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Live PGA Tour leaderboard

Follow golf at work

Sport Spreadsheet follows live golf — the PGA Tour and the majors — as the leaderboard, scores to par and positions inside a spreadsheet. A leaderboard is a ranked table to begin with, so golf hides in a sheet perfectly.

Golf is the sport most likely to be on during your working day: a tournament plays across four days, and the Thursday and Friday rounds run right through the office week — with the majors turning a whole working day into must-follow television. Here's how to keep the leaderboard in front of you without a bright fairway on your screen.

Why golf is hard to follow at work

Every tournament opens on a Thursday and Friday — two full working days of live golf before the weekend even starts — and play runs from early tee times to late afternoon. A live broadcast of a leader's back nine is obvious on a shared screen; a leaderboard of names and scores to par is not.

Golf we cover

CompetitionRegionCoverage
PGA TourInternationalLive

What you can follow

The live leaderboard — position, player and score to par — updating as the field plays, laid out as a ranked table exactly like the standings for any other sport. It reads as a report, not a broadcast.

Guides by competition

Questions

Can I follow the PGA Tour at work?
Yes — the live leaderboard with each player's score to par and position, laid out as a ranked table in the grid, with a one-key boss button.
Why does golf suit a spreadsheet disguise so well?
A golf leaderboard is already a ranked table — position, player, score to par — so following the tournament looks exactly like watching a spreadsheet sort itself.

Open the spreadsheet

Today's golf fixtures and the live table are one quiet tab away. Free, instant, no account.

Follow Golf at Work — Live PGA Tour Leaderboards, Disguised · Sport Spreadsheet