Play at the Valero Texas Open resumed Sunday morning at TPC San Antonio after Saturday’s stoppage, with Robert MacIntyre holding a two-shot lead over Ryder Cup teammate Ludvig Åberg as the tournament moves toward its final round. MacIntyre, the 29-year-old Scot, was 15 under par through six holes of his third round when play picked back up, while Åberg sat two strokes back as the pair use the Valero as a tuneup ahead of the Masters.
Third-round play had been suspended Saturday afternoon and was set to be completed Sunday morning, with coverage of the resumption available exclusively on PGA Tour Live via ESPN+ beginning at 8:45 a.m. ET. PGA Tour Live will also provide featured-group and featured-hole streaming throughout the day; viewers need an ESPN+ subscription to access that stream. Once the third round is finished, the final round will begin the same day at TPC San Antonio, with linear TV coverage split between Golf Channel and CBS.
Golf Channel is scheduled to carry the early final-round window from 1 to 2:30 p.m. ET, after which CBS will telecast the remainder of the final round from 2:30 to 6 p.m. ET. Tournament organizers have said final-round tee times will be posted after the completion of third-round play on Sunday morning, when pairings and starting holes for the remaining groups are finalised.
MacIntyre and Åberg were both prominent members of Europe’s victorious Ryder Cup team last fall, and their positions atop the leaderboard give them momentum heading into April’s major at Augusta. Both are still searching for their first victories of the 2026 PGA Tour season, and their top-two standing at TPC San Antonio places them among the favourites in a field that often serves as a last competitive tuneup before the Masters.
Sunday’s schedule means a long day for leaders and for fans tracking the leaderboard: many players who had started their third rounds on Saturday will finish early and then turn around to begin the final round, depending on how quickly play resumes. PGA Tour Live’s featured-hole coverage may be particularly useful for viewers wanting continuous, shot-by-shot updates from the leaders while the field finishes the third round.
As action finishes and the final pairings are released, spectators and broadcasters alike will watch to see whether MacIntyre can convert his early advantage into a long-awaited 2026 victory, or if Åberg — and any late movers from the chase pack — can overtake him en route to the title at the Valero Texas Open.
