Masters 2025: Saturday tee times, pairings at Augusta National as Bryson DeChambeau, Rory McIlroy chase a green jacket
AUGUSTA, Ga. — Justin Rose is hanging on by a thread.
Rose, who built up a three-shot lead after a huge start on Thursday, enters Moving Day at Augusta National with just a one-shot advantage over the field. Bryson DeChambeau and Rory McIlroy aren't far behind.
DeChambeau jumped into second on Friday with his second-round 68, and McIlroy rallied from a finish that sent him sprinting off the course on Thursday to get to 6-under on the week. Corey Conners matched him at 6-under, too, and top-ranked Scottie Scheffler leads a group at 5-under. Scheffler is attempting to be the first person to win back-to-back Masters titles since Tiger Woods did so in 2001 and 2002.
Here's everything you need to know to keep up with the third round of the Masters on Saturday.
All times ET
CBS picks up coverage for the final two rounds of the Masters this weekend. All live coverage is also simulcast on Masters.com, the Masters app, ESPN+ and Paramount+ each day starting with the first tee times.
Round 3 | Saturday, April 122 p.m. - 7 p.m. | CBS
Round 4 | Sunday, April 132 p.m. - 7 p.m. | CBS
All time ET
9:50 a.m. | Tom Kim10 a.m. | Joaquin Niemann, Jordan Spieth10:10 a.m. | Stephan Jaeger, Max Greyserman10:20 a.m. | Danny Willett, J.T. Poston10:30 a.m. | Jon Rahm, Zach Johnson10:40 a.m. | Patrick Cantlay, Akshay Bhatia10:50 a.m. | Denny McCarthy, J.J. Spaun11:10 a.m. | Maverick McNealy, Charl Schwartzel11:20 a.m. | Brian Campbell, Ben An11:30 a.m. | Aaron Rai, Justin Thomas11:40 a.m. | Sahith Theegala, Davis Thompson11:50 a.m. | Matt Fitzpatrick, Wyndham Clark12 p.m. | Nick Taylor, Daniel Berger12:10 p.m. | Tom Hoge, Max Homa12:30 p.m. | Harris English, Min Woo Lee12:40 p.m. | Sam Burns, Nicolas Echavarria12:50 p.m. | Brian Harman, Bubba Watson1 p.m. | Davis Riley, Mhciael Kim1:10 p.m. | Xander Schauffele, Tommy Fleetwood1:20 p.m. | Patrick Reed, Collin Morikawa1:30 p.m. | Ludvig Åberg, Hideki Matsuyama1:50 p.m. | Jason Day, Sungjae Im2 p.m. | Rasmus Højgaard, Viktor Hovland2:10 p.m. | Scottie Scheffler, Tyrrell Hatton2:20 p.m. | Matt McCarty, Shane Lowry2:30 p.m. | Rory McIlroy, Corey Conners2:40 p.m. | Justin Rose, Bryson DeChambeau
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Aljamain Sterling doesn't get Sean O'Malley's stardom: 'His personality is a little dry'
Aljamain Sterling doesn't get Sean O'Malley's stardom: 'His personality is a little dry' Aljamain Sterling is confused by UFC 316 headliner Sean O'Malley's star power. O'Malley (18-2 MMA, 10-2 UFC) runs things back with Merab Dvalishvili (19-4 MMA, 12-2 UFC) in Saturday's main event (pay-per-view, ESPN, ESPN+) at Prudential Center in Newark, N.J. Sterling lost his bantamweight title to O'Malley at UFC 292, before his teammate Dvalishvili dethroned O'Malley to become champion at UFC 306. "The Funkmaster" previously said his fight with O'Malley didn't deliver the pay-per-view buys he expected, and that the idea of him being a big star may be a myth. "I don't really know his personality outside of when he's asking me constantly about my weight, or asking other fighters how much they weigh in person," Sterling told Home of Fight. "That's always been my interaction with him: 'How much do you weigh right now?' So I don't really have much to go of off. "I've always said his personality was a little dry, in my opinion, and I didn't really understand the stardom other than his fight skills. He's a very good fighter. He had a lot of good knockouts and highlights. That's usually good when you're fighting not-so-good people." O'Malley revealed that he went into his first fight with Dvalishvili with a torn labrum in his hip, which he underwent surgery for after the fight. When Sterling fought O'Malley, it was just three months after he had retained his belt against Henry Cejudo in a five-round battle at UFC 288. "Isn't that funny? Isn't that funny that he's all of a sudden healthy, but for some reason I was making excuses when we fought, had to turn around (fast) after just going 25 minutes with a former two-division champion?" Sterling said. "You could say whatever you want. I had to take a whole month off just to let my legs heal, and somehow that had no bearing on the fight in his fanbase's mind. "But anyone, as a combat sports athlete, understands the game. You have to be mentally ready and physically prepared in order to step in there, so I think it's perfect timing with the irony. Karma has a way of playing funny games, and now he sees how it feels. Even if he had two good hips, I really don't think on that day he was beating Merab."
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Rory McIlroy's post-Masters hangover continues after dismal second round at Canadian Open
Rory McIlroy's US Open plans are in absolute tatters. Watching his torment in Toronto on Friday night, it was hard to equate the player who missed the cut by 10 shots with the golfer who so magnificently won the Masters just eight weeks ago to become the sixth player in history to complete the grand slam. From immortal to backmarker. Golf is cruel. Out of the 156 players competing at the Canada Open in Toronto – an event McIlroy has won twice – the world No 2 only had three beneath him (although three did withdraw). Advertisement This was a low point, his eight-under 78 a golfing atrocity. In tournaments he has finished, McIlroy has never endured such a poor placing. Whatever way one looks at it, it has been a kick in the teeth, so shortly after he was all pearly white smiles. It is his only missed cut of the year and his first in 11 months. Granted, hangovers happen. But McIlroy's headache going into the US Open, which begins on Thursday, now appears to be verging on the insufferable. Especially as the American national championship is being hosted at the major venue that implodes craniums perhaps more than any other – Oakmont. A competitor has to be able to drive it accurately at the notorious Pittsburgh layout, with fairways so narrow and rough so thick. McIlroy hit only four fairways in this second round. He just about managed to break 80, but only because TPC Toronto is a par 70. In truth, it is not a tough track. The leader, Cameron Champ, is on 12 under, 21 strokes ahead of McIlroy. Perhaps his motivation after achieving his lifelong dream is a factor. But technically, it cannot be doubted that his driver woes are to blame. McIlroy's tee-shot game defines him and it was a huge blow for his TaylorMade Qi10 to be deemed non-conforming in the practice days at last month's US PGA. He switched to the Qi35 for this tournament, but he is struggling. Advertisement If only it was just the driver letting him down. He was plagued by a two-way miss and this was marked most emphatically with his quadruple-bogey eight on the fifth. At the start of the week, he acknowledged that motivation is a problem after achieving his lifelong dream. Yet Oakmont is no place to head when the technique is off and the mind is not sharp. In his absence, Champ takes a two-shot lead into the weekend over fellow American Andrew Putman. Irishman Shane Lowry is only two further off the pace on eight-under, after a 68. England's Danny Willett is on seven-under on a congested leaderboard. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Shaquille O'Neal insists 'Inside the NBA' won't change at ESPN: 'Chuck's not changing, I'm not changing'
Shaquille O'Neal, Charles Barkley, Kenny Smith and Ernie Johnson are going to have a new home next season when "Inside the NBA" makes the transition to ESPN. So far, it's looking like the show will be very similar to the one beloved by fans. During an appearance on "The Rich Eisen Show" on Friday, O'Neal insisted that neither he nor Barkley will ever change, while praising the professionalism of Johnson and Smith. He also hinted at having a situation similar to "The Pat McAfee Show" which is also syndicated by ESPN from a different company. Advertisement O'Neal's response: "I don't have any concerns because I know one guy that you're never going to change, and I know another guy that's really close to him. The other two guys — listen, Ernie is a consummate professional and he can adapt to any situation. Ernie is the guy that really keeps us out of trouble and Kenny is professional, but Chuck is right there on the line and I'm right below Chuck. Chuck's not changing, I'm not changing. "I actually saw something yesterday where it said ESPN is going to give us the same no-look that they give Pat McAfee. So, listen, we're just going to go have fun, do what we do and talk about the game that we love and just try to make people laugh." Eisen noted that his own show is in a similar situation, with a return to ESPN coming this fall. The "Inside the NBA" crew recently wrapped its lengthy run on TNT, where it had become an iconic part of the NBA media ecosystem. When TNT's parent company of Warner Bros. Discovery lost its NBA rights, the future of the show was in question until the network cut a deal with ESPN. It's going to be the same "Inside the NBA" on a different network. (Photo by Andrew Burke-Stevenson/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) (Boston Globe via Getty Images) TNT will continue to independently produce the show while airing it on ESPN, which reportedly plans to give the show its usual timeframe. Barkley has made perfectly clear he has no plans to change to fit in better at ESPN given how much he has blasted some of his future co-workers in recent months. Barkley has also said he plans to retire after two more seasons, though he's walked back retirement plans before.