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2026 WM Phoenix Open Sunday TV coverage: Watch Round 4

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The final round of the 2026 WM Phoenix Open gets underway Sunday morning at TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course. Here’s everything you need to know to watch the tournament on Sunday, including full WM Phoenix Open TV coverage, streaming details and Round 4 tee times.

How to watch WM Phoenix Open on Sunday

Hideki Matusyama takes a one-shot lead into Sunday’s final round in search of his third WM Phoenix Open title. Matsuyama sits at 13 under after a Saturday 68.

One shot back of him are a pack of contenders that includes Nicolai Hojgaard and Si Woo Kim. Hojgaard fired a sizzling six-under 65 on Saturday to vault into contention. Kim, who has gone T11-T6-T2 to start the season, backed up his Friday 62 with a 66 on Saturday.

Matt Fitzpatrick and Akshay Bhatia are among a group of players two shots back at 11 under.

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World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler is five shots back at eight under in a tie for 16th.

You can watch the third round of the WM Phoenix Open on TV via Golf Channel starting at 12 p.m. ET on Sunday, followed by the CBS broadcast at 3 p.m. RT. PGA Tour Live on ESPN+ will provide streaming coverage beginning at 11:30 a.m. ET Sunday morning, as well as featured group and featured hole coverage all day long.

Below you will find everything you need to know to watch the fourth round of the 2026 WM Phoenix Open.

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How to watch on TV Sunday

Golf Channel will air final-round TV coverage of the 2026 WM Phoenix Open from 12-3 p.m. ET on Sunday, followed by the CBS broadcast from 3-6:30 p.m. ET.

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How to stream online Sunday

You can stream the final round of the 2026 WM Phoenix Open via PGA Tour Live on ESPN+, which will offer streaming coverage starting at 11:30 a.m. ET on Saturday in addition to featured group and hole coverage. Paramount+ will stream the CBS broadcast.

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2026 WM Phoenix Open tee times for Sunday: Round 4 (ET)

Tee No. 1

10:45 a.m. – Daniel Berger, Harris English, A.J. Ewart
10:56 a.m. – Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen, Michael Kim, Sam Stevens
11:07 a.m. – Sudarshan Yellamaraju, Jacob Bridgeman, Jordan Smith
11:18 a.m. – Ryan Fox, Rickie Fowler, Max McGreevy
11:29 a.m. Mac Meissner, Keith Mitchell, Cameron Young
11:40 a.m. Ben Griffin, Brian Campbell, Sepp Straka
11:51 a.m. – Sahith Theegala, Michael Brennan, Mackenzie Hughes
12:02 p.m. – Scottie Scheffler, Kevin Roy, Stephan Jaegar
12:13 p.m. – Min Woo Lee, Chris Gotterup, Pierceson Coody
12:24 p.m. – John Parry, Viktor Hovland, Rasmus Hojgaard
12:35 p.m. – Jake Knapp, Matt Fitzpatrick, Akshay Bhatia
12:46 p.m. – Si Woo Kim, Ryo Hisatsune, Michael Thorbjornsen
12:57 p.m. – Hideki Matsuyama, Nicolai Hojgaard, Maverick McNealy

Tee No. 10

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10:45 a.m. – Christo Lamprecht, Patrick Rogers, S.H. Kim
10:56 a.m. – Zach Bachou, Wyndham Clark, Alex Smalley
11:07 a.m. – Tom Kim, Zecheng Dou, Nick Taylor
11:18 a.m. – Chad Ramey, Rico Hoey, Davis Thompson
11:29 a.m. – Kurt Kitayama, Joe Highsmith, Chandler Phillips
11:40 a.m. – John VanDerLaan, Johnny Keefer, Bud Cauley
11:51 a.m. – Sami Valimaki, Cam Davis, Keita Nakajima
12:02 p.m. – J.T. Poston, Kensei Hirata, Takumi Kanaya
12:13 p.m. – Max Homa, Kristoffer Reitan, Collin Morikawa
12:24 p.m. – Hank Lebioda, S.T. Lee, Adrien Saddier
12:35 p.m. – Gary Woodland, Xander Schauffele
12:46 p.m. – Patton Kizzire, Neal Shipley

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Rick Bowness rips ‘selfish’ Blue Jackets play in scathing postgame remark

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The Columbus Blue Jackets have missed the playoffs in five straight seasons. They looked like contending for a wild card spot last year, but eventually fell two points shy of clinching it. They were hoping to equal that points tally from last season and solidify their playoff chances this year against the Boston Bruins on Sunday.

But the Blue Jackets surrendered in what looked like a routine win. Having gone up 3-0 in the first period, the Bruins mounted a spirited comeback in the third before winning the game 4-3 in a shootout. They leapfrogged the Blue Jackets into the top Eastern Conference wild card spot and left Columbus at 87 points.

Blue Jackets head coach Rick Bowness didn’t mince any words following his team’s fourth loss in five games (1-3-1). He called out to his players to develop a playoff mindset, as many on the roster have yet to taste playoff success in their NHL careers.

“We got away from being aggressive, and I thought we got very selfish with the puck,” Bowness said. “Some of these guys, they’ve got a lot to learn about how to play in this league at this time of year.

“It gets harder and harder and harder, and we’re going to keep reminding them and reminding them every day how hard it is to win at this time of the year, and you just can’t get away. I hate it when we play on our heels, and we were back a little bit. Give them credit. They started coming, but there’s a lot to be learned from some of these guys, and they better damn well start listening.”

Bowness’ frustrations stem from the fact that the Blue Jackets dropped their game on Saturday against the San Jose Sharks in a similar fashion. They held a 2-1 lead after the second intermission, but let the Sharks come back into the game and eventually take a 3-2 win with a winner at 18:35 in the third.

Blue Jackets players express their disappointment after surrendering 3-0 lead

Captain Boone Jenner stated during the postgame interviews that is imperative that the Blue Jackets leave the loss behind them and look to consolidate their footing in the final eight games left in the regular season.

“It’s a tough loss, obviously, and we know what’s at stake,” Jenner said. “We are where we are right now. We can’t change the games where we didn’t get points, right? We have eight huge games here the rest of the way. We have to learn from tonight and we need to get better in order to get some more wins down the stretch.”

Jenner was guilty of taking a tripping penalty with 42 seconds left in the game, which led to Pavel Zacha’s second and game-tying goal. Leading up to the goal, the Blue Jackets tried to dump out the puck, with the nervousness showing in front of the home crowd. With eight games left, that is one emotion that needs to take a back seat.

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“There was a reason we were up 3-0,” Coyle said, “and it’s because we were doing the right things and playing the right way. We’ve got to stick to it. And we had the talk in between period, like, ‘Let’s stay on it.’

“They’re a good team. They’re going to push and play well and press a little bit, but it’s up to us, no matter what happens, to just stay on it. We can’t be turning pucks over like that and giving them easy transition.”

Columbus has played eight times in the last 13 days. They will get a rest day on Monday before they are off to face the division leaders, Carolina Hurricanes.