Byeong Hun An has shared his reaction by replying to a tweet by FD Degenerates host Kenny Kim talking about PGA Tour professional Collin Morikawa's struggle in the last three years to win a tournament.
1 (tie), Corey Conners and Viktor Hovland, 36. 3, David Skinns, 42. 4 (tie), Ludvig Aberg, Patrick Cantlay and Alejandro Tosti, 48. 7, Jackson Suber, 49.5. 8, 7 tied with 54.
It's Round 1 of the 2025 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am golf tournament on the PGA Tour. Follow for score updates and highlights, plus how to watch.
The PGA Fedex Cup Rankings on Jan 27 Rnk Prv Total 1. (1) Hideki Matsuyama (Japan) $3,784,755 2. (2) Collin Morikawa (USA) 2,160,000 3. (3) Sepp Straka (Austria) 1,928,138 4. (4) Nick Taylor (Canada) 1,
The only players among the top 30 on the money list who were not eligible for the Signature Event at Pebble Beach are No. 9 Sam Stevens and No. 28 Lee Hodges. Harris English was the biggest mover after winning last week's Farmers Insurance Open, going from 114th to sixth with a $1,674,000 first-place check.
The top five on the money list going into the Farmers Insurance Open didn’t change: Hideki Matsuyama, Collin Morikawa, Sepp Straka, Nick Taylor and Sungjae Im. Matsuyama tied for 32nd at Torrey Pines and has more than $3.7 million in earnings.
Mike McClure locked in his PGA one and done Pebble Beach golf picks and predictions for the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am 2025
History suggests that picking a past champion at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am is as safe a bet as any.
The return of the most anticipated champions, from Scottie Scheffler to Rory McIlroy, the participation of some of the greats of the sport such as, among others, Pau Gasol, Tom Brady, Larry Fitzgerald and Steve Young.
Hawaii on Sunday on an 8-foot putt to set the 72-hole Tour scoring record of 35-under-par 257 and beat Collin Morikawa by three shots in The Sentry, the PGA Tour's opening event of the 2025 season.
So far this season pro golf's headlines have focused on injuries, on issues, on alternate leagues. This week at Pebble? That could change.
Wyndham Clark doesn’t like watching himself on tournament television tapes. He didn’t revisit his first PGA title two years ago or the U.S. Open victory six weeks later