Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Xander Schauffele shoots 63 to take 5-shot lead at Travelers

Xander Schauffele shoots 63 to take 5-shot lead at Travelers

CROMWELL, Conn. (AP) — Xander Schauffele shot his second straight 7-under 63 on Friday to take a five-stroke lead in the Travelers Championship. The Olympic champion shot a 31 on the front nine at TPC River Highlands with four birdies, then had a 32 on the back, making birdies on 11, 14 and 17. He has hit 33 of 36 greens in regulation and is the only player in the tournament without a bogey. His closest call came close at the par-3 16th, where he hit his tee shot found the rough behind a greenside bunker. “It plays really interesting with the wind swirling through there,” Schauffele said. “It was my least committed swing of the week and just really happy to get up and down there and save par.” Kevin Kisner (64), Nick Hardy (64), defending champion Harris English (65), Cam Davis (66) and Patrick Cantlay (67) were tied for second at 9 under. First-round leaders Rory McIlroy and J.T. Poston followed opening 62s with 70s to drop six strokes back. Cantlay, who shot a 60 at TPC River Highlands as an amateur in 2011, played in the same morning group as English. “(I’m) still right here in this tournament, and looking forward to the weekend,” Cantlay said. “I enjoy the challenge, and that’s all you can do in golf, is give yourself as many chances as you possibly can.” English, who won on the eighth hole of a playoff last year, is playing in his third tournament since returning in May from Valentine’s Day surgery to repair a torn labrum in his right hip. “The toughest thing is walking and playing,” English said. “I mean, I feel like back home I can go hit a bunch of balls on the range, but up and down these hills and being on your feet for five or six hours is the toughest part. It’s getting better and better, and I feel like the more I play competitive rounds out here, it’s just going to get stronger.” Hardy, starting on the back nine had four consecutive birdies on 16, 17, 18 and 1. He also is coming back from injury after damaging the tendon is his left wrist in April. “I just was in great rhythm,” Hardy said. “That’s kind of been the name of the game for me since I came back. Just being in good rhythm. I think I’m swinging the club well and my mind is in a good spot.” Kisner had some good luck on 15 when his tee shot went right and rolled toward the course’s signature lake before getting hung up on a microphone cable, inches from the water. “Five shots is not insurmountable but I’m a going to need (Schauffele) to slow down a little bit,” Kisner said. Schauffele, played one group ahead of McIlroy, who was still leading by a stroke at 13 under before getting into trouble on the 12th hole. McIlroy hit his tee shot left and out of bounds into the woods, then found the deep rough to the right on his next shot. He put the ball into a green-side bunker from there, then chipped out short of the green and into the rough again, before finishing with a quadruple bogey. He left the hole trailing by three strokes and then found more trouble on the 15th. He went right on his tee shot, finding the high grass, then ran his third shot over the green, down the hill and into the water. He finished that hole with a 6. But he made birdie on 16, finishing with an even-par 70 when his birdie putt lipped out on 18. “I should be closer to the lead,” he said. “Feel like I let a lot of guys into the golf tournament because of it.” The last player to make a quadruple bogey and go on to win a PGA Tour event was Adam Scott at the 2016 Honda Classic. Scott put two shots in the water on the par-3 15th hole. The cut was at 2 under, with 2017 winner Jordan Spieth (1 over) dropping out with Sam Burns (even par), Zach Johnson (4 over) and Jason Day (6 over).

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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+800
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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Requests
Type: Requests - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler (1st) / Daniel Berger (2nd) - Exacta (1st/2nd in order)+40000
Scottie Scheffler / Daniel Berger / Cameron Young - Tricast (1st/2nd/3rd any order)+250000
Tournament Match-Ups - P. Cantlay vs T. Hatton
Type: Tournament Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Patrick Cantlay-135
Tyrrell Hatton+105
Tournament Match-Ups - C. Conners vs R. Henley
Type: Tournament Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Corey Conners-125
Russell Henley-105
Tournament Match-Ups - J. Day vs P. Reed
Type: Tournament Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Patrick Reed-125
Jason Day-105
Tournament Match-Ups - B. DeChambeau vs J. Thomas
Type: Tournament Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau-175
Justin Thomas+135
Tournament Match-Ups - T. Fleetwood vs V. Hovland
Type: Tournament Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Tommy Fleetwood-145
Viktor Hovland+110
Tournament Match-Ups - D. Berger vs S. Im
Type: Tournament Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Daniel Berger-120
Sungjae Im-110
Tournament Match-Ups - B. Koepka vs J. Spieth
Type: Tournament Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Jordan Spieth-130
Brooks Koepka+100
Tournament Match-Ups - M.W. Lee vs W. Clark
Type: Tournament Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Min Woo Lee-130
Wyndham Clark+100
Tournament Match-Ups - S. Lowry vs S. Straka
Type: Tournament Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Shane Lowry-130
Sepp Straka+100
Tournament Match-Ups - A. Bhatia vs M. McNealy
Type: Tournament Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Maverick McNealy-130
Akshay Bhatia+100
Tournament Match-Ups - C. Morikawa vs L. Aberg
Type: Tournament Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Collin Morikawa-150
Ludvig Aberg+115
Tournament Match-Ups - H. Matsuyama vs J. Niemann
Type: Tournament Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Joaquin Niemann-130
Hideki Matsuyama+100
Tournament Match-Ups - J. Rahm vs X. Schauffele
Type: Tournament Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Jon Rahm-130
Xander Schauffele+100
Tournament Match-Ups - R. McIlroy vs S. Scheffler
Type: Tournament Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy-115
Scottie Scheffler-115
Rory McIlroy
Type: Rory McIlroy - Status: OPEN
Winner+450
Top 5 Finish-105
Top 10 Finish-200
Top 20 Finish-450
Top 30 Finish-650
Top 40 Finish-900
1st Round Leader+1400
1st Round Leader & Win+3000
1st Round Top 5 Finish+250
1st Round Top 10 Finish+115
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Scottie Scheffler
Type: Scottie Scheffler - Status: OPEN
Winner+500
Top 5 Finish+100
Top 10 Finish-190
Top 20 Finish-425
Top 30 Finish-600
Top 40 Finish-850
1st Round Leader+1400
1st Round Leader & Win+3000
1st Round Top 5 Finish+250
1st Round Top 10 Finish+115
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Bryson DeChambeau
Type: Bryson DeChambeau - Status: OPEN
Winner+800
Top 5 Finish+175
Top 10 Finish-120
Top 20 Finish-275
Top 30 Finish-375
Top 40 Finish-550
1st Round Leader+2000
1st Round Leader & Win+4500
1st Round Top 5 Finish+325
1st Round Top 10 Finish+150
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Justin Thomas
Type: Justin Thomas - Status: OPEN
Winner+1800
Top 5 Finish+300
Top 10 Finish+140
Top 20 Finish-170
Top 30 Finish-210
Top 40 Finish-320
1st Round Leader+3000
1st Round Leader & Win+8000
1st Round Top 5 Finish+475
1st Round Top 10 Finish+225
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Collin Morikawa
Type: Collin Morikawa - Status: OPEN
Winner+2500
Top 5 Finish+375
Top 10 Finish+170
Top 20 Finish-140
Top 30 Finish-175
Top 40 Finish-250
1st Round Leader+3500
1st Round Leader & Win+12500
1st Round Top 5 Finish+500
1st Round Top 10 Finish+250
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Jon Rahm
Type: Jon Rahm - Status: OPEN
Winner+2000
Top 5 Finish+375
Top 10 Finish+170
Top 20 Finish-140
Top 30 Finish-190
Top 40 Finish-280
1st Round Leader+3500
1st Round Leader & Win+10000
1st Round Top 5 Finish+500
1st Round Top 10 Finish+250
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Xander Schauffele
Type: Xander Schauffele - Status: OPEN
Winner+2200
Top 5 Finish+375
Top 10 Finish+170
Top 20 Finish-140
Top 30 Finish-190
Top 40 Finish-280
1st Round Leader+3500
1st Round Leader & Win+10000
1st Round Top 5 Finish+500
1st Round Top 10 Finish+250
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Ludvig Aberg
Type: Ludvig Aberg - Status: OPEN
Winner+2500
Top 5 Finish+400
Top 10 Finish+190
Top 20 Finish-130
Top 30 Finish-175
Top 40 Finish-250
1st Round Leader+3500
1st Round Leader & Win+12500
1st Round Top 5 Finish+500
1st Round Top 10 Finish+250
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Joaquin Niemann
Type: Joaquin Niemann - Status: OPEN
Winner+3500
Top 5 Finish+500
Top 10 Finish+225
Top 20 Finish+100
Top 30 Finish-130
Top 40 Finish-200
1st Round Leader+4000
1st Round Leader & Win+17500
1st Round Top 5 Finish+600
1st Round Top 10 Finish+275
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Patrick Cantlay
Type: Patrick Cantlay - Status: OPEN
Winner+4000
Top 5 Finish+650
Top 10 Finish+280
Top 20 Finish+120
Top 30 Finish-120
Top 40 Finish-180
1st Round Leader+4500
1st Round Leader & Win+22500
1st Round Top 5 Finish+650
1st Round Top 10 Finish+300
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Hideki Matsuyama
Type: Hideki Matsuyama - Status: OPEN
Winner+4500
Top 5 Finish+650
Top 10 Finish+280
Top 20 Finish+120
Top 30 Finish-120
Top 40 Finish-175
1st Round Leader+5000
1st Round Leader & Win+30000
1st Round Top 5 Finish+750
1st Round Top 10 Finish+325
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Tommy Fleetwood
Type: Tommy Fleetwood - Status: OPEN
Winner+4000
Top 5 Finish+650
Top 10 Finish+280
Top 20 Finish+115
Top 30 Finish-120
Top 40 Finish-180
1st Round Leader+4500
1st Round Leader & Win+22500
1st Round Top 5 Finish+650
1st Round Top 10 Finish+300
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Brooks Koepka
Type: Brooks Koepka - Status: OPEN
Winner+4500
Top 5 Finish+650
Top 10 Finish+280
Top 20 Finish+120
Top 30 Finish+100
Top 40 Finish-150
1st Round Leader+5000
1st Round Leader & Win+30000
1st Round Top 5 Finish+750
1st Round Top 10 Finish+325
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Jordan Spieth
Type: Jordan Spieth - Status: OPEN
Winner+5000
Top 5 Finish+700
Top 10 Finish+325
Top 20 Finish+125
Top 30 Finish+100
Top 40 Finish-150
1st Round Leader+5500
1st Round Leader & Win+35000
1st Round Top 5 Finish+800
1st Round Top 10 Finish+350
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Tyrrell Hatton
Type: Tyrrell Hatton - Status: OPEN
Winner+5000
Top 5 Finish+700
Top 10 Finish+300
Top 20 Finish+125
Top 30 Finish-110
Top 40 Finish-165
1st Round Leader+5500
1st Round Leader & Win+35000
1st Round Top 5 Finish+800
1st Round Top 10 Finish+350
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Sepp Straka
Type: Sepp Straka - Status: OPEN
Winner+4500
Top 5 Finish+800
Top 10 Finish+350
Top 20 Finish+140
Top 30 Finish+100
Top 40 Finish-140
1st Round Leader+5500
1st Round Leader & Win+35000
1st Round Top 5 Finish+800
1st Round Top 10 Finish+350
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Shane Lowry
Type: Shane Lowry - Status: OPEN
Winner+4000
Top 5 Finish+800
Top 10 Finish+350
Top 20 Finish+140
Top 30 Finish-110
Top 40 Finish-165
1st Round Leader+5000
1st Round Leader & Win+30000
1st Round Top 5 Finish+750
1st Round Top 10 Finish+325
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Viktor Hovland
Type: Viktor Hovland - Status: OPEN
Winner+5000
Top 5 Finish+800
Top 10 Finish+350
Top 20 Finish+140
Top 30 Finish-110
Top 40 Finish-165
1st Round Leader+5500
1st Round Leader & Win +40000
1st Round Top 5 Finish+800
1st Round Top 10 Finish+350
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Finishing Position - Bryson DeChambeau
Type: Finishing Position - Status: OPEN
11th or better-125
12th or worse-105
Finishing Position - Justin Thomas
Type: Finishing Position - Status: OPEN
18th or better-125
19th or worse-105
Finishing Position - Xander Schauffele
Type: Finishing Position - Status: OPEN
21st or better-145
22nd or worse+110
Finishing Position - Scottie Scheffler
Type: Finishing Position - Status: OPEN
7th or worse-120
6th or better-110
Finishing Position - Rory McIlroy
Type: Finishing Position - Status: OPEN
6th or better-115
7th or worse-115
Finishing Position - Jon Rahm
Type: Finishing Position - Status: OPEN
21st or better-145
22nd or worse+110
Rory McIlroy - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Rory McIlroy - Status: OPEN
Make-1600
Miss+750
Scottie Scheffler - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Scottie Scheffler - Status: OPEN
Make-1600
Miss+750
Bryson DeChambeau - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Bryson DeChambeau - Status: OPEN
Make-1000
Miss+550
Justin Thomas - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Justin Thomas - Status: OPEN
Make-600
Miss+375
Collin Morikawa - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Collin Morikawa - Status: OPEN
Make-500
Miss+325
Jon Rahm - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Jon Rahm - Status: OPEN
Make-600
Miss+375
Xander Schauffele - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Xander Schauffele - Status: OPEN
Make-600
Miss+375
Ludvig Aberg - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Ludvig Aberg - Status: OPEN
Make -450
Miss+300
Joaquin Niemann - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Joaquin Niemann - Status: OPEN
Make-350
Miss+250
Brooks Koepka - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Brooks Koepka - Status: OPEN
Make-275
Miss+200
Tommy Fleetwood - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Tommy Fleetwood - Status: OPEN
Make-400
Miss+275
Hideki Matsuyama - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Hideki Matsuyama - Status: OPEN
Make-350
Miss+250
Patrick Cantlay - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Patrick Cantlay - Status: OPEN
Make-350
Miss+250
Tyrrell Hatton - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Tyrrell Hatton - Status: OPEN
Make -350
Miss+250
Shane Lowry - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Shane Lowry - Status: OPEN
Make-350
Miss+250
Corey Conners - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Corey Conners - Status: OPEN
Make-300
Miss+220
Patrick Reed - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Patrick Reed - Status: OPEN
Make-275
Miss+200
Viktor Hovland - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Viktor Hovland - Status: OPEN
Make-300
Miss+220
Jordan Spieth - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Jordan Spieth - Status: OPEN
Make-250
Miss+180
Russell Henley - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Russell Henley - Status: OPEN
Make-250
Miss+180
Sepp Straka - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Sepp Straka - Status: OPEN
Make-275
Miss+200
Daniel Berger - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Daniel Berger - Status: OPEN
Make-275
Miss+200
Min Woo Lee - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Min Woo Lee - Status: OPEN
Make-225
Miss+165
Keegan Bradley - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Keegan Bradley - Status: OPEN
Make-225
Miss+165
Tony Finau - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Tony Finau - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Rory McIlroy
Type: Rory McIlroy - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish-105
Top 10 Finish-200
Top 20 Finish-450
Top 30 Finish-650
Top 40 Finish-900
Keith Mitchell - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Keith Mitchell - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Scottie Scheffler
Type: Scottie Scheffler - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+100
Top 10 Finish-190
Top 20 Finish-425
Top 30 Finish-600
Top 40 Finish-850
Sungjae Im - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Sungjae Im - Status: OPEN
Make-225
Miss+165
Bryson DeChambeau
Type: Bryson DeChambeau - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+175
Top 10 Finish-120
Top 20 Finish-275
Top 30 Finish-375
Top 40 Finish-550
Robert MacIntyre - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Robert MacIntyre - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Justin Thomas
Type: Justin Thomas - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+300
Top 10 Finish+140
Top 20 Finish-170
Top 30 Finish-210
Top 40 Finish-320
Davis Thompson - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Davis Thompson - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Collin Morikawa
Type: Collin Morikawa - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+375
Top 10 Finish+170
Top 20 Finish-140
Top 30 Finish-175
Top 40 Finish-250
J J Spaun - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: J J Spaun - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Jon Rahm
Type: Jon Rahm - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+375
Top 10 Finish+170
Top 20 Finish-140
Top 30 Finish-190
Top 40 Finish-280
Sam Burns - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Sam Burns - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Xander Schauffele
Type: Xander Schauffele - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+375
Top 10 Finish+170
Top 20 Finish-140
Top 30 Finish-190
Top 40 Finish-280
Maverick McNealy - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Maverick McNealy - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Ludvig Aberg
Type: Ludvig Aberg - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+400
Top 10 Finish+190
Top 20 Finish-130
Top 30 Finish-175
Top 40 Finish-250
Harris English - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Harris English - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Joaquin Niemann
Type: Joaquin Niemann - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+500
Top 10 Finish+225
Top 20 Finish+100
Top 30 Finish-130
Top 40 Finish-200
Denny McCarthy - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Denny McCarthy - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Brooks Koepka
Type: Brooks Koepka - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+650
Top 10 Finish+280
Top 20 Finish+120
Top 30 Finish+100
Top 40 Finish-150
Si Woo Kim - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Si Woo Kim - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Hideki Matsuyama
Type: Hideki Matsuyama - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+650
Top 10 Finish+280
Top 20 Finish+120
Top 30 Finish-120
Top 40 Finish-175
Akshay Bhatia - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Akshay Bhatia - Status: OPEN
Make-185
Miss+140
Patrick Cantlay
Type: Patrick Cantlay - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+650
Top 10 Finish+280
Top 20 Finish+120
Top 30 Finish-120
Top 40 Finish-180
Byeong Hun An - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Byeong Hun An - Status: OPEN
Make-185
Miss+140
Tommy Fleetwood
Type: Tommy Fleetwood - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+650
Top 10 Finish+280
Top 20 Finish+115
Top 30 Finish-120
Top 40 Finish-180
Mackenzie Hughes - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Mackenzie Hughes - Status: OPEN
Make-185
Miss+140
Jordan Spieth
Type: Jordan Spieth - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+700
Top 10 Finish+325
Top 20 Finish+125
Top 30 Finish+100
Top 40 Finish-150
Will Zalatoris - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Will Zalatoris - Status: OPEN
Make-185
Miss+140
Tyrrell Hatton
Type: Tyrrell Hatton - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+700
Top 10 Finish+300
Top 20 Finish+125
Top 30 Finish-110
Top 40 Finish-165
Wyndham Clark - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Wyndham Clark - Status: OPEN
Make-185
Miss+140
Sepp Straka
Type: Sepp Straka - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+800
Top 10 Finish+350
Top 20 Finish+140
Top 30 Finish+100
Top 40 Finish-140
Justin Rose - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Justin Rose - Status: OPEN
Make-175
Miss+135
Shane Lowry
Type: Shane Lowry - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+800
Top 10 Finish+350
Top 20 Finish+140
Top 30 Finish-110
Top 40 Finish-165
Brian Harman - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Brian Harman - Status: OPEN
Make-175
Miss+135
Viktor Hovland
Type: Viktor Hovland - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+800
Top 10 Finish+350
Top 20 Finish+140
Top 30 Finish-110
Top 40 Finish-165
J.T. Poston - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: J.T. Poston - Status: OPEN
Make-175
Miss+135
Corey Conners
Type: Corey Conners - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1000
Top 10 Finish+425
Top 20 Finish+170
Top 30 Finish+115
Top 40 Finish-130
Adam Scott - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Adam Scott - Status: OPEN
Make-185
Miss+140
Patrick Reed
Type: Patrick Reed - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1200
Top 10 Finish+500
Top 20 Finish+190
Top 30 Finish+130
Top 40 Finish-115
Sergio Garcia - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Sergio Garcia - Status: OPEN
Make-165
Miss+125
Russell Henley
Type: Russell Henley - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1200
Top 10 Finish+500
Top 20 Finish+190
Top 30 Finish+130
Top 40 Finish-120
Rasmus Hojgaard - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Rasmus Hojgaard - Status: OPEN
Make-165
Miss+125
Daniel Berger
Type: Daniel Berger - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1200
Top 10 Finish+550
Top 20 Finish+210
Top 30 Finish+130
Top 40 Finish-115
Thomas Detry - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Thomas Detry - Status: OPEN
Make-150
Miss+110
Jason Day
Type: Jason Day - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1200
Top 10 Finish+550
Top 20 Finish+210
Top 30 Finish+130
Top 40 Finish-110
Ryan Fox - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Ryan Fox - Status: OPEN
Make-150
Miss+110
Sungjae Im
Type: Sungjae Im - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1200
Top 10 Finish+550
Top 20 Finish+210
Top 30 Finish+135
Top 40 Finish-110
Cameron Young - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Cameron Young - Status: OPEN
Make-150
Miss+110
Akshay Bhatia
Type: Akshay Bhatia - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1600
Top 10 Finish+650
Top 20 Finish+250
Top 30 Finish+175
Top 40 Finish+115
Aaron Rai - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Aaron Rai - Status: OPEN
Make-175
Miss+135
Justin Rose
Type: Justin Rose - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1400
Top 10 Finish+550
Top 20 Finish+230
Top 30 Finish+170
Top 40 Finish+110
Dustin Johnson - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Dustin Johnson - Status: OPEN
Make-150
Miss+110
Keith Mitchell
Type: Keith Mitchell - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1800
Top 10 Finish+800
Top 20 Finish+300
Top 30 Finish+160
Top 40 Finish+110
Rickie Fowler - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Rickie Fowler - Status: OPEN
Make-165
Miss+120
Min Woo Lee
Type: Min Woo Lee - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1400
Top 10 Finish+550
Top 20 Finish+230
Top 30 Finish+140
Top 40 Finish-110
Max Homa - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Max Homa - Status: OPEN
Make-150
Miss+110
Wyndham Clark
Type: Wyndham Clark - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1400
Top 10 Finish+550
Top 20 Finish+230
Top 30 Finish+170
Top 40 Finish+110
Cameron Smith
Type: Cameron Smith - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1600
Top 10 Finish+650
Top 20 Finish+250
Top 30 Finish+170
Top 40 Finish+110
Keegan Bradley
Type: Keegan Bradley - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1800
Top 10 Finish+800
Top 20 Finish+300
Top 30 Finish+200
Top 40 Finish+130
Maverick McNealy
Type: Maverick McNealy - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1600
Top 10 Finish+650
Top 20 Finish+250
Top 30 Finish+170
Top 40 Finish+110
Max Homa
Type: Max Homa - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1600
Top 10 Finish+650
Top 20 Finish+250
Top 30 Finish+175
Top 40 Finish+115
Rickie Fowler
Type: Rickie Fowler - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1800
Top 10 Finish+800
Top 20 Finish+300
Top 30 Finish+220
Top 40 Finish+140
AdventHealth Championship
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Kensei Hirata+1800
Mitchell Meissner+2200
SH Kim+2200
Neal Shipley+2500
Seungtaek Lee+2800
Hank Lebioda+3000
Norman Xiong+3000
Adrien Dumont De Chassart+3500
Chandler Blanchet+3500
Pierceson Coody+3500
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Robert MacIntyre
Type: Robert MacIntyre - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1800
Top 10 Finish+800
Top 20 Finish+300
Top 30 Finish+175
Top 40 Finish+115
Sam Burns
Type: Sam Burns - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1800
Top 10 Finish+800
Top 20 Finish+300
Top 30 Finish+170
Top 40 Finish+110
Si Woo Kim
Type: Si Woo Kim - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1800
Top 10 Finish+800
Top 20 Finish+300
Top 30 Finish+175
Top 40 Finish+115
Tony Finau
Type: Tony Finau - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1600
Top 10 Finish+650
Top 20 Finish+250
Top 30 Finish+175
Top 40 Finish+115
Aaron Rai
Type: Aaron Rai - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+2200
Top 10 Finish+900
Top 20 Finish+340
Top 30 Finish+200
Top 40 Finish+130
Andrew Novak
Type: Andrew Novak - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1800
Top 10 Finish+800
Top 20 Finish+300
Top 30 Finish+170
Top 40 Finish+125
Regions Tradition
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Stewart Cink+550
Ernie Els+700
Steve Stricker+800
Steven Alker+800
Miguel Angel Jimenez+1000
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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Stoneman Douglas alum Nicholas Thompson provides support following tragedyStoneman Douglas alum Nicholas Thompson provides support following tragedy

Nicholas Thompson was on daddy duty, playing with his two young children, when the text messages started arriving last Wednesday. Had he heard? Did he know there had been a shooting at his alma mater, Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, that afternoon? Stunned, Thompson turned on the TV. The news video of those terrified teens running out of the buildings with their hands over their heads was haunting. The death toll was staggering. “I was beyond shocked,â€� Thompson recalls. The rest of the afternoon, Thompson and his wife, Christen, who, like her husband, is a 2001 MSD graduate, took turns watching the non-stop TV coverage or playing with the kids. They wanted to shield the oldest, who is 4, from the terrible news. “But pretty much everything that was published online, I read about it,â€� says Thompson, who grew up and lived about 5 miles from the school for nearly three decades. So once the children were asleep that night, Nicholas and Christen  finally were able to process what had happened. And they knew they had to do something. The Honda Classic, which is being played this week at PGA National in West Palm Beach just minutes from their home, offered the perfect opportunity. So the PGA TOUR veteran talked with executive director Ken Kennerly and a plan was hatched. The tournament is providing maroon ribbons for its 1,600 volunteers to wear to show support for the victims. Thompson and his wife bought another 500 — maroon and silver with the letters MSD on them – for the players, caddies and wives. On Thursday, less than 24 hours after the shooting, Thompson also ordered 3,100 maroon rubber bracelets with the words “Eagle Pride #MSD Strongâ€� written in silver. He plans to distribute them at the tournament in exchange for donations to help the victims and their families. Thompson has also set up a GoFundMe page – the Support MSD Shooting Victims’ Fund – that funnels any money raised into the Stoneman Douglas Victims Fund page. The Broward Educational Foundation fund already has raised more than $1.8 million. Stoneman Douglas graduates, like Thompson, nationwide have embarked on similar projects – not just to raise money but also to effect change. There’s even a private Facebook page called Mobilizing MSD Alumni that was created Wednesday after the shootings and already has more than 10,000 members. “There are people doing t-shirts, there are people doing decals for cars, other people doing different types of wristbands,â€� Thompson says. “Everybody’s just trying to help as much as they can. They’re doing a like town hall, things with CNN, a concert, just everything to help not only raise money and funds but to get awareness out of what occurred and how people feel and all of that.â€�  Thompson doubts many of his friends on TOUR know he graduated from Stoneman Douglas. (His sister, Lexi, a nine-time winner on the LPGA Tour, and brother, Curtis, who competes on the Web.com Tour, both were home-schooled.) He actually went to school with one of the shooting victims, football coach Aaron Feis. The 37-year-old Feis, who was one of 17 killed that afternoon, died trying to shield students from the gunman. “I didn’t 100 percent know him, but we had plenty of mutual friends,â€� says Thompson, who was two years behind Feis in high school. “And I knew of him.â€� The building, which housed the freshman class, where the shooting occurred wasn’t there when Thompson attended MSD. But he remembers when it was built, and the other views from campus broadcast nationwide over the past week brought back vivid memories. “I’m not much of a crier, but it was a very, very sad moment,â€� Thompson says. “To see on TV, the pictures of the school that I went through for four years and the area where it occurred was terrible.â€� Thompson now lives about 45 minutes away from Parkland where MSD is located. While he had hoped to be playing in The Honda Classic in his backyard this week – Thompson fell short in Monday qualifying – he has new purpose for the week. “Now I’ll be able to help out more with this,â€� Thompson says. The excitement in his voice is palpable and the sense of purpose strong. Just like all the teenagers at his alma mater who are trying to turn this tragedy into something positive, too.

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TOUR pros: My first time with TigerTOUR pros: My first time with Tiger

One player nearly ran his car off the road upon hearing the news. Another used a single hole’s worth of confidence to kick-start a career. A third was beaten so badly he almost reconsidered turning professional. There have been tears, cheers, roars and, of course, nerves when it comes to PGA TOUR players who are part of the lucky fraternity of having shared on-course time with Tiger Woods. Woods’ first PGA TOUR appearance came at the Riviera Country Club in 1992 as a 16-year-old. Now, 28 years later, he will serve as host for this week’s Genesis Invitational in its new elevated status, putting it in line with the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard and the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide, hosted by Jack Nicklaus. Oh, and should Tiger win this week, he’ll break the tie with Sam Snead and be the solo record holder for most wins with 83 on the PGA TOUR. Woods has played in 360 official TOUR events for those first 82 wins, with 1,292 completed rounds. Add to this further efforts in off-season events like his own Hero World Challenge and team events such as the Presidents Cup, Ryder Cup and World Cup and the count rises. It’s a lot of playing partners – not to mention practice rounds if you’re lucky enough to nab an invite. These days Woods still finds himself meeting new playing partners. And they all have a story to tell afterwards. While we certainly haven’t gone close to uncovering all of the amazing tales, we’ve given it a crack. Here are some of the recollections of TOUR players playing with Woods for the first time. BUBBA WATSON: “It was a practice round at Torrey Pines North Course in 2007. I was on the old No. 10, which is now No. 1, and he was on nine. I had never met him, but I had sent him a funny T-shirt as a Christmas gift, so Teddy [Scott, Watson’s caddie] and I were kind of watching him finish as we walked down the fairway. But he yelled out and asked if he could join us. I looked around, trying to be funny because there’s nobody watching us but there are thousands of people watching him and I’m like, ‘Sure, you can join us.’ So he just picks his ball up, comes under the rope and drops it right there in the fairway with me. “We played that nine holes and it was the thrill of a lifetime for me. I mean I graduated high school when he won the Masters. It seemed unreal. After we got done, he said, ‘Hey, you want to go to dinner this week?â€� I stumbled out a ‘Yeah, man, I’d love to’ and he says, ‘OK, you got my number?’ I was like, ‘How do I have your number? Where do you think I got your number from?’ He laughed and gave me his number and a couple of days later, we went to a dinner in town. He ended up winning that week so I joke with him still that I probably inspired him.â€� RORY McILROY: “I played with him at his tournament at Sherwood back in 2010. I’ve never said ‘good shot” as much in my life playing with anyone as I did that day. It was just ‘good shot, good shot, good shot.’ He was consistently hitting great shots the entire day and shot 6 under. I felt pretty nervous the first few holes, but then I settled in and sort of did my thing, was playing OK. Afterwards, inevitably you compare yourself to him and what you’ve just seen. I was thinking definitely he’s better than me there and I can definitely hang with him there and I need to do better with this.â€� ADAM SCOTT: “I had just decided to turn pro in 2000 and got Butch Harmon’s blessing to do that because he was coaching me, and of course Tiger, at the time. We talked about it and he felt strongly that I should go and play in Europe first and gain some experience. A week or so before the U.S. Open, I was in Las Vegas and Tiger was stopping in on the Sunday before heading to Pebble Beach. Butch said to me on Saturday, ‘Tiger is coming in and if he goes and plays, you can play with him.’ So I was nervous, of course. “We went out and played and we had a match, and I was maybe 1-down through the turn at Rio Secco, and then Tiger stepped it up and went birdie, birdie, birdie and had an eagle. He closed me out on the 14th and shot 63 – with a double bogey at the ninth. I was a bit blown away by what I saw. It was quite windy and I thought I played quite well. I probably shot even par and I was nine off the pace. I made a throwaway comment to Butch, something like, ‘Maybe I should reconsider turning pro.’ The only thing that made me feel good was he won the U.S. Open by 15 the next week, so I was quite happy to see that no one else really played like that.â€� MARC LEISHMAN and BRANDT SNEDEKER Their first time playing with Woods happened in the same threesome during the FedExCup Playoffs. LEISHMAN: “Incredibly, Sneds and I got him for the first time at the 2009 BMW Championship in the FedExCup Playoffs in the final group. But unlike Sneds I wasn’t in the final group until the next morning. Weather came through and they changed to threesomes, so I didn’t have to sleep on it, I was just thrown into it – which was probably better. He had a big lead but and on the first tee, I was so nervous I was going to hit driver even though it was too much club. I just wanted to be certain I got the ball in the air. But I calmed down enough to hit a good 3-wood.â€� SNEDEKER: “Everybody says they want to play Tiger at his best and then you have it and you’re like, ‘Well, do I really want him in the last group on Sunday for the first time playing with him like we did?’ It definitely made for a little bit of a sleepless night. These young guys don’t really understand. That Tiger had a different effect back then. He really did have an intimidation factor and he was two shots ahead before you stepped on the tee, he was that dominant. On that day he started seven clear of us, so you kind of knew beforehand how it might play out but seeing him up-close and getting a real look at how he went about playing with a lead and playing smart. … Unfortunately I had a four putt on the last hole, which meant I missed the TOUR Championship. I was trying to kind of get out of his way and I hit a few putts really quickly and that actually taught me a really valuable lesson. After the round, Tiger was like ‘What were you doing?’ and I told him, ‘I felt I was going to be in your way and you’re going to win.’ He was like ‘Man, I’m going to win by seven shots. You weren’t in my way, don’t worry about that sort of thing.’ Like I said, I learned a lot.â€� JORDAN SPIETH: “We had a little 12-hole match, Tiger and Kuch [Matt Kuchar] versus Steve Stricker and I the practice day before the 2013 Presidents Cup. We started on No. 7, and on our [par-3] sixth hole, Tiger hit an 8‑iron and it looked like he went after it, so I went ahead and hit kind of a smooth 7. It was 173 into a little breeze, played 175, 176, and started at the flag and never really left it … and all of a sudden, it dropped. Everybody’s hands went up, so our arms went up, and it was really cool; a cool environment that we had that many people around. We were all just giving each other high‑fives and the next hole we were talking about how many [aces] each other had and I realized it was a lot humbling because they all have a lot more than I do.â€� MATT KUCHAR: “It was the 1998 Masters where he was a defending champion and I was the U.S. Amateur champ. The walk from the practice putting green to the first tee used to be longer back then – a good 20-30 yards through kind of what felt like a tunnel of people that you walked down before you made the right-hand turn on to the tee box. Tiger had walked out ahead of me and I heard this huge roar… and I thought, ‘Wow, I’ve got to follow that up?’ But I remember being so excited to get a chance to play with him and also so nervous. “It’s funny the little things you remember but one vivid part is the pin was back on one and he hit this massive drive over the bunker, had pitching wedge in and hit it over the green. I looked at my dad who was my caddie and I said, ‘I can’t believe he hit it there — even I know that you can’t go long to a back pin and it’s my first Masters.’ But then he hits this most remarkable chip shot, a kind of quarter-swing chip that he somehow put tons of spin on the ball and gets it like 6 inches away. It just blew my mind. That shot would be impossible for me and he made it look easy.â€� JON RAHM: “My first time was the [2018] Ryder Cup singles. He just won at East Lake; he’s 0-3, I was 0-2. I’m like, he really wants to win this for sure, and I’m not playing my best. I went to bed that night, woke up, and all the way from the hotel to the golf course I was talking to a mental coach of what I wanted to do … I kind of went with the mindset of I’m going to have to beat this guy at his own game. I’m not a person known for not making mistakes, but I’m going to have to play as flawless as I can and it’s what I set my mind to. Then on the last putt right before I hit it, somebody in Spanish yelled, ‘Do it for Seve,’ at the top of his lungs. Knowing how much Seve means to me, having the 5-footer to beat Tiger Woods, earning the first full point for the Europeans when it was looking kind of dark, there was a lot going on in my mind. “When I turned around, I had to apologize because I didn’t see he was coming to me and he came to me with a smile. He said, “Man, don’t even worry, you played great.’ I started crying in front of Tiger… it was such an emotional moment. I saw him win a great deal of events, grew up with a dream of someday beating him, and to do it on the Sunday of a Ryder Cup — it was extremely special. There’s not many things that are going to be better than that in golf for me.â€� KEVIN NA (THE PLAYERS Championship 2019): “The third round at last year’s PLAYERS is one I’ll never forget. Ever since I was 10 years old I’ve had a habit of walking after putts and pulling the ball out of the hole quickly but when I did it with Tiger it went to another level. On the famous island par-3 17th I hit a great putt and it started right online and I took a big stride and I got it really quick. My hand went right in as soon as the ball went in. I have always done it so it wasn’t a big deal and I kind of looked over and he was just cracking up. And then he did it also. I said oh my god I can’t believe the goat just did that. It surprised me. I never in a million years would have thought he would imitate me and do that. But when the Big Cat does it, it really goes viral. We had a lot of fun, we laughed about it and ever since then on social media I get tagged every time somebody walks in a putt. I’ve been enjoying it.â€�  QUICK BITES, PART 1 ZACH JOHNSON: “It was so long ago I can’t even remember specifically. We competed a little against each other as amateurs, but that was very brief. And then he got on TOUR in 1996 and my rookie year was not until 2004. Our roads were slightly different. He was on an interstate and I was on a gravel road for seven years.â€� SCOTT STALLINGS (2013 Memorial, third round): “I thought he was big-timing me on the first green. I had 2 feet, he had 3. He said, ‘You should putt.’ I’m like, ‘You’re out. What do you mean?’ He said, ‘OK.’ He putted and sure enough (the crowd starts running).â€� BRONSON BURGOON (2018 Quicken Loans National, final round): “He hit a driving iron on the 11th hole… it was probably the best shot I’ve ever seen in my entire life. I’ll never forget it. He had the honor so I was able to hit after that. I put my tee down behind his divot, and it was the most perfect dollar-ball divot I’ve ever seen in my life.â€� XANDER SCHAUFFELE (2019 Farmers Insurance Open): “These days I do like to make fun of him for being old and stiff and stuff like that, and I think I might have tried that a little on that first day, but he shut me up pretty quick.â€� SCOTT PIERCY (2013 Masters, first two rounds): “That was the year of the infamous drop and subsequent penalty and I remember it didn’t look like he did anything wrong from where I was, so I showed up the next day and had no idea that anything had even happened. It was pretty awesome to see how he went around Augusta and getting to listen to him talk to his caddie, saying things like ‘This always feels into the wind, but it plays down,’ lots of stuff like that.â€� BRENDAN STEELE: “It was Sunday after my first made cut on TOUR at Torrey Pines in 2011… so it was certainly a trial by fire. I was doing the quick counting Saturday to figure it out and was obviously super nervous but also super excited when it became official. I don’t remember how I slept. It probably wasn’t awesome and I definitely had nerves off the first tee and nerves for a lot of the day. Tons of friends and family came out to watch and deal with the madness that is the galleries. To get to play with him at all and then have it at a course like Torrey where he’s had so much success, it was pretty surreal. “He was really nice and really cool so it made it a lot more comfortable because I didn’t know what I was supposed to do. Am I supposed to talk to him? Or leave him alone and just stay out of his way? He came over and talked to me on the second or third hole — and it relaxed me for sure. It helped me play a great round and I moved up to 17th place. I had missed the first two cuts in my rookie year so it was a nice finish and gave me a huge confidence boost.â€� SCOTT BROWN: “It was the final round of the Wyndham Championship in 2015 and I made a hole-in-one on the third hole. I live close so had my whole family out there. Everyone was excited before the round knowing the pairing and I was a little nervous but excited to play with my idol. I remember the ace was an 8-iron from 162 yards and any time you make a one, it’s such a bonus. But being with Tiger, it was obviously electric. I high-fived his left hand and he kind of made a dunk motion with his other hand and then he said that it’s the only one he’s ever had to write on a card that wasn’t for himself. So I’ll take his word for it.â€� JACK’S FIRST MEETING WITH TIGER The Golden Bear discusses the first time he met Tiger Woods. NICKLAUS: “I think Tiger was about 13 years old when I first met him. He was at Bel Air Country Club in Los Angeles and I was doing a clinic and they brought this young guy out to hit a couple shots. And I saw this tall slender kid whack a couple shots out there and he had a pretty darn good record already. And they said this guy’s gonna be a really good player, I say ‘OK, let’s just see what happens.’ Well, we’ve seen what happened, he’s done pretty well.â€� WEBB SIMPSON: “Mine was a little unique as he withdrew after 11 holes with an Achilles injury at the WGC in Doral in 2012. It was a bit weird because it went from one extreme to the other, from playing with all the people to playing with no people. I‘d already played in some big pairings, having won twice the year before, but still that was something new that I hadn’t experienced and I was more nervous than I thought I’d be. I remember I had heard that he likes to get to the tee last because that way whoever’s on the team is going to feel his presence. So I putted until the last minute until I knew that he was gone and as soon as he left, I picked up my ball and I walked after him. In the end, he was great to play with.â€� CAMERON PERCY: “The one and only time for me was the 2009 Australian Masters, final round. After the third round, I got in my car and was driving out of Kingston Heath with the golf on the radio and someone missed a putt on 18 and with that, I hear, ‘That means Cameron Percy is playing with Tiger Woods tomorrow’ and I just about ran off the road. My phone then went crazy for the next 10 minutes and when I got home, my wife was there and she’s like, ‘Well done. Who are you playing with tomorrow?’ I deadpanned to her: ‘Oh you know, just Tiger Woods.’ Her mum was there and she just about had a breakdown.â€� RUSSELL KNOX: “Great memory for me in 2018 at The Open. People were texting me all of a sudden – ding, ding, ding, ding – my phone just went nuts and sure enough I was paired with Tiger, in an Open Championship at Carnoustie. I couldn’t believe it. I was sitting there thinking really … really? Tiger teed off before I did on the first tee and obviously he’s the best, the legend, and he gets this massive roar. Then being a Scot, I go next and my roar was as big, if not bigger, so I had like goosebumps as I was walking to my shot. I was just so happy I was able to get the ball on the tee because my head was shaking and I just like skanked some 4-iron down the fairway and away we went.â€� ROD PAMPLING: “It was 1999 before The Open Championship at Carnoustie and [caddie] Steve Williams helped schedule a practice round for 6 a.m. with Stuart Appleby and me. It was my first major so I was excited but it was pissing down with rain and I’m there with my caddie, thinking Tiger is not going to show. But sure enough he did and we went straight to the tee. Tiger was saying that we will be ahead of the field by practicing in the shocking conditions as no one else would play in it. I had a mind to believe him after it worked for me in the first round. [Pampling led after being the only player to shoot even par in high winds during the first round with the field average being 78.31 but shot 86 in the second round to miss the cut]. Some of the shots you saw from him just seemed from another planet.â€� KEEGAN BRADLEY: “It was at [TPC] Sawgrass and it was like playing with Michael Jordan. … I sent the text message that we get from the TOUR with tee times to my buddies in a group chat and they were freaking out. They were more excited than I was. Playing at Sawgrass also – I’d never seen an atmosphere like that. And we were well back from the lead. But to just see the atmosphere he plays in, it’s like a Sunday in contention for everyone else … he has that every single day.â€� JOEL DAHMEN: “It was a wild time. Earlier in the season at Wells Fargo, I was staying with Brandon Harkins and the Saturday night, we were sitting together watching people finish knowing it’s either me or him who gets to play with Tiger on Sunday. Now we are best friends, but it looked like I was playing with Tiger for an hour and all of a sudden something happened where it flipped to Brandon and I was really disappointed. I was happy for him but you always want a chance to play with the greatest of all time. “So when I got the call on Friday night in his event in D.C. saying it was him, well, I was at dinner with my wife and my mouth kind of drops and I was super-excited. Then the nerves really took over. I went to sleep OK, but I woke up at like two or three and then it was one of those nights where you toss and turn for four or five hours. We had a later tee time so you could sleep in, but I was wide awake at 6 o’clock. I’ve played with a lot of top guys, but there’s a different atmosphere with Tiger. Even just when he’s in the field and you don’t even see him you can feel it. He has an aura about him. He went first on the first tee and it really went nuts and I remember running to get my tee in the ground as fast as I could because I didn’t want anybody watching me tee the ball up.â€� JASON DAY: “I grew up reading his book and idolizing Tiger so for my first time to be an Australian Open in my early 20s was like it wasn’t real. I’d watched him on television for so long that when that day came it was almost like he was just a character. … The one memory I have of his game was seeing his famous stinger shot for the first time in person. It was at the par-5 eighth at the Lakes and he had like 300 yards into a 20-yard wind and he hit this low bullet, 3-wood to about 20 feet. I was hitting driver off the deck about 20 yards short. His shot came out like 10 feet off the ground and was just hunting the whole way. I could only shake my head. It was so cool. It was like seeing his video game in real life.â€� HIDEKI MATSUYAMA: “It was in Akron and I was nervous and I was thinking, ‘Why did they pair me with Tiger? It was my first year on TOUR, I was 21 and I was just thinking, ‘Wow, how did this happen?’ But being able to watch Tiger play up close was beyond all my expectations. I was a spectator those two rounds as he shot 66-61 and led the tournament by seven shots at halfway but I still hadn’t secured my TOUR card for the next season so I was grinding. Because of that, I didn’t realize what a treat it was to be able to play with Tiger and maybe didn’t take it all in. But what it did do was show me how much work I still had left to do and, to be honest, left me a little worried wondering if I could really play that well. It made me continue to work hard and thankfully I was able to get my card.â€� RHEIN GIBSON: “It was the 2014 British Open and I was the last guy to make the cut. I had to birdie 18 at Liverpool from about 12 feet to make it and at the time figured it was to be first out Saturday with Jordan Spieth. But then, for the first time in the history of the British Open, they decided to do threesomes off two tees, so instead of being the first out at 7 a.m., now I’m last out with Spieth and Tiger off the 10th. I didn’t get my tee time until like 10 or 10:30 at night. “It was weird because I had a bunch of family and friends come out because it was my first major and we were already happy to have made the cut and then it goes up a notch when I get thrown to the wolves with Tiger. Everyone was excited but all of a sudden it was after midnight and I was like, I got to go to bed! “Next morning Spieth and I are just in a normal bus to get out to the 10th tee and we are joking, ‘Where’s Tiger?’ and all of a sudden this black Mercedes backs up to the tee and he and Joe [LaCava, caddie] get out with his clubs. It was all so cool but then I lost my first tee shot into a gorse bush so I had to hit two off the first tee. We had a couple of jokes about that – I said as we walked off the tee, ‘Hey Tiger, I get two off the first [a mulligan] against you, right?’ He smiled and we had some good banter for the rest of the round.â€� QUICK BITES, PART 2 SATOSHI KODAIRA (2019 ZOZO Championship, first round): “I was nervous but when Tiger started with three consecutive bogeys, that helped me relax. What I could see was Tiger played with the same rhythm from start to finish and that really impressed me and is something I have tried to learn from. He turned around a bad start and stayed strong — and of course eventually won the tournament.â€� BUD CAULEY (2018 Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard): “I remember the crowd on the first being so big but it was funny as it almost relaxed me. I remember thinking even if I hit it crooked, it’s not going to go too far offline because it would hit someone first. Luckily it didn’t have to bounce it off someone and I put it in the fairway.â€� AARON BADDELEY (2000 Masters, first two rounds): “I was an amateur and the clearest memory was on the first hole after I hit it in the fairway bunker, hit it from there into a greenside bunker and made bogey. We walked off the green and Tiger walks next to me and he says, ‘I know you made bogey, but it’s a much better bogey than my first bogey here. I putted it off the green my first hole at the Masters, so I’d say you’re OK.’ That was funny and loosened me up a bit for sure.â€� AARON WISE (2019 WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play): “It was match play so we didn’t talk much. I don’t talk much myself in general but he put me to shame that day [3 and 1]. He doesn’t care to talk to you [when it’s a match]. He just wants to go about his business and kick your butt and you can’t blame him for that.â€� ABRAHAM ANCER (2019 WGC-Mexico Championship, first round): “That was by far the most nervous I had been on a first hole to that point. I played half-decent, which was good considering I couldn’t even feel my hands on some shots.â€� GREG CHALMERS (Eisenhower Trophy at Le Golf National, Paris): “I was 19 and I think he was 16 or 17. I had heard of him but had no idea what I was in for. Tiger was definitely a little wild off the tee that day but when he got everything right it was like nothing I had ever seen; I honestly didn’t think it was possible to hit shots that good. The strike and the sound were just brilliant and he was just a teenager. I wish I had bet on him winning a huge bunch of tournaments back then!â€� PAT PEREZ: “I had known Tiger for a long time before we actually played together. There had been hype around him since we were eight and playing junior golf around San Diego, but I didn’t actually play with him until 1996 in college. We played 36 holes in a two-ball and while I can’t remember a lot of the specifics, I know we had a lot of fun.â€� JOHN SENDEN (2007 Farmers Insurance Open, first two rounds): “When I saw him on the first tee, I remember feeling like he just looks like the guy to beat. He was so calm and confident and of course looked like exactly what he was – the best player in the world. We started on the North Course and I shot 64 to beat his 66 on the first day so it was a nice small claim to fame that afternoon at least. Then he beat me by three on the South in the second round and went on to shoot 69-66 on the weekend to win the tournament.â€� RYAN PALMER (2005 PLAYERS Championship, first two rounds): “TPC Sawgrass when Tiger was in his prime… the arena was unbelievable. You’re going through crowds of at least three or four deep between every hole and all you can hear is Tiger, Tiger, Tiger. I think I heard someone say go Ryan once, which made me smile.â€� VAUGHN TAYLOR (2005 Sentry Tournament of Champions final round): “It was 15 years ago in Maui. I was really excited about it and then that night and late morning we got a lot of rain and had a delay so that anticipation was made even longer. You are kind of watching the clock and counting down the minutes. I was surprised at how talkative he was.â€� CHARLES HOWELL III: “I played against him in the [1996] U.S. Amateur quarterfinals when he was on his way to a three-peat at Pumpkin Ridge. He was 20, I was 17 and I just remember he wasn’t even as big around as his 43-inch steel-shafted driver, but he was hitting it miles and I just had never seen a guy hit it that high, that far and that straight. It was just incredible. It was definitely eye-opening. I’d never seen golf played that way and it was impressive. I had a decent chance to win, but I lost 2 and 1. I was hard-headed enough at the time to think I should have beaten him but I learned quickly.â€� JIMMY WALKER: “The first time was just one hole before the 2001 [AT&T] Byron Nelson in a practice round. He was cutting around and I had Monday qualified, I think, as an amateur. But he cut over and played one hole with me, a par 3, and I was so nervous hitting my shot in front of him. I was like, don’t shank it, don’t do this, don’t do that … I had a serious case of the don’ts. He hit first to like 12 feet and I get in there and I’m like, don’t, don’t, don’t, don’t … but I ended up hitting it like 8 feet and I was like, ‘Wow, maybe I really can play golf.’ It was a huge confidence booster going forward. I mean that’s the most nervous I’d ever been to that point and still to this day is the most nervewracking shot I’ve ever hit in my life.â€� ZAC BLAIR: “It was at the Memorial in 2015 when Jason Day missed a 6-footer on the last hole Friday to miss the cut. While the local fans were sad to see him go, that put me with Tiger so I was pretty happy. … Everybody was calling me and texting me. We were playing second off in the morning and I mean it was packed, everybody was out there. It was a cool experience. I was really excited but not expecting too much conversation because I was just a rookie on TOUR and he’s Tiger. But he was awesome the entire round, even though he had a really tough day and battled it out for an 85. I didn’t think I could like somebody more than I liked him. Yet after I played with him, I liked him 10 times as much. I obviously wished he would have played better, but at the same time it was so cool to beat him.â€�

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