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Nashville teen Blades Brown 1 shot off American Express lead

Jan 24, 2026, 08:24 PM ET

LA QUINTA, Calif. — Blades Brown looked well beyond his 18 years under increasing attention Saturday. He finished with three straight birdies that left him tied with world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, both of them one shot behind Si Woo Kim going into the final round of The American Express.

Kim had a 6-under 66 and the advantage of playing La Quinta Country Club as the wind finally arrived in the Coachella Valley. Scheffler and Brown were on the Stadium Course at PGA West, the most difficult even in calm conditions. Each shot a 68.

Brown, from Nashville, Tennessee, was playing his seventh consecutive round after arriving from a Korn Ferry Tour event in the Bahamas. That didn’t stop him from playing “rock, paper, scissors” with a young fan and then holing a 25-foot birdie putt on the par-3 17th. He followed with a 45-foot birdie on the 18th.

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Scheffler caught the worst of the wind and had two bogeys. He was on the verge of ending with another until holing a 25-foot par putt that swirled in on the last turn.

Kim was at 22-under 194, with Scheffler and Brown right behind. They will be part of the final group Sunday on the Stadium Course.

The teen is the most compelling. Brown could become the youngest winner in nearly a century, probably longer.

Charles Kocsis won the Michigan Open in 1931 at 18 years, 6 months — a couple of months younger than Brown — but that tournament was regarded as a regional event. Young Tom Morris won his first British Open in 1868 at age 17.

Blades Brown, 18, made a 25-foot birdie putt on the 17th hole and a 45-foot birdie on the 18th. He sits one shot behind leader Si Woo Kim in The American Express. Denis Poroy-Imagn Images

Brown tied for 17th in the Bahamas in a Korn Ferry Tour event that ended Wednesday, got on a private jet to reach California and reached his hotel about 14 hours before his tee time.

Tired? Not at his age, and not with this opportunity in front of him.

“I feel great,” Brown said. “I got another opportunity to see what we can make happen tomorrow. Got another 18 holes and, yeah, should be fun.”

The other two guys in the final group should have plenty of fun, too. Scheffler helped get Kim a membership at Royal Oaks in Dallas, and they are regulars on the weekend game. They competed plenty in the month leading up to The American Express.

Scheffler confirmed that Kim beat him the last time they played by adding, “Yes, I gave him back a little of his money.”

Thirteen years ago at PGA West, a 17-year-old Kim made it through the last edition of the former Q-school, having to wait until he was 18 to join the PGA Tour. He was 21 when he captured The Players Championship, one of his four tour victories.

And he has become a favorite of most players.

“Have you ever spent any time with him? He’s hilarious,” Scheffler said of Kim.

Sunday might be all business, and they all know enough about this tournament not to get wrapped up in the final group. Scores have been low despite the difficult wind.

Former U.S. Open champion Wyndham Clark and Eric Cole each shot 66 at La Quinta and were two shots behind. Another shot back was Tom Hoge, who had a 65 at La Quinta. Nine players were separated by four shots.

The most curious of the lot is Brown, who turned pro last year when he was still in high school. He received a sponsor exemption to The American Express for the second straight year.

“I’m 18 years old playing on the PGA Tour. How awesome is that?” Brown said. “Finished high school about two weeks ago, so it’s nice to have that burden off my back, but I’m really looking forward to tomorrow.”

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