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Presidents Cup 2015 streaming: How to watch Day 4 matches live online

Jordan Spieth has done his part keeping the USA in front at the Presidents Cup, but the Internationals head to Sunday singles closer than they’ve been in a decade. Here’s how to watch in primetime Saturday and Sunday night.

Harry How/Getty Images

For the first time in a decade, Sunday singles will start at the Presidents Cup with the two teams tucked tight on the leaderboard. The USA holds a one-point advantage at 9.5 to 8.5, which is the smallest margin since it was tied going into Sunday in 2005.

An interminable Saturday that ended in the darkness in Korea and more bad weather forecasted for Sunday forced organizers to bump Sunday singles up some 90 minutes. The first tee time is now scheduled to go at 8:15 p.m. ET on Saturday night back in the States. So Golf Channel, which will carry Sunday’s final session live, gets a nice boost with a broader coverage window in primetime back in the States, hopefully an earlier and reasonablly-timed ending some time after midnight, and an actual competitive Presidents Cup at the start of the final day.

The heavily favored USA side is not playing especially poorly, it’s just that the Internationals have had a few power pairings step up. Remarkably, it has not been some of their bigger names -- Jason Day and Adam Scott have yet to win a match. But the South African duo of Louis Oosthuizen and Branden Grace have been unstoppable and became the first ever International pairing to rip through all four two-man sessions a perfect 4-0-0.

The USA will still be heavily favored in the final session -- they have the deeper roster and this is a format where all 12 players tee it up, unlike the two-man sessions where you can hide lesser players on the bench. Also, no team in Presidents Cup history has gone to Sunday with the lead and failed to win the Cup. So there’s still a lot going in the USA’s favor, it’s just going to be more close and tense this time around.

The limited nature of a team match play event does not lend itself to multiple streaming and broadcast options. There are just 24 players to cover and usually only a pocket of five or six holes with players on them. The Sunday singles session might be the only time a stream dedicated to a specific match or two might come in handy, but it’s not really necessary. With the matches halfway around the world and taking place in the middle of the night for the American audience, the Tour opted not to set up their PGA Tour Live streaming service. The only stream available is the basic simulcast of the TV coverage, which is on Golf Channel’s LiveExtra service.

It’s exciting to finally have it this close this late, so the Sunday singles session should be a worthwhile watch. This is not going to compete with college football and the MLB Playoffs, but the stream is a fine second screen option late Saturday night. Here’s how to watch the final session from Korea:

Day 4 coverage -- Saturday night / Sunday morning

Television:

8 p.m. Saturday to 2 a.m. ET Sunday -- Golf Channel

Noon to 6 p.m. ET Sunday -- Replay on NBC

Online streams:

8 p.m. Saturday to 2 a.m. ET Sunday -- Golf Channel/NBC Sports LiveExtra simulcast stream

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