The Sony Open in Hawaii, the PGA Tour’s first full-field event of the season, concludes Sunday. Here’s a look at final-round tee times and groupings at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu ( click here for how to watch):
TCU graduate Tom Hoge struggled in the second round, shooting one over par on Friday, and is sitting at 5-under for the tournament along with Dallas resident Tom Kim. Among those right behind were figures from the last Ryder Cup outside Rome — Sepp Straka of Austria, and U.S. captain Zach Johnson.
From tee times to TV and streaming information, here's everything you need to know for the second round of the 2025 Sony Open.
Tom Hoge joked about his caddie having high standards when it comes to his performance. The American golfer joined the stellar field of this week's Sony Open in Hawaii, which kicked off with its first round on Thursday, January 9.
Hoge and Hall tied for eighth last week at The Sentry, the PGA Tour's season-opening event in Kapalua, Hawaii. They sit level with Adam Schenk, Eric Cole, Denny McCarthy and Paul Peterson after each shot a 6-under-par 64 on Thursday at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu.
How to watch the 2025 Sony Open on Saturday, including full Saturday TV coverage and streaming info for Round 3 in Hawaii.
Luke Clanton is the headline amateur in this week’s Sony Open field. But for the moment, Tyler Loree is low amateur. The 17-year-old Loree, who is from Kula, Hawaii, earned his PGA Tour debut after winning the Hawaii State Golf Association’s amateur qualifier,
Tom Hoge and England's Harry Hall are off to hot starts again in the Aloha State, as they are among six players tied for the first-round lead at the Sony Open in Hawaii. Hoge and Hall tied for ...
Tom Hoge and England’s Harry Hall are off to hot starts again in the Aloha State, as they are among six players tied for the first-round lead at the Sony Open in Hawaii. Hoge and Hall tied for ...
The Trinity Christian Academy graduate is four strokes off the lead at PGA West in the Palm Springs-area desert.
With no internal out of bounds, Hoffman took advantage of a small opening left of the par-5 finishing hole – and succeeded all four times.
Chan Kim, far left, signed autographs during the final round of the Sony Open in Hawaii on Sunday. Taylor had less than a 1% chance of winning the tournament when he walked off the 17th green — Spaun had a 68% chance of victory — but played the par-5 18th in eagle-birdie-birdie to secure another exciting victory.