The race to the FedEx Cup Playoffs comes down to the wire at the 2025 Wyndham Championship! 🇨🇦

Corey Conners, Nick Taylor, Taylor Pendrith, and Mackenzie Hughes have already secured their spots. But can Adam Hadwin, Adam Svensson, or Ben Silverman pull off a must-win performance to join them?

In this episode, Bob Weeks, Adam Scully, and Mark Zecchino break down the chances for each Canadian, the pressure of the PGA Tour’s final regular season event, and what it will take to make it into the top 70.

⛳️ Who’s in? Who needs a win?
🔥 Can Hadwin, Svensson, or Silverman rise to the occasion?
🎯 What’s at stake heading into the FedEx Cup Playoffs?

Watch now for expert analysis, insider insight, and Canadian golf coverage you won’t find anywhere else.

👉 Don’t forget to like, comment, and subscribe for all things PGA Tour, LPGA, and Team Canada!

#FedExCup #WyndhamChampionship #PGA2025 #CanadianGolf #CoreyConners #AdamHadwin #NickTaylor #MackenzieHughes #GolfTalkCanada

Let’s take a look at the Canadian FedEx Cup standings right now. Cory Connors at 13, Nick Taylor at 17, Taylor Pendr at 37, Mackenzie Hughes at 59. Then it gets interesting. Adam Hadwin at 134, Adam Spenson at 162, and then you have Ben Silverman at 163. But Mark, I want to start with Hadwin. When you see Hadwin and 134th in the FedEx Cup standings, it’s jarring, isn’t it? Well, it’s jarring because we know how much better of a player he actually is than that. That’s what’s shocking. And it is also a statement of how good the tour is every year with the new crop of players. Uh, you know, look at the Chris Gotup conversations we’ve been having over the last couple of weeks. Where did he come from? Right? So, there’s always a youth movement. There’s always guys coming up looking for your job, looking for your spot. But to your point, Adam, you know, Hadwin’s too good to be in this position. And you know, we’re going to talk a lot about the top 50 over the next couple weeks because they get to secure their schedule next year with signature events, etc. Top 70 with one week to go to get into the playoffs. Hadwin needs to win at the Windom or he’s, you know, not part of the playoffs. But Bob, for me, when we talk about Adam Hadwin Weeksy, I’m thinking more about how does he have a, you know, four or five really good starts in the fall week, so that he secures his card for next year, top 100 get to go through. Well, he’s been working very hard all year long on swing changes with his coach, Mark Blackburn, and they’ve actually gone through three different iterations and and obviously the first two didn’t work, and the third one doesn’t seem to be paying a lot of dividends to it. And Mark Blackburn is a pretty renowned coach who’s who’s taught a lot of guys who’ve done very well. So you just wonder if there’s just a disconnect there or if Adam Hadin is just frustrated by he’s made the playoffs every year of his career. The last 10 years he’s been in the FedEx Cup playoffs. Now there used to be four events where it was top 125. But to see him sitting where he is in the standings, you know that his mind is probably just going crazy about trying to figure things out. And and also he’s probably getting a little tired. He’s played a whole bunch of golf in a row here trying to work his way up these standings and he’s just really hasn’t gone very far. A T44 finish at the 3M Open. That’s his best finish on the PGA Tour since the RBC Canadian Open. All right, how about Adam Spenson? He showed some big glimmers of hope last week, the opening 60, follow it up with a 75, ends up finishing T14. Bob, what did you see at all from Adam Spenson? because his game really has been up and down like a yo-yo. I mean, Adam Spencson, more than any of the other Canadians, is a guy who can go low. He showed it in his career. He’s had 61s and 62s, a whole bunch of them. You know, this is not a guy who is is is doing this once in his career. He does this fairly often. I won’t say every week obviously, or he wouldn’t be where he is right now, but he was not able to follow it up for the next three rounds. who was not. He almost when you heard him talk after the first round, it was almost like he was expecting not to play well. I don’t know. His comments were sort of I won’t say they were horribly negative, but they weren’t super positive. Let’s put it that way. And he sort of said, you know, I felt good. I had a good warm-up and I was playing well, but you know, we’ll sort of see. And I think the putting was was crazy, Mark. He was his putting stats were ridiculous. Well, Bob, on Thursday, you know, if you if you make about 90 feet of putts during a round of golf on the PGA Tour is a very solid day of putting and and the further you are below 90, the weaker it gets and the further you are above 90, the better putting day. That’s kind of the standard, that 80 to 90 range. On Thursday, he had over 190 feet of putts made in the opening round for the course record 60 on Thursday. Following day with the 75, 56 feet of putts. I mean, it’s just night and day shocking to the putting members to your point, Bob. But, uh, it’s interesting the comments. I mean, almost talking yourself into a poor Friday. That’s what it felt like after that round on Thursday, which is mindboggling from a guy who goes and shoots 60.

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