Mexico Open at VidantaWorld 2025: Tee times and how to watch Round 3
The PGA Tour's Mexico Open at VidantaWorld continues Saturday, following a cut to 77 players.
Here's a look at tee times and groupings for the third round in Vallarta, Mexico (click here for TV times and stream links).
Time
Tee
Players
10:35 AMEST
1
Harry Hall
Frankie Capan III
Justin Hastings(a)
10:35 AMEST
10
Ricky Castillo
Fred Biondi
Erik van Rooyen
10:46 AMEST
1
Rafael Campos
Mason Andersen
Taylor Montgomery
10:46 AMEST
10
Thriston Lawrence
Blades Brown
Andrew Putnam
10:57 AMEST
1
Joe Highsmith
Michael Kim
Rasmus Højgaard
10:57 AMEST
10
Quade Cummins
Thorbjørn Olesen
Joel Dahmen
11:08 AMEST
1
Takumi Kanaya
Aaron Baddeley
Victor Perez
11:08 AMEST
10
Adam Svensson
Niklas Nørgaard
Chad Ramey
11:19 AMEST
1
Greyson Sigg
Matt McCarty
Chandler Phillips
11:19 AMEST
10
Henrik Norlander
Peter Malnati
Noah Goodwin
11:30 AMEST
1
Patrick Rodgers
John Pak
Hayden Springer
11:30 AMEST
10
Jose Luis Ballester Barrio(a)
Sam Ryder
Ben Martin
11:41 AMEST
1
Nicolai Højgaard
Vincent Norrman
Kris Ventura
11:41 AMEST
10
Jonathan Byrd
Ben Kohles
C.T. Pan
11:52 AMEST
1
Alejandro Tosti
Jeremy Paul
Lanto Griffin
11:52 AMEST
10
David Lipsky
Emiliano Grillo
Kevin Yu
12:03 PMEST
1
Ryo Hisatsune
Alex Smalley
Francesco Molinari
12:03 PMEST
10
Thomas Rosenmueller
Jake Knapp
Matteo Manassero
12:14 PMEST
1
Steven Fisk
Kevin Roy
Jesper Svensson
12:14 PMEST
10
Karl Vilips
Max McGreevy
Santiago de la Fuente
12:25 PMEST
1
Isaiah Salinda
Sami Valimaki
Ryan Gerard
12:25 PMEST
10
Chan Kim
Jacob Bridgeman
Taylor Moore
12:36 PMEST
1
Aaron Rai
Ben Griffin
Akshay Bhatia
12:36 PMEST
10
Scott Piercy
Harry Higgs
Danny Walker
12:47 PMEST
1
Aldrich Potgieter
Stephan Jaeger
Brian Campbell
12:47 PMEST
10
Riley Lewis
Antoine Rozner

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Scottie Scheffler emulates Tiger Woods with latest dominant win
World No 1 Scottie Scheffler emulated Tiger Woods by successfully defending the Memorial Tournament title at Muirfield Village. Only five-time winner Woods had previously retained the crown between 1999 and 2001, but Scheffler claimed a second consecutive success with a four-stroke victory over Ben Griffin. Advertisement "Well, you did it again," tournament host Jack Nicklaus told him walking off the green. Scheffler has now won three times in four starts after wins at the CJ Cup Byron Nelson and PGA Championship. "It's pretty cool," Scheffler told CBS Sports after his 16th PGA Tour victory. "It's always a hard week as it's so challenging to play this tournament. "I battled really hard over the weekend and Ben made things interesting down the stretch, but overall it was a great week." Scottie Scheffler triumphed at the Memorial (Getty Images) Scheffler took a one-shot lead into Sunday and the chasing pack failed to put him under any concerted pressure. Advertisement Birdies at the seventh, 11th and 15th gave Scheffler breathing space in a final round two-under par 70, with a solitary dropped shot coming at the 10th – his first bogey in 32 holes. Griffin closed with a 73 to finish one ahead of Austria's Sepp Straka, with Nick Taylor a shot back in fourth. "You know Scottie's probably going to play a good round of golf. The guy's relentless,' said Straka after the round. 'He loves competition, and he doesn't like giving up shots. But it's one of those courses where it can always happen, so you got to be prepared for it. I felt like I gave myself a lot of chances to kind of make a push." England's Tommy Fleetwood was tied 16th, Scotland's Robert MacIntyre tied 20th but Shane Lowry, of Ireland, dropped down the leaderboard for a share of 23rd place with a disappointing 77. Advertisement Meanwhile, Rickie Fowler had his first top 10 of the year at just the right time. He made par on the 18th to tie for seventh, earning him the lone available qualification spot for The Open at Royal Portrush in July. Fowler tied with Brandt Snedeker at one-under but gets the one Open exemption available based on a higher world ranking – Fowler at No 124 and Snedeker at No 430. "That's one I've wanted on the schedule," said Fowler, who faces a 36-hole qualifier for the US Open on Monday. Additional reporting from PA
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Scottie Scheffler Joins Tiger Woods as Only Players to Achieve Rare PGA Milestone
Scottie Scheffler Joins Tiger Woods as Only Players to Achieve Rare PGA Milestone originally appeared on Athlon Sports. There isn't an athlete in the sports world currently in a rhythm quite like Scottie Scheffler is over the last month on the PGA Tour golf circuit. Advertisement On Sunday, Scheffler shot a two-under final round to finish 10-under for the tournament, capturing the Memorial Tournament title in Dublin, Ohio. The win was made even more special by the fact that it came at 'Jack's Place,' with golf legend Jack Nicklaus himself there to greet Scheffler after he sank the winning putt on the 18th hole. This marks Scheffler's second consecutive victory at the Memorial, and following his four-stroke win, the PGA Tour announced a piece of history: Scheffler has joined Tiger Woods as the only players to win the Memorial Tournament in back-to-back years. It also marks his third tournament win of the year—and his third in just his last four starts. Scheffler, the No. 1 ranked golfer in the world, notched his biggest win of the year so far at the PGA Championship, where he secured his second career major. His consistency over the past two-plus years has been nothing short of remarkable, firmly establishing him as one of the game's elite. Advertisement He still has two majors remaining this season—the U.S. Open and The Open Championship—both of which happen to be the final legs he needs to complete the career Grand Slam. It's an incredibly tall task, but if anyone in today's game has the ability to pull off such a historic achievement before turning 30, it's Scheffler, who is still just 28 years old. Scottie Scheffler walks to the third tee during the final round of the Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin on June 1, 2025.© Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images He is expected to take the upcoming week off and will not compete in the RBC Canadian Open, which will feature Rory McIlroy, who has missed the last two tournaments. Related: Major Rory McIlroy News Draws Attention Ahead of RBC Canadian Open This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 1, 2025, where it first appeared.


Newsweek
8 hours ago
- Newsweek
Memorial: Jack Nicklaus Has Eye-Opening Scottie Scheffler Proclamation
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Scottie Scheffler won the Memorial Tournament for the second straight year, joining Tiger Woods as the only two players to conquer Muirfield Village in consecutive seasons. He began the day holding a one shot advantage over Ben Griffin, the North Carolinian who won last week's Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial. Griffin has been red-hot as of late, too, but Scheffler slammed the door shut on him down the stretch in Ohio on Sunday. After missing the fairway and making a bogey on the par-4 10th, Scheffler canned back-to-back birdie tries on the 11th and 12th holes. Meanwhile, Griffin missed a short birdie try on 11 and then bogeyed the 12th and 13th, which increased Scheffler's lead to four with five holes to play. The engraver could have started to etch Scheffler's name into the trophy at that point. Jack Nicklaus and Scottie Scheffler pose for photos with the trophy after Scheffler won the 2025 Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club on June 01, 2025 in Dublin, Ohio. Jack Nicklaus and Scottie Scheffler pose for photos with the trophy after Scheffler won the 2025 Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club on June 01, 2025 in Dublin, Griffin, a fiery player whose confidence only continues to increase, made an eagle on the par-5 15th. He then sunk a long birdie putt on the par-3 16th to apply some pressure and suddenly, Scheffler's lead dwindled from four to two with two to play. "I told myself when we were standing there on 17 tee, if [Griffin] eagles 15, birdies 16 and 17 and 18, we deserve to be in a playoff," Scheffler said after. "I can't stop him from playing great golf, but all I can do is just go out there and try and execute. I hit the fairway on 17, hit the green, gave myself a good look. When you're in the rough out here, it's really challenging, and [Griffin] put it in the rough on 17, which makes that hole extremely difficult, and paid the price for an errant tee shot." Griffin walked away with a double while Scheffler penciled in a four into his scorecard. It was over, leaving Scheffler with an easy stroll up to the 18th green, where a victorious handshake with tournament host Jack Nicklaus awaited. "I think that great players are ones who rise to the occasion and are ones who know how to play coming down the stretch in important events," Nicklaus said after the tournament ended. "[Scheffler is] a great player. I mean, look at the record that he has had the last few years. It's unbelievable." Scheffler won his 16th PGA Tour title on Sunday, all of which have come since February 2022. He's on a remarkable tear, one that makes the game look so easy and so simple. He hits fairways and greens routinely, rarely putting himself out of position. Why is the Memorial one of my favorite tournaments of the year? Well the biggest reason has to do with Jack, and the way he makes himself available during this week every year. For my entire life, I have loved hearing his insight, especially at Muirfield Village, whether it be… — Jack Milko (@jack_milko) June 2, 2025 His mental toughness is unflappable too, which led Nicklaus, the winningest major champion of all time, to make quite the declaration on Sunday evening. "I don't think I played nearly as well as he played," Nicklaus said of Scheffler. "He's playing better than I played and more consistent. He's just been playing fantastic, and I love watching him play. Whether it's here or on the television or whatever it is, I love to watch. Anytime he's playing, I want to watch." Scheffler smiled at the comment, but did not add anything further. He's a man of humility, an individual who never gets too far ahead of himself. He also does not have a big ego whatsoever. He is focused solely on the present and on his process to prepare. Higher than those items on his priority list are his faith and his family. But he is also intense, and he takes that intensity and tries to apply it to each and every shot — one of the many reasons why he has won so much over the past three years. "Early in my career I felt like I didn't bring enough intensity to the first couple rounds. Like I would bring a lot of intensity on Saturday and Sunday, but I was always kind of on the outside looking in when it came to leaderboards, and that's one thing I think that Tiger was really good at was bringing that level of intensity to each and every shot," Scheffler said. "I never got to play with Mr. Nicklaus, but I would assume that's probably a pretty similar thought process that he brought to each round. And each tournament week feels like a marathon, especially when you're playing a difficult golf course like this, so it's just more important to stay in the proper head space and try and hit shots and then go from there." That increased intensity has turned Scheffler into a Hall of Fame player, or perhaps even better than that, as Nicklaus so aptly put it. More Golf: The Memorial: Ben Griffin Reveals Frightening Reason For His Sunglasses