RBC Canadian Open 2025: Tee times, pairings for final round at TPC Toronto
The RBC Canadian Open concludes Sunday at TPC Toronto in Ontario.
Here's a look at final-round tee times and pairings with Golf Channel coverage beginning at 1 p.m. EDT.
Wyndham Clark
Hayden Springer
Tyler Mawhinney
(a)
Justin Lower
Steven Fisk
Carson Young
Vince Whaley
Lanto Griffin
Zac Blair
Chandler Phillips
Patrick Fishburn
Beau Hossler
Davis Riley
Dylan Wu
Robert MacIntyre
Charley Hoffman
Adam Schenk
Mark Hubbard
Max McGreevy
Paul Peterson
Emiliano Grillo
Henrik Norlander
Noah Goodwin
Nate Lashley
Rasmus Højgaard
Ryo Hisatsune
Jackson Suber
Jesper Svensson
Matthew Anderson
Jeremy Paul
Trevor Cone
Harry Hall
Thorbjørn Olesen
Paul Waring
Trey Mullinax
Peter Malnati
Corey Conners
Keith Mitchell
Ben Silverman
Taylor Montgomery
John Pak
Richard Lee
Ludvig Åberg
Thomas Detry
Shane Lowry
Nick Taylor
Danny Willett
Sam Burns
Adam Hadwin
Taylor Pendrith
Antoine Rozner
Kevin Roy
Cameron Champ
Alex Smalley
Cristobal Del Solar
Victor Perez
David Skinns
Cameron Young
Rico Hoey
Byeong Hun An
Jake Knapp
Andrew Putnam
Matt McCarty
Mackenzie Hughes
Lee Hodges
Kevin Yu
Matteo Manassero
Ryan Fox

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


NBC Sports
6 hours ago
- NBC Sports
Manassero moves one step closer to first Tour win
Matteo Manassero shares the 54-hole lead heading into the final round of the RBC Canadian Open thanks to "delightful" play on Saturday and moves one step closer to his first PGA Tour triumph.
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
HLs: American Family Insurance Championship, Rd. 2
Highlights | Round 3 | RBC Canadian In the third round of the 2025 RBC Canadian Open, Matteo Manassero and Ryan Fox each carded 6-under 64s to get to 14-under after 54 holes at TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley (North Course). Both DPWT alums take the co-lead by one heading into Sunday. 12:42 Now Playing Paused Ad Playing
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Mackenzie Hughes in the hunt heading into final round at Canadian Open
CALEDON, Ont. — Mackenzie Hughes has dreamed of this moment. In fact, he's already been in this moment. This time, he has to believe, will be different. For the second straight year, the Dundas, Ont. native heads to Sunday at the RBC Canadian Open with a chance to win his national Open. 'I've dreamt from a young age about doing something like this,' Hughes said after shooting a Saturday 64 to head into the final round at 12-under par, two shots back of the lead. 'I was standard-bearer back at Hamilton in '03 and volunteered at a young age and thought, 'Wow, this is really cool.' Now that I get to actually do it, I tell myself, 'Hey, you've got to lean into this. You've got to embrace it and enjoy it.'' He tried to embrace it last year at Hamilton Golf and Country Club. Whether it was the weight of the moment, the thought of accomplishment, or simply golf, he couldn't get it across the finish line, shooting a gut-wrenching 70 in the final round. 'It was easy to kind of look forward and imagine what it would be like to win tournaments 10 minutes from my house and win the Canadian Open,' he recalled. 'It was difficult not to have that in your mind. I think it affected me.' 'I think the hardest thing is to not want it too much, which is hard to turn off. It's hard to turn off something that you've thought about for years,' he said. This year at TPC Toronto in Caledon, the 34-year-old Canadian will have plenty of crowd support as he tries to chase down co-leaders Ryan Fox and Matteo Manassero who head to Sunday at 14-under. If Hughes is in the hunt when he reaches the rowdy par-3 Rink Hole 14th, they might be able to hear the cheers from Hamilton. 'You've got to embrace it and enjoy it. A week like this, I can use them,' Hughes said of the fans. 'I can use them for energy. I can use them for momentum. We don't get that very often. If I go play anywhere else in the world and I'm playing the last round with anyone that's notable, I'm not the favourite. I'm not someone they're going to be rooting for. Here I have that going for me, and I think it's important to try and use it.' The rather unheralded trio of Lee Hodges, Kevin Yu and Matt McCarty are tied for third, one shot back at 13-under. Hughes is tied for sixth at 12-under with Jake Knapp and Andew Putnam. There will be more than one Canadian trying to make history on Sunday. Canadian Open hero from two years ago Nick Taylor eagled the 18th hole on Saturday to join fellow Canucks Taylor Pendrith and Adam Hadwin at 10-under par. All three will be looking to take advantage of TPC Toronto's receptive greens and make a Sunday charge. 'Certainly a low 60s is not out of the question around this place. We've seen it this week,' Hadwin said. 'I think at this point it's going to come down to whether I can get hot with the putter tomorrow.' The condensed leaderboard has 15 players within three shots of the lead, and another nine players four back at 10-under, including the three Canadians, Irish star Shane Lowry, and American Sam Burns. Hadwin expects the course could play tougher on Sunday if the expected winds kick up as the course continues to dry from a Wednesday rain storm. Adam Hadwin finally seeing hope in 'hardest period' of golf career Rory McIlroy makes brutal snowman at RBC Canadian Open, going home early 'Fairways have definitely dried out. Greens are still a little soft; they grab pretty quickly,' Hadwin said of the changing conditions. 'We're definitely starting to see some release at least downwind with mid-irons which we hadn't seen. I imagine by afternoon tomorrow, especially if the wind gets up at all, it will be a bit of a different golf course than we saw Thursday.' The 37-year-old from Abbotsford, B.C. has struggled mightily this season as he goes through a swing change, but has seen plenty of reason for optimism through 54 holes, and hopes to use this trip home to jumpstart a mid-season push back into the FedEx Cup Top-100, which is the new cut-off to retain a PGA Tour card for 2026. 'To be able to continue momentum from Thursday and on, it's been a great feeling,' he said. 'Just the fact that I can kind of set up and know where the shot is going and how it's going to come off is a great feeling, something that I felt like I've been missing for a while here.' The Canadian contenders begin action with Taylor playing with Lowry at 11:50 a.m. Hadwin is paired with Pendrith in an all-Canadian group at 12:10 p.m., and Hughes plays with Matt McCarty at 1:25 p.m. The final group of Fox and Manassero tees off at 1:45 p.m.