logo
Memorial Tournament 2025: First-round tee times, groupings at Muirfield Village

Memorial Tournament 2025: First-round tee times, groupings at Muirfield Village

NBC Sports28-05-2025
The seventh of eight signature events this season begins Thursday at Muirfield Village in Dublin, Ohio.
Here's a look at the first-round tee times and groupings for the Memorial Tournament as well as how you can watch the coverage.
Golf Channel Staff,
Joe Highsmith
Brandt Snedeker
Brian Campbell
Harris English
Rickie Fowler
J.J. Spaun
Justin Rose
Daniel Berger
Akshay Bhatia
Tony Finau
Austin Eckroat
Denny McCarthy
Alex Noren
Eric Cole
J.T. Poston
Adam Hadwin
Cam Davis
Cameron Young
Stephan Jaeger
Christiaan Bezuidenhout
Wyndham Clark
Max Greyserman
Ben Griffin
Shane Lowry
Chris Kirk
Sahith Theegala
Xander Schauffele
Jordan Spieth
Viktor Hovland
Ludvig Åberg
Hideki Matsuyama
Collin Morikawa
Jhonattan Vegas
Matti Schmid
Bud Cauley
Harry Higgs
Andrew Novak
Lucas Glover
Ryan Fox
Maverick McNealy
Michael Kim
Ryan Gerard
Min Woo Lee
Sam Stevens
Davis Thompson
Sungjae Im
Matthieu Pavon
Max Homa
Taylor Pendrith
Corey Conners
Matt Fitzpatrick
Tom Hoge
Nick Dunlap
Sam Burns
Aaron Rai
Tommy Fleetwood
Brian Harman
Thomas Detry
Robert MacIntyre
Byeong Hun An
Si Woo Kim
Adam Scott
Justin Thomas
Patrick Cantlay
Scottie Scheffler
Sepp Straka
Russell Henley
Keegan Bradley
Mackenzie Hughes
Matt Kuchar
Nick Taylor
Jacob Bridgeman
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'I just did not see this coming at all': Paul Azinger said of winning Payne Stewart Award
'I just did not see this coming at all': Paul Azinger said of winning Payne Stewart Award

USA Today

time6 hours ago

  • USA Today

'I just did not see this coming at all': Paul Azinger said of winning Payne Stewart Award

ATLANTA – Paul Azinger and Payne Stewart loved to play practical jokes on each other. Take, for instance, the 1993 Tour Championship when it was played at The Olympic Club during an unusually warm week. Each time Stewart dug into the water cooler on the back nine, he only found empty bottles and a note….that someone had scribbled his John Hancock to it. "It couldn't have been anyone but Zinger," Stewart told the Orlando Sentinel. "Every can would have some mean message about why there wasn't any water on it. 'Bone dry.' 'Where's the water?' 'I'm dying of thirst.' And every single one had my name signed to it." All these years later, Azinger confesses he did this dirty deed. "He's just got a devious mind," Stewart said. "He's a kid at heart, but a kid with a devious mind." So, too, was Stewart. When Azinger stunned him with a hole-out bunker shot that trickled into the hole on the 18th green at Muirfield Village Golf Club to steal the 1993 Memorial Tournament, he made a bee line to Stewart while they were still standing on the 18th green. "Payne, I'm really sorry," Azinger said. Stewart had held the lead most of the day. "It's OK, bud," Stewart answered. "That's part of it. That's the game." Azinger tried to console him again as they signed their scorecards. During his victory speech, Azinger expressed mixed emotion for breaking the heart of one of his closest pals and wondered if Stewart was back at his locker, shattered and choking back tears. But it turned out Stewart wasn't too broken up. 'I knew he was OK when I got back to the locker room and there were bananas stuffed up in the toes of my shoes," Azinger recalled. Not long ago, Stewart, who died in a plane crash in 1999 during the week of the Tour Championship, went 1 up in their back-and-forth game of pranks when his widow, Tracy, and son, Aaron, surprised him with news that he had been named the recipient of this year's Payne Stewart Award, which is presented annually by the PGA Tour to a professional golfer who best exemplifies Stewart's steadfast values of character, charity and sportsmanship. 'I just did not see this coming at all,' Azinger said. 'Gosh, I don't get tricked very often.' Azinger and Stewart, an 11-time Tour winner and World Golf Hall of Fame member, met in Hattiesburg, Miss., at what is now the Sanderson Farms Championship in 1982. 'I thought he had earrings in his ear,' recalled Azinger, who later learned it was a form of acupuncture. 'I became a better player the second I shook his hand.' Azinger grew up the son of a career military man, who served as a navigator in the Air Force, a lieutenant colonel who flew missions in both Korea and Vietnam. His mother, Jean, won numerous state and regional golf tournaments. When she was seven months pregnant with him, she played an exhibition match with Patty Berg and chipped in three times that day. 'To this day, some people claim I inherited my golf talent from her through osmosis,' Azinger said in his autobiography, Zinger. But the truth was more simple: he fell in love with the game by watching his parents and playing with them. Azinger had a strong unorthodox grip but the two most influential instructors in his career – Jim Suttie and John Redman – both refused to change it. During his first year at Brevard Community College, he was the No. 3 man on the 'B' team. But he worked hard at this game and by the time he returned to school for his second year he was the No. 1 player on the team. He moved on to Florida State, where he helped lead the team to its best season in school history at the time. Azinger still needed a little seasoning before he became one of the game's fiercest competitors. In 1985, when he led a tournament for the first time, he became so nervous he told his wife, 'If I have to be this nervous to make a living, I think I'm going to give up golf and do something else.' Later, he asked veteran pro Bert Yancey about those butterflies. Yancey's reply was classic. 'He drawled, 'Son, you want to welcome that chance to be nervous. You want to be so nervous you can't spit. Because if you aren't nervous, you are playing in the middle of the pack. And that's not where you want to be,' ' Azinger recounted. Azinger won for the first time at the 1987 Phoenix Open and could hardly spit as he went on to collect 12 Tour titles, none bigger than the 1993 PGA Championship. To say he was nervous during the sudden-death playoff with Greg Norman with a major championship on the line would be like saying the Titanic took on a little water. He told CBS's Jim Nantz about the neon flashes going off in his eyes every time his heart took a beat. His breakthrough victory that shed the label of best player never to win a major was expected to open the floodgates for Azinger but he soon would face an even bigger foe. Whenever Azinger lifted the Wanamaker Trophy, he felt a dull, throbbing pain in his right shoulder. Doctors eventually diagnosed Azinger with non-Hodgkin lymphoma, a cancer he beat after six months of chemotherapy and five weeks of radiation. While he returned to the winner's circle post-cancer, Azinger's diagnosis afforded him the opportunity to work in television in 1995 during his recovery, and he has made a successful second career as a television analyst, working most recently for the PGA Tour Champions. It was Azinger who donned a tam-o'shanter cap, like the ones Stewart wore on the golf course, and tucked his pant legs into his socks, to replicate Stewart's famous knickers, when he gave a moving eulogy at Stewart's memorial service after a jet carrying Stewart and five others from Orlando to Texas crashed into a field in South Dakota. Having shared a few stories of Stewart, who he called 'the life of every party,' Azinger removed his cap, paused and said, 'To try to accept the magnitude of this tragedy is the most difficult thing I've ever had to do.' Azinger, who played on four U.S. Ryder Cup teams and was the winning captain in 2008, is a most fitting recipient of the Payne Stewart Award. The only question is, what took them so long to honor him? He joins the likes of award winners Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and most recently Brandt Snedeker. 'To be named the recipient of this award, representing my dearest friend, is one of the proudest moments in my life,' said Azinger. 'Payne displayed the ultimate character, sportsmanship and service to others throughout his career. He set the standard for how to represent the game of golf, so to be recognized for this award is truly humbling.' Back home in Florida's Bradenton-Sarasota area, Azinger and his wife, Toni, give back through the Azinger Family Compassion Center in Manatee County. Opened in 2021 on the campus of One More Child, the 12,000-square-foot facility, which aims to serve vulnerable and struggling families within Manatee County, continues to make a difference in the lives of hungry kids, sex-trafficked children and working families living paycheck to paycheck. Over the past year, Azinger's non-profit has distributed nearly $19 million worth of food, clothing, household items and other needed supplies, and supported more than 190 nonprofit partners from the surrounding area. In Azinger's book, Stewart described him as 'a great friend, who displays courage and faith that people should strive to imitate,' all qualities represented in the Stewart Award. But just as when it came to delivering practical jokes, Azinger one-upped Stewart with this perfect description of his dear friend: 'If golf were an art, Payne Stewart was the color," he said. "Payne Stewart had style.'

Report: NBC Sports, USA, Golf Channel expected to keep U.S. Open, U.S. Women's Open
Report: NBC Sports, USA, Golf Channel expected to keep U.S. Open, U.S. Women's Open

Yahoo

time13 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Report: NBC Sports, USA, Golf Channel expected to keep U.S. Open, U.S. Women's Open

Despite a serious bid from Netflix, it appears the U.S. Open and U.S. Women's Open will stay on the same group of TV networks, according to reporting done by John Ourand of Puck. The U.S. Golf Association's contract with NBCUniversal runs through Dec. 31, 2026, but the two sides are working to re-sign for a longer term, which would keep the two major championships (among others) on NBC, USA Network and the Golf Channel. Back in 2020, the USGA moved its media rights from Fox Sports to NBCUniversal, a move that ended a 12-year deal with Fox Sports worth about $1 billion. After the COVID-19 pandemic forced the USGA to move the dates of the U.S. Open from June to September, Fox Sports struggled to find the broadcast hours needed for the championship, USGA officials noted, given their additional commitments to the NFL, MLB and college football. Talks that began looking into how Fox Sports and NBC/Golf Channel might work together ultimately ended in NBC taking over entirely. But with the contract due to expire at the end of next year, and NBC Universal taking a different look, talks are on to extend the deal with the same partners. According to a story from CNBC back in May, Comcast spun off most of its cable network stations into a new company named Versant. Versant, which had been called SpinCo until a permanent name was chosen, will own cable networks including USA, CNBC, MSNBC, Oxygen, E!, SYFY and Golf Channel. It will also house digital assets Fandango, Rotten Tomatoes, GolfNow, GolfPass and SportsEngine. The rest of Comcast's NBCUniversal portfolio, including the broadcast network, Peacock streaming service, Universal Studios, the theme parks and Bravo, will remain with Comcast. The new name isn't meant to be consumer-facing. Lazarus said he wants Versant to be viewed as a house of brands, with each asset interacting with users rather than the corporate holding entity. This would mark Versant's first major sports rights deal and it's expected to net the USGA roughly the same as the original Fox deal did in 2013. This time around, Netflix had bid for the rights, after ESPN, CBS and Warner Bros. Discovery inquired, but the NBCUniversal extension appears to be the most likely scenario. This article originally appeared on Golfweek: USGA, NBCUniversal getting closer to extension on TV deal

2025 Tour Championship first-round marquee pairings, tee times, where to watch Thursday
2025 Tour Championship first-round marquee pairings, tee times, where to watch Thursday

USA Today

time20 hours ago

  • USA Today

2025 Tour Championship first-round marquee pairings, tee times, where to watch Thursday

The 2025 Tour Championship features the top 30 players in the FedEx Cup Playoffs standings and for the second week in a row, the No. 1- and No. 2-ranked players will be in the final group the first day. Scottie Scheffler, who won last week's BMW Championship, will be paired with three-time FedEx Cup champ Rory McIlroy. That is the marquee group at East Lake for Thursday's first round, but there are other duos that will be worth keeping an eye on. Marquee groups for the 2025 Tour Championship So far, only the first day's tee times have been released. Some interesting pairings include: Thursday tee times for the 2025 Tour Championship Where to watch, stream, follow the Tour Championship 11 a.m. ET to 6 p.m. ET, PGA Tour Live on ESPN+ 12 p.m. ET to 6 p.m. ET, PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM 1 pm. to 6 p.m. ET, Golf Channel Watch Golf Channel for free on Fubo Sign up for ESPN+ to watch PGA Tour Live Sign up for Peacock to stream PGA Tour

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store