2026 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am Sunday: How to watch Round 4, tee times and what to expect

2026 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am Sunday: How to watch Round 4, tee times and what to expect

Akshay Bhatia arrives at Pebble Beach with a two-shot lead over Collin Morikawa, Sepp Straka and Jake Knapp as the AT& T Pebble Beach Pro-Am heads into its final round. Stormy conditions are forecast for Sunday, which could play a pivotal role in determining the champion. Below is everything you need to know to follow the conclusion — broadcast windows, streaming start times, key tee times and what to expect from the weather and leaderboard.

How to follow Round 4 on Sunday

Television coverage opens in the early afternoon with a cable broadcast starting at 1 p. m. ET. Network television carries the marquee window from 3–6: 30 p. m. ET. Streaming coverage begins earlier in the morning at 10: 45 a. m. ET with exclusive live-streamed coverage plus featured-group and featured-hole feeds throughout the day. A simulcast of the network broadcast will be available on a streaming service during the afternoon window.

Tee times and key groups to watch

The final-round tee sheet sends out a series of notable groups in late morning and early afternoon. The leaders — Akshay Bhatia, Collin Morikawa and Sepp Straka — tee off together in the late lineup, giving them a final look at conditions that are expected to intensify. Selected pairings and start times (all times ET):

  • 10: 22 a. m. — Rory McIlroy, Justin Rose, Pierceson Coody
  • 10: 33 a. m. — Tony Finau, Russell Henley, Sami Valimaki
  • 10: 44 a. m. — Patrick Cantlay, Alex Smalley, Ryan Gerard
  • 10: 55 a. m. — Jason Day, Harry Hall, J. T. Poston
  • 11: 06 a. m. — Nick Taylor, Chris Gotterup, Keegan Bradley
  • 11: 17 a. m. — Ryan Fox, Harris English, Max Greyserman
  • 11: 28 a. m. — Scottie Scheffler, Max McGreevy, Robert MacIntyre
  • 11: 39 a. m. — Alex Noren, Matt Fitzpatrick, Brian Harman
  • 11: 50 a. m. — Tom Hoge, Rickie Fowler, Ryo Hisatsune
  • 12: 01 p. m. — Jordan Spieth, Xander Schauffele, Shane Lowry
  • 12: 12 p. m. — Min Woo Lee, Ben Griffin, Nico Echavarria
  • 12: 23 p. m. — Tommy Fleetwood, Sam Burns, Maverick McNealy
  • 12: 34 p. m. — Jake Knapp, Jacob Bridgeman, Hideki Matsuyama
  • 12: 45 p. m. — Akshay Bhatia, Collin Morikawa, Sepp Straka

Early- and mid-morning groups also feature star power, including another late-morning collection with top-ranked players who could apply pressure on the leaders as the wind and rain pick up.

Weather, momentum and the purse

Forecasts call for rain and steady winds near 20 mph on the Monterey Peninsula, a combination that will test shot-making and course management. ‘‘I’m not saying it’s enjoyable, ’’ Tommy Fleetwood said. ‘‘But you have to accept the conditions for what they are and you have to look forward to playing in it and make the most of it really. It’s just the mindset that you’re going to have. We’ll see what the conditions bring. It sounds like it’s going to be rough, but who knows — the weather’s been wrong plenty of times. Yeah, that’s just how I think you have to handle it. Whether you play well or not or whether things go your way is a different story. But go in there with the right mindset. ’’

Momentum players loom large. The world No. 1 has surged through a long stretch and moved rapidly up the leaderboard, while others have produced late eagles and big swings that could reshape the final-hour drama. The tournament carries a $20 million purse, with the winner set to earn $3. 6 million — stakes that make risk-and-reward decisions under difficult conditions even more consequential.

Expect shifting winds, wet turf and strategic conservatism from those near the top. Whoever navigates the elements best on Sunday afternoon will most likely leave Pebble Beach with the trophy.