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Transcript – NBC Sports Live From The Masters Media Conference Call

April 3, 2024 By admin

Wednesday, April 3, 2024

Rich Lerner

Brandel Chamblee

Notah Begay III

Johnson Wagner

THE MODERATOR: Good afternoon, everybody. Welcome to the NBC Sports Live From the Masters media conference call. Today we’ll be joined by our Live From The Masters host Rich Lerner and analysts Brandel Chamblee, Notah Begay and Johnson Wagner.

We already have members of our production team on the ground in Augusta for what will be more than 100 hours of programming in and around Augusta National over the next 10+ days. Our coverage of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur began today with Anna Jackson, Morgan Pressel, Paige Mackenzie and Steve Burkowski calling the first round of action from Champions Retreat this afternoon.

This is the second year we are showing live coverage of the first two rounds from Champions Retreat. That will be followed by Live From the Augusta National Women’s Amateur studio coverage on Friday and Saturday on Golf Channel and Peacock, culminating with final round coverage at Augusta National Golf Club live on NBC and Peacock live on Saturday afternoon.

One of the best events on the entire golf calendar is this Sunday morning, 8 a.m. ET, when we have live coverage of the Drive, Chip & Putt finals on Golf Channel and Peacock, and then everything shifts to the Masters with our comprehensive studio coverage originating from Augusta National. That begins Monday next week, 2 p.m. ET.

Just as a reminder, we will open this up to questions from the press momentarily but we will begin with some opening remarks from our speakers. We’re going to begin with Rich Lerner.

RICH LERNER: Thanks to everyone for jumping on. I’ll briefly touch on a handful of big storylines going in.

We’ll start with Rory [McIlroy]. Always fascinating to me when one tournament can so dramatically alter one player’s legacy. Rory without a Masters victory is still one of the best players of his generation, but Rory with a Masters win is one of the best of all time, as he would be just one of six to have won all four.

Jon Rahm returns not simply as defending champion but as the guy who jumped, leaving the public conflicted.

Tiger [Woods], the spartan recent record leans towards it’s over, but for those in the category best athletes of all time, the possibility of one more is never easily relinquished.

Also with the struggles of the top players in 2024, and I think Brandel is going to expand on this, you have to consider the idea that for the first time in 45 years, a first-timer will win, and there are two that really jump out more than any in recent memory, Wyndham Clark and Ludvig Aberg.

Lastly, Scottie, you don’t worry about Scottie Scheffler as a player and as a person. If Scottie were your doctor, if he were your kid’s high school basketball coach, you would feel good. The not-quite-reliable putting makes him not quite a lock to win, though I think we would all agree he is a lock to contend.

BRANDEL CHAMBLEE: I agree with pretty much all that. More generally I’ll just say it’s exciting to cover the Masters. It’s the most anticipated golf tournament in the world for obvious reasons. There’s the longest time span between the last major played and the first major of the new year and the familiarity that everybody has with the golf course, both players and spectators alike. Every shot has instant context and historical meaning.

That makes the Masters unique in the landscape of professional golf.

What further makes it unique is the exciting layout, the back nine. There’s no better stage in the world for the best players in the world to show off, and historically it has given us I think the highest and most reliable sort of drama.

It’s also the fact that we wait the longest for it but they give us the least of it. There’s no other major championship where we see so few of the shots and wait so long to watch the golf. So they have us all standing there salivating waiting for whatever we end up getting to see.

You put all that together, and it’s the most compelling event, and in this landscape today, it’s one of four events where all of the disparate strands of the game of golf come together: LIV players, PGA TOUR players, DP World Tour players. They all come together. So it’s added — we can debate whether or not that’s good, but you cannot deny that it’s compelling.

There’s a sense now even a further heightened sense with more than a dozen LIV players coming back. Nobody really would have seen them play for the large part of this year, so there’s a sense of great anticipation at what kind of games they’re going to have and what kind of controversy it’s going to stir up.

You put all that together, and it’s a pretty compelling event.

I think Rich already hit pretty solidly on Scottie Scheffler and Rory and Rahm and the first-timers. I couldn’t agree more.

I think one of the biggest mysteries going on in the world of golf right now is why so few of the best players in the world are playing well. That’s true on the PGA TOUR, and it’s also true on LIV.

I’ve gone back and looked at every single LIV player that is playing at the Masters. I’ve looked at all of their records and looked at all of the data from when they left to LIV and compared it over a comparative amount of time before they left, and almost every single one of their games has fallen off. People will say, well, they played well in the Masters last year, and that’s certainly true, a few of them did, and Brooks Koepka won the PGA last year, and he certainly did, but if you compare the amount of majors that they’ve played in since they left and then compare it to the amount of majors, an equal number of majors before they left, almost every single player out there is worse off. Their games are worse.

There’s one whose game is marginally better, and that’s Cameron Smith, and I’m counting the Open Championship where he won as him being a LIV player because everybody knows he had already decided to go to LIV when he won the Open Championship.

It’s true on the PGA TOUR, it’s true on the LIV Tour, so few of the best players in the world are playing well, and it’s opened up the landscape more wide open than it’s ever been, and I would say that’s interesting because the Masters is the most predictable major championship. It’s the most predictable golf tournament in the world to predict a winner.

But this year I would argue that it’s more wide open for all of the reasons I’ve listed and what Rich touched on.

NOTAH BEGAY: Thanks, everybody, for joining. It’s certainly great to be with you all. I think one of the most intriguing things for me in my attraction is the Masters is just the opportunity to compare records, historical records, performance records, whatever they may be. I think that’s one of the reasons I love Olympic track and field is the stopwatch and the measuring tape are the same pretty much wherever you go, and with the Masters it’s the one time where year after year we sort of get to compare performances.

I know the course has changed in certain regards, but Jordan’s historic win to Tiger’s historic win to other great players that have sort of gone through Augusta National and won the Masters, and looking at this year’s event isn’t any different. I don’t think in recent history you’ve had a player coming in that has been so good in contrast to the rest of his peers than Scottie Scheffler, and I believe Tiger is the only player in history to have won THE PLAYERS and the Masters in the same year, and Scottie gets a chance to do that again for the second time.

Those are neat things to keep an eye on because this is a place that will haunt you. Just ask Greg Norman and Rory McIlroy. Not only do they have to face the challenges of the golf course, they have to face all the demons ahead of “can I actually do this,” when both of those players came ever so close and can sort of feel one arm in the green jacket at some point down the stretch.

Then it brings to life other players. You’ve got three different players, one that hasn’t played, one that’s playing very average, and Jordan would be sort of — out of the Jordan-Mickelson-Tiger bunch would be the one playing the best, but those guys seem to find some sort of magic when they get to the practice ground there at Augusta and their games sort of find a way.

I disagree with both Brandel and Rich in the sense that a first-time winner may be imminent this year. I still think the golf course is like trying to take the MCAT with two days to study. You’re just not going to get it right. But I’m looking forward to whatever comes our way, and we’ll certainly as a broadcast team be ready to cover it.

Thanks.

JOHNSON WAGNER: Thank you so much, everybody out there. Really looking forward to being at the Masters and covering it for the first time. I had the pleasure of going down and shadowing for radio last year, so I got to see the inner workings of the press building and sort of the back roads access, and you can’t be more impressed by a place than I was last year, getting a whole new perspective.

I echo everyone’s comments on Scottie Scheffler. It seems like after a year of tremendous consistency, how can this guy get any better, but he continues to get better, and I’m of the belief that a guy like Scottie Scheffler, who is not on social media, who is seemingly unfazed by anything going on around him, I think we’re on the precipice of a historic run that we’ve already seen the beginnings of with him.

Then I agree with Notah. I don’t think we’re looking at a first-time participant winning this, but I think we’re looking at — if it’s not Scheffler, I think we’re looking at a first-time major winner in a guy like Will Zalatoris. He’s had a great career. He finished second in 2021, sixth in 2022. He’s back, he’s healthy, he’s playing great golf, and I’m really looking forward to watching his play this week.

Q: This is kind of directed at the former players in the group. For Brandel, Notah and Johnson, you’ve got a lot of guys going into a tournament like this with I don’t want to say baggage, but they’re in pursuit of something, a first thing. Rory has talked about the fact that he hasn’t won in 10 years, a major, and the next one is going to feel like the next. You’ve got Cam Young who hasn’t won a tournament at all but has done so many things well in the last two plus years. You’ve got Xander Schauffele who’s been seven times and has been close but still hasn’t won that first major. Rickie hasn’t won a first major. What do you guys think is most difficult out of all those three, winning your first tournament, winning the first major, or a guy like Rory who’s got the weight of the world with him with the Grand Slam hanging over him?

JOHNSON WAGNER: Well, I think it’s got to be Rory McIlroy. I think history is going against him. This is his 10th attempt to complete the career Grand Slam, and I think of the five previous that have completed it, none have taken more than, I believe, four or five years to do so, and the only person to do it at Augusta National, correct me if I’m wrong, but I believe it was Gene Sarazen, and that was in either the first or second editions of the Augusta National Invitational before it became really the Masters.

I think for me it’s Rory McIlroy all the way has the most pressure.

NOTAH BEGAY: I think winning your first major is harder, only because you’re usually playing the toughest courses against the toughest fields under the most extreme pressure with the most coverage.

The one thing I really love about golf, and you’ve seen it these past couple weeks, is a win for a player, it changes your life.

Some of these players that have gone on to win their one major, a handful of majors, it just completely validates all of the struggle and the pursuit. For some it’s kind of everything they expected and more, and for others it didn’t quite live up to what they expected, but it’s always different for each person, so in the context of what is harder, I think that in and of itself is probably the hardest thing.

BRANDEL CHAMBLEE: I would say, look, I certainly agree Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay are certainly facing a lot of pressure. There’s evidence they are feeling it. There’s objective evidence they are feeling it. But I think there’s stronger evidence, to Johnson Wagner’s point, that the person who’s under the most mental duress at the Masters is Rory.

You go back and you look, and there’s a pattern. Every time he seems to play his worst golf when it means the most, in other words, in the first round when he’s got to get off to a good start. His last five Masters he’s averaged 73.8 in the first round. That speaks to not being in the right place mentally.

But whenever he is in a good place — when he does manage to get himself into a good place, say in 2018 he was second after 54 holes, he shot 74 Saturday. In 2016 he was second after 36 holes, and he shot 77 Saturday.

He plays his best when it means the least, and he plays his worst when it means the most. Now, we can dive in and parse out technical reasons why that is, but the larger landscape is it’s just mental. I think him trying to get over that hurdle and become the sixth person to win the Grand Slam is mentally the most compelling thing that will take place at the Masters.

Q: A quick one for Notah and then Brandel. What did you make of Justin Thomas’ decision to part with [Jim] “Bones” [Mackay] and especially the timing of it? What kind of unique challenges does that create for next week?

NOTAH BEGAY: Well, terrible timing. Anytime you have to walk away from a trusted relationship — the premise of a caddie-player relationship is predicated on trust. You’re trusting somebody to interject their opinion into critical decisions, especially around a place where your attitude can either enhance your chances or end your chances of winning the golf tournament.

For him it obviously has to be the right choice because things just weren’t going his way. Had the third single worst strokes gained putting round in that third round at Valspar. That’s certainly not a reflection on the caddie, but maybe just a new look, a new feel, a little new energy might sort of get things moving in the right direction.

I don’t think it’s an overall solution to bad play. Sometimes it does help get things moving back in a place that you feel like you can put up some decent scores.

Q: You mentioned how compelling this event is because we finally have all the top players in the field again. Are you optimistic that we’re inching our way out of this period of uncertainty and do you think the economics of the sport are sustainable in any way?

BRANDEL CHAMBLEE: Do I think we’re inching our way out of this controversy? I’m not optimistic that there’s going to be a merger between the PGA TOUR and LIV. I think the litigation ending and the discovery ending was important, but I’m not optimistic at all that there will be a merger between these two groups. Even if they agree upon it, I’m not convinced that the DOJ will allow it.

So no, I don’t see these groups coming together, and I think the quickest way for these players to find their way, the LIV players to get back on to and playing PGA TOUR events is when and if LIV dissolves, and if that happens, then I think there will be a process that would allow them to come back for different players.

I think that’s drawn out.

For at least the next two, three, four years, majors will be about the only time we see these players join forces, which is compelling. Again, it’s really hard to dive into these LIV events. It’s hard to take them seriously from a competitive standpoint. It’s hard to divine out of them any sort of data. The data is elementary and dubious if you go on to their website.

So the only real objective data that we can use is how do they play when they show up and play in the majors. Are they better or worse than when they left? Are they better or worse? By and large, they’re worse. The vast majority of them are worse.

They’ve done themselves a disservice competitively and historically. They’re richer, but they’ve done themselves a disservice.

Then by the same token, players on the PGA TOUR, most of the best players on the PGA TOUR are distracted, and they’re playing worse, too. That’s why we have so many lower ranked players in the world doing so well on the PGA TOUR this year would be my argument, and that’s why I look at the landscape of the Masters and say, is it likely a first-time winner could win? No, but are the chances better than they’ve ever been or better than — I would say better than they’ve ever been. Yes, I’d say they are.

There’s a sense that the Masters is more wide open this year than it’s ever been on the one hand. On the other, you have to go back to the Tiger Woods days to find a player who’s dominated the PGA TOUR the way Scottie Scheffler is and who arrives there with every facet of his game, the most important facets of his game needed to win the Masters. Nobody has even come close to having them in the order, not even Tiger Woods, in the order that Scottie Scheffler has them.

The most important parts of winning the Masters are approach play and scrambling. Well, he’s first in approach play, and he’s fourth in scrambling. You add those two numbers together, that’s five. Nobody has come in there with anything less than 20.

What we’re looking at here is, on the one hand, yeah, the odds are better that it’s going to be wide open, but on the other, it’s easy to see a Scottie Scheffler blowout.

RICH LERNER: If I could just jump in on LIV real quickly, I do not dispute anything that you said. What I think we can safely say, though, is that they, those in the LIV camp, will undoubtedly hang their hat on the fact that the first two majors of 2024 will have as defending champions LIV guys in Jon Rahm and Brooks Koepka, and then at the Masters next week four of the first five on the final leaderboard from 2023 are now with LIV, Rahm, Koepka, Mickelson and Patrick Reed, who tied for fourth with Russell Henley. That and the fact that they can claim to be aligned with McIlroy on this need for — the approach that they need to come together, however that happens.

It feels like — I don’t know that they’ll have an upper hand, but I think they’ll lean into that, whether it’s justified or not.

Q: The other news of today, Rory McIlroy officially took a lesson a week or so ago after THE PLAYERS with Butch Harmon, and I’m curious your reaction to that. What do you think of that move and some of the stuff that Rory is doing to try to close the deal on the Grand Slam?

BRANDEL CHAMBLEE: I’d have to reserve judgment until I watch him make a few golf swings in the practice round. He had made some improvements on his iron play at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, made some improvements I should say at THE PLAYERS over what he did at Arnold Palmer Invitational. He had made some improvements.

But I’ll have to see it, and I’ll believe it when I see it. His golf swing is just so — it’s beautiful, no doubt, but it’s such an odd fit for Augusta. He just swings too in to out, and he misses so many shots there off all those hook lies. That’s the thing about the equipment is very few players draw it anymore because if you draw it, you have to work so hard to draw it. The equipment makes you work so hard to draw it that when it comes to iron play, you’re just too much in to out and have too much closure of the face and it leads to too many long and left shots which are accentuated at Augusta National by hook lies, further accentuated by greens that slope severely back to front, so you’re long left above the hole coming down the hill, and you are just handicapped at Augusta National.

Now, that is a scene that plays out year after year after year with Rory. For him to change the attack angle, the approach and his release patterns for one week and get it fully set, that’s just a tall order, a really tall order.

I’ll believe it when I see it. The game is better when Rory is playing his best. It’s more exciting. That’s arguably the most exciting — don’t count Tiger, but outside of Tiger, that’s the most exciting story in all of golf.

If he drives it down 1 on the first day and he’s got a huge hook lie and he hits a soft cut 10 feet beneath the hole, I’ll go, game on. But if he hits it 30 feet left of the hole above the hole, I’m like, here we go again. So I’ll believe it when I see it.

NOTAH BEGAY: To follow up on Brandel’s comments, and he’s spot on with regard to Rory’s short iron performance at Palmer, 17 times between 100 and 150 yards, he had a short iron in his hand and only managed to get two of those inside 15 feet. That’s far below average of any PGA TOUR player, far below any of our expectations with regard to a player of Rory’s caliber and talent. Yes, there were improvements at THE PLAYERS, but it still came up to bite him on a handful of shots that he needed to keep himself in contention there.

I’ve seen Butch work with a number of players. I saw him firsthand work, standing next to him, work with Tiger, and his approach has been the same. Once he gets you swinging left, once he gets you on top of the ball, and if you listen to Rickie Fowler’s post-round comments a few weeks ago, having gone back to Butch just recently, he talked about I need to do what Butch told me and I need to swing left. That’s a big thing to change in a short period of time.

Like Brandel is right; if we see a big high soft cut off a slightly above-the-feet lie, then I think we can reconsider, but until then I think it’s still a big question mark.

Q: Notah, do you have any additional insight into — we haven’t seen Tiger for a while, really since the one round he played. Have you any more insight you can share with us, what we might expect from him next week?

NOTAH BEGAY: Well, with regard to that, the recipe hasn’t changed. He’s trying to formulate a strategy and approach that he can work within the constraints that he’s presented with. He’s got some major constraints. He’s got zero mobility in that left ankle and really has some low back challenges now, which he knew he was going to have.

After the ankle surgery I had a chance to visit with him when Charlie was playing in my junior golf event in Louisiana, and he said, my ankle doesn’t move, so something is going to take the stress. The stress is going to transfer somewhere else, and he goes, I don’t know where it’s going to be, but it might be my knee, it might be my hip, and it ended up being his low back.

This last couple months he’s just been spending trying to find a way to recover. He can play the golf, and we always knew the question mark was going to be can he walk the 72, that’s still up in the air, but can he recover from one round to the next. That’s the biggest question that I really don’t know and he’s not going to know, either, until he gets out there and figures out if the way he’s prepared for this year’s Masters is going to work for him.

Q: While we have been on this call, your colleague Todd Lewis is reporting that Matt Minister will be the caddie for (Justin Thomas) next week. My first question would be to Johnson. You probably have known Matt for a long time. You have shed one veteran caddie, you add another with a major right in front of you, is that helpful that it’s someone like Matt versus a close friend from home or some kind of patchwork kind of deal?

JOHNSON WAGNER: I think that’s a great move. Matt Minister is an awesome caddie, been with a number of great players, most notably recently with Patrick Cantlay. Matt has got a great track record. He and Justin know each other well.

My personal opinion, the JT-Bones thing, while I have so much respect for both of them, it was never a perfect fit. Without that PGA Championship, which I believe they were seven back with nine holes to play and Pereira making double on the last to put them in a playoff with Will Zalatoris, they hadn’t really done a whole lot together and hadn’t really contended a bunch.

I think it’s a good thing for JT. I think Matt Minister is a wonderful person to have on the bag. I couldn’t be happier for JT, and it makes me like his chances even more.

Q: Notah, you talked about Tiger not knowing where the forces are going to go. Is this an example of why he may not have been able to play THE PLAYERS because who knows how the back felt leading up to that, but he can then play the one-day Seminole pro-am? Is that where we are with not knowing how he’ll feel any given day?

NOTAH BEGAY: Well, exactly. He’s not going to risk going out — anytime Tiger tees it up in a sanctioned event, the guy gives it his all. Brandel and I stood there years ago and watched him just completely embarrass himself at the Waste Management Phoenix Open when he just couldn’t chip.

But I talked to him shortly thereafter, and he’s like, I never stopped trying. I didn’t know what was happening with my swing, but I just couldn’t chip, but I never stopped trying. He just doesn’t have that gear in him to give up. So if he goes out and tees it up in THE PLAYERS a few weeks ago and something else happens and breaks down, then it jeopardizes the Masters.

THE PLAYERS is such a crapshoot on your tee times and the wind conditions. It favors nobody. Why would he risk it there when he can go to Augusta where he knows the course better than any player walking on the grounds, where he’s at a distinct advantage, and it’s just a question — the same questions are in front of him. Can I walk this hilly course and what’s going to happen to me when I do.

I just don’t think the risk was worth it to him.

Q: Lastly for Rich, those essays which I assume are written during Live From because you don’t know who the champion is up until very close, how fast of a turnaround is that from I’m going to put something down, I’m going to write it, I’m going to do the voiceover and then you see it on there? That’s got to be pretty fast.

RICH LERNER: It varies, but thank you. I’ve done them sometimes as the championship is ending. I’ve had to load them up when something dramatic has happened, something has changed radically at the end, which happens quite a bit. I’ll write — what I do quite a bit is I’ll write the first half to two-thirds that tries to maybe capture what we’ve seen through the week, the sort of overarching storyline, and then I will write three or four different endings with three or four different player possibilities.

Last year let’s say at the PGA Championship I had plenty written about Michael Block, and then I wrote a Viktor Hovland ending, I wrote whoever else was in it, and then I wrote a Koepka ending and then came back to Michael Block.

Other times I have written them sometimes to cover any eventuality, and I can get them done early in the day. It’s a challenge but it’s a fun one to try to get something finished early and then look at it and say, does this cover any eventuality, including a hole-out to win. That gives the people, the production team back in Stamford, Connecticut, plenty of time to dress it up.

It varies. I’ve had many hair-on-fire experiences, but it keeps me — it absolutely keeps me on my toes all day long. It’s good fun. But thank you for that.

Q: A question about (Jon) Rahm. Brandel, you touched a little bit on it earlier, but I’m curious, how dizzying this game has been, a year ago this guy had won three times in eight starts coming into the Masters and was on everybody’s radar as the best guy out there, and now a year later Scottie has kind of taken that mantle and Rahm feels like to the regular golf fan like he’s been in witness protection. He’s played a lot less leading into this Masters, Jon has, and many less rounds and obviously hasn’t won. I’m curious what your take is, Brandel, Notah and Johnson, on what you expect to see out of him. I know Brandel, you referred to the fact he does so much research obviously leading into this as you always do about the numbers, but I’m curious with this different lead-up for him what you expect and how you think it’ll affect him.

BRANDEL CHAMBLEE: Well, it’s a bit of an unknown, again, if you look at the data that’s available on LIV’s website, they have preposterous numbers for guys in some instances. They’ve got a handful of guys that are hitting over 75 percent of their greens in regulation. A handful. More than a handful.

It’s rare when one person does that on the PGA TOUR. They’ve got guys out there that are well above their historical high on the PGA TOUR in data achieving it with regularity out there. So you just don’t know what to believe.

When you look at Rahm, obviously he hasn’t won yet on LIV. We’ll see what he does in Miami. But he’s playing very consistent golf.

The thing about Augusta National is that — one of the reasons why it has so many repeat winners and it’s so predictable is if you happen to have some very specific aspects of your game that fit that golf course, it’s the gift that just keeps on giving, and as it relates to Rory, if you just happen to have a couple aspects of your game that don’t fit Augusta National, it’s the pain that keeps on giving.

Rahm just has everything in spades. There hasn’t really been his equal in terms of driving it long and straight since maybe (Jack) Nicklaus. It’s just extraordinary to watch him. He has the necessary move being able to hit cuts off hook lies. He can hit towering iron shots. He doesn’t swing left. There’s such a huge movement to swing left. There’s a fine line between swinging out, swinging down the line and swinging left.

Most Masters winners I would argue don’t swing left. They swing down the line and they finish high, and that’s what Jon Rahm does. He’s down that line.

He’s just got it all. They just don’t come along like him very often. He’s so competitive, and I’m sure he feels like he’s got an axe to grind, and I’m sure he feels like he wants to show the world that LIV has not impoverished him. I’m sure he’ll show up in the mindset I’m guessing of so many of the LIV players last year, and that’s part of why they played so well last year I would say, but the other part is they’re defending champions. They’re the best players in the world. That’s why LIV sought them out and poached them because they had value and they were still freshly off having played the PGA TOUR.

As time goes on, they’re going to become less and less competitive. I think the early data is showing that. But I think Rahm will show up and do very well. It’s rare that somebody successfully defends, but it wouldn’t surprise anybody.

JOHNSON WAGNER: I don’t have much to add. I agree Rahm is an incredibly competitive guy. I think maybe he’s at a little bit of a crossroads debating whether or not he made his decision. I hate to — the right decision. I hate to speculate, but from everything I’ve heard, he’s maybe missing the competitive golf, so I think he’s going to get back into the major environment and he’s going to feel right at home quickly and I think he’s going to relish the opportunity to go back out there and be somewhat of a disruptor.

NOTAH BEGAY: Yeah, and I think obviously Brandel hit the nail on the head again. My take on it, just maybe from a playability standpoint, is that there’s a reason that the world’s best runners get together on a consistent basis leading up to the Olympics. It’s because they make each other better. They’re challenging each other. They’re pushing each other. They’re calibrating times and splits and recovery and all the things that you have to do against the world’s best athletes in those specific events.

That’s not happening on LIV. That happens on the PGA TOUR. It’s cutthroat. You’ve got players nobody has ever heard you that can beat you on a week-to-week basis as has been shown this first few months, and at the end of the day steel sharpens steel. They make each other tougher, they make each other better. There’s no guarantees of anything. They play just as much for the glory as they do for the money.

I think you’re going to see a slow deterioration of not just Jon Rahm’s game but other players that had once held that top-10 World Ranking at some point just because it’s inevitable when you’re not pushing yourself and red lining your performance expectations every single week. Lance Armstrong said it very clearly: Comfort makes you weak.

Those guys are awfully wealthy and awfully comfortable right now.

Q: You talked earlier about Will Zalatoris, but I wondered if starting with Brandel if you could break down what you like about the changes to his golf swing that you like after having the back surgery?

BRANDEL CHAMBLEE: Well, I’ve looked at his golf swing in pretty granular detail. He still has a huge right-side bend, still has a lot of spine angle tilt coming into the golf ball. The things that we could have surprised were causing a back issue, they’re still prevalent there to me, but he’s swinging without any pain, so that’s great news. His club head speed, his ball speed has come up as the year has gone on, he’s had some solid finishes.

I think 1-A to the bad back was the bad putting stroke. Even though his dad is not by any stretch of the imagination great in that regard, I would say it’s somewhat promising.

I’m saying promising in the sense that it’s not as devastating as it looked before or potentially as devastating.

Contrary to popular belief, the Masters has rewarded a number of very poor putters over the years. Ball-striking is more important there. Chipping is more important there.

I’m bullish on Will. I’m not completely gung-ho on him. He’s still losing four-tenths of a shot to the field with his putter.

But more than anything, what matters is how well you’re recovering, almost as much as your iron play. His short game is just not that sharp. Hasn’t been that sharp.

It wouldn’t surprise anybody if he hung in there and he contended, but I don’t think he’s going to be anybody’s pick to win the golf tournament.

NOTAH BEGAY: I think the most notable element of Will Zalatoris’s game that can lend some people to have some excitement about him heading into the Masters is the new putter and the new putting stroke. The stats aren’t obviously overwhelming, which I think he makes up for with his tee-to-green game, but I did a careful analysis of that stroke and the stroke is solid, but what’s more important is that ball is turning end-over-end extremely well.

I know the speed of the greens and the slope of the greens at the Masters does not lend itself to rewarding a long putter, but he wouldn’t be the first player to win at Augusta using a long putter. I think that the fact that I think he certainly feels more comfortable on the greens going back to a venue where he obviously feels great tee to green, and that’s his strength, certainly pushes him up my list.

JOHNSON WAGNER: Well, with Will Zalatoris for me, I played with him a couple years ago his rookie year at the Byron Nelson, and I was blown away with how high he hit his irons. I don’t think I had ever in my life seen someone be able to compress and hit an iron quite so high in the air, and I watched him pretty closely at THE PLAYERS Championship and a little bit on Bay Hill, and one thing that makes me very excited about him is that he is still hitting his irons as high as he did before. He’s ninth this year in strokes gained approach, which Brandel said was one of the key stats coming into Augusta.

I don’t think he gets enough credit for how imaginative and creative he is with a wedge in his hand around the greens.

I know the putter is always going to be an issue, but I think he’s got exceptional touch, and his iron play is exquisite, and I think he is back pain-free. I’m not picking him to win, but he is definitely going to be in the top 5 for me.

Q: About your tweet last night talking about all the players losing ground, strokes gained total, one year ago to today, there was just a comment earlier, this wasn’t originally part of my question, but there was a comment earlier about when the top players are together they play better, but all the top players are playing together more this year, and as you mentioned, a lot of them are playing worse. Why do you think that is, and could it be because the schedule puts them all together so much that everybody can’t play well every week?

BRANDEL CHAMBLEE: You know, I think they’re distracted, honestly. I think to the degree that players think about money, they’re not being drawn upward athletically. I just don’t think that’s the place where your best anything comes from.

If you’re distracted at all, just generally speaking, you can’t play your best golf. But if you’re distracted to the degree that the best players in the world are, should I go, should I stay — several of these great players are on the board, so every time they go out there they’re barraged with questions.

We talk so much about how important it is for players to be in the right place mentally, and I just think there’s an epidemic of distraction on the PGA TOUR, whether it’s greed or trying to solve problems that are almost unsolvable, however you want to put it. I just think they’re hugely distracted.

Then there’s always the two or three or four players that come along that decide they want to chase perfection, and they start fiddling around with their golf swings and they lose their game.

I think Viktor Hovland is suffering that. We spent most of our time this year talking about the falloff in Viktor Hovland’s game, but Fleetwood’s game has fallen off more, Cantlay’s game has fallen off more, Matthew Fitzpatrick’s game has fallen off more, Max Homa’s game has fallen off more.

In the top 20 players, they are about, on average, the top 20 players in the world right now are about, on average, one shot worse a round than they were last year. That is a lot of bad golf from the best players in the world. That is a lot of bad golf.

There’s only just a few players that are playing a little bit better in the top 20 in the world. Just a few. Xander Schauffele is playing better. Scottie Scheffler obviously is playing better, which is hard to do, given how well he was playing last year. Wyndham Clark who wasn’t in the top 20 last year but is now at this time — last year at this time he was 81st but he’s obviously playing better.

Again, it’s very few. I’ve never seen a time when the best players in the world have come into the Masters playing so poorly and so distracted, which is why I think it sets up for a blowout by Scheffler, or if he doesn’t very well, doesn’t play to his best, a very surprising winner at the Masters.

 

Filed Under: masters, NBC, PGA Tour, transcript, Uncategorized

AUGUSTA NATIONAL WOMEN’S AMATEUR HIGHLIGHTS NEARLY 50 HOURS OF LIVE GOLF COVERAGE ACROSS NBC, GOLF CHANNEL AND PEACOCK THIS WEEK

April 3, 2024 By admin

Live Coverage of Augusta National Women’s Amateur Begins Today From Champions Retreat Golf Club in Georgia at 1:30 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock

Live From Augusta National Women’s Amateur On-Site Coverage Presented this Friday at 1 p.m. ET & Saturday at 10 a.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock

PGA TOUR’s Valero Texas Open Live Coverage From TPC San Antonio Begins Thursday at 4 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock

Smylie Kaufman to Serve as Analyst for This Week’s Coverage of Valero Texas Open

LPGA Tour Season Continues with T-Mobile Match Play From Shadow Creek in Las Vegas; Live Coverage Begins Today at 6 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock

Five Hours of Live Drive, Chip and Putt National Finals Coverage from Augusta National Golf Club Begins Sunday, April 7, at 8 a.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock

Golf Central Live From The Masters Media Conference Call – Today, April 3, at 3:30 p.m. ET

STAMFORD, Conn. – April 3, 2024 – NBC Sports presents nearly 50 hours of live golf coverage across NBC, GOLF Channel and Peacock this week, highlighted by the Augusta National Women’s Amateur and the PGA TOUR’s Valero Texas Open.

AUGUSTA NATIONAL WOMEN’S AMATEUR

72 of the world’s top female amateurs are scheduled to play in the fifth edition of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur this week. The first two rounds will be played at Champions Retreat Golf Club before the leading 30 players and ties compete in the final round at Augusta National Golf Club for the title.

Provided she remains an amateur, the winner will receive an invitation to the next five Augusta National Women’s Amateurs, the 2024 U.S. Women’s Open, the 2024 AIG Women’s Open, the 2024 Chevron Championship, the 2024 Evian Championship and additional amateur championships. Thirty-seven competitors return from last year’s event, including 2023 third-place finisher Andrea Lignell of Sweden and fourth-place finisher Cayetana Fernandez Garcia-Poggio of Spain.

Live coverage from Champions Retreat Golf Club gets underway Wednesday and Thursday at 1:30 p.m. ET on Peacock and GOLF Channel. The final round at Augusta National will be presented on NBC and Peacock this Saturday at Noon ET.

Live From Augusta National Women’s Amateur on-site coverage will be presented this Friday at 1 p.m. ET & Saturday at 10 a.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock.

NBC, GOLF Channel & Peacock Broadcast Team

    • Host/Play by Play: Mike Tirico / Anna Jackson
    • Analyst: Morgan Pressel
    • Holes: Paige Mackenzie / Steve Burkowski
    • On-Course: Jim ‘Bones’ Mackay
    • Interviews: Cara Banks

How To Watch – Wednesday, April 3 – Saturday, April 6 (all times ET)

    • TV – NBC, GOLF Channel
    • Streaming – Peacock, NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app
Day NBC/Peacock GOLF Channel/Peacock
Wednesday   1:30-3:30 p.m.
Thursday   1:30-3:30 p.m.
Saturday 12-3:30 p.m.

 

Notable Players This Week

    • Andrea Lignell
    • Cayetana Fernandez Garcia-Poggio
    • Latanna Stone
    • Yuna Araki
    • Megha Ganne
    • Jennie Park
    • Caitlyn Macnab
    • Ingrid Lindblad
    • Emilia Migliaccio

 

PGA TOUR: VALERO TEXAS OPEN

The PGA TOUR stays in Texas this weekend at the Valero Texas Open from TPC San Antonio (Oaks Course). The winner of the 93rd playing of this tournament, if he is not already exempt, gets a spot into next week’s Masters. Jordan Spieth, who won this event in 2021, joins a competitive field this week including Rory McIlroy, Matt Fitzpatrick, and Max Homa.

Live coverage gets underway tomorrow and Friday at 4 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock. During the weekend, live coverage begins at 1 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock on both days before transitioning to NBC at 3:30 p.m. ET on Saturday and 2:30 p.m. ET on Sunday.

NBC, GOLF Channel & Peacock Broadcast Team

    • Play by Play: Dan Hicks / Steve Sands
    • Analyst: Smylie Kaufman
    • Holes: Curt Byrum
    • On-Course: John Wood / Billy Ray Brown
    • Interviews/Reports: Damon Hack

How To Watch – Thursday, April 4 – Sunday, April 7 (all times ET)

    • TV – NBC, GOLF Channel
    • Streaming – Peacock, NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app
Day NBC/Peacock GOLF Channel/Peacock
Thursday   4-7 p.m.
Friday   4-7 p.m.
Saturday 3:30-6 p.m. 1-3:30 p.m.
Sunday 2:30-6 p.m. 1-2:30 p.m.


Notable Players This Week

    • Rory McIlroy
    • Jordan Spieth
    • Matt Fitzpatrick
    • Max Homa
    • Rickie Fowler
    • Hideki Matsuyama
    • Collin Morikawa
    • Corey Conners
    • Adam Scott

 

LPGA TOUR: T-MOBILE MATCH PLAY

The 2024 LPGA Tour season continues this week with the T-Mobile Match Play at Shadow Creek in Las Vegas, Nev. This year’s tournament utilizes both stroke play and match play and the field has been expanded to 96 players. After two rounds of stroke play on Wednesday and Thursday, the field will be cut to the low 65 plus ties. After another round of stroke play on Friday, the top eight players will qualify for match play on the weekend. The quarterfinals and semifinals will be held Saturday, with the 18-hole championship match taking place on Sunday.

Nelly Korda, winner of last week’s Ford Championship, will look to become the first player to win in four straight LPGA starts since Lorena Ochoa in 2008.

Opening round coverage gets underway tonight at 6 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock.

GOLF Channel & Peacock Broadcast Team

    • Play by Play: Grant Boone
    • Analyst: Karen Stupples
    • Holes: Tom Abbott
    • On-Course: Kay Cockerill

How To Watch – Wednesday, April 3 – Sunday, April 7 (all times ET)

    • TV – GOLF Channel
    • Streaming – Peacock, NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app
Day GOLF Channel/Peacock Peacock
Wednesday 6-9 p.m.  
Thursday 7-9 p.m. 6-7 p.m.*
Friday 7-8:30 p.m. 5:30-7 p.m.*
Saturday 6-9 p.m.  
Sunday 6-9 p.m.  

*Also on NBCSports.com and NBC Sports App

Notable Players This Week

    • Nelly Korda
    • Celine Boutier
    • Lydia Ko
    • Minjee Lee
    • Brooke Henderson
    • Rose Zhang
    • Allison Corpuz

 

DRIVE, CHIP AND PUTT NATIONAL FINALS

The Drive, Chip and Putt National Finals from Augusta National Golf Club, featuring 40 boys and 40 girls competing in four age divisions, will be presented live this Sunday, April 7, across five hours of coverage beginning at 8 a.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock.

Emilia Migliaccio (Wake Forest) will be pulling double duty this week for the second consecutive year, competing in the Augusta National Women’s Amateur before joining the GOLF Channel and Peacock broadcast team as a chip analyst on Drive, Chip and Putt coverage.

Live coverage begins Sunday at 8 a.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock.

GOLF Channel & Peacock Broadcast Team

    • Play by Play: Mike Tirico / Anna Jackson
    • Analysts: Paige Mackenzie / Peter Jacobsen
    • Drive Analyst: Arron Oberholser
    • Chip Analyst: Emilia Migliaccio
    • Interviews: Kira Dixon / Anna Jackson

How To Watch – Sunday, April 7 (all times ET)

    • TV – GOLF Channel
    • Streaming – Peacock, NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app
Day GOLF Channel/Peacock
Sunday 8 a.m.-1 p.m.

 

KORN FERRY TOUR: CLUB CAR CHAMPIONSHIP

How To Watch – Thursday, April 4 – Sunday, April 7 (all times ET)

    • TV – GOLF Channel
Day GOLF Channel
Thursday 10:30 a.m. -1:30 p.m.
Friday 10:30 a.m. -1:30 p.m.
Saturday 3:30-6 p.m.
Sunday 2:30-6 p.m.

 

GOLF CENTRAL LIVE FROM THE MASTERS MEDIA CONFERENCE CALL

    • NBC Sports golf commentators Rich Lerner, Brandel Chamblee, Notah Begay III, and Johnson Wagner will preview the upcoming 2024 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Ga., on a media conference call today, April 3, at 3:30 p.m. ET.

Media interested in participating should call 786-697-3501; Passcode: NBC Sports.

    • WHAT: NBC Sports Live From The Masters Media Conference Call
    • WHO: Rich Lerner, Brandel Chamblee, Notah Begay III, Johnson Wagner
    • WHEN: Wednesday, April 3, at 3:30 p.m. ET
    • NUMBER: 786-697-3501
    • PASSCODE: NBC Sports

BROADCAST NOTES

    • Golf Central will provide pre- and post-tournament coverage on GOLF Channel Wednesday-Sunday. Golf Central coverage is anchored by Whit Watson, Rex Hoggard, and Jim Gallagher Jr.
    • Live From Augusta National Women’s Amateur will provide on-site pre-tournament coverage from Augusta National Golf Club on GOLF Channel and Peacock Friday, April 5, and Saturday, April 6. Kira Dixon will host both days alongside Brandel Chamblee and Beth Ann Nichols.
    • Golf Today on Wednesday will be hosted by George Savaricas, Hoggard, and Eamon Lynch.

 

Day Golf Central Golf Today Live From The Augusta National Women’s Amateur
Wednesday 3:30-4:30 p.m./9-10 p.m.* 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. p.m.  
Thursday 3:30-4 p.m./9-10 p.m.    
Friday 3:30-4 p.m./9-10 p.m.   1:30-3:30 p.m.
Saturday Noon-1 p.m./9-10 p.m.*   10 a.m.-Noon
Sunday 9-10 p.m.    

Note: all times ET, post-round coverage begins following conclusion of play

*Delay Coverage

 

All GOLF Channel coverage also streams on NBCSports.com and the NBC Sports app via authentication, giving consumers additional value to their subscription service, and making high-quality content available to MVPD customers both in and out of the home and on multiple platforms.

 

–NBC SPORTS–

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: anwa, Golf, Golf Central, LPGA, masters, NBC, PGA Tour, Uncategorized

PGA TOUR’S TEXAS CHILDREN’S HOUSTON OPEN HEADLINES LIVE GOLF COVERAGE ACROSS NBC, GOLF CHANNEL AND PEACOCK THIS WEEK

March 27, 2024 By admin

Texas Children’s Houston Open Live Coverage From Memorial Park Golf Course in Houston, Texas, Begins Tomorrow at 4 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock

Brandel Chamblee to Serve as Analyst for This Week’s Coverage of Texas Children’s Houston Open

LPGA Tour Ford Championship Presented by KCC at Seville Golf & Country Club– Live Tomorrow at 7 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock

PGA Tour Champions’ The Galleri Classic From Mission Hills Country Club Gets Underway Friday at 10 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel

DP World Tour Hero Indian Open Live Tomorrow at 3:30 a.m. ET on GOLF Channel

New Episodes of the GOLF Channel Podcast with Rex & Lav

STAMFORD, Conn. – March 27, 2024 – The PGA TOUR’s Texas Children’s Houston Open from Memorial Park Golf Course in Houston, Texas, headlines live golf coverage across NBC, GOLF Channel, and Peacock this week.

PGA TOUR: TEXAS CHILDREN’S HOUSTON OPEN

The PGA TOUR travels to Houston, Texas, this week for the Texas Children’s Houston Open at Memorial Park Golf Course. The field includes World No. 1 and PLAYERS Championship winner Scottie Scheffler, PLAYERS Championship runner-up Wyndham Clark, and defending champion Tony Finau, who looks to repeat his 2022 victory at this event (no event in 2023).

Live coverage begins tomorrow and Friday at 4 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock. Live coverage this weekend begins Saturday and Sunday at 1 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock before transitioning to NBC at 3:30 p.m. ET and 2:30 p.m. ET, respectively. Longtime NBC Sports golf commentator Brandel Chamblee will serve as analyst for this week’s coverage.

NBC, GOLF Channel & Peacock Broadcast Team

    • Play by Play: Dan Hicks / Steve Sands
    • Analyst: Brandel Chamblee / Brad Faxon / Curt Byrum
    • On-Course: John Wood / Smylie Kaufman
    • Reporter: Damon Hack

How To Watch – Thursday, March 28 – Sunday, March 31 (all times ET)

    • TV – NBC, GOLF Channel
    • Streaming – Peacock, NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app
Day NBC/Peacock GOLF Channel/Peacock
Thursday   4-7 p.m.
Friday   4-7 p.m.
Saturday 3:30-6 p.m. 1-3:30 p.m.
Sunday 2:30-6 p.m. 1-2:30 p.m.


Notable Players This Week

    • Scottie Scheffler
    • Wyndham Clark
    • Tony Finau
    • Will Zalatoris
    • Jason Day
    • Robert MacIntrye
    • Gary Woodland
    • Nick Dunlap

 

LPGA TOUR: FORD CHAMPIONSHIP PRESENTED BY KCC

The LPGA Tour heads to Arizona for the inaugural Ford Championship presented by KCC at Seville Golf & Country Club in Gilbert. The first-time championship was announced in December 2023 and will feature a strong field that includes the top three ranked LPGA players in Nelly Korda, Lilia Vu, and Celine Boutier.

Live coverage gets underway tomorrow at 6 p.m. ET on Peacock before transitioning to both GOLF Channel and Peacock at 7 p.m. ET.

GOLF Channel & Peacock Broadcast Team

    • Play by Play: Grant Boone
    • Analyst: Karen Stupples / Paige Mackenzie
    • On-Course: Kay Cockerill

How To Watch – Thursday, March 28 – Sunday, March 31 (all times ET)

    • TV – GOLF Channel
    • Streaming – Peacock, NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app
Day GOLF Channel/Peacock Peacock
Thursday 7-9 p.m. 6-7 p.m.
Friday 7-9 p.m. 6-7 p.m.
Saturday 6-9 p.m.  
Sunday 6-9 p.m.  


Notable Players This Week

    • Nelly Korda
    • Lilia Vu
    • Celine Boutier
    • Lydia Ko
    • Rose Zhang
    • Minjee Lee
    • Allison Corpuz
    • Ayaka Furue

 

PGA TOUR CHAMPIONS: THE GALLERI CLASSIC

Held at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, Calif., the PGA Tour Champions’ Galleri Classic is entering its second year of existence. Major champions David Duval, Fred Couples, and Mike Weir are all expected to compete at this week’s event.

First round coverage streams exclusively on Peacock from 4-6 p.m. ET on Friday, with encore coverage on Friday at 10 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel. Weekend coverage will be live on GOLF Channel and Peacock

How To Watch – Friday, March 29 – Sunday, March 31 (all times ET)

    • TV – GOLF Channel
    • Streaming – Peacock, NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app
Day GOLF Channel GOLF Channel/Peacock Peacock
Friday 10 p.m. – 12 a.m.*   4-6 p.m.
Saturday   3:30-6 p.m.  
Sunday   2:30-6 p.m.  

Tape Delay*


Notable Players This Week

    • David Duval
    • Fred Couples
    • Mike Weir
    • Ernie Els
    • Vijay Singh
    • J. Choi
    • Steven Alker
    • Mark O’Meara

 

DP WORLD TOUR: HERO INDIAN OPEN

The DP World Tour’s Hero Indian Open – the national championship of India – will be played from DLF Golf & Country Club in New Delhi, India. Anirban Lahiri will look to win this event for the second time after winning in its first year as part of the DP World Tour in 2015.

Live coverage begins tomorrow at 3:30 a.m. ET on GOLF Channel.

How To Watch – Thursday, March 28 – Sunday, March 31 (all times ET)

    • TV – GOLF Channel
    • Streaming – NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app
Day GOLF Channel
Thursday 3:30-8:30 a.m.
Friday 3:30-8:30 a.m.
Saturday 4-8:30 a.m.
Sunday 2:30-7:30 a.m.


Notable Players This Week

    • Rasmus Hojgaard
    • Anirban Lahiri
    • Kazuma Kobori
    • Eddie Pepperell
    • Rafa Cabrera Bello
    • Yannik Paul
    • Shubhankar Sharma

 

GOLF CHANNEL PODCAST WITH REX & LAV

NBC Sports’ GOLF Channel Podcast with Rex & Lav, hosted by GOLFChannel.com senior writers Rex Hoggard and Ryan Lavner, sees the two longtime scribes discuss and debate the latest news and hottest topics in the sport.

Throughout the year, Rex and Lav will break down the game’s biggest storylines in an informative, entertaining, and nuanced way – and with two episodes a week, there won’t be any news missed.

Click here to listen to the latest episode on YouTube and Apple Podcasts.

 

BROADCAST NOTES

    • Golf Central will provide pre- and post-tournament coverage on GOLF Channel Wednesday-Sunday. Golf Central coverage is anchored by Rich Lerner, Tripp Isenhour, and Damon Hack.
    • Golf Today on Wednesday will be hosted by Eamon Lynch, George Savaricas, and Hack.

 

Day Golf Central Golf Today
Wednesday 4-5 p.m. Noon – 1 p.m.
Thursday 3-4 p.m./9-10 p.m.  
Friday 3-4 p.m./9-10 p.m.  
Saturday 12-1 p.m./9-10 p.m.*  
Sunday 12-1 p.m./9-10 p.m.*  

Note: all times ET, post-round coverage begins following conclusion of play

Tape Delay*

 

All GOLF Channel coverage also streams on NBCSports.com and the NBC Sports app via authentication, giving consumers additional value to their subscription service, and making high-quality content available to MVPD customers both in and out of the home and on multiple platforms.

–NBC SPORTS–

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Champions Tour, Golf, LPGA, NBC, PGA Tour, Uncategorized

PGA TOUR’S VALSPAR CHAMPIONSHIP HEADLINES LIVE GOLF COVERAGE ACROSS NBC, GOLF CHANNEL AND PEACOCK THIS WEEK

March 20, 2024 By admin

Valspar Championship Live Coverage From Innisbrook Resort (Copperhead Course) in Palm Harbor, Fla., Begins Tomorrow at 2 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock

Notay Begay III to Serve as Analyst for This Week’s Coverage of Valspar Championship

LPGA Tour Heads to Palos Verdes, Calif., for FIR HILLS SERI PAK Championship Live Tomorrow at 6 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock

PGA Tour Champions’ Hoag Classic From Newport Beach Country Club Gets Underway Friday at 10 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel

DP World Tour Porsche Singapore Classic Live Tomorrow at 1 a.m. ET on GOLF Channel

STAMFORD, Conn. – March 20, 2024 – The PGA TOUR’s Valspar Championship from Innisbrook Resort (Copperhead Course) in Palm Harbor, Fla., headlines live golf coverage across NBC, GOLF Channel, and Peacock this week.

PGA TOUR: VALSPAR CHAMPIONSHIP

The PGA TOUR travels to Palm Harbor, Fla., this week for the Valspar Championship at Innisbrook Resort (Copperhead Course), the final event of the PGA TOUR’s 2024 Florida Swing. The field includes Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas, PLAYERS Championship runner-up Xander Schauffele, and Sam Burns, who looks to win his third Valspar Championship after winning back-to-back titles in 2021 and 2022.

Live coverage begins tomorrow and Friday at 2 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock. Live coverage this weekend begins at 1 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock before transitioning to NBC on both days. Long-time NBC Sports golf commentator Notah Begay III will serve as analyst for this week’s coverage of the Valspar Championship.

NBC, GOLF Channel & Peacock Broadcast Team

    • Play by Play: Dan Hicks / Steve Sands
    • Analyst: Notah Begay III / Brad Faxon / Curt Byrum
    • On-Course: John Wood / Arron Oberholser
    • Reporter: Kira Dixon

How To Watch – Thursday, March 21 – Sunday, March 24 (all times ET)

    • TV – NBC, GOLF Channel
    • Streaming – Peacock, NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app
Day NBC/Peacock GOLF Channel/Peacock
Thursday   2-6 p.m.
Friday   2-6 p.m.
Saturday 3-6 p.m. 1-3 p.m.
Sunday 3-6 p.m. 1-3 p.m.


Notable Players This Week

    • Jordan Spieth
    • Justin Thomas
    • Xander Schauffele
    • Sam Burns
    • Tony Finau
    • Matt Kuchar
    • Min Woo Lee
    • Sungjae Im

 

LPGA TOUR: FIR HILLS SERI PAK Championship

World Golf Hall of Famer Seri Pak will make her return to the LPGA Tour next week as host of the newly renamed FIR HILLS SERI PAK Championship at Palos Verdes Golf Club in Palos Verdes Estates, Calif. Pak won 25 LPGA tournaments including five majors and was a pioneer and an inspiration for generations of LPGA players from Korea. World No. 4 Ruoning Yin will look to defend her title at this week’s event.

Live coverage gets underway tomorrow at 6 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock.

NBC, GOLF Channel & Peacock Broadcast Team

    • Play by Play: Grant Boone
    • Analyst: Morgan Pressel
    • Holes: Tom Abbott
    • On-Course: Kay Cockerill

How To Watch – Thursday, March 21 – Sunday, March 24 (all times ET)

    • TV – GOLF Channel
    • Streaming – Peacock, NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app
Day GOLF Channel/Peacock Peacock
Thursday 6-9 p.m.  
Friday 6-9 p.m.  
Saturday 7-9 p.m. 6-7 p.m.*
Sunday 3-6 p.m.  

Also on NBCSports.com and NBC Sports app*


Notable Players This Week

    • Ruoning Yin
    • Nelly Korda
    • Seri Pak
    • Brooke Henderson
    • Rose Zhang
    • Megan Khang
    • Leona Maguire

 

PGA TOUR CHAMPIONS: HOAG CLASSIC

Held at Newport Beach Country Club in California, the PGA Tour Champions’ Hoag Classic is entering its 28th year at this venue. World Golf Hall of Famer Ernie Els looks to win this tournament for the third time in the last four events (No event in 2021).

First round coverage streams exclusively on Peacock from 5:50-7:50 p.m. ET on Friday, with encore coverage on Friday at 10 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel. Weekend coverage will be live on GOLF Channel and Peacock

How To Watch – Friday, March 22 – Sunday, March 24 (all times ET)

    • TV – GOLF Channel
    • Streaming – Peacock, NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app
Day GOLF Channel GOLF Channel/Peacock Peacock
Friday 10 p.m. – 12 a.m.*   5:50-7:50 p.m.
Saturday   4-7 p.m.  
Sunday   6-8 p.m.  

Tape Delay*


Notable Players This Week

    • Padraig Harrington
    • Ernie Els
    • Vijay Singh
    • Retief Goosen
    • Jim Furyk
    • J. Choi
    • Fred Couples

 

DP WORLD TOUR: PORSCHE SINGAPORE CLASSIC

The DP World Tour’s Porsche Singapore Classic – first event of the DP World Tour’s Asian Swing – will be played from Laguna National Golf Resort in Singapore. 2019 Open champion Shane Lowry and 2024 Farmers Insurance Open champion Matthieu Pavon headline a competitive field at this week’s event.

Live coverage begins tomorrow at 1 a.m. ET on GOLF Channel.

How To Watch – Thursday, March 21 – Sunday, March 24 (all times ET)

    • TV – GOLF Channel
    • Streaming – NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app
Day GOLF Channel NBCSports.com/NBC Sports App
Thursday 1-6 a.m.  
Friday 1-6 a.m. 10:30 p.m. – 12 a.m.
Saturday 12-3 a.m.  
Sat/Sun 10 p.m. – 3 a.m.  


Notable Players This Week

    • Rasmus Hojgaard
    • Shane Lowry
    • Matthieu Pavon
    • Paul Casey
    • Max McGreevy
    • Matthias Schwab
    • Thriston Lawrence

 

BROADCAST NOTES

    • Golf Central will provide pre- and post-tournament coverage on GOLF Channel Wednesday-Sunday. Golf Central coverage is anchored by Steve Burkowski, Jim Gallagher Jr., Matt Adams and Kira Dixon.
    • Golf Today on Wednesday will be hosted by Eamon Lynch, George Savaricas, and Dixon.

 

Day Golf Central Golf Today
Wednesday 4-5 p.m. Noon – 1 p.m.
Thursday 1-2 p.m./9-10 p.m.  
Friday 1-2 p.m./9-10 p.m.  
Saturday 12-1 p.m./9-10 p.m.  
Sunday 12-1 p.m./8-9 p.m.  

Note: all times ET, post-round coverage begins following conclusion of play

All GOLF Channel coverage also streams on NBCSports.com and the NBC Sports app via authentication, giving consumers additional value to their subscription service, and making high-quality content available to MVPD customers both in and out of the home and on multiple platforms.

 

–NBC SPORTS–

 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Champions Tour, Golf, Golf Central, Golf Channel, LPGA, NBC, PGA Tour, Uncategorized

NOTES AND QUOTES – SCOTTIE SCHEFFLER WINS THE 2024 PLAYERS CHAMPIONSHIP ON NBC AND PEACOCK

March 17, 2024 By admin

“You know what No. 1 is? It’s when you do what he does. The consistency under pressure the last couple of years.” – Mike Tirico on 2024 PLAYERS Champion Scottie Scheffler

“Unbelievable! How did that not drop?” – Dan Hicks on Wyndham Clark’s lip-out on No. 18 to force playoff

“Go ahead and do…you’ve got to be kidding me. That’s got to be the cruelest, most brutal lip-out I’ve ever seen.” – Rich Lerner on Clark’s 18th hole lip-out on Live From The PLAYERS

STAMFORD, Conn. – March 17, 2024 – NBC Sports presented final round coverage of The PLAYERS Championship from The Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., on NBC and Peacock.

Scottie Scheffler fired a final round 64 to defeat Wyndham Clark, Xander Schauffele, and Brian Harman by one shot, becoming the first player in PLAYERS Championship history to repeat as champion.

Golf Central Live From The PLAYERS followed with post-round coverage on GOLF Channel and Peacock.

Dan Hicks and Mike Tirico handled play-by-play duties, while Kevin Kisner and Brad Faxon served as analysts. John Wood, Smylie Kaufman, Notah Begay III and Curt Byrum served as on-course reporters, while Damon Hack handled reports and interviews.

Rich Lerner, Brandel Chamblee and Paul McGinley anchored Live From The PLAYERS post-round coverage. Following are notes and quotes from today’s coverage.

PLAYERS Championship – Final Round Leaderboard

Player Total
Scottie Scheffler -20
Brian Harman -19
Wyndham Clark -19
Xander Schauffele -19
Matt Fitzpatrick -16

 

ON SCOTTIE SCHEFFLER (-20, Champion)

Hicks following Scheffler’s final round 64: “No. 1 in strokes gained tee-to-green this week, the familiar refrain with Scheffler. Driving accuracy No. 1 at 80 percent and then the putting, which had been the negative narrative for so long – he turned that around and all of a sudden he’s just about bullet-proof.”

Scheffler to Kaufman on overcoming a neck injury throughout the week: “I’m a pretty competitive guy and I didn’t want to give up in the tournament. I did what I could to hang around until my neck got better and I’m just very thankful.”

Tirico on defining the No. 1 player in the world: “You know what No. 1 is? It’s when you do what he does. The consistency under pressure the last couple of years and now he has the chance to go back-to-back weeks winning on the PGA TOUR.”

Kisner prior to Scheffler’s eagle hole-out on No. 4: “This one ‘oughta be dancing around the hole.”

Kaufman on caddie Ted Scott flashing the number six after the hole-out: “The bet is, if (Scottie) has 10 hole-outs this year, I’ve got to pay him at the end of the year. And Scottie said, ‘We’re already at six, so…” (Ted) is already starting to get the wallet out.”

Hicks on No. 8: “Scottie Scheffler is turning back into Scottie Scheffler and his confidence grows with each and every shot.”

Kisner: “He looks like he’s back to the World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler that I’m used to watching.”

Kisner on Scheffler’s putting: “I love his routine. No line on the ball, just looking and reacting.”

ON WYNDHAM CLARK (-19, T-2nd)

Hicks on Clark’s lip-out on 18th hole to force playoff: “Unbelievable! How did that not drop?”

Kisner: “He two-stepped it early. Even after it started spinning out, he stepped again.”

Lerner on Live From THE PLAYERS: “Go ahead and do…you’ve got to be kidding me. That’s got to be the cruelest, most brutal lip-out I’ve ever seen.”

Wood on the wind at No. 17: “Just to add to the difficulty this is the hardest the wind has blown all week long. It’s blowing a good 15 mph right now and you can feel it.”

Faxon on the long pre-shot discussions between Clark and caddie John Ellis affecting his putts: “When you get into this situation, slow players slow down and fast players speed up and (Clark) has certainly slowed it down.”

Kisner after Clark missed fairway on No. 11: “Seems to be a little off, pulling the iron shots and over-curving the driver.”

Kisner on the communication between Clark and Ellis: “Love how much he’s asking his caddie John Ellis about shots he saw. He obviously had him watch the early coverage to see how balls are reacting on these greens.”

ON BRIAN HARMAN (-19, T-2nd)

Begay III on Harman checking the leaderboard: “I really love that about (Harman). He just wants to know exactly where he’s at because he’s not afraid of the moment.”

Kisner on Harman: “This guy has wanted the ball in his hands ever since I’ve known him, so it doesn’t shock me that he’s checking the leaderboard.”

Hicks on Harman’s finish: “He loves the course, he played his heart out this week. Another high finish but coming up a shot short.”

ON XANDER SCHAUFFELE (-19, T-2nd)

Faxon on Schauffele leaving his birdie putt short on 16: “Thought he’d be a little more aggressive there.”

Kisner: “You have to be.”

ON RORY MCILROY (-9. T-19th)

Hicks on Rory’s performance: “He hit five balls in the water this week, that’s the most in a PLAYERS Championship for him and it’s tied for the most of anyone this week… you can’t do it.”

–NBC SPORTS–

Filed Under: Golf, Golf Channel, NBC, PGA Tour, Uncategorized

NOTES AND QUOTES – THE 2024 PLAYERS CHAMPIONSHIP ON NBC AND PEACOCK (THIRD ROUND)

March 16, 2024 By admin

“He was over that shot for way longer than any other shot today. It was like he was almost frozen over it.” – John Wood on Wyndham Clark’s shot into the water on No. 17

“To be known as ‘The Ghimme at 17’ for Doug.” – Mike Tirico on Doug Ghim’s chip-in on the same line as the “Better Than Most” Tiger Woods putt at No. 17

“You get the feeling that maybe it’s his time to break out of all of these Top 10s… he hasn’t won since the Scottish Open in 2022, and he knows he’s better than that.” – Dan Hicks on Xander Schauffele

“I don’t know that I’ve ever seen him as magical as he was today.” – Brandel Chamblee on Xander Schauffele on Live From The PLAYERS

“We are in a sprint here tomorrow.” – Paul McGinley on Live From The PLAYERS

STAMFORD, Conn. – March 16, 2024 – NBC Sports presented comprehensive coverage of the third round of The PLAYERS Championship from The Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., on NBC and Peacock. Golf Central Live From The PLAYERS followed with post-round coverage on GOLF Channel and Peacock.

Dan Hicks and Mike Tirico handled play-by-play duties, while Kevin Kisner and Brad Faxon served as analysts. John Wood, Smylie Kaufman, Notah Begay III and Curt Byrum served as on-course reporters, while Damon Hack handled reports and interviews.

Coverage also included a live walk-and-talk interview with Maverick McNealy on the 11th hole.

Rich Lerner, Brandel Chamblee and Paul McGinley anchored Live From The PLAYERS post-round coverage. Following are notes and quotes from today’s coverage.

 

PLAYERS Championship – Third Round Leaderboard

Player Total
Xander Schauffele -17
Wyndham Clark -16
Brian Harman -15
Maverick McNealy -13
Matt Fitzpatrick -13
Scottie Scheffler -12
Sahith Theegala -12

 

ON XANDER SCHAUFFELE (-17, Leader)

Hicks on 58-foot birdie make on 14th hole: “You get the feeling that maybe it’s his time to break out of all of these Top 10s that he’s been filling up the last couple of years…he’s playing such good golf., but he hasn’t won since the Scottish Open in 2022, and he knows he’s better than that.”

Chamblee on Live From: “I don’t know that I’ve ever seen him as magical as he was today.”

 

ON WYNDHAM CLARK (-16, 2nd)

Kisner: “He’s in one of the hardest spots you can be in in golf – a big lead on Saturday. He has to really stay aggressive and keep his foot on the gas. I always told myself that I was tied even if I had a big lead.”

Kisner on Clark’s confidence: “Early on in his career, I heard a lot of guys talking about how confident of player he was in his own game. Frankly, that’s what all of us our here need – more of that self-belief. It’s a one-man show out there and if you’re not going to believe in yourself, who is?”

McGinley on Live From: “He was a guy that was not on his game today…he was not on his driving, he was not on his iron play, but he battled like hell. He’s still there…now he’s the hunter, not the hunted, and I think he’s going to bounce back tomorrow. We are in a sprint here tomorrow.”

Faxon on Clark’s shot in the water on 17th hole: “Nothing even close to anything like that was expected. Well short.”

Tirico: “That sounded terrible.”

Faxon: “He hit two or three inches behind it.”

Wood: “He was over that shot for way longer than any shot earlier today. It’s almost like he was frozen over it.”

Tirico: “We see balls in the water here, obviously, but rarely do you see a shot this short.”

Hicks: “The ShotLink data is telling us that the tee shot went 102 yards.”

 

ON SCOTTIE SCHEFFLER (-12, T-6th)

Kaufman on Scheffler’s movement after Friday’s neck discomfort: “His overall movement just looks a little stiff. He can definitely get through the golf shots just fine. He’s got to avoid the rough today with how heavy it is.”

Kaufman on 7th hole: “A couple times today, I’ve seen Scottie take a more club and I think that has everything to do with his neck. Hitting more three-quarter shots, not going all in at it.”

Faxon: “He just does everything right – all the time.”

 

ON BRIAN HARMAN (-15, 3rd)

Kisner: “I was a senior with Chris Kirk and Brendon Todd on the Georgia Bulldogs and when (Harman) came in as a freshman, we had just won the national championship. This little guy comes in and starts playing No. 1 against all of us and we would play five-man practice rounds and I swear, he would hit a flagstick per round in our practice rounds. He was so good as a freshman, I think he was as good then as he is now.”

 

ON RORY MCILROY (-9, T-12th)

Tirico to Curt Byrum on the 7th hole with sand wedge from 135 yards: “How has Rory been with the wedges today?”

Byrum as McIlroy missed the green to the left: “Not great…and that one is terrible.”

 

ON DOUG GHIM (-9, T-12th)

Tirico prior to Ghim’s chip from the back of the 17th green: “It’s not the exact hole location, but it’s close enough in the neighborhood that it gives you the ‘better than most’ feels.”

Faxon: “All due respect, I’m not going to use that line, ever, in deference to Gary Koch. But this is much harder than the putt, this can really get away from you and go right off the green if you’re not careful.”

Tirico as Ghim strikes the ball: “And now it begins its journey…”

Faxon: “Looks like it’s got some pretty nice pace…”

Tirico: “…very nice pace…”

Faxon: “…really good pace…”

Tirico: “Doug Ghim! Yeah!

Faxon on refraining from the ‘better than most’ phrase: “Don’t do it! Don’t do it!”

Tirico: “To be known as ‘The Ghimme at 17’ for Doug…gave you a little bit of the Tiger “better than most” fist pump too.”

 

WALK AND TALK WITH MAVERICK MCNEALY (T-4th)

McNealy on recent top-10 and top-20 finishes: “It’s what you play for. There’s two games – there’s the first game and then you play your way into the second game. That’s where the action happens. It’s validating to see that my game is good enough to get myself up there with all of those great players. There’s nothing better than hitting a great golf shot under pressure.”

Faxon to McNealy: “We’re sitting in the 18th tower with no idea what the wind is doing. It seems like it’s all over today.”

McNealy: “You guys stole the words right out of my mouth. We’ve had northeast, southwest and pretty much everything in between. I put myself through the short game Olympics on the front nine.”

 

ON SWIRLING WINDS TODAY AT TPC SAWGRASS

Wood: “It’s a caddie’s nightmare out here right now.”

Faxon: “It’s a player’s nightmare!”

Tirico: “Just fine for the announcers.”

–NBC SPORTS–

 

Filed Under: Golf, NBC, PGA Tour, Uncategorized

NOTES AND QUOTES – THE 2024 PLAYERS CHAMPIONSHIP ON GOLF CHANNEL AND PEACOCK (SECOND ROUND)

March 15, 2024 By admin

“This had to have been an incredibly frustrating day for Rory McIlroy.” – Roger Maltbie

“The story of the day is Wyndham Clark. We’ve highlighted not just the kind of player that he is, but the kind of competitor that he is as well. It was exemplified very clearly today.” – Paul McGinley on Live From The PLAYERS

“I was so mad, I walked all the way to the clubhouse…I still have the same driver shaft. It didn’t break and it’s still in play.” – Keith Mitchell on his viral driver smash in 2023 PLAYERS during “Fridays With Smylie”

STAMFORD, Conn. – March 15, 2024 – NBC Sports presented comprehensive of the second round of The PLAYERS Championship from The Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., on GOLF Channel and Peacock. Golf Central Live From The PLAYERS followed with post-round coverage.

Dan Hicks, Mike Tirico and Steve Sands handled play-by-play duties, while Brad Faxon, Gary Koch and Notah Begay III served as analysts. John Wood, Roger Maltbie and Curt Byrum served as on-course reporters, while Damon Hack handled reports and interviews.

Today’s coverage included the latest edition of NBC Sports’ “Fridays with Smylie,” as Smylie Kaufman and Kevin Kisner provided commentary from alongside the iconic 17th hole. Kaufman and Kisner were also joined by Keith Mitchell and Brian Harman for portions of the coverage.

Rich Lerner, Brandel Chamblee and Paul McGinley anchored Live From The PLAYERS post-round coverage. Following are notes and quotes from today’s coverage.

PLAYERS Championship – Second Round Leaderboard

Player Total
Wyndham Clark -14
Xander Schauffele -10
Nick Taylor -10
Matt Fitzpatrick -9
Maverick McNealy -9

 

“FRIDAYS WITH SMYLIE” ON 17TH HOLE

Kisner on the 17th hole: “I lost my breath just walking across the tee here, just the nerves of the hole and the stadium that they build around it…today we have about as benign conditions as possible with no wind and soft greens, but you’re still one bad swing away from reteeing or heading to the drop zone.”

Mitchell on his viral video moment of slamming his driver down as the horn sounded for weather in 2023: “There are a lot of loud noises in that clip – my drive, the smash against the ground, the horn, the splash in the water. I was so mad, I walked all the way to the clubhouse…I don’t care if I get struck by lightning right now, I’m walking into the clubhouse…I still have the same driver shaft. It didn’t break and it’s still in play.”

Kisner to Harman: “How nice is it that you get to sit here and you don’t have to play 10 more holes like Tyson Alexander does?”

Harman: “The way you can play this golf course on Friday morning instead of on Friday afternoon is a big deal. This place gets so scary late Friday afternoon.”

GARY KOCH ON THE “BETTER THAN MOST” PUTT

Koch on what most fans don’t know about his famous call: “Most of the times that you hear the call, you don’t hear what Johnny Miller asks me initially. As the ball takes off – and Johnny always had a habit of bringing us in without us really knowing it was going to come – Tiger’s ball rolls about six to eight feet off the putter and I hear, ‘How’s that look, Gary?’ And that was the first ‘better than most,’ because it was farther left than any other putt I had seen to that point.”

ON WYNDHAM CLARK (-14, Leader)

Tirico: “Forty-five weeks ago, Wyndham Clark was a good player with talent who we were all wondering when he was going to break through. Clark, now a confident, Ryder Cup-er, is a threat when he is at the top of the board.”

Clark to Tirico on his mentality on today’s round: “On this golf course you have to be mentally tough, because the minute you let go and lose your focus, you’ll find yourself in a tough spot. Any time I did lose my focus I was able to bring it back to the present and hit a good shot.”

McGinley on Live From: “The story of the day is Wyndham Clark. We’ve highlighted not just the kind of player that he is, but the kind of competitor that he is as well. It was exemplified very clearly today. If he comes out with that kind of focus and intensity…he could well be the winner here.”

ON SCOTTIE SCHEFFLER (-8, T-6th)

Begay III on Scheffler, who was dealing with neck discomfort: “We are used to seeing his footwork be all over the place but he’s imbalanced. Compensation is going on just trying to keep the club face square at impact and get the ball out into the short stuff.”

ON RORY MCILROY (-6, T-13th)

Hicks: “Rory has had to use everything in the bag and in his mind today to stay focused.”

Maltbie: “This had to have been an incredibly frustrating day for Rory.”

ON BRIAN HARMAN (-7, T-10th)

Begay III: “He plays very mistake-free, efficient golf and when he does get in trouble, he’s got a plan to get himself out of it by making a big putt.”

ON MATT FITZPATRICK (-9, T-4th)

Chamblee on Live From: “I’ve lost my keys, I’ve misplaced my phone a time or two, but I’ve never forgotten a weight under my grip…he drove it like a god today. He’s back.”

–NBC SPORTS–

Filed Under: Golf, NBC, PGA Tour, Uncategorized

NOTES AND QUOTES – THE 2024 PLAYERS CHAMPIONSHIP ON GOLF CHANNEL AND PEACOCK (FIRST ROUND)

March 14, 2024 By admin

“Iron play is more important than anything else and he has really been struggling in that regard. He told me exactly what he’s been working on (this week) and that he’d worked the problems out.” – Brandel Chamblee on Rory McIlroy on Live From The PLAYERS

“We are waiting on the ShotLink details on the club toss.” – Mike Tirico on Adam Hadwin throwing his club in the water on the 18th hole

STAMFORD, Conn. – March 14, 2024 – NBC Sports presented comprehensive of the first round of The PLAYERS Championship from The Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., on GOLF Channel and Peacock. Golf Central Live From The PLAYERS followed with post-round coverage.

Dan Hicks, Mike Tirico and Steve Sands handled play-by-play duties, while Brad Faxon, Gary Koch and Notah Begay III served as analysts. John Wood, Smylie Kaufman and Roger Maltbie served as on-course reporters, while Damon Hack handled reports and interviews.

Today’s coverage included Roger Maltbie’s live interview with Jack Nicklaus winner of the inaugural PLAYERS Championship in 1974, as the event celebrates its 50th anniversary this year.

Rich Lerner, Brandel Chamblee and Paul McGinley anchored Live From The PLAYERS post-round coverage. Following are notes and quotes from today’s coverage.

 

PLAYERS Championship – First Round Leaderboard

Player Total
Rory McIlroy -7
Xander Schauffele -7
Wyndham Clark -7
Nick Taylor -6
Matt Fitzpatrick -6

 

ON TPC SAWGRASS STADIUM COURSE AND CONDITIONS

Koch on TPC Sawgrass: “It’s such a fun course to watch the players on. Like we have seen today, good things and bad things can happen in such a short time.”

Koch on the greens: “The average green size is 5,500 square feet. That’s relatively small for courses on the PGA TOUR. No surprise that iron play – strokes gained approach – usually a very important stat going towards winning the championship.”

Xander Schauffele to Damon Hack on when to be aggressive or conservative: “The scare of a bogey comes when you miss the fairways here. The rough is pretty thick, shockingly thick in some spots, so you just have to keep it on the short grass.”

Faxon on the keys to winning at TPC Sawgrass: “I learned to play here not using the driver a lot. A lot of holes are like No. 4 where if you just get in the fairway, you have a short iron in and then you have to chip and putt.”

McGinley on the ideal scoring conditions today: “The weather was a big part of it and the golf course is presented in unbelievably good condition this year. I was disappointed with the softness of the greens. A big way to hold players to their standards is to have the greens a bit firmer. When you give players of these quality, ideal weather conditions, they are going to take advantage.”

 

JACK NICKLAUS WITH ROGER MALTBIE ON THE FIRST TEE

Maltbie: “Did you envision the spectacle and importance The PLAYERS would have in the game today?”

Nicklaus: “We did not know but I did want to win it because Deane (Beman) wanted to make it as big of a tournament as we could make it. I said, ‘You want to get it on my list, then make it a major.’”

Maltbie: “Could you imagine in 1982 that it would become this big, beautiful park that it is today?”

Nicklaus: “It’s very pretty and the first tee here has totally changed. Everything is different but it’s in beautiful shape, it’s beautifully manicured. It’s the kind of golf course where on a day like today you’ll shoot good scores.”

 

ON RORY MCILROY (-7, Co-Leader)

Tirico on McIlroy: “Even with putting two balls in the penalty area off the tee today, Rory joins Justin Thomas as the last two players out of five total who have had 10 birdies in one round at The PLAYERS.”

Chamblee on McIlroy’s improved iron play on Thursday: “A lot of hard work went into this, and he had to iron some things out. This championship season, iron play is more important than anything else and he has really been struggling in that regard. He told me exactly what he’s been working on and that he’d worked the problems out.”

McIlroy to Hack on his round: “Much improved from Sunday at Bay Hill. Put a lot of work in over the last three days and honestly feel like I saw a lot of progress out there. It was a continuation of other things I have been doing well.”

 

ON WYNDHAM CLARK (-7, Co-Leader)

Kaufman: “His recovery ability has been incredible today, just the precision and power he plays the game with right now, it’s so impressive.”

 

ON SCOTTIE SCHEFFLER (-5, T-6th)

Hicks on Scheffler’s recent success with the putter: “He eliminated the line, it’s more of a feel. Added the mallet putter and it has just been a tremendous change.”

Maltbie on Scheffler: “The level of ball-striking that he carries from week-to-week is very impressive. Even when you don’t think he’s playing that well, you look up at the scoreboard and he’s -4.”

 

ON ADAM HADWIN (+3, 125th)

Begay III on Hadwin tossing his club into the water on the 18th hole: “That just tells you how this golf course can rock you off your knockers.”

Tirico on Hadwin: “We are waiting on the ShotLink details on the club toss.”

–NBC SPORTS–

 

Filed Under: Golf, Golf Central Live, Golf Channel, NBC, peacock, PGA Tour, Uncategorized

KEVIN KISNER SERVES AS ANALYST, ROGER MALTBIE AND GARY KOCH JOIN NBC SPORTS’ COVERAGE AS PART OF 50TH PLAYERS CHAMPIONSHIP CELEBRATION

March 8, 2024 By admin

Kisner Serves as Analyst for Weekend Coverage and Teams Up with Smylie Kaufman for “Friday Happy Hour” on Iconic 17th Hole

Roger Maltbie Joins as On-Course Reporter For Thursday-Friday Coverage

Gary Koch to Team Up with Mike Tirico During Thursday-Friday Coverage

STAMFORD, Conn. – March 8, 2024 – NBC Sports has announced that Kevin Kisner, Roger Maltbie and Gary Koch will join NBC Sports’ broadcast team as part of its celebration of the 50th anniversary of The PLAYERS Championship at The Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla, with coverage airing across NBC, GOLF Channel and Peacock March 14-17.

Kisner will serve as an analyst for weekend coverage of The PLAYERS with play-by-play commentator Dan Hicks. Additionally, Kisner and Smylie Kaufman will team up to call “Friday Happy Hour” coverage from alongside the iconic 17th hole on Friday afternoon on GOLF Channel and Peacock.

Maltbie will serve as an on-course reporter during Thursday and Friday coverage, while Koch will join Mike Tirico in the broadcast booth during Thursday and Friday coverage.

“Kevin did a great job in the booth with Dan Hicks earlier this year and his work with Smylie Kaufman on the 16th hole at the WM Phoenix Open made for great TV, so we’re happy we can once again pair Kevin with Dan and have Kevin join Smylie at the 17th hole at TPC Sawgrass next Friday,” said Tommy Roy, NBC Sports’ lead golf producer. “Roger Maltbie and Gary Koch have called some of the most iconic moments at The PLAYERS Championship throughout the past three decades and having them on next week’s broadcasts is a great way for NBC Sports to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the PLAYERS.

NBC Sports will surround the 2024 PLAYERS Championship with comprehensive live championship and studio coverage across NBC, GOLF Channel and Peacock, beginning next Monday, March 11, with Golf Central Live From The PLAYERS at 7 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock.

–NBC SPORTS–

Filed Under: Golf, NBC, PGA Tour, Uncategorized

PGA TOUR ARNOLD PALMER INVITATIONAL PRESENTED BY MASTERCARD HEADLINES GOLF COVERAGE THIS WEEK ACROSS NBC, GOLF CHANNEL AND PEACOCK

March 6, 2024 By admin

Arnold Palmer Invitational Coverage Begins Thursday at 2 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel/Peacock – NBC Weekend Coverage Begins at 2:30 p.m. ET

Golf Central Studio Coverage On-Site from Arnold Palmer Invitational

PGA TOUR Puerto Rico Open – Thursday-Sunday on GOLF Channel/Peacock

LPGA Tour Blue Bay LPGA – Coverage Begins Wednesday at 11 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel/Peacock

PGA TOUR Champions Cologuard Classic – Friday-Sunday on GOLF Channel/Peacock

College Golf – Darius Rucker Intercollegiate – Final Round Today at 2:30 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel/Peacock

STAMFORD, Conn. – March 6, 2024 – NBC Sports presents more than 50 hours of live tournament golf coverage this week across NBC, GOLF Channel and Peacock, headlined by the PGA TOUR’s Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard at Bay Hill Club & Lodge.

PGA TOUR: ARNOLD PALMER INVITATIONAL PRESENTED BY MASTERCARD

The Arnold Palmer Invitational marks the fourth Signature Event of the 2024 PGA TOUR season, offering 700 FedExCup points to the winner and boasting a field that includes World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas, and Rickie Fowler, as well as Austin Eckroat, who won last week’s Cognizant Classic in The Palm Beaches and qualified via the Aon Next 10. The full field also includes the top 50 players in FedExCup points last season.

Live tournament coverage begins Thursday-Friday at 2 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock. Weekend coverage begins at 12:30 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock, shifting to NBC at 2:30 p.m. ET.

NBC/GOLF Channel/Peacock Broadcast Team

  • Play by Play: Dan Hicks / Mike Tirico
  • Analyst: Luke Donald / Brad Faxon / Curt Byrum
  • Holes: Curt Byrum / Steve Sands
  • On-Course: John Wood / Smylie Kaufman / Notah Begay III
  • Reporter: Damon Hack

 

How To Watch – Thursday, March 7 – Sunday, March 10 (all times ET)

  • TV – GOLF Channel, NBC
  • Streaming – Peacock, NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app

 

Day GOLF Channel/Peacock NBC/Peacock
Thursday 2-6 p.m.  
Friday 2-6 p.m.  
Saturday 12:30-2:30 p.m. 2:30-6 p.m.
Sunday 12:30-2:30 p.m. 2:30-6 p.m.

 

Notable Players This Week

  • Scottie Scheffler
  • Rory McIlroy
  • Jordan Spieth
  • Justin Thomas
  • Rickie Fowler
  • Max Homa
  • Xander Schauffele
  • Patrick Cantlay
  • Jason Day


PGA TOUR: PUERTO RICO OPEN

The Puerto Rico Open is an Additional Event being played opposite the Arnold Palmer Invitational for the third consecutive year. Notable past champions include Tony Finau and Viktor Hovland.

GOLF Channel and Peacock will present coverage Thursday-Friday beginning at 10 a.m. ET and Saturday-Sunday beginning at 2:30 p.m. ET.

 

GOLF Channel/Peacock Broadcast Team

  • Play by Play: George Savaricas
  • Analyst: Johnson Wagner
  • On-Course: Billy Ray Brown / Tripp Isenhour

 

How To Watch – Thursday, March 7 – Sunday, March 10 (all times ET)

  • TV – GOLF Channel
  • Streaming – Peacock, NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app

 

Day GOLF Channel/Peacock
Thursday 10 a.m. –1 p.m.
Friday 10 a.m. –1 p.m.
Saturday 2:30-5 p.m.
Sunday 2:30-4:30 p.m.

 

Notable Players This Week

  • Joel Dahmen
  • Kevin Kisner
  • Cameron Champ
  • Robert MacIntyre
  • Fred Biondi
  • Nick Watney

 

LPGA TOUR: BLUE BAY LPGA

The LPGA Tour concludes its swing through Asia with the Blue Bay LPGA held at Jian Lake Blue Bay Golf Club in the People’s Republic of China, marking the first time the event is being held since 2018. The first four winners on Tour this season are all major winners (Lydia Ko, Nelly Korda, Patty Tavatanakit and Hannah Green).

Live overnight coverage begins Wednesday at 11 p.m. ET on GOLF Channel and Peacock.

How To Watch – Wednesday, March 6 – Saturday, March 9 (all times ET)

  • TV – GOLF Channel
  • Streaming – Peacock, NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app

 

Day GOLF Channel/Peacock NBCSports.com/NBC Sports App
Wednesday 11 p.m. – 4 a.m.  
Thursday 11 p.m. – 4 a.m.  
Friday 12 a.m. – 4 a.m. 11 p.m. – 12 a.m.
Saturday 11 p.m. – 5 a.m.  

 

Notable Players This Week

  • Lydia Ko
  • Lilia Vu
  • Minjee Lee
  • Celine Boutier
  • Anna Nordqvist
  • Ruoning Yin

 

PGA TOUR CHAMPIONS: COLOGUARD CLASSIC

The Cologuard Classic will be held at La Paloma Country Club in Tuscon, Ariz., featuring a field that includes last year’s Charles Schwab Cup champion Steve Stricker and defending champion David Toms, as well as Ernie Els, David Duval, Stewart Cink, Corey Pavin and Steven Alker. The event will utilize the resort’s Ridge Course for the front nine and the Canyon and Hill courses for the back nine.

How To Watch – Friday, March 8 – Sunday, March 10 (all times ET)

  • TV – GOLF Channel
  • Streaming – Peacock, NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app

 

Day GOLF Channel/Peacock
Friday 7-9 p.m.
Saturday 5-7 p.m.
Sunday 5-8 p.m.

 

Notable Players This Week

  • Steve Stricker
  • David Toms
  • Ernie Els
  • David Duval
  • Stewart Cink
  • Corey Pavin
  • Steven Alker

 

DP WORLD TOUR: JONSSON WORKWEAR OPEN

A co-sponsored event by the Sunshine Tour, the Jonsson Workwear Open will be held at Glendower Golf Club in Evendale, South Africa, which has also served as a host of the South African Open on several occasions.

How To Watch – Thursday, March 7 – Sunday, March 10 (all times ET)

  • TV – GOLF Channel
  • Streaming – Peacock, NBCSports.com, NBC Sports app

 

Day GOLF Channel/Peacock NBCSports.com/NBC Sports App
Thursday 5-10 a.m.  
Friday 6-10 a.m. 5-6 a.m.
Saturday 6-10 a.m. 5:30-6 a.m.
Sunday 7-10:30 a.m. 5:30-7 a.m.

 

Notable Players This Week

  • Dylan Frittelli
  • Rafa Cabrera Bello
  • Jonas Blixt
  • Soren Kjeldsen
  • Joost Luiten

 

DARIUS RUCKER INTERCOLLEGIATE PRESENTED BY PRINCIPAL FINANCIAL AND PXG

NBC Sports presents final round coverage of the Darius Rucker Intercollegiate Presented by Principal Financial and PXG today at 2:30 p.m. ET, returning this year after making its television debut on GOLF Channel two years ago when it became the first all-women’s regular season collegiate golf tournament to be presented live on the network.

The annual event, hosted by multi-platinum country artist Darius Rucker, is held at Long Cove Club in Hilton Head, S.C., and features a 54-hole stroke play competition for individual and team honors. Past individual champions of the tournament include Maria Fassi (2018, Arkansas), Emilia Migliaccio (2020, Wake Forest), and Cheyenne Knight (2016-2017, Alabama).

BROADCAST NOTES

  • Golf Central: Golf Central will provide pre- and post-tournament coverage on GOLF Channel on-site from the Arnold Palmer Invitational this Wednesday-Sunday. This week’s Golf Central coverage features Rich Lerner, Brandel Chamblee, Mark Rolfing, Todd Lewis, and Damon Hack.
  • Golf Today will be presented Wednesday and features George Savaricas, Ryan Lavner, and Lewis

 

Day Golf Central Golf Today
Wednesday 5:30-6:30 p.m. 1-2:30 p.m.
Thursday 1-2 p.m. / 6-7 p.m.  
Friday 1-2 p.m. / 6-7 p.m.  
Saturday 11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. / 7-8 p.m.  
Sunday 11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. / 8-9 p.m.  

Note: all times ET, post-round coverage begins following conclusion of play

All GOLF Channel coverage also streams on NBCSports.com and the NBC Sports app via authentication, giving consumers additional value to their subscription service, and making high-quality content available to MVPD customers both in and out of the home and on multiple platforms.

 

–NBC SPORTS–

 

Filed Under: College Golf, Golf, Golf Central Live, LPGA, NBC, PGA Tour, Uncategorized

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