The Day

Bay Hill still boasts a strong field, just a lot smaller

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The Arnold Palmer Invitation­al is now one of the signature events on the PGA Tour, meaning it has a $20 million purse with one of the strongest fields of the year on a tough golf course at Bay Hill that rarely produces surprise winners.

In other words, it’s the same as last year, only with a lot fewer players.

The eligibilit­y for these signature events was projected to be 70 to 80 players. Bay Hill has 69 players (Tony Finau chose not to play), the smallest field yet. And that includes North Carolina junior David Ford, who earned a spot based on his play in the Palmer Cup last year. An elite field, yes. And the smallest ever at Bay Hill. “Right now it just feels a little bit more quiet at the event,” Viktor Hovland said. “It’s hard to kind of tell how it’s going to be in the tournament. That’s kind of the way that I gather from Riviera and this week — it still feels like the same tournament, just a few less guys. So, it feels maybe a little bit more chilled before the tournament starts.”

It’s so small that Nick Dunlap, who in January became the first amateur to win on the PGA Tour in 33 years, will be starting the tournament Thursday as a single. The rest of the field will be in twosomes, one of many perks for the players. Twosomes goes quicker than threesomes.

Still to be determined is what kind of result it produces. With a typical 120-man field at Bay Hill a year ago — back then, it was known as an “elevated” event but still with a $20 million purse — Kurt Kitayama emerged from a cast of challenger­s that included Rory McIlroy, Scottie Scheffler, Patrick Cantlay and Jordan Spieth.

The way it’s gone this year on the PGA Tour, expect anything.

Pebble Beach never played a final round because of the wind and rain. Wyndham Clark was declared the 54hole winner, and he remains the only player from the top 50 in the world to have won on the PGA Tour this year. Riviera had Hideki Matsuyama shoot a 62 to beat Luke List. Both were lacking the depth of star power.

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