Scottie Scheffler stepped into the media center at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am on Tuesday with everyone wondering what exactly happened on Christmas Day. Sidelined since the holidays due to a hand injury sustained while preparing dinner,
Justin Thomas, Patrick Cantlay and Nick Dunlap Compete at The American Express at PGA West in La Quinta, Calif., – Thursday-Sunday Coverage on GOLF Channel Begins at 4 p.m. ET
Straka, one of more than a dozen active PGA Tour players from the University of Georgia, followed up his third-round 64 with a 70 on Sunday at the Stadium Course and at 25-under-par 263 won The American Express by two shots over Justin Thomas (66).
The PGA Tour drew a measly 232,000 viewers for Sepp Straka's win on Sunday, according to Josh Carpenter of Sports Business Journal, down from 534,000 last year for then-amateur Nick Dunlap's win over Xander Schauffele (T-3) and Justin Thomas (T-3). When LIV Golf's Jon Rahm won in 2023, 391,000 tuned in.
Sony Open winner Nick Taylor is the leading earner in this week’s American Express, topping a list of 10 players among the top 20 on the PGA Tour money list who are at PGA West and the La Quinta ...
History suggests that picking a past champion at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am is as safe a bet as any.
Even though The American Express is the dominating event in the Coachella Valley golf scene, it is hardly the end of the golf season in the desert. In fact, The American Express is just the beginning of a 2025 golf season that will stretch all the way to October.
A recent column on the decline in television viewership for professional golf, including The American Express in La Quinta, seemed to strike a nerve with many readers. Or perhaps it just opened an old wound.
Pebble Beach & Spyglass Hill are the two courses for the 2025 Pebble Beach Pro-Am Signature Event with a $20 million prize pool & elite field of PGA Tour golfers. Odds, stats, matchups, picks, props and insight with information you can bet on.
But this is an inflection point for the PGA Tour and slow play, thanks to a convergence of mounting fan outrage, broadcast pressures and the ongoing schism between the tour and LIV Golf. The question isn't whether the tour needs to act,
The slow play on Saturday came after the uproar caused by the laborious pace in last Sunday’s final round of The American Express. The final group on the PGA West Stadium Course that included winner Sepp Straka took 5 hours and 39 minutes in perfect conditions, finishing about 40 minutes beyond the TV window.