Sungjae Im’s Valspar Moment: Why Sunday’s Final Round Matters More Than You Think
I’ve been covering professional golf long enough to recognize when a tournament takes on deeper significance than just the trophy on the line. The Valspar Championship heading into Sunday feels like one of those moments—and it’s got nothing to do with the purse.
Sungjae Im sits atop the leaderboard at 10-under, two shots clear of Brandt Snedeker and David Lipsky. On the surface, it’s a comfortable lead. In reality, it’s the kind of margin that evaporates faster than a morning frost if the guy chasing you gets hot. I’ve watched enough final rounds to know that two shots heading into Sunday is really just breathing room—not a destination.
What strikes me about this particular setup is Im himself. Here’s a player with genuine PGA Tour talent who hasn’t won since the 2021 Shriners Children’s Open. That’s nearly three years of knocking on the door without getting inside. In my experience covering the tour, that kind of drought does something to a player’s psyche. It doesn’t necessarily make them play worse—sometimes it sharpens the focus—but it can create a certain brittleness under pressure.
The Pairing Politics
Let’s talk about Sunday’s setup for a moment. Im plays with Snedeker in what amounts to the final grouping at 1:50pm EDT. This is where experience matters enormously. Snedeker has been in these spots before—he’s a two-time PGA Tour winner with veteran instincts. But Snedeker’s also someone who I’ve seen let opportunities slip away when they’re right there for the taking.
“Im plays alongside Snedeker on Sunday, with a tee time of 1.50pm EDT (4.50pm GMT). Lipsky is paired with Penge, with the duo beginning at 1.40pm EDT (4.40pm GMT).”
What makes this interesting is the grouping just ahead. Lipsky—tied for second—is paired with Marco Penge. Lipsky is a solid, methodical player, but he’s not exactly known for his Sunday heroics. He’s the kind of competitor who’ll shoot a clean 68 and stay in the hunt, but he’s unlikely to go out and shoot 63 to snatch victory. That’s actually good news for Im, relatively speaking. The threat isn’t immediately behind him; it’s beside him.
The Wider Picture: Depth and Contention
Here’s what I find encouraging about this tournament: there’s genuine depth in the contention. We’ve got Fitzpatrick three back, and that’s a guy who knows how to close tournaments. Koepka’s seven back at four-under—close enough to be dangerous if something goes sideways, but far enough that he’d need perfection.
“Plenty of other players are in contention, including Marco Penge and Matt Fitzpatrick, who are three back of Im at eight under.”
Having covered 15 Masters and countless other majors, I can tell you that when you’ve got multiple players with proven experience just waiting for someone to stumble, it changes how the leader plays. Im will know that a single wayward shot could cost him everything. That kind of awareness can either tighten a player up or focus them completely—there’s rarely a middle ground.
Why This Matters Beyond Sunday
I think what’s really significant here is what a win would mean for Im’s career trajectory. Going three years without a tour victory, no matter how talented you are, starts to become a story. It becomes a question mark. Does he have what it takes to close? Can he handle the pressure? A victory Sunday doesn’t erase all that, but it starts to rewrite the narrative. And narrative, whether we like to admit it or not, matters in professional golf.
Having caddied for Tom Lehman back in the day, I learned that momentum in golf isn’t just a feel-good concept—it’s real. One win opens doors, changes how you see yourself, how competitors see you. For Im, Sunday isn’t just about a trophy. It’s about reclaiming something.
Final Round Tee Times (EDT/GMT)
| Primary Contenders | Time |
| Brooks Koepka, Tony Finau | 12:45pm (4:45pm GMT) |
| Matt Fitzpatrick, Adrien Dumont de Chassart | 1:30pm (5:30pm GMT) |
| David Lipsky, Marco Penge | 1:40pm (5:40pm GMT) |
| Sungjae Im, Brandt Snedeker | 1:50pm (5:50pm GMT) |
The beauty of the Valspar is that it tends to produce the right winner—not always the favorite, but almost always someone who deserves it. Sunday will tell us whether that someone is Im, or whether we’re in for a more dramatic conclusion. Either way, this is good golf, the kind that makes you remember why you fell in love with the game in the first place.

