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Your Complete Guide to Watching the 2026 PGA Championship at Aronimink

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Golf Colors
·3 min read
Your Complete Guide to Watching the 2026 PGA Championship at Aronimink

There's something almost reverent about a major championship returning to a Donald Ross masterpiece. When the 2026 PGA Championship tees off this Thursday at Aronimink Golf Club in Pennsylvania, it will mark only the second time this storied layout has hosted the event—the first coming all the way back in 1962.

I've walked Aronimink's corridors in the quiet of an autumn afternoon, and trust me when I say the television cameras will struggle to capture what makes this place special: the way the land moves beneath your feet, the precision Ross demanded from every approach shot, the trees that frame each hole like a gallery in a museum. This week, we'll all have the chance to see the world's best navigate it under championship pressure.

The Field and What's at Stake

The storylines arriving at Aronimink could fill a novel. Rory McIlroy, fresh off his Masters triumph at Augusta, is chasing his third PGA Championship title. There's a swagger about McIlroy when he's playing with confidence, and right now, he's brimming with it.

Then there's Scottie Scheffler, the World No. 1 who fell one agonizing stroke short at Augusta. Scheffler arrives as the defending PGA Champion, looking to join the rare few who've gone back-to-back in this event. The chess match between these two alone is worth clearing your schedule.

Cameron Young continues to knock on the door, with two massive wins already this season positioning him perfectly for a breakthrough major. Matt Fitzpatrick is in fine form searching for his second major, while Bryson DeChambeau looks to shake off a disappointing missed cut at the Masters and claim his third major title—his first PGA Championship.

How to Watch: TV Schedule

ESPN and CBS are splitting broadcast duties this week, and here's exactly how to plan your viewing:

  • Thursday, May 14: 12-8 p.m. ET (ESPN)
  • Friday, May 15: 12-8 p.m. ET (ESPN)
  • Saturday, May 16: 10 a.m.-1 p.m. ET (ESPN); 1-7 p.m. ET (CBS)
  • Sunday, May 17: 10 a.m.-1 p.m. ET (ESPN); 1-7 p.m. ET (CBS)

The handoff from ESPN to CBS on the weekend has become a comfortable rhythm for major championship viewers. ESPN handles the morning drama—the bubble players fighting for their tournament lives—while CBS takes over for the trophy presentation push.

Streaming Options

For those of us who can't be glued to a television, ESPN+ and Paramount+ offer extensive streaming coverage. This includes featured group coverage and featured hole coverage across all four days—perfect for following your favorite player or watching a particularly diabolical par-4 claim victim after victim.

The Disney Bundle (Disney+, Hulu, ESPN+) offers solid value if you're looking to consolidate your streaming subscriptions while ensuring you don't miss a single approach shot into Aronimink's challenging green complexes.

Tee Times

Complete tee times for Rounds 1 and 2 are being released Tuesday. Once they're announced, you'll want to identify the marquee groupings—expect McIlroy, Scheffler, and DeChambeau to be paired in ways that maximize early-round drama.

The Takeaway

This is a major championship with genuine intrigue at every level: a historic Ross design hosting its first PGA in over six decades, a defending champion hunting a repeat, a Masters winner seeking more, and hungry contenders who feel their moment has arrived. Clear your schedule Thursday through Sunday. Aronimink deserves your attention—and so does this field.