The PGA Tour got its first dose of weather last week at the 2025 Farmers Insurance Open. High winds forced a nearly 90-minute delay during Thursday’s second round.
Up next is the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, an event known for having to deal with pretty much all the possible elements Mother Nature can dish out.
In 2024, the final round was postponed to Monday and then canceled altogether Sunday night after a full day of high winds with more expected at the Monterey Peninsula. Wyndham Clark, the 54-hole leader, was declared the winner and while did come back to the golf course Monday to collect his trophy and take some pictures, most of the images that people saw in the days that followed were of debris strewn about and trees knocked over.
It was the first time the tournament was shortened since 2009 when Dustin Johnson was the victor.
So how are things looking for 2025?
The PGA Tour released its weather forecast for the week and Thursday’s first round should have mostly cloudy skies and zero percent chance of rain. Come the weekend, though, and it’s looking like a 20 percent chance of rain all three days.
Good news on the wind, though, as it appears that it shouldn’t be anything like it was a year ago, with nothing more than 15 MPH gusts.
Low wind, slight chance of rain? We’ll take it.
Doug Ferguson | Associated PressPebble Beach, Calif. – For a sport needing a jolt of energy, the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am is as good a test as any.Sco
The 2025 Pebble Beach Pro-Am is the fifth event of the 2025 PGA Tour season, but the debut event for many of golf's top athletes. World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler
A Villager in a golf cart was arrested after he was spotted driving on Buena Vista Boulevard. Arnold Godfrey Jr., 77, who lives in the Carrabelle Villas in the