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pga golf tour 2023 schedule

2022-23 PGA Tour Schedule: Complete Dates, Winners, Purses

  • Author: SI Golf staff

Here is the complete schedule for the 2022-23 PGA Tour season, including every major championship and the season-ending FedEx Cup playoffs in August.

We'll update this article after every tournament with the winner of each event and the total prize money won.

Here's when each of the majors will be played in 2023:

2023 majors schedule

  • The Masters : Week of April 3-9 at Augusta National, Augusta, Georgia
  • The PGA Championship : Week of May 15-21 at Oak Hill Country Club, Rochester, New York
  • The U.S. Open : Week of June 12-18 at Los Angeles Country Club (North Course), Los Angeles, California
  • The British Open : Week of July 17-23 at Royal Liverpool, Hoylake, England

Here is the schedule, which features 45 events from September 2022 through August 2023.

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The 2022-23 PGA Tour Schedule: Complete dates, winners and prize money

Date, Tournament, Course(s), Location, Champion and Purse

Sept. 12-18: Fortinet Championship, Silverado Resort and Spa (North Course), Napa, California.

Winner: Max Homa, $1,440,000 from purse of $8 million

Sept. 19-25: Presidents Cup, Quail Hollow Club, Charlotte, North Carolina

Winner: U.S., 17.5-12.5

Sept. 26- Oct. 2: Sanderson Farms Championship, The Country Club of Jackson, Jackson, Mississippi

Winner: Mackenzie Hughes, $1,422,000 from a purse of $7.9 million

Oct. 3-9: Shriners Children's Open TPC Summerlin, Las Vegas, Nevada

Winner: Tom Kim, $1,440,000 from a purse of $8 million

Oct. 10-16: Zozo Championship, Narashino Country Club, Chiba Prefecture, Japan

Winner: Keegan Bradley, $1,980,000 from a purse of $11 million

Oct. 17-23: The CJ Cup in South Carolina, Congaree Golf Club, Ridgeland, South Carolina

Winner: Rory McIlroy, $1,890,000 from a purse of $10.5 million

Oct. 24-30: Butterfield Bermuda Championship, Port Royal Golf Course, Southampton, Bermuda

Winner: Seamus Power, $1,170,000 from a purse of $6.5 million

Oct. 31-Nov. 6: World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba, El Camaleón Golf Course at Mayakoba, Riviera Maya, Mexico

Winner: Russell Henley, $1,476,000 from a purse of $8.2 million

Nov. 7-13: Cadence Bank Houston Open, Memorial Park Golf Course, Houston, Texas

Winner: Tony Finau, $1,512,000 from a purse of $8.4 million

Nov. 14-20: The RSM Classic, Sea Island Golf Club (Seaside Course, Plantation Course), St. Simons Island, Georgia

Winner: Adam Svensson, $1,458,000 from a purse of $8.1 million

Nov. 28-Dec. 4: Hero World Challenge, Albany, Bahamas.

Winner: Viktor Hovland, $1 million from a purse of $3.5 million

Dec. 5-11: QBE Shootout at Tiburon Golf Club at The Ritz-Carlton Golf Resort, Naples, Florida

Winners: Tom Hoge and Sahith Theegala, sharing $950,000 from a purse of $3.6 million

Jan. 2-8: Sentry Tournament of Champions, Kapalua Resort (The Plantation Course), Kapalua, Maui, Hawaii

Winner: Jon Rahm, $2.7 million from a purse of $15 million

Jan. 9-15: Sony Open in Hawaii, Waialae Country Club, Honolulu, Hawaii

Winner: Si Woo Kim, $1,422,000 from a purse of $7.9 million

Jan. 16-22: The American Express, PGA West (Stadium Course, Nicklaus Tournament Course), La Quinta Country Club, La Quinta, California

Winner: Jon Rahm, $1.44 million from a purse of $8 million

Jan. 23-29: Farmers Insurance Open (Saturday finish), Torrey Pines Golf Course (South Course, North Course), San Diego, California

Winner: Max Homa, $1.566 million from a purse of $8.7 million

Jan. 30-Feb. 5: AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, Pebble Beach Golf Links, Spyglass Hill Golf Course, Monterey Peninsula Country Club (Shore Course), Pebble Beach, California

Winner: Justin Rose, $1.62 million from a purse of $9 million

Feb. 6-12: Waste Management Phoenix Open, TPC Scottsdale (Stadium Course), Scottsdale, Arizona

Winner: Scottie Scheffler, $3.6 million from a purse of $20 million

Feb. 13-19: The Genesis Invitational, The Riviera Country Club, Pacific Palisades, California

Winner: Jon Rahm, $3.6 million from a purse of $20 million

Feb. 20-26: The Honda Classic, PGA National Resort and Spa (The Champion), Palm Beach Gardens, Florida

Winner: Chris Kirk, $1.512 million from a purse of $8.4 million

Feb. 27-March 5: Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, Arnold Palmer's Bay Hill Club and Lodge, Orlando, Florida

Winner: Kurt Kitayama, $3.6 million from a purse of $20 million

Feb. 27-March 5: Puerto Rico Open, Grand Reserve Country Club, Rio Grande, Puerto Rico

Winner: Nico Echavarria, $684,000 from a purse of $3.8 million

March 6-12: The Players Championship, TPC Sawgrass (The Players Stadium Course), Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida

Winner: Scottie Scheffler, $4,500,000 from a purse of $25 million

March 13-19: Valspar Championship, Innisbrook Resort (Copperhead Course), Palm Harbor, Florida

Winner: Taylor Moore, $1,458,000 from a purse of $8.1 million

March 20-26: World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play, Austin Country Club, Austin, Texas

Winner: Sam Burns, $3,500,000 from a purse of $20 million

March 20-26: Corales Puntacana Championship, Puntacana Resort and Club (Corales Golf Course), Punta Cana, Dominican Republic

Winner: Matt Wallace, $684,000 from a purse of $3.8 million

March 27-April 2: Valero Texas Open, TPC San Antonio (The Oaks Course), San Antonio, Texas

Winner: Corey Conners, $1,602,000 from a purse of $8.9 million

April 3-9: Masters Tournament, Augusta National Golf Club, Augusta, Georgia

Winner: Jon Rahm, $3,240,000 from a purse of $18 million

April 10-16: RBC Heritage, Harbour Town Golf Links, Hilton Head Island, South Carolina

Winner: Matt Fitzpatrick, $3,600,000 from a purse of $20 million

April 17-23: Zurich Classic of New Orleans, TPC Louisiana, Avondale, Louisiana

Winners: Nick Hardy and Davis Riley share $2,485,400 from a purse of $8.6 million

April 24-30: Mexico Open, Vidanta Vallarta, Vallarta, Mexico

Winner: Tony Finau, $1,386,000 from a purse of $7.7 million

May 1-7: Quail Hollow Club, Charlotte, North Carolina

Winner: Wyndham Clark, $3,600,000 from a purse of $20 million

May 8-14: AT&T Byron Nelson, TPC Craig Ranch, McKinney, Texas

Winner: Jason Day, $1,710,000 from a purse of $9.5 million

May 15-21: PGA Championship, Oak Hill Country Club, Rochester, New York

Winner: Brooks Koepka, $3,150,000 from a purse of $17.5 million

May 22-28: Charles Schwab Challenge, Colonial Country Club, Fort Worth, Texas

Winner: Emiliano Grillo, $1,566,000 from a purse of $8.7 million

May 29-June 4: the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday, Muirfield Village Golf Club, Dublin, Ohio

Winner: Viktor Hovland, $3,600,000 from a purse of $20 million

June 5-11: RBC Canadian Open, Oakdale Golf and Country Club, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Winner: Nick Taylor, $1,620,000 from a purse of $9 million

June 13-19: U.S. Open, Los Angeles Country Club (North Course), Los Angeles, California

June 26-29: Travelers Championship, TPC River Highlands, Cromwell, Connecticut

Winner: Keegan Bradley, $3,600,000 million from a purse of $20 million

June 26-July 2: Rocket Mortgage Classic, Detroit Golf Club, Detroit, Michigan

Winner: Rickie Fowler, $1,584,000 from a purse of $8.8 million

July 3-9: John Deere Classic, TPC Deere Run, Silvis, Illinois

Winner: Sepp Straka, $1,332,000 from a purse of $7.4 million

July 10-16: Genesis Scottish Open, Renaissance Club, North Berwick Scotland

Winner: Rory McIlroy, $1,575,000 from a purse of $9 million

July 10-16: Barbasol Championship, Keene Trace Golf Club (Champions Course), Nicholasville, Kentucky

Winner: Vincent Norrman, $684,000 from a purse of $3.8 million

July 17-23: The British Open, Royal Liverpool, Hoylake, England

Winner: Brian Harman, $3,000,000 from a purse of $16.5 million

July 17-23: Barracuda Championship, Tahoe Mountain Club (Old Greenwood), Truckee, California

Winner: Akshay Bhatia, $684,000 from a purse of $3.8 million

July 24-30: 3M Open, TPC Twin Cities, Blaine, Minnesota

Winner: Lee Hodges, $1,404,000 from a purse of $7.8 million

July 31-Aug. 6: Wyndham Championship, Sedgefield Country Club, Greensboro, North Carolina

Winner: Lucas Glover, $1,368,000 from a purse of $7.6 million

2023 FedEx Cup Playoffs

Aug. 7-13: FedEx St. Jude Championship, TPC Southwind, Memphis, Tennessee

Winner: Lucas Glover, $3.6 million from a purse of $20 million

Aug. 14-20: BMW Championship, Olympia Fields Country Club (North Course), Olympia Fields, Illinois

Winner: Viktor Hovland, $3.6 million from a purse of $20 million

Aug. 21-27: Tour Championship, East Lake Golf Club, Atlanta, Georgia

Winner: Viktor Hovland, $18 million from a purse of $75 million

PGA Tour Schedule 2023: Events, dates and prize money

PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan announced huge changes to the 2023 schedule before last week's Tour Championship in reaction to the emergence of LIV Golf.

pga golf tour 2023 schedule

The PGA Tour schedule for 2023 was fairly straightforward before commissioner Jay Monahan announced a series of bombshells ahead of last week's Tour Championship.

The dates of each event remained the same, but now, the top 20 players from the Player Impact Program will be required to play in 20 events next year. 

Securing the future of the Tour's best players was the main aim of these new innovations which were discussed by Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy and a number of other players two weeks ago in a special meeting.

This will include 12 Elevated Events, four major championships, The Players Championship and three other tournaments of the players' choice. Four Elevated Events are still yet to be decided.

The Sentry Tournament of Champions, the Genesis Invitational, the Arnold Palmer Invitational, the Memorial Tournament, the WGC Match Play and the three FedExCup Playoffs events constitute the first eight confirmed Elevated Events.

PGA Tour Schedule 2023: Events, dates and prize money

The four new Elevated Events will have prize purses of $20 million. The Tour Championship and FedEx Cup bonus pool in 2023 will be $75 million.

70 players will start the first FedEx Cup Playoff event at the FedEx St. Jude Championship. 50 will make it to the BMW Championship and as usual, 30 will play in the finale. 

The PIP has also been expanded to a $100 million prize pool for the top 20 players who excel in Internet Searches, General Awareness, Golf Fan Awareness, Media Mentions and Broadcast Exposure.

These changes to the schedule which begin next month have been brought forward in a rapid fashion due to the development of the LIV Golf Tour .

In 2023, there will be 44 events and here is the full PGA Tour 2023 schedule below:

FedEx Cup Playoffs:

- August 7-13: FedEx St. Jude Championship, TPC Southwind, Tennessee

- August 14-20: BMW Championship, Olympia Fields Country Club, Illinois

- August 21-27: Tour Championship, East Lake Golf Club, Georgia

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PGA Tour Schedule

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Below is a list of golf tournaments that are scheduled for the 2023 PGA Tour , which you can use to see where and when the next PGA tournament will be played.

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PGA Tour Schedule 2023 – Upcoming Golf Tournaments

You can also download this printable version of the 2023 PGA Tour schedule .

Golf Major Schedule 2023

Pga tour 2023 winners, where is the next pga tour golf tournament.

The next PGA Tour Golf tournament will be the Hero World Challenge, which will be held from the 30th of November to the 3rd of December 2023.

When is the Next Major Golf tournament?

The next major will be the Masters in Augusta, Georgia which will be held from the 8th to the 14th of April 2024.

2024 US Open - Day 12

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Pga tour releases 2023 fall schedule, where players will battle for status.

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The PGA Tour unveiled its reimagined fall schedule on Wednesday with many of the same stops but a dramatically adjusted focus.

The fall will feature seven events, down from nine last year, beginning two weeks after the Tour Championship:

  • Sept. 14-17: Fortinet Championship
  • Oct. 5-8: Sanderson Farms Championship
  • Oct. 12-15: Shriners Children’s Open
  • Oct. 19-22: Zozo Championship (Japan)
  • Nov. 2-5: World Wide Technology Championship
  • Nov. 9-12: Butterfield Bermuda Championship
  • Nov. 16-19: RSM Classic

Gone from the fall schedule are the CJ Cup and the Houston Open, the latter of which, according to various reports, is moving to the regular Tour schedule.

The fall will primarily provide players who finish 51 st and beyond on the previous season’s FedExCup points list a chance to improve their status for the next year and provide a pathway into designated events. Points earned through the regular season and playoff events will carry over into what is being called FedExCup Fall.

Players who finish Nos. 51-70 in points upon the conclusion of the previous season – after the regular season and playoffs – will have full status for the next season. But their play in the fall could lead to extra opportunities. Nos. 51-60 in FedExCup points after the fall series concludes will earn spots into the first two designated events (following the Sentry TOC) of the new season.

Those who finish between Nos. 71-125 in the previous season will need to play the fall events to maintain their status for the next season. Nos. 126 and above can also play their ways in during the fall, with 125 still being the fully exempt cutoff.

Players who finish the season in the top 50 can play in the fall as well. They will not earn any FedExCup points, because their positions are already locked for the upcoming year, but can still claim everything else – money, OWGR points, exemptions, improved eligibility through a win.

A victory in the fall will be worth 500 FedExCup points and will earn a player a spot in Maui the following year, as well as an invitation to the Masters. But, unlike in wraparound seasons, fall points will not carry over into the new year.

Starting next year, the designated events will be limited-field (70-80 players), no-cut tournaments. Those events (not counting the four majors and The Players) are the three “player-hosted” invitationals (Genesis Invitational, Arnold Palmer Invitational and Memorial), the Sentry Tournament of Champions and four other events still to be determined.

The fields for each of those eight events will include:

  • Top 50 from the prior season’s FEC points list
  • Top 10 from the current year’s FEC points list (not otherwise eligible)
  • Top 5 from the current year’s FEC points list through each “swing” (not otherwise eligible)
  • Additional qualifiers (tournament winners, top 30 OWGR, four sponsor exemptions; top 10 from fall get into the first two post-Sentry designated events)

A “swing” is what the Tour considers consecutive full-field events between designated events. The Tour anticipates two to three full-field events to be contested in a row, in which the top 5 FEC points earners (not otherwise eligible) during that section would qualify for the next designated event.

Champions Tour Schedule 2023

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Pga tour turns to fedex fall series with eight events starting in napa, share this article.

pga golf tour 2023 schedule

Scottie Scheffler won a fairly drama-less Tour Championship on Sunday, capping his seven-win 2024 season in which he banked giant gobs of money.

Now, everyone gets a week off as there is no PGA Tour event Sept. 5-8.

There will be eight FedEx Fall events over an 11-week period starting Sept. 12-15 in Napa, California, starting with the rebranded Procore Championship (formerly the Fortinet Championship).

After that, there is a three-week gap between Tour events but one of those weeks will be filled by the Presidents Cup, Sept. 26-29.

The fall swing takes the tour to Mississippi, Utah, Nevada, Japan, Mexico, Bermuda and finally Georgia.

Take a closer look at the eight fall events in 2024.

Procore Championship – Sept. 12-15

2022 Fortinet Championship

The 15th hole during the second round of the Fortinet Championship at Silverado Resort and Spa North course in Napa, California. (Mike Mulholland/Getty Images)

Defending champions: Sahith Theegala.

Sanderson Farms Championship (Oct. 3-6)

2024 Sanderson Farms Championship

The 18th fairway at the 2024 Sanderson Farms Championship at the Country Club of Jackson in Jackson, Mississippi.

Defending champion: Luke List.

Black Desert Championship (Oct. 10-13)

Black Desert Resort Utah

No. 16 at Black Desert Resort in Utah (Black Desert Resort/Brian Oar)

Shriners Children’s Open (Oct. 17-20)

2023 Shriners Children's Open

Tom Kim plays his shot from the 17th tee during the third round of the 2023 Shriners Children’s Open at TPC Summerlin in Las Vegas. (Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)

Defending champion: Tom Kim.

Zozo Championship (Oct. 24-27)

2023 Zozo Championship

Ben Griffin, Justin Suh and Kensei Hirata of Japan walk to the 16th green during the second round of 2023 Zozo Championship at Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club. (Yoshimasa Nakano/Getty Images)

Defending champion: Collin Morikawa.

World Wide Technology Championship (Nov. 7-10)

2023 World Wide Technology Championship

Fans on the 16th hole during the final round of the 2023 World Wide Technology Championship at El Cardonal at Diamante in Cabo San Lucas, Baja California Sur, Mexico. (Hector Vivas/Getty Images)

Defending champion: Erik van Rooyen.

Butterfield Bermuda Championship (Nov. 14-17)

2023 Butterfield Bermuda Championship

Satoshi Kodaira hits a tee shot on the 16th hole during the second round of the 2023 Butterfield Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Course. (Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)

Defending champion: Camilo Villegas.

RSM Classic (Nov. 21-24)

2023 RSM Classic

A fan fishes near the 12th hole during the final round of the 2023 RSM Classic on the Seaside Course at Sea Island Resort in St Simons Island, Georgia. (Sam Greenwood/Getty Images)

Defending champion: Ludvig Aberg.

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Why did the PGA Tour and LIV Golf merge? Here's a full breakdown

Everything you need to know about the pga tour and liv golf merger is right here, by logan reardon • published june 6, 2023 • updated on june 6, 2023 at 12:05 pm.

The golf world was stunned on Tuesday morning.

In a shocking twist, the PGA Tour announced it would merge with the controversial LIV Golf in order to "unify the game of golf." The merger also includes the DP World Tour, which is the PGA's European Tour.

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Tuesday's news answers the question of will LIV Golf survive, as the Saudi-backed tour struggled to maintain relevance despite heavy funding and the signings of star players.

Here's a full breakdown of the merger, including details on LIV Golf and what happens next:

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When did LIV Golf form?

LIV Golf was founded in 2021 before playing its inaugural season in 2022.

The tour was owned by the Public Investment Fund, which is Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund. Two-time major champion Greg Norman served as CEO and the public face of the league.

Why did LIV golfers leave the PGA?

There were a few benefits for players joining LIV Golf.

First and foremost, golfers received massive money from the PIF. Phil Mickelson reportedly signed a $200 million contract to join LIV, while Dustin Johnson ($150 million), Bryson DeChambeau ($125 million), Brooks Koepka ($100 million) and Cameron Smith ($100 million) also reached nine-figure bonuses.

After signing their contracts just to join, players were awarded increased prize money during their tournaments. It was a clear message to the PGA Tour that players felt they were not being compensated fairly.

Beyond just the money, there were several other benefits that players saw with LIV. They played fewer tournaments each year (14 were scheduled for 2023 compared to 47 PGA events), with smaller fields and three rounds instead of four in each tournament.

LIV also utilized shotgun starts, meaning that every player began their round at the same time on different holes -- which meant the days were shorter.

What is the LIV Golf controversy?

The concern about LIV Golf was always about where the money came from.

Saudi Arabia funded the tour. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has been involved in multiple controversies, including human rights violations of his own people, the murder of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi and the government's alleged involvement in the Sept. 11 attacks in the U.S.

The ethics of players taking money from the country has been debated endlessly since players started defecting. Rory McIlroy and Tiger Woods have both been outspoken against the league, with the latter reportedly turning down between $700 and $800 million to join.

A LIV Golf timeline

The PGA's rival tour is coming to an end but let's look back at some of the highlights over the last two years.

pga golf tour 2023 schedule

What is the 2023 LIV Golf Schedule? Courses, countries new tour will visit

pga golf tour 2023 schedule

Who are the Top 20 LIV golfers in 2023?

pga golf tour 2023 schedule

LIV Golf Announces TV Partnership With CW Network

While PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan previously condemned LIV Golf and discouraged players from taking their money, the merger seems to be a sellout of sorts. As part of the agreement, the PIF will contribute a "significant financial investment, toward minority equity ownership of a new, collectively held, for-profit LLC." The PIF will make a financial investment to become a premier corporate sponsor of the PGA Tour and DP World Tour.

What happens with PGA and LIV lawsuits now?

As part of the merger, PGA and LIV mutually agreed to end all pending litigation between the parties.

LIV sued the PGA last year for allegedly engaging in monopolistic behavior by creating rules intended to stop golfers from playing in rival leagues. PGA sought subpoenas for a countersuit alleging that LIV illegally pushed players to break contracts with the PGA by offering exorbitant sums of money.

The case was expected to go to trial next May, but that obviously will not happen after the merger.

What happens to PGA and LIV golfers now?

Here's what was said in the official announcement :

"The three organizations will work cooperatively and in good faith to establish a fair and objective process for any players who desire to re-apply for membership with the PGA TOUR or the DP World Tour following the completion of the 2023 season and for determining fair criteria and terms of re-admission, consistent with each Tour's policies."

LIV Golfers were already eligible to play in major championships, so the merger doesn't change anything there. Koepka became the first LIV Golf player to win a major when he triumphed at the PGA Championship last month.

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Xander Schauffele, Tony Finau, Rickie Fowler among PGA Tour's biggest ball-speed gainers, losers in 2024

Speed is the name of the game in professional golf.

xander-schauffele-cbs-1.jpg

Cameron Champ was the fastest man on the PGA Tour in 2024. Not with his pace of play, per se -- that honor could go to Ludvig Åberg -- but with his golf ball. For the sixth straight season, the three-time PGA Tour winner topped the list with a ball speed averaging 190.41 mph off the tee -- a slight uptick compared to his 2023 numbers and far beyond the Tour's average of 173.73 mph.

Champ wasn't the only player to speed up his shots; for the most part, the long got longer.

Rory McIlroy and Xander Schauffele are the two biggest names that made strides in the ball-speed department. While McIlroy has been one of the longest players throughout his career, Schauffele's surge to the top has been more gradual.

"He's looked to add speed but did it very methodically, very quietly, very in the dark," Jordan Spieth said of Schauffele. "It's been amazing watching him go after the tournament rounds -- like on Thursday, Friday, Saturday -- and he'll go to the workout trailer and hit a heavy gym session after the round. It's not common out here. There's a few guys that will do it, but it's still not common. Everybody goes before now; 10, 12 years ago, half the field went before, now everyone does.

"But he's going after and hitting these heavy workouts with a goal in mind that he thought would gain a slight advantage. He already had a lot of speed, and he did it while maintaining his consistency and his short game, and it just allowed him to hit shorter clubs into greens, which, maybe over the course of four rounds, being a shot or two. The way he approached that patiently is extremely inspiring."

Schauffele's work ethic produced one of the greatest major championship seasons in the history of the game. Finishing inside the top 10 across all four major championships -- picking off the PGA Championship and The Open along the way -- Schauffele's speed surely had a hand in his success.

Now, Schauffele has never been slow; he's typically ranked around 35th on the PGA Tour. However, he has never been this fast compared to his peers. Climbing inside the top 10 in ball speed this season, the two-time major champion is just one of many players to realize speed kills.

Notable ball-speed gains (mph)

Schauffele has gained 10 mph in ball speed over the last five years with his biggest jump coming this season courtesy of a new training regime and a more efficient action thanks to swing coach Chris Como. He's 3 mph faster than guys like Åberg and Byeong Hun An and 5 mph faster than Keith Mitchell.

Meanwhile, there are players like Tony Finau, who always has more fuel in the tank if needed; he often gets to 200 mph playing at home. Finau gained nearly 5 mph in ball speed this year alone, but interestingly, he endured the worst off-the-tee season of his career as wide misses became more prevalent throughout his 2024 campaign. Will he scale things back in 2025 or continue to let it rip?

Taylor Pendrith got healthy after battling a shoulder injury and had one of the more underrated back halves to the year, while Justin Thomas finds himself in the same boat as Finau. Plenty long and with ample firepower, the American's off-the-tee numbers were about half that from 2017-22 when he was consistently winning.

The most meaningful gains may have gone to Stephan Jaeger. At age 35, the German has made a concerted effort to get faster going from 97th to 72nd to 51st on the PGA Tour in ball speed over the last three seasons. It paid dividends this past spring in Houston when he outdrove and outplayed the best player in the world en route to his first career PGA Tour victory.

Notable ball-speed losses (mph)

The curious case of Cameron Young continued this year as the talented right hander went through another PGA Tour season without entering the winner's circle. It was not without chances as he factored at the Valspar Championship and Rocket Mortgage Classic; in the latter tournament, he ironically snapped his driver in frustration during the final round.

Since graduating from the Korn Ferry Tour, the Bronx bomber has been one of the longest players on the PGA Tour ranking inside the top five in ball speed over first two seasons. He dropped to 12th and endured his worst off the tee season in 2024. The skillset that is capable of separating him from his peers, Young's length (and lack of accuracy), is something worth watching next year.

On the flip side, it wasn't all bad for those who lost some ball speed this past season. In fact, 44-year-old Adam Scott enjoyed a renaissance of sorts finishing T4 at the Tour Championship and polishing off his year with five straight top 20s. The Australian had his best season since 2020 and his best off the tee output since 2018.

Hovland's struggles have been out in the open for a while now. a dip in ball speed is notable, but it may be chalked up to working through some mechanical aspects of the golf swing. Once he gets right, he should be alright, and the same should go for Denny McCarthy.

Battling a torn labrum in his hip, the putting maestro will aim to get healthy this offseason and continue what was an upward trend in the ball-striking department. He has now improved with his irons in three straight seasons, but McCarthy's 2024 marked his worst off the tee season as not only was he without distance but also accuracy (for his standards). 

That leaves us with Rickie Fowler, who may have experienced the most disappointing season on the PGA Tour. After scratching and clawing his way back to relevance -- winning again, factoring in major championships, playing in the Ryder Cup -- across the 2023 campaign, the 35-year-old fell off the face of the map in 2024.

It was the worst season of Fowler's career (yes, worse than 2022) and his worst off the tee. Fowler has never been shorter relative to his peers and dropped below the PGA Tour average with his 3 mph decrease year-over-year. His play over the last handful of years has many wondering whether the success of 2023 was the outlier and not the other way around.

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The Match: At least someone is reuniting PGA Tour, LIV Golf stars

As golf events go, “The Match” — which pits celebrities and/or golf stars against each other in a made-for-TV competition — doesn’t exactly hold the status of a major. Previous matches that have featured everyone from Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson to Tom Brady and Aaron Rodgers have been long on star power, short on actual golf drama.

Say this for The Match, though: At least someone is trying to reunite golf’s divided stars.

The latest installment of the event , teeing off this December in Las Vegas, will pit PGA Tour stars Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy against LIV Golf’s Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka. In other words, The Match has done what the PGA Tour and LIV Golf couldn’t: bring together the stars of the game once again.

Men’s professional golf has splintered into two distinct camps ever since LIV Golf began play in 2022. While the PGA Tour has the legacy and the biggest names — Woods and McIlroy — LIV Golf has managed to lure most of the most interesting characters in the golf universe. Players like DeChambeau, Koepka, Mickelson and Jon Rahm now play on the LIV tour, and the only time they cross paths with their former PGA Tour mates is at majors and the occasional non-PGA Tour event like the Olympics.

What makes all this so maddening is that the best LIV players clearly still have the competitive juice to hang with their Tour counterparts. This year’s U.S. Open at Pinehurst was one of the best tournaments — not just majors, but tournaments of any stripe — in recent golf history, and DeChambeau’s victory over McIlroy came down to the final shots of the final hole. Olympic golf at Le Golf National in Paris looked like Le Rahm Spectacle right up until Rahm imploded and Scheffler swiped the gold from around his neck.

There certainly doesn’t appear to be any visible urgency behind the scenes for any kind of reunification. The Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, the financial backer of LIV Golf, announced their surprising end of hostilities back in June 2023, and since then, there’s been almost nothing in the way of concrete movement forward.

PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan doesn’t often address the media (and, by association, the Tour’s fans), but he did so last week prior to the Tour Championship in Atlanta. While he was asked about the status of the PIF negotiations and LIV Golf five separate times, he declined to give any specifics .

“These conversations are complex. They're going to take time. They have taken time, and they will continue to take time,” Monahan said, and then repeated a variant of the same line that so many involved with the agreement have said so many times: “I'm not going to negotiate details in public or disclose details or specifics. All I can say is that conversations continue, and they're productive.”

The greatest enemy of the PGA Tour and LIV Golf isn’t each other, it’s indifference. The longer these “productive” negotiations drag on, the more fans find something else to do with their time.

“I just think that it’s gone on long enough,” McIlroy said last week of the never-ending negotiations to unify, adding, “I think if it doesn’t happen soon, then honestly, I think the PIF and the Saudies are going to have to look at alternative options, right?”

More golf news

pga golf tour 2023 schedule

  • PGA Tour vs. LIV: Rory McIlroy, Scottie Scheffler to face Bryson DeChambeau, Brooks Koepka in next edition of 'The Match'
  • LIV Golf 2025 schedule: Opening dates in Asia, Australia, Saudi Arabia released
  • Ryder Cup captain Keegan Bradley, Max Homa among Americans selected to join U.S. Presidents Cup team

Now that the PGA Tour season has ended, the LIV tour is winding down, and football has begun, golf will recede in the public’s mind even further than it already has. That’s not the pathway to a sustainable future for men’s golf, no matter how many corporate sponsors each side lines up.

So now comes The Match, stepping into the void that the Tour and LIV have left. The storylines abound. There’s the Pinehurst Rematch, Koepka trying to get his game back, McIlroy eating his words about not wanting to have anything to do with LIV, Koepka and DeChambeau getting along, Scheffler just dominating everyone in sight … every hole should have enough drama to inspire a million Golf Twitter reactions. Sure, it’s manufactured drama, but at this point, we’ve got to be happy with what we get.

“This isn’t just a contest between some of golf’s major champions; it’s an event designed to energize the fans," McIlroy said in a text to Golfweek’s Eamon Lynch. "We’re all here to put on a great show and contribute to a goodwill event that brings the best together again.”

McIlroy has been one of LIV’s strongest critics, but he’s also one of the few on the PGA Tour side who has publicly taken a game-first approach. He understands that golf is, at its heart, a show — and when golf stops being a “good show,” the fans go elsewhere.

The Match won’t solve golf’s problems. But it’s at least proof that reunification is possible … even if we have to put up with some awkward banter and forced jokes to get there.

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Scottie Scheffler's historic 2024: FedExCup win follows fatherhood, arrest, Olympic gold and PGA Tour dominance

Scottie Scheffler became the first player to win The Players, The Masters and the FedExCup in the same season; world No 1 claimed a four-shot victory at the Tour Championship and earned over $62m - including bonuses - during his 2024 PGA Tour campaign

By Ali Stafford

Monday 2 September 2024 13:35, UK

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Scottie Scheffler beats Collin Morikawa to the Tour Championship crown at East Lake.

Scottie Scheffler said he had "lived almost a full lifetime this one year" after securing FedExCup victory, capping off a 'nuts' season - both on and off the golf course – for the world No 1.

Scheffler closed out a four-stroke victory at the season-ending Tour Championship, where he never relinquished top spot at any point during the four days and became the first player since Tiger Woods in 2007 to register seven or more victories in a year on the PGA Tour.

It completes a remarkable few months for Scheffler, who became a father for the first time shortly after winning The Masters for a second time in three years, was arrested ahead of his second round at the PGA Championship in May and also won Olympic gold in Paris.

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Scottie Scheffler holds his wife Meredith Scudder on the 18th green after he won the final round of the Tour Championship golf tournament, Sunday, Sept. 1, 2024, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

"If you can describe it in words, more power to you, because I don't think I can," Scheffler told reporters as he reflected on his 2024 efforts, following his Tour Championship win. "It has been a long year.

"I think emotionally right now I'm pretty drained. It has been a very eventful year but it's been really fun. You had the one weird spot there at Valhalla (the PGA Championship arrest), but everything else has been pretty special."

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LOUISVILLE, KY - MAY 18: Scottie Scheffler (USA) looks on after teeing off at the fifth hole during the third round of the 2024 PGA Championship at Valhalla Golf Club on May 18, 2024 in Louisville, Kentucky. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire) (Icon Sportswire via AP Images)

Scheffler had topped the FedExCup standings since winning the Arnold Palmer Invitational in March, then added further victories the The Players, The Masters, RBC Heritage, Memorial Tournament and Travelers Championship during the regular season.

The 28-year-old American earned an $8m bonus for leading the Comcast Business Tour Top 10 heading into the FedExCup Playoffs, where he claimed $25m for his Tour Championship victory to take his season earnings - including bonuses - to a staggering $62,228,357 (£47.4m).

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"I felt like I was kind of gradually building towards something," Scheffler said. "I had some decent starts to the year. I had a couple top 10s to start and I was close to winning in Phoenix. Then overall I was playing really solid, so I knew I was close.

"I made some putts this year when I really needed to, and that's why I'm sitting here with a lot of wins instead of a few. Last year I was playing good golf and I wasn't able to make the key putts at the right time, and this year I was. That's really just the difference.

"I'm proud of the results. It's something I try not to focus too much on, but at the end of the day, being able to win tournaments is a great feeling, and it's what we work towards, and to be able to have as many wins as I have this year is really special."

 How the Tour Championship crown was won

Scheffler added: "I feel like I've lived almost a full lifetime in this one year. It has been nuts. I think it just always comes back to my faith. I think that's the thing that just keeps me grounded, keeps me in the right frame of mind."

How Scheffler keeps his focus

Scheffler took a two-shot lead into the Tour Championship and was seven ahead during the early stages of the final round, before recovering from seeing his advantage cut to two strokes by playing his next six holes in five under to reclaim control of the tournament.

"Just nothing fazes him," said Collin Morikawa, who played alongside Scheffler for the final three rounds at East Lake. "Whether I was close in gaining some ground or he was gaining ground, it didn't change how he walked or how he played or how he went through every shot.

 Scottie Scheffler's shank from the bunker

"I think his mental game is a lot stronger than a lot of people know. It's amazing what he's been able to do for this entire season and honestly this past three years now. It's been really cool to watch him."

Scheffler had previously squandered a six-shot advantage to McIlroy on the final day of the 2022 Tour Championship, although his latest win is the third event in a row and eighth time in 14 attempts on the PGA Tour that he has converted a 54-hole lead into a victory.

Scheffler iv

"Just think how well he plays when he's the guy to beat every single week," former FedExCup champion Justin Thomas said. "I don't think people understand how hard that is to do.

"When you're expected to win, when you're the favourite to win, when every single thing you're doing is being looked at, good and bad, on the golf course, and how hard it is to get in your own little zone and own little world and truly just quiet the noise.

"It's something that is just as much of a skill as being able to hit a driver in the fairway or an iron on-line. He's clearly figured that out very well. All Scottie wants to do is just play the best he can and win as many tournaments as possible, and he's doing a pretty good job of that."

Consistency key for Scheffler?

Scheffler has been the best player in the world from tee-to-green, with his 2023 total the best seen since Woods in 2006 and his 2.456 strokes gained in that metric last season nearly a stroke better than any other player on the PGA Tour.

Only inconsistency on the greens prevented him from being a more prolific winner during the second half of 2023 and the early part of this year, before a switch to a mallet-style putter in March helped add another element to Scheffler's game.

Scottie feeling grateful 🙏 pic.twitter.com/ekvNNA2Lse — PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) September 2, 2024

"It just seems like he's basically doing what he did last year, just putting probably a little bit more consistently," former FedExCup champion Viktor Hovland said. "When you hit it as good as he does every single week and you start making some putts, you're going to be very difficult to beat."

The switch of putter was initially suggested by Rory McIlroy earlier in the season, with the four-time major winner impressed by Scheffler's low scoring and ability to limit mistakes.

"The one thing I've always admired about Scottie is the amount of bogey-free rounds he shoots," McIlroy said. "You just go back over the last two, three years and you look at how many rounds that he'll shoot like four under par, no bogeys.

pga golf tour 2023 schedule

"It doesn't look spectacular at all, but it's just so solid. He doesn't really put himself out of position. When you don't make a ton of bogeys, the field has got to do something really special to keep up."

A Tiger-esque season from Scheffler?

Scheffler has been quick to play down comparisons with Woods at multiple points this season, but his sustained brilliance has produced numbers and consistency not seen since the 15-time major champion in his prime.

On whether Scheffler's 2024 performance is the best seen since Woods, former world No 1 Adam Scott said: "I think that's fair. I think all the stats back that up. I think that the results back it up. It has been pretty incredible.

Tiger woods Scottie

"I think it is on par with those great years of Tiger's. It's very hard today for anyone to separate themselves as much as Scottie has. I don't think we've seen that in a long time."

Scheffler's FedExCup success came after entering the Tour Championship top of the standings for the third consecutive year, with his 13 PGA Tour wins to date coming in just over a two-and-a-half-year period.

"I think by the definition of dominance, I think that's literally where he's sitting," said Xander Schauffele, who started the Tour Championship as his closest challenger for FedExCup victory after two major victories in 2024.

Scottie Scheffler, left, and Xander Schauffele, both of the United States, laugh on the 13th green during a practice round for the men's golf event at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Wednesday, July 31, 2024, at Le Golf National in Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, France. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)

"Since I've been out [on the PGA Tour], I think Dustin [Johnson] had a run, Brooks [Koepka] had a run, Jon [Rahm] had a run, Rory [McIlroy] had a run. But they were kind of punching back and forth between one, two and three.

"Scottie has been at the tip-top of the mountain for two full years now it seems."

Woods' dominance lasted a generation. Scheffler still has some way to go if he's going to match those efforts, but he's on the right trajectory to continue his dominance for many seasons to come.

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Pro golf’s feud continues as LIV Golf announces first 4 events of 2025

LIV Golf revealed the first four events of its 2025 season on Tuesday night.

Isaiah Vazquez/Getty Images

The l ong-simmering feud between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf has now reached the two-and-a-half-year mark, and as both tours turn the page to 2025, it’s becoming clear that there is no end in sight.

When commissioner Jay Monahan announced the 2025 PGA Tour schedule ahead of the FedEx St. Jude Championship in August, it featured 39 tournaments but showed no room for any kind of deal or merger with LIV Golf. At the time, Monahan agreed with that assessment, saying, “I think that’s fair.”

On Tuesday night, LIV Golf made a schedule announcement of its own, revealing the first four events of what it called in a press release its “third official full season.”

Greg Norman's latest Instagram post celebrated LIV's successes — and took shots at golf's establishment.

Greg Norman makes 10 bold LIV claims, takes shot at ‘tired’ golf establishment

The season-opener, LIV Golf Riyadh , will kick off February 6 at Riyadh Golf Club, followed one week later by LIV Golf Adelaide (Feb. 14-16) at Grange Golf Club in Australia.

Two weeks later LIV heads to Hong Kong Golf Club for LIV Golf Hong Kong from March 7-9, before skipping over to Sentosa Golf Club the next week for LIV Golf Singapore (March 14-16).

Included in the press release was a statement from LIV CEO Greg Norman that displayed a confident outlook in LIV’s future and no mention of any merger with the PGA Tour.

“As we set our sights on 2025, LIV Golf is gearing up for our most ambitious season start, to date,” Norman said in the press release. “Since our debut in 2022, LIV Golf has played 34 tournaments in nine different countries across four continents. We are a global league with a global footprint, and we’re excited to kick off next season with four truly international events that will deliver our unique blend of elite golf, entertainment and culture to fans around the world.”

It was eerily similar to Monahan’s own message in August when announcing the PGA Tour schedule, though he did at least mention negotiations with the Public Investment Fund, which finances LIV.

PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan announced the Tour's 2025 schedule on Wednesday in Memphis.

The 2025 PGA Tour schedule dropped. Here’s what’s changing (and what it means for LIV)

“There’s tremendous momentum [on the PGA Tour]. I think that’s reflected in the energy you see coming in the Playoffs, the ’25 schedule, and we’ve seen and continue to see a lot more innovation,” Monahan said at the FedEx St. Jude, “and certainly the conversations with the Public Investment Fund are an important part of the journey that we’re on this year and that we’ll continue to be on.”

Neither provided any hope to golf fans sick of the fighting and anxious for an official end to the feud, one the golf world thought was imminent when the two sides announced the Framework Agreement in June of 2023.

But after a brief denouement following that agreement, players have continued switching tours, hot takes have continued to fly from leading figures in the game, the deadline for a final deal came and went last December and no noticeable progress has been made in negotiations.

Furthermore, when we put the tours’ 2025 schedules side-by-side, it becomes clear that the competition between the two sides is still brewing on the course.

All four of the 2025 LIV events that have been announced occur the same week as major PGA Tour events.

LIV Golf Riyadh will be played the same week as the popular WM Phoenix Open, and the very next week LIV Golf Adelaide will occur at the same time as the Genesis Invitational, a Signature Event hosted by Tiger Woods.

The week of March 9 will see another PGA Tour Signature Event, the Arnold Palmer Invitational, go up against LIV Golf Hong Kong. When LIV Golf Singapore kicks off the following week, the Players Championship — the biggest Tour event of them all — will be underway at TPC Sawgrass.

So while negotiations appear to have ground to a halt, both LIV Golf and the PGA Tour are forging ahead into the murky future independently.

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How to watch TOUR Championship, Round 1: Featured Groups, live scores, tee times, TV times

How to watch TOUR Championship, Round 1: Featured Groups, live scores, tee times, TV times

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Those in the field include FedExCup leader Scottie Scheffler, No. 2 in the standings Viktor Hovland, three-time FedExCup champion Rory McIlroy, former FedExCup champions Patrick Cantlay and Jordan Spieth, Masters champion Jon Rahm, U.S. Open champion Wyndham Clark, Champion Golfer of the Year Brian Harman and Ryder Cup qualifiers Max Homa and Xander Schauffele.

FEDEXCUP STARTING STROKES

The TOUR Championship will feature the FedExCup Starting Strokes format. Click here for details on the format , and here to see in what place each player will begin Round 1.

HOW TO FOLLOW (All times ET)

Here's everything you need to know to follow the action, including Featured Groups for PGA TOUR LIVE on ESPN+ .

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Full tee times

Join the world’s best as they prepare to take on East Lake for a chance at hoisting the FedExCup. "On the Range at the TOUR Championship brought to you by Titleist" will feature players on the practice range, fine tuning their game with Trackman Tracing, radar stats, expert analysis, player interviews and more. Tune in Wednesday, Aug. 23, from 2-3:30 p.m. on ESPN+ .

Television: Thursday-Friday, 1-6 p.m. (Golf Channel). Saturday, 1-3 p.m. (Golf Channel), 3-7 p.m. (CBS). Sunday, noon.-1:30 p.m. (Golf Channel), 1:30-6 p.m. (CBS)

Radio: Thursday-Friday, noon–6 p.m. Saturday, 2-7 p.m. Sunday, 1-6 p.m. ( PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio )

PGA TOUR LIVE ON ESPN+

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

The First Look

Power Rankings: TOUR Championship

TOUR Championship field: How they will begin with 'FedExCup Starting Strokes'

See the 30 players who qualified for the TOUR Championship

How it works: FedExCup Playoffs

Power Rankings for the FedExCup Playoffs

PGA TOUR 2024 schedule

Five things to know: East Lake

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  9. PGA Tour Schedule 2023: Events, dates and prize money

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  10. 2023 PGA Championship guide: TV schedule, streaming, tee times

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  11. PGA Tour Schedule 2023

    Augusta National Golf Club. 18-21 May 2023. The PGA Championships. New York, USA. Oak Hill. 15-18 June 2023. The US Open. California, USA. Los Angeles Country Club.

  12. 2023 Tour Championship: How to watch, TV schedule, tee times

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  14. Tour releases '23 fall sked, with status on the line

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  15. PGA TOUR Champions Schedule

    Feb 9 - 11. Trophy Hassan II. Royal Golf Dar Es Salam - Rabat, Morocco. Stephen Ames. 210 (-9) $320,000. Feb 17 - 19. Chubb Classic. Tiburón Golf Club - Naples, FL.

  16. PGA Tour turns to FedEx Fall series with eight events ...

    The PGA Tour's 2024 FedEx Fall series is eight events and ... Tom Kim plays his shot from the 17th tee during the third round of the 2023 Shriners Children's Open at TPC Summerlin in Las Vegas. ... Justin Suh and Kensei Hirata of Japan walk to the 16th green during the second round of 2023 Zozo Championship at Accordia Golf Narashino Country ...

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  18. PGA Tour, LIV Golf merger explanation, timeline, details

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  19. Full Swing and Mobility. Season Wrap-Up.

    The PGA of America is one of the world's largest sports organizations, composed of PGA of America Golf Professionals who work daily to grow interest and participation in the game of golf.

  20. 2023 PGA Championship schedule: TV times, channel, streaming, dates

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  21. Red Raiders Golf Alum's First PGA Tour Season Found Success

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  22. Xander Schauffele, Tony Finau, Rickie Fowler among PGA Tour's biggest

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  23. The Match: At least someone is reuniting PGA Tour, LIV Golf stars

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  24. Scottie Scheffler's historic 2024: FedExCup win follows fatherhood

    Stream PGA Tour and more golf with NOW ... PGA Tour in 2025: Full FedExCup schedule ... with his 2023 total the best seen since Woods in 2006 and his 2.456 strokes gained in that metric last ...

  25. TOUR Championship 2024 Golf Leaderboard

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  26. THE 5 BEST Oryol Shopping Centers & Stores

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  27. THE BEST Oryol Tours & Excursions for 2024 (with Prices)

    Hammersmith Hongjecheon Artificial Waterfall Lagomar Museum Sigmund-Thun-Klamm SM Duty Free Incheon Airport Cathedral Canyon Anderson Ferry Ron Jon Surf Shop - Cocoa Beach Discovery Park Bathhouse Row Alexandria Horse Carriage Tour Hawaii Mobile Wifi Hotspots for Travelers - Self Guided Cai Be Princess Cruise - A taste of Mekong Full Day ...

  28. Pro golf's feud continues as LIV announces first 4 events of 2025

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