James Colgan

Rory Mcilroy enters the last Sunday round at AT&T Pebble Beach pro-am in the last pairing.
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Pebble Beach, Caliph. – The vision PGA Tour has searched for three years finally arrived in the 7th box at Pebble Beach just before noon on Saturday.
And it appeared scary.
The leaders reached the box of tee as endless sheets of white rainfall and the deafening wind overthrew the coast, their bodies appeared against gusts like pilings against the wave. After a week at the low level of 50, the temperature at the point was immersed in the 1930s, stirring CBS Reporter on Dottie Pepper course To wonder if last week’s international ski competition was warmer. The few fans who were worried about staying around in 7th while Rory Mcilroy, Collin Morikawa and Rasmus Hoygaard arrived were no longer diahards, they were stupid. And if they were to stay in the cold, they would be lucky if the folly was their only grief.
Why has PGA Tour passed the past three years following This? In the warm living rooms and in comfortable armchairs across the United States, the rest of the golf world knew the answer.
For the first time in three years, the signature of PGA Tour (unsaturated Defined events, raised) had given a bonafide blocker. Eighty of PGA Tour’s best players filled a field in one of the largest golf courses in the world, and through 45 holes, the crop cream had signed out on the top of the manager.
Now, in the 7th box, three of the contenders were about to hit their shooting in one of the world’s most famous golf holes. Pipsqueak par-3 seventh was playing extra short on Saturday, less than 100 yards, but conditions turned a wedge rounded into a buzz. Mcilroy went first, bursting his long goal and leaving the green, almost holding his ball up to the 8th box. Then came Morikawa, who dumped his short and right approach to a bunker. Finally, Hoygard played Goldilocks, finding the placement surface and leaving a two-tested tested to save par. After the 18th return, CBS broadcast took on stage with Glee, and for what it felt like the first time in 2025, fans at home responded in nature.
Last year, the national chairman of Augusta Fred Ridley calls Here is Lisa While describing the par-3 most famous of his club, the 12th. This brutish moment, immersed in the rain on Saturday at 7? This was a masterpiece in itself. Jay Monahan must have dreamed Jackson Pollock.
When Monahan’s tour envisioned a series of signature events that now occupy eight weeks of the Pro Golf season, they imagined a scene like Saturday: with the best players in the world under one roof, on a legendary golf course, pretending to an audience national television. The good vibes were only helped by a Zipa Telecas – who, assisted by players coming out in the threes of nine front and back, ended 17 minutes earlier.
So far, signature events have not largely managed to capture this spirit, prevented by a combination of the incorrect direction chart, the nominee or unworthy weather. But on Saturday, at least, Mcilroy was among the players who felt the known sound of a weekend in a quarrel in a tournament that ABoUT.
“Yes. Look, I think the really good places are a large part of the scenario,” he said. “When we go to big championships, especially an open American championship and an open championship, I always feel like the golf course is a large part of the story scene that goes on Thursday. Sometimes in PGA Tour this is not so , because if you play a TPC mill or whatever it is, it is simply not so interesting. “
“If everything is on the table for whatever will be this new PGA Tour view,” Mcilroy said. “I think the places will be a large part of it.”
Mcilroy was far from the only player who arrived at Pebble this week with the change in mind. He, Jordan Spieth and Scottie Scheffler were just some of the stars who spoke openly about the need for the tournament to continue modernization in order to provide a “more compelling product”. This Edikt tried with a PGA Tour announcement of some changes in broadcasting and the pace of game initiatives to increase the interest of fans. Interestingly, the three players intimated that the tournament was closer to rescue than the last influx of suggested changes. The biggest keyelade, everyone agreed, was compelling competition.
“The reason I have always watched sports is to see the competition,” Scheffler said on Tuesday. “When I think of something that would be good for the golf game, I think the more we can go back to the competition of things, I think this is what is the best.”
On Saturday at Pebble Beach, at least, the Golf world has got exactly that. Scheffler is one by half a dozen bonafid stars that enters the last Sunday round of 54 holes, sepp Straka. Mcilroy is the closest to the gang, entering Sunday a shot and was paired in the final grouping with Ryder Cup Shane Lowry’s friend.
The scene is set for Sunday’s most memorable afternoon in the history of signature events, broadcast live in the world in Prime, without football competition. This is the moment when the golf world waited – the heavenly extension that has proved so elusive to PGA Tour. Now there is only one critical test.
The golf world got what he wanted. Now is the time to see if they will be allocated for the completion.

James Colgan
Golfit.com editor
James Colan is a news editor of news and features in Golf, writing stories on the website and magazine. He manages the hot germ, golf media vertical and uses his experience on camera across brand platforms. Before entering Golf, James graduated from Siracuse University, during which time he was a caddy scholarship receiver (and Astuta Looper) in Long Island, where he is. He can be reached on James.colgan@golf.com.