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Red Hot Horschel wins in New Orleans

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If the Zurich Classic had been a horse race, the track conditions would have been classified as “sloppy,” with multiple inches of rain falling on TPC Louisiana in the New Orleans suburb of Avondale during the week. But on a marathon Sunday, Billy Horschel was the one sprinting victoriously toward the scoring tent.

Horschel took advantage of lift-clean-and-place provisions and made nine birdies on the day en route to an 8-under 64, good enough for a one-shot victory over penultimate-groupmate D.A. Points.

The University of Florida alum vanquished Points with a 26-foot, 8-inch putt on the par-5 No. 18, exacting sweet revenge on the man who had made a tournament-winning putt on the final hole less than a month ago at the Shell Houston Open. Before his second shot on the hole, Horschel had to wait for more than an hour after rain halted play — one of the several times it happened Sunday.

Click here to see pictures of the clubs Horschel used at the Zurich Classic, as well as his “What’s in the bag?” video with GolfWRX on-course reporter Sara Brown.

The celebration from Horschel rivaled the one that erupted from Adam Scott two weeks ago at the Masters and if that seems a little overkill, consider the tremendous breakthrough nature of Horschel’s victory. After knocking on the door a number of times in the last year-plus, Horschel is now on a four-week streak of top-10 finishes. He also has not missed a cut in his last 23 starts, a Tour-best mark.

Horschel’s nine Sunday birdies brought his total for the current season to 220, giving him a staggering lead of 31 on Jimmy Walker. Walker, for his part, finished in a seven-way tie for eighth at 13-under par for the week, shooting 71 on Sunday.

Points was the very epitome of a hard-luck runner-up this week, having made 21 birdies and a mere two bogies in 72 holes. He capped a stellar performance this week with a bogey-free, seven-birdie Sunday 65. That charge included a six-foot birdie make on the final hole that proved anticlimactic after Horschel ended things early.

Kyle Stanley parlayed a final-round 67 into a solo third-place finish at 17-under par, his best finish on Tour since his victory at the Waste Management Phoenix Open in February 2012. Perhaps this portends a continued run of good play from the Washington native and former Clemson University standout who now calls South Carolina home.

Teenage phenom Tianlang Guan finished up his Zurich Classic on Sunday with a 2-over 74, landing him at 4-over par for the tournament and in 71st place. In spite of a lackluster final 36 holes, his making the cut at only 14 years old is an impressive achievement and has golf fans salivating about what the future holds for the young native of China.

The Tour moves east to Charlotte, N.C. this week for the Wells Fargo Championship, where Rickie Fowler earned his maiden Tour victory in 2012.

Tim grew up outside of Hartford, Conn., playing most of his formative golf at Hop Meadow Country Club in the town of Simsbury. He played golf for four years at Washington & Lee University (Division-III) and now lives in Pawleys Island, S.C., and works in nearby Myrtle Beach in advertising. He's not too bad on Bermuda greens, for a Yankee. A lifelong golf addict, he cares about all facets of the game of golf, from equipment to course architecture to PGA Tour news to his own streaky short game.

1 Comment

1 Comment

  1. Blanco

    Apr 29, 2013 at 3:11 am

    I remember spending a half hour watching this guy hit 8 footers off a Putting Tutor at the Fry’s.com in 2011. Had never heard of him before that. I remember thinking: is this one of the guys that floats around the 120s who we never see? Or is he a young gun on the rise?

    Thine hath rizen Sir Horschel. Thine!

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Photos from the 2026 CJ Cup Byron Nelson

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With the second major of 2026 now behind us, the PGA Tour arrives in Texas for the CJ Cup Byron Nelson.

GolfWRX Tour Photographer, Greg Moore, is on site at TPC Craig Ranch in McKinney, Texas, and he’s already captured several WITBs and a look at some new colorways of just-spotted L.A.B. Golf VZN.1i putters.

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How much each player won at the 2026 PGA Championship

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Aaron Rai upset the odds to win his first major championship on Sunday at Aronimink, firing a final round of 5-under par to see off his competitors and claim the winner’s check for $3,690,000.

Jon Rahm and Alex Smalley were the best of the chasing pack, with both men sharing runner-up spot which was good enough for each to receive a check for $1,804,000.

With a total prize purse of $20.5 million up for grabs, here’s a look at how much each player won at the 2026 PGA Championship.

Players who missed the PGA Championship cut each received $4,300 each.

1: Aaron Rai, $3,690,000

T2 : Jon Rahm, $1,804,000

T2 : Alex Smalley, $1,804,000

T4: Justin Thomas, $843,866

T4: Ludvig Aberg, $843,866

T4: Matti Schmid, $843,866

T7: Cameron Smith, $637,050

T7: Rory McIlroy, $637,050

T7: Xander Schauffele, $637,050

T10: Kurt Kitayama, $496,707

T10: Chris Gotterup, $496,707

T10: Justin Rose, $496,707

T10: Patrick Reed, $496,707

T14: Matt Fitzpatrick, $364,762

T14: Scottie Scheffler, $364,762

T14: Max Greyserman, $364,762

T14: Ben Griffin, $364,762

T18: Maverick McNealy, $229,128

T18: Jordan Spieth, $229,128

T18: Stephan Jaeger, $229,128

T18: Padraigh Harrington, $229,128

T18: David Puig, $229,128

T18: Harris English, $229,128

T18: Min Woo Lee, $229,128

T18: Joaquin Niemann, $229,128

T26: Nick Taylor, $125,523

T26: Alex Noren, $125,523

T26: Cameron Young, $125,523

T26: Andrew Novak, $125,523

T-26: Daniel Hiller, $125,523

T26: Tom Hoge, $125,523

T26: Sam Burns, $125,523

T26: Hideki Matsuyama, $125,523

T26: Bud Cauley, $125,523

T35: Christiaan Bezuidenhout, $78,805

T35: Patrick Cantlay, $78,805

T35: Ryo Hisatsune, $78,805

T35: Daniel Berger, $78,805

T35: Ryan Fox, $78,805

T35: Haotong Li, $78,805

T35: Aldrich Potgieter, $78,805

T35: Si Woo Kim, $78,805

T35: Martin Kaymer, $78,805

T44: Chris Kirk, $53,743

T44: Matt Wallace, $53,743

T44: Shane Lowry, $53,743

T44: Jhonattan Vegas, $53,743

T44: Denny McCarthy, $53,743

T44: Chandler Blachet, $53,743

T44: Taylor Pendrith, $53,743

T44: Dustin Johnson, $53,743

T44: Nicolai Hojgaard, $53,743

T44: Michael Kim, $53,743

T44: Kristoffer Reitan, $53,743

T55: Collin Morikawa, $34,186

T55: Corey Conners, $34,186

T55: Andrew Putnam, $34,186

T55: Brooks Koepka, $34,186

T55: Mikael Lindberg, $34,186

T60: Sami Valimaki, $29,218

T60: Sahith Theegala, $29,218

T60: Rico Hoey, $29,218

T60: Rickie Fowler, $29,218

T60: Brian Harman, $29,218

T65: Casey Jarvis, $26,900

T65: Jason Day, $26,900

T65: Rasmus Hojgaard, $26,900

T65: Keith Mitchell, $26,900

T65: Sam Stevens, $26,900

T70: Luke Donald, $25,070

T70: Ryan Gerard, $25,070

T70: John Parry, $25,070

T70: William Mouw, $25,070

T70: Kazuki Higa, $25,070

T75: Elvis Smylie, $24,158

T75: Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen, $24,158

T75: Alex Fitzpatrick, $24,158

T75: Daniel Brown, $24,158

79: John Keefer, $23,970

80: Ben Kern, $23,930

81: Michael Brennan, $23,910

82: Brian Campebll, $23,900

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