2023 PGA Championship
The 2023 PGA Championship was the 105th PGA Championship. It was a 72-hole stroke play tournament played on May 18–21 on the East Course of Oak [Hill Country Club] in Pittsford, New York.
Brooks Koepka finished at nine under for the tournament to win his third career PGA Championship and fifth major championship by two shots over Viktor Hovland and Scottie Scheffler. Koepka joined Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods as the only players to win three PGA titles in the stroke-play era and became the 20th player to win five majors. With the victory, Koepka became the first golfer to win a major golf championship as a member of LIV Golf.
Venue
previously hosted six major championships, the last being the 2013 PGA Championship. The course underwent a significant renovation beginning in 2019, including the removal of several trees and rebuild of the greens with bentgrass. The old par-3 sixth hole was removed and the fifth, sixth, and 15th holes were completely redesigned.Course layout
Source:Yardage by round
Previous course lengths for major championships
- – par 70, 2013 PGA Championship
- – par 70, 2003 PGA Championship
- – par 70, 1989 U.S. Open
- – par 70, 1980 PGA Championship
- – par 70, 1968 U.S. Open
- – par 70, 1956 U.S. Open
Field
Criteria
This list details the qualification criteria for the 2023 PGA Championship and the players who qualified under them; any additional criteria under which players qualified are indicated in parentheses.1. All past winners of the PGA Championship
- Keegan Bradley
- Jason Day
- Pádraig Harrington
- Brooks Koepka
- Rory McIlroy
- Shaun Micheel
- Phil Mickelson
- Collin Morikawa
- Justin Thomas
- Jimmy Walker
- Yang Yong-eun
- John Daly, Jason Dufner, Martin Kaymer, Davis Love III and Vijay Singh withdrew after the initial field release.
- Paul Azinger, Rich Beem, Mark Brooks, Jack Burke Jr., Steve Elkington, Raymond Floyd, Al Geiberger, Wayne Grady, David Graham, John Mahaffey, Larry Nelson, Bobby Nichols, Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player, Nick Price, Jeff Sluman, Dave Stockton, Hal Sutton, David Toms, Lee Trevino, Bob Tway, Lanny Wadkins and Tiger Woods were not in the initially released field.
3. Recent winners of the U.S. Open
4. Recent winners of The Open Championship
5. Recent winners of The Players Championship
6. The top three on the Official [World Golf Ranking]'s International Federation Ranking List as of April 24, 2023.
7. Current Senior PGA Champion
8. The leading 15 players, and those tying for 15th place, in the 2022 PGA Championship
- Abraham Ancer
- Tommy Fleetwood
- Tyrrell Hatton
- Lucas Herbert
- Tom Hoge
- Max Homa
- Chris Kirk
- Mito Pereira
- Séamus Power
- Davis Riley
- Justin Rose
- Xander Schauffele
- Brendan Steele
- Cameron Young
- Will Zalatoris was not in the field.
- Alex Beach
- Michael Block
- Matt Cahill
- Anthony Cordes
- Jesse Droemer
- Chris French
- Russell Grove
- Steve Holmes
- Colin Inglis
- Ben Kern
- J. J. Killeen
- Greg Koch
- Kenny Pigman
- Gabe Reynolds
- Chris Sanger
- Braden Shattuck
- John Somers
- Josh Speight
- Jeremy Wells
- Wyatt Worthington II
- Christiaan Bezuidenhout
- Hayden Buckley
- Sam Burns
- Patrick Cantlay
- Wyndham Clark
- Corey Conners
- Cameron Davis
- Harris English
- Tony Finau
- Rickie Fowler
- Emiliano Grillo
- Adam Hadwin
- Nick Hardy
- Brian Harman
- Russell Henley
- Billy Horschel
- Viktor Hovland
- Mark Hubbard
- Mackenzie Hughes
- Im Sung-jae
- Kim Si-woo
- Tom Kim
- Kurt Kitayama
- Matt Kuchar
- Lee Kyoung-hoon
- Denny McCarthy
- Keith Mitchell
- Taylor Montgomery
- Taylor Moore
- Trey Mullinax
- Taylor Pendrith
- J. T. Poston
- Andrew Putnam
- Chez Reavie
- Patrick Rodgers
- Sam Ryder
- Adam Schenk
- Adam Scott
- J. J. Spaun
- Scott Stallings
- Sepp Straka
- Adam Svensson
- Nick Taylor
- Sahith Theegala
- Brendon Todd
- Aaron Wise
- Brandon Wu
12. Winners of official tournaments on the PGA Tour from the 2022 PGA Championship until the start of the championship
13. PGA of America invitees
- Adri Arnaus
- Dean Burmester
- Joel Dahmen
- Luke Donald
- Ryan Fox
- Talor Gooch
- Ben Griffin
- Nicolai Højgaard
- Rasmus Højgaard
- Rikuya Hoshino
- Zach Johnson
- Sadom Kaewkanjana
- Kevin Kisner
- Anirban Lahiri
- Pablo Larrazábal
- Thriston Lawrence
- Min Woo Lee
- Robert MacIntyre
- Maverick McNealy
- Adrian Meronk
- David Micheluzzi
- Joaquín Niemann
- Alex Norén
- Thorbjørn Olesen
- Adrián Otaegui
- Yannik Paul
- Victor Perez
- Thomas Pieters
- Patrick Reed
- Callum Shinkwin
- Webb Simpson
- Jordan Smith
- Justin Suh
- Ben Taylor
- Davis Thompson
- Harold Varner III
- Paul Casey withdrew.
Alternates who gained entry
Round summaries
First round
Thursday, May 18, 2023Friday, May 19, 2023
A frost delay caused tee times to be delayed on Thursday by almost 2 hours, ultimately resulting in play being suspended at 8:50 pm EDT due to darkness. 10 groups did not finish their rounds due to the suspension of play. Play resumed at 7:00 am EST on Friday.
Bryson DeChambeau made three birdies over his final nine holes to shoot 66 and move atop the leaderboard at the end of the first round.
Eric Cole, making his PGA Championship debut after getting into the field as an alternate, made three straight birdies on holes 2–4 and was alone in first place at five under when play was halted. He double-bogeyed the sixth hole on Friday morning to drop back to three under and a shot behind DeChambeau. Scottie Scheffler did not make a bogey in a round of 67 to join Cole in a tie for second place, along with Dustin Johnson who was tied with DeChambeau until a bogey on the 18th. Adam Scott also got to four under until a double bogey on the 18th dropped back to two under and a four-way tie for sixth place that included 2011 champion Keegan Bradley.
Defending champion Justin Thomas made a double bogey on the sixth hole and shot two-over 72 in his opening round. World No. 1 Jon Rahm made six bogeys, including on his final three holes, and a double bogey as he began the tournament with a six-over 76.
| Place | Player | Score | To par | |||||||||||||||||
| 1 | ![]() Second roundFriday, May 19, 2023Corey Conners, Viktor Hovland, and Scottie Scheffler tied for the lead through 36 holes at five under. Scheffler, one back at the start of the round, birdied the first hole after hitting his approach to within two feet. He bogeyed the seventh hole, his first bogey of the tournament, before hitting his tee shot on the par-three 15th hole to a foot for a birdie and a share of the lead with Conners. A closing bogey dropped Scheffler back to five under after a two-under round of 68. Conners was three under on his round and alone in first place at six under before a bogey at the seventh hole to match Scheffler's 68. Hovland birdied his first two holes, including holing a 20-foot putt on the second, then made another 18-footer for birdie at the 10th. At the 18th, Hovland hit his approach to five feet and made the putt for a closing birdie and a 67. It was Hovland's 10th consecutive major championship round inside the top 10 on the leaderboard. First-round leader Bryson DeChambeau double-bogeyed the sixth hole after hitting his approach shot into a greenside bunker and fell as many as five shots off the lead before making three birdies on the back nine to get back to four under. He found another bunker on the 18th and made bogey to fall to three under, two shots back of the lead. Justin Suh joined him in a tie for fourth place after making a 33-foot birdie putt on the eighth hole, his 17th. Two-time champion Brooks Koepka made five birdies on his closing nine holes, including both the 17th and 18th, to shoot a four-under 66 and climb into a tie for sixth place at two under. Michael Block, a club pro in California, was three under on his round before a bogey at the par-5 fourth hole and double bogey on the par-3 fifth after his tee shot struck a tree. He finished at even par and tied for 10th place, the first PGA professional to be inside the top 10 after the second round since 1988. The cut came at 145, with 76 players making it to the weekend. Defending champion Justin Thomas needed a seven-foot putt to save bogey on the 18th hole and make the cut on the number, as did two-time champion Phil Mickelson. Notables to miss the cut included 2015 champion Jason Day and reigning U.S. Open champion Matt Fitzpatrick.
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