Key events
Scottie Scheffler isn’t in gung-ho mode right now. He aims for the heart of the 12th green, declining to chase the pin, and lags his 20-foot birdie effort short. He tidies up for par, and he’s one hole closer to glory. He’s also one hole closer to the Green Mile, so you can spin this situation both ways.
-10: Scheffler (12)
-9: Rahm (14)
-7: DeChambeau (15), Poston (13)
-6: English (F), Fitzpatrick (16)
“Oh Rahmbo! Wide right!” A member of the gallery explains what happens after Jon Rahm splashes out of the bunker at 14 to six feet. Big chance turned down and he remains one off the lead. Meanwhile up on 16, Matt Fitzpatrick comes up too quickly from a short putt and that’s an unnecessary bogey that drops him back to -6.
-10: Scheffler (11)
-9: Rahm (14)
-7: Fitzpatrick (15), DeChambeau (15), Poston (13)
Scottie Scheffler has missed a lot of shots to the left today. We’ve belaboured this point, to be fair. But it looks like he’s finally got the ship steadied, because at 12 he splits a third fairway in a row. Just as well he’s fixed the issue, given how much trouble is down the left along the Green Mile. Meanwhile up on 15, Bryson DeChambeau sends his approach up a vegetation-strewn bank at the back of the green … but whips an elegant chip to kick-in distance for a birdie that brings him back into view as well. This is bubbling up deliciously!
-10: Scheffler (11)
-9: Rahm (13)
-7: Fitzpatrick (15), DeChambeau (15), Poston (12)
Scottie prowls around the putt awhile. This could be huge. He gives it the legs, but not enough to the right of the cup. It dies to the left on its final turn. Par. Alex Noren bogeys again and at -5 his race is run. Up on 14, another unlucky break for Jon Rahm after that lip-out, as his tee shot into the driveable green takes a wicked bounce right into a bunker. Meanwhile on 12, JT Poston rakes in a long birdie putt to get himself back into the picture. Again.
-10: Scheffler (11)
-9: Rahm (13)
-7: Fitzpatrick (15), Poston (12)
-6: English (F), DeChambeau (14)
… and he makes it … hold on … no he doesn’t, it lips out. Oh my. Jon Rahm gives his big left-to-right curler everything. It looks on a fine line. It looks perfectly paced. It looks in. It dips. But somehow it refuses to drop, pops back up, and horseshoes around the lip, left to right. How did that not go in?! Just a par, and here’s how thin the margins are: Scottie Scheffler caresses an 8-iron pin high from 170 yards on 11, and it’s now his turn to have a run at birdie, from 13 feet.
That Scottie Scheffler birdie must have calmed a few jangling nerves. Because now he crashes a drive down the middle of 11. That’s two fairways found in succession, which was pretty much a give for him yesterday, when he hit 13 of 14, but was far from the case on the front nine this afternoon. But Jon Rahm remains in buoyant mood, and clips his tee shot at the par-three 13th pin high. He’ll have a look at birdie from 20 feet to draw level at the top again.
Scottie Scheffler finally regains some forward momentum! He splashes out of the bunker at 10 to ten feet, then steers in the right-to-left curler. Bogey for Alex Noren, however, having carelessly sent his third into sand. On 11, JT Poston hands back the shot he’s just picked up after chunking a chip. Meanwhile on 12, Jon Rahm wedges to ten feet but can’t make the birdie effort. All change at the top, again, with Bryson mopping up for birdie on 14.
-10: Scheffler (10)
-9: Rahm (12)
-7: Fitzpatrick (14)
-6: English (F), DeChambeau (14), Poston (11), Noren (10)
Scottie Scheffler creams his second at the monster par-five 10th greenward … but again there’s a little more draw than he’d fancy, and the ball takes a kick off to the left and into a bunker. Meanwhile up on 14, Bryson DeChambeau sends his tee shot up the Adam Scott bank … but unlike the Aussie, he manages to gently lob onto the fringe and slowly release his ball to a couple of feet. That could have been disastrous; it should lead to a birdie that brings him immediately back into contention.
Local lad JT Poston joins the party at -7 with birdie at 10. A reminder that he’s already got one North Carolinian victory on his resumé, having won the 2019 Greater Greensboro Open (now known as the Wyndham, but c’mon). Another incoming?
Let’s not get ahead of ourselves. If Jon Rahm wins this, he’ll have the chance to join Rory McIlroy and his pals in the Career Slam club at Portrush in July. Just saying.
… but Bryson DeChambeau is going the wrong way. From the back of 13, he leaves a short chip seven feet short, then sends the next one four feet past. He does well in the circumstances to steady himself and make the one coming back, but that’s a bogey to follow a short birdie miss at the previous hole. And made the wrong time. He’s -5.
Jon Rahm teases his downhill 15-foot right-to-left slider at 11 into the cup for a third birdie in four holes! He’s now the co-leader! Scottie Scheffler needs a response, and gets one on 10, striping his drive down the par-five. What he’d give for a momentum-shifting birdie here. And speaking of a momentum shifter, here comes Matt Fitzpatrick, chipping out of the thick rough behind the short par-four 14th … and in for eagle! He’s back in the race!
-9: Rahm (11), Scheffler (9)
-7: Fitzpatrick (14), Noren (9)
While Scottie Scheffler leaves the door creaking invitingly ajar, folk further up the track are making mistakes as well. Bryson DeChambeau chips up to six feet on 12, only to stab miserably at his birdie chance. He remains at -6. Adam Scott, meanwhile, sails his tee shot at the driveable par-four 14th onto the bank to the right of the green. Short-sided, and worried about the water on the other side of a downward sloping green, he fluffs his chip into a bunker. He can’t scramble for a sandy par, and moves back to -5.
Scottie Scheffler, with two huge lumps of mud on his ball, manages to guide his 27-foot putt from the fringe to the lip. He tidies up for a bogey that, all told, could have been a whole lot worse. But he’s taken 37 on the front nine, while Jon Rahm continues on his blemish-free way, and he’s on the 11th in regulation, with a 15-footer for birdie. It’s possible – and this seemed so improbable just an hour ago – that there will soon be a tie at the top!
-9: Scheffler (9)
-8: Rahm (10)
-7: Noren (9)
In the rough – deep, not semi – down the left of 9, Scottie Scheffler finds himself snookered by a couple of trees, 200 yards out. Even a man of his talent and power can only swipe his ball 50 yards short of the green. Then his wedge in bounds past the flag and nearly off the back. His ball nestles up against the collar, and has a spot of mud on it as well. That won’t improve his mood. Trouble here.
Jon Rahm makes his birdie putt on 10. This … this is major-championship Sunday. This is on.
-10: Scheffler (8)
-8: Rahm (10)
-7: Noren (8)
-6: English (F), Scott (13), DeChambeau (11), Vegas (10), Poston (9)
Scottie Scheffler keeps pulling his tee shots. He’s missed left at 2, 5, 7, 8 and now 9. This latest one not dramatically so – he’s in the semi-rough – but factor in pulled approaches at 1 and 3, and this is a problem he’ll need to solve quicksmart. Not least because Jon Rahm has just clipped a wedge at 10 to three feet, and has a huge chance of a birdie that would reduce Scheffler’s lead to two.
Scottie Scheffler chips down from the bank. It’s decent, but not out of his top drawer. He leaves himself a 12-footer and doesn’t give the putt enough on the high side. It breaks apologetically to the left. Another par. Alex Noren has a birdie chance from eight feet, but misreads and lets a huge chance to further close the gap at the top go by. Scottie breathes again. They’re -10 and -7 respectively. Meanwhile Matt Fitzpatrick flays his drive into deep trouble down the left of 12, and barely manages to get out of it with his second, but eventually does well to limit the damage on 12 to bogey, getting up and down from an unpromising position off the back of the green. However he slips back to -5.
Scottie Scheffler is definitely feeling the pressure now. He whistles his tee shot at the driveable par-four 8th into the gallery atop a bank to the left of the green. Meanwhile Jon Rahm batters his drive at the par-five 10th down the middle. To repeat: Rahm would love to be in the same match as Scheffler now, engaging in hot mano-a-mano action. Given the current momentum and mood, Rahmbo would be in his element.
Alex Noren isn’t finished yet, and he gets up and down from greenside sand for birdie at 7 to grab himself a share of second. Meanwhile back-to-back birdies for JT Poston at 7 and 8, while Jon Rahm makes a staunch 12-footer for par at 9 to turn in 34. This felt over 40 minutes ago. It doesn’t feel that way so much now.
-10: Scheffler (7)
-7: Rahm (8), Noren (7)
-6: English (F), Scott (12), Fitzpatrick (11), DeChambeau (10), Vegas (9), Poston (8)
Two putts for Scottie Scheffler on 7, and that’s a par. Not the worst result given the direction of his drive. Meanwhile Tony Finau is always out of position on 10, going from bunker to rough and bunker again, and that’s a careless bogey on a hole that’s averaged 4.7 shots this week. Plenty given up to the field, there. That also explains why Bryson isn’t happy with his par, but at least unlike his playing partner, he’s still at -6.
… meanwhile Jon Rahm is the first to move in a more positive direction! He lashes his tee shot at the short par-four 8th pin high, but just off the green to the right. He chips up to three feet, and tidies up for birdie. Meanwhile back on 7, Scottie’s a bit sloppie again, his tee shot far enough to the left that branches force him to lay up, and then with nerves jangling, he plays his approach safe, aiming for the centre of the green rather than the pin. Par is likely, and it’ll steady a ship that isn’t yet listing wildly, but perhaps rocking gently like Val Doonican. A reference for the pop kids, there.
-10: Scheffler (6)
-7: Rahm (8)
The first big mistake from the chasing pack arrives courtesy of Davis Riley. His wedge into the par-five 7th plops into the water guarding the front right of the green. That wholly unnecessary mistake is compounded by a three-putt from six feet, and leads to a triple-bogey eight. He moves down the rankings to -3, and his race is surely run.
Scottie Scheffler can’t save himself this time. It looks like he’s made a fairly straight uphill ten-footer, but it kinks off to the left just before reaching the cup. He’s surprised. But as Dame Laura Davies says on Sky: you can’t hole them all. Birdies meanwhile for Matt Fitzpatrick at 9 and 10, and Jhonattan Vegas at 7 and 8 … and what about this?! If Scottie starts to feel the heat, this is so on.
-10: Scheffler (5)
-6: English (F), Scott (10), Fitzpatrick (10), DeChambeau (9), Finau (9), Vegas (8), Rahm (7), Riley (6), Noren (6)
Scheffler wedges over the bunker to ten feet, but he’s got another testing par putt coming up. Meanwhile up on 9, Bryson rakes in a long birdie putt to join the club at -6. As does his playing partner Tony Finau, who cards his third birdie in a row. If Scottie does make a mess of this, there are plenty of folk waiting to pounce.
Scottie Scheffler misses another green. This time he pulls his tee shot at 6 so far wide it misses the bunker on that side of the dancefloor. But will it matter? On the evidence so far, almost certainly no. Though is it possible for anyone to keep successfully scrambling like this? Logic also suggests no. Something’s got to give. Meanwhile should Scheffler stumble, the 2013 Masters champion Adam Scott might be poised to take advantage. Birdie at 10, his third of the day, moves the ever-cheerful Aussie into a share of second at -6.
That par save was so important for Scheffler. For a moment, it looked like his lead, which had been five shots a few minutes ago, was about to be trimmed to three. But he made the putt, while up on the par-three 6th, Davis Riley was failing to get up and down from a bunker, handing his slam-dunk shot straight back. And suddenly the lead is five again!
-11: Scheffler (5)
-6: English (F), Rahm (6), Riley (6), Noren (5)
Now then, maybe that claim was a bit bold. Scottie Scheffler almost whiffs his wedge out of the gnarly rough at the back, and though the ball makes it onto the green, he leaves his chip 18 feet short. This is probably a shot gone. But hold on … let me go back and score out that opening statement … he calmly steers in a gentle left-to-right slider for another outrageous par save. This street-fighting, grimly determined nonsense is, in its own way, as impressive as the world-class display he put on over the closing holes last night. It’s just another facet of golf that he’s the best in the world at!
Scottie Scheffler sends his drive at 5 into the fairway bunker down the left. He then air-mails the green with a gap wedge. A tricky up and down from thick rough at the back awaits, though if any man can solve the problem, Scottie can.
Bryson DeChambeau certainly won’t be letting this lie. At 7, he’s faced with a long bunker shot, the green sloping down towards the water, the flag way down near the briny. He splashes out softly, from 35 yards to seven feet, and makes the birdie putt. He’s -5.
… so having said that, Davis Riley slam-dunks a lob, Mark-Calcavecchia-at-the-1989-Open style, from thick rough to the right of 5! He was short-sided in thick oomska, swished hard, and had that not disappeared into the hole, his ball could have ended up in South Carolina. But with a swish and a slam and dunk and a huge wedge of luck, he’s suddenly got second place all to himself!
-11: Scheffler (4)
-7: Riley (5)
OK, Scottie’s not perfect, he leaves his 35-foot birdie putt at 4 five feet short. But he tidies up without any fuss to save his par. Meanwhile Alex Noren sends a hot bunker shot towards the fringe at the back of the green. He’s never making the 25-foot putt he leaves himself, and in fact does well to make the four footer that follows. But there’s a pained look in his eye, a bead of nervous sweat on his brow. This is already threatening to turn into a procession, and it’s only taken four holes.
-11: Scheffler (4)
-6: English (F), Rahm (5), Riley (4), Noren (4)
Scottie Scheffler hasn’t quite got his irons under control yet. He only just makes it over the bunker and onto the green at the 192-yard par-three 4th. But it’s on, and then Alex Noren dunks his tee shot into that very trap. The weird thing about Scottie’s week so far is that, the obvious (and admittedly significant) caveat of yesterday’s other-worldly closing stretch aside, the world number one hasn’t been totally on top of his game. Quite a few wild drives, plenty of erratic approaches. But his short game is galaxy-level good. And he’s simply unflappable. And he’s still laying waste to the strongest field in golf! We’re witnessing greatness, aren’t we?
For the second time today – and the sample size of three holes is not exactly huge – Scottie Scheffler pulls his approach from the centre of the fairway miles left. The unforced error finds sand. No bother! Facing a 70-foot splash, he elegantly whips his ball along what looks like an inexorable journey into the cup. You couldn’t hit a putt more smoothly. But it stops one dimple short of dropping. So close to another outrageous birdie. But par keeps him -11, four clear of his playing partner Alex Noren, who also pars.
Joaquin Niemann is making an entertaining fist of moving up the leaderboard. He splashes out of sand at 14, hits the flagstick, and nearly holes out for eagle. Just a birdie … though it’s immediately followed up by another at 15, where again eagle proves an elusive inch away, as he nearly slam dunks from 100 yards. The Chilean is now -5; it could so easily be -7 and a share of second with Alex Noren. But here we are.
English shoots 65
Harris English could have that elusive Top-Ten Finish In A Major That Isn’t The US Open (damn right that’s a thing) after all! He drains a long birdie putt across 18 for his fifth birdie on the back nine! Back in 31, and he’s signing for a best-of-day (so far) 65. He’s the early clubhouse leader at -6.
-11: Scheffler (2)
-7: Noren (2)
-6: English (F), Rahm (3), Riley (2), Poston (2)
-5: McCarthy (9), Wallace (7), Scott (7), Vegas (5)
-4: Niemann (14), Griffin (11), Greyserman (10), Gerard (9), Davis (9), Fitzpatrick (6), DeChambeau (5), Kim (4)
Meanwhile on 5, Bryson DeChambeau pays the price for an overly aggressive putt from the fringe. He leaves himself too much to do with the one coming back, and the three-putt bogey drops him to -4. He cocks his head back, a Pez dispenser of misery, and surely knows his race is run.
Scottie Scheffler makes the 15-foot left-to-right curler that remains on 2, and that’s an absurd birdie given the nature of his drive. But when opportunity knocks, you’ve got to answer the door. He’s back to -11, the damage of the opening hole repaired in a stroke! You have to hand it to him: there’s never any panic when he finds himself out of position. He’s pulled off this trick once or twice around Augusta, too.
Scottie Scheffler had a huge break on 8 yesterday, when a tee shot that looked like disappearing forever into the trees pinged back into play. He even nearly made birdie. And once again he benefits from the generosity of the golfing gods, as he bags a decent lie on pine straw and a route to the green. He’s not one for examining the mouths of gift horses too closely, and finds the centre of the putting surface with his wedge. The sort of luck you need if you’re to win a major. Even world-number-one geniuses need it sometimes.
Denny McCarthy arrives on the fringes of the action with birdie at 9. It’s his fourth of the day – half of that good work has been negated by bogeys at 1 and 4 – and the 32-year-old from Maryland moves to -5. Meanwhile yet a third par out of three for Jon Rahm, who must wish he was in the same group as Scottie Scheffler, and able to exert a little bit of matchplay-style pressure.
Hmm II. Scottie Scheffler hooks wildly into the trees down the left of 2 … and Alex Noren follows him into bother. Some nervous energy in this final group. Meanwhile the Ben Griffin dream begins to sour with bogey at 9. Still, he’s out in 32, and he’d have taken that on the 1st tee. He’s -5.
Hmm, everyone at the top moving backwards at the moment. From the centre of the 1st fairway, Scottie Scheffler pulls his approach into a bunker on the left, while Alex Noren sends his into a trap on the right. Neither can get up and down, and that’s a pair of opening bogeys in the final match. Jon Rahm pars 2, though, so at least somebody’s holding their position.
-10: Scheffler (1)
-7: Noren (1)
-6: Rahm (2), Riley (1), Poston (1)
Davis Riley is looking to follow up his tie for 21st at Augusta with another high finish at a major. But the 28-year-old from Mississippi hasn’t started well. An opening bogey. He slips to -6, as does his playing partner JT Poston, who pays the price for failing to get up and down from the bank at the front of the green. Poston is another local hero, from Hickory, a mere 60 miles from Quail Hollow. He’s already won one big prize in his home state of North Carolina, the 2019 Wyndham Championship Greater Greensboro Open (deletion made for the benefit of purists). This isn’t an ideal start in his pursuit of home-state prize number two.
Noren only has two top-ten finishes at the majors in his entire career. Both of them came at the Open, in 2012 and 2017. But he’s won ten times on the European Tour, securing some big titles as well, including the Scottish Open, French Open, and the biggest of the lot, the BMW PGA Championship. So the hard-working Swede – check those famously calloused hands – has both moxie and game to add the US version of the PGA to his CV.
The leader Scottie Scheffler tees it up. If he’s feeling nerves, they’re not betraying him on his face. A huge roar from the gallery for the big man from Texas. He gracefully larrups a gentle fade around the trees down the right and he’s in position A on the fairway. He’s going round with Alex Noren today. No nerves evident from the Swedish veteran, either, as he splits the fairway. A quiet start meanwhile for Bryson DeChambeau: par-par-par. The high-point so far a whip over a huge tree to get himself back into position on 3. He remains at -5.
Matt Fitzpatrick might have rendered himself realistically done and dusted. But that’s not going to stop him battling for every shot and a high finish. He’s responded to that bogey-bogey start by raking in long birdie putts on the next two holes to return to his starting point. Meanwhile Jon Rahm’s quest to “play well” begins with par; his playing partner Kim Si-woo drops a stroke, though. So this is where we are now, with the last match preparing to tee off.
-11: Scheffler
-8: Noren
-7: Riley, Poston
-6: Griffin (8), Rahm (1)
-5: English (15), Scott (4), Fitzpatrick (4), Finau (2), DeChambeau (2), Vegas (1), Kim (1)
Harris English is another who could sell his round to the chasing pack for decent coin. The 35-year-old Georgian has just put together a run of four birdies in five holes – at 11, 12, 14 and 15 – to rise to -5. He’s got three top-ten major-championship finishes on his resumé, all at the US Open. As things stand, he’s set for a fourth … but here comes that Green Mile.
Matthieu Pavon followed up his short birdie miss at 1 by sending his tee shot at 2 into the trees. That led to a double bogey, and dreams of becoming only the second male French player in history to win a major, after 1907 Open champion Arnaud Massey, are dust. He’s -3. Also going the wrong way: the 2011 winner Keegan Bradley and his playing partner Jhonattan Vegas, who both bogey 1. They’re -4 and -5 respectively.
Another birdie for Ben Griffin, this time at 7. He’s four under for his round, and -6 overall for the championship. He could sell this start to those starting their round further up the leaderboard for a good chunk of change. Keeping it up will be the problem: the aforementioned Sam Burns was five under through his first eight holes today, only to play the remainder in one-over par. But whatever happens now to Griffin, the local lad from the renowned university town of Chapel Hill, will be posting his highest finish at a major. This is the first time he’s made the cut at one. It could be a top-ten finish, you never know.
So much was expected from Rory McIlroy this week. So much for the concept of Rory McIlroy Country Club (© Jordan Spieth, all rights reserved). His bid was pretty much scuppered from the get-go, with that opening round of 74, and he only really brought anything like his good stuff on Friday, with a 69. He’s just followed up yesterday’s 72 with the same score, and finishes the week +3. Ah well, he’ll always have Augusta. As he loads his clubs into the back of the car to go home, he runs into Jon Rahm, who is only just off to work, and slaps his European Ryder Cup buddy on the back, sending him off with a cheery “play well!” Sad to see the newest member of the career-slam club leave the course so early, but that’s golf for you.
The 2023 US Open champion Matt Fitzpatrick’s slim hopes seem pretty much extinguished already. A miss to the left on 1 costs him a shot; a miss to the right on 2 costs him another. He’s back to -3 and only has pounds, points and position to play for now.
A fast start is essential if anyone from the chasing pack is to apply pressure on Scottie Scheffler. Ben Griffin started too far back to be a contender, but he’s currently showing what can be done, with birdies at 2, 3 and 5. He’s -3. Matthieu Pavon however is within swinging distance going into the final round, and it looks like he’s made the perfect start by clipping his approach at 1 from 180 yards to six feet. But he prods meekly at the birdie putt, and remains at -5.
Here we are at the business end of the 107th PGA Championship, then. Somebody will most likely have to go low if they’re to catch Scottie Scheffler. So is it possible on the early evidence? Nobody’s gone super-low as of yet: Sam Burns has been the best of the morning starters, back in the hutch with a 67, while Xander Schauffele signed off the defence of his title with a 68. They finish the week -2 and -1 respectively. But most of the pins are accessible, so while the greens are firming up, and the wind is picking up, nothing is off the table.
Preamble
This is Scottie’s to lose. But anything can happen on any given major-championship Sunday – it’s only three years since Justin Thomas won from a record-equalling seven back, after all – and there are plenty of big names lurking should the world number one somehow misplace his mojo. Thing is, it was Mito Pereira who led going into that historic day in 2022; today it’s Scheffler, the world number one, who yesterday evening laid waste both the field and Quail Hollow’s notorious closing stretch with some out-of-this-world, carpe-diem golf (beginning here). Still, you never know. Here’s how the top of the leaderboard looked at the end of the third round …
-11: Scottie Scheffler
-8: Alex Noren
-7: Davis Riley, JT Poston
-6: Jon Rahm, Kim Si-woo, Jhonattan Vegas
-5: Keegan Bradley, Tony Finau, Bryson DeChambeau, Matthieu Pavon, Matt Fitzpatrick
… and here are the tee times (all BST). It’s on!
13.10 Chris Kirk (US), Sergio Garcia (Spa)
13.20 Bud Cauley (US), Byeong Hun An (Kor)
13.30 Brian Campbell (US), Elvis Smylie (Aus)
13.40 Austin Eckroat (US), Brian Harman (US)
13.50 Tom Kim (Kor), Michael Kim (US)
14.00 Nicolai Højgaard (Den), Stephan Jaeger (Ger)
14.10 Justin Lower (US), Kevin Yu (Tai)
14.20 Daniel Berger (US), Rasmus Højgaard (Den)
14.30 Tommy Fleetwood (Eng), Collin Morikawa (US)
14.40 Xander Schauffele (US), Sam Burns (US)
14.50 Christiaan Bezuidenhout (SA), Rory McIlroy (NI)
15.10 Richard Bland (Eng), Sam Stevens (US)
15.20 Tom McKibbin (NI), Corey Conners (Can)
15.30 Luke Donald (Eng), Thorbjørn Olesen (Den)
15.40 Marco Penge (Eng), Beau Hossler (US)
15.50 Max Homa (US), Wyndham Clark (US)
16.00 Harris English (US), Aaron Rai (Eng)
16.10 Eric Cole (US), Nico Echavarria (Col)
16.20 Rafael Campos (Pur), Cameron Young (US)
16.30 Michael Thorbjornsen (US), Tyrrell Hatton (Eng)
16.40 Harry Hall (Eng), Taylor Moore (US)
16.50 Joaquin Niemann (Chi), Viktor Hovland (Nor)
17.10 Robert MacIntyre (Sco), David Puig (Spa)
17.20 JJ Spaun (US), Alex Smalley (US)
17.30 Taylor Pendrith (Can), Maverick McNealy (US)
17.40 Ben Griffin (US), Ryo Hisatsune (Jpn)
17.50 Ryan Fox (NZ), Max Greyserman (US)
18.00 Denny McCarthy (US), Ryan Gerard (US)
18.10 Lucas Glover (US), Cam Davis (Aus)
18.20 Joe Highsmith (US), Garrick Higgo (SA)
18.30 Matt Wallace (Eng), Adam Scott (Aus)
18.40 Matthieu Pavon (Fra), Matt Fitzpatrick (Eng)
19.00 Tony Finau (US), Bryson DeChambeau (US)
19.10 Jhonattan Vegas (Ven), Keegan Bradley (US)
19.20 Jon Rahm (Spa), Kim Si-woo (Kor)
19.30 Davis Riley (US), JT Poston (US)
19.40 Scottie Scheffler (US), Alex Noren (Swe)