gives me a really distinct advantage that helps me win a lot out here. I feel like my putting is good enough. “I just have to improve the irons and wedges a little bit,” he added. Finau, meanwhile, shot 67 to also finish T4 – another close call for the one-time TOUR winner. “I had so many, so many great looks that I thought I made, and just slid by,” he said. “… I felt like just try and get to double digits as fast as you can, and hopefully from there you have some holes left to make some more birdies. I did that. I got to 10-under, I think after 14, and had four holes in front of me that I felt like if I got a couple, I would have a great chance, and gave myself some looks.” QUOTEBOARD “I didn’t realize how much I actually missed this area.” – Southern Cal product Morikawa, who graduated from Cal-Berkeley, just across the bay from TPC Harding Park “There’s nothing I would change. I’m very, very happy with how I played.” – Paul Casey (66, 11 under, T2) after thumping final-round playing partner Brooks Koepka “You know, I was just there to cheer Paul on.” – Brooks Koepka, who was in contention for a third straight PGA Championship win but shot a final-round 74 (T29) WYNDHAM REWARDS The Wyndham Rewards Top 10 is a season-long competition that offers a $10 million bonus for the 10 golfers who end the regular season at the Wyndham Championship inside the top 10 in FedExCup points. The player atop the standings will earn $2 million, with varying payoffs for the others through $500,000 for the 10th place finisher. Justin Thomas remains at No. 1 with a 556-point lead over new No. 2 Collin Morikawa. With 500 points available to the winner of this week’s Wyndham Championship, that means Thomas has clinched the victory in the Wyndham Rewards Top 10, while the remaining nine places remain up for grabs. This is the last week before the start of the FedExCup Playoffs. Here’s how the standings look heading into this week’s Wyndham Championship: SOCIAL SNAPSHOT

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