Day: May 28, 2017

Simpson hopes to hold on amid shifting windsSimpson hopes to hold on amid shifting winds

FORT WORTH, Texas – News and notes from Saturday’s third round of the DEAN & DELUCA Invitational, with Webb Simpson leading by two shots after a 3-under 67. Click here for more from Colonial Country Club. SIMPSON HOPES TO SOLVE SHIFTING WINDS The good news: Temperatures for Sunday’s final round should be about 10-plus degrees cooler than Saturday’s scorcher of 96 degrees with a heat index of 108. That should make it slightly more palatable for players and fans at Colonial (but you’ll still need to drink plenty of water!). More good news: Strong overnight thunderstorms should improve scoring conditions on softer greens. In addition, wind gusts are not expected to be as severe as the previous three rounds. The storms also forced tournament officials to adjust the tee times, with threesomes now going off on two tees starting at 11:14 a.m. ET. Now for the challenging news: The wind is expected to shift, and will come out of the north for the first time since the tournament started. It had been a southerly wind the first three days. Thus, the player who makes the quickest adjustment might very well have the advantage Sunday. Tournament leader Webb Simpson (9 under) hopes it’ll be him. “There is going to be probably six holes where we hit a different club off the tee, knowing it’s a north wind,â€� Simpson. “I’m thankful I played in the practice round. I’ve seen this wind before. “You know, just got to map it out a little different.â€� Simpson has the 54-hole lead for the first time in four years. While it’s been a while, he did convert that lead into a victory at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in 2013, the last of his four wins on TOUR. The 2012 U.S. Open winner had a chance to end his victory drought earlier this year at the Waste Management Phoenix Open but lost in a playoff to Hideki Matsuyama. That remains his only top 10 in 16 starts this season, but he feels his game is on the upswing. He tied for 11th at the RBC Heritage in April, and tied for 16th earlier this month at THE PLAYERS Championship. “I feel like Hilton Head, I had a chance to win Sunday,â€� Simpson said. “PLAYERS Championship, I was in the mix after two days. So I feel like that’s starting to happen more, where I’m part of the conversation of contending.â€� CINK, CASEY SEEK TO END DROUGHT Paul Casey’s only TOUR win remains the 2009 Shell Houston Open. Stewart Cink’s last TOUR win was also in 2009 – The Open Championship. Casey, tied for second with Danny Lee, is two shots back of Webb Simpson; Cink is three shots off the pace. Both are excited about the possibilities on Sunday. “I think in your career out here, season after season, you give yourself five or six chances to win, being in the mix on Sunday,â€� Cink said. “One of those times, it might happen, maybe more. “You can’t expect it to happen unless you get yourself in position on Saturday. Got 18 more holes to go. I would love to be down the stretch in the mix here, too, and enjoy that challenge.â€� Cink actually has been in the mix before at Colonial. In 2000, he led by three shots after 54 holes, but closed with a 71 and lost to Phil Mickelson, who shot a 7-under 63. “When I finished that tournament, that was one that I remember I probably let get away,â€� Cink said. “… I took it and learned what I could from it and tried to get a little bit better that day and the rest of the year. It did become a good year for me.â€� As for Casey, he’s won five times on other tours since his win in Houston, the last in 2014 at the European Tour’s KLM Open. He said the few times since then that he’s been in contention, “I haven’t been firing on all cylinders. If I can string together the ball-striking that I’ve been doing and hole putts, then my chances are better than they were before.â€� Casey said he feels “a pretty good calmnessâ€� about entering Sunday’s round in contention. “I would like this to be kind of like a new norm, if possible,â€� he said. SHOT OF THE DAY HEAT TALK Stewart Cink said Saturday’s heat was the No. 1 topic of conversation in the locker room. Here’s what a few of the contenders said about it. Jordan Spieth: “It was tough out there because it was so hot. Legs getting jello-y. Real loose. … I got a little lapse of concentration for a few holes, just a dizziness where anybody would have, where you just kind of not fully there. It kind of let me down. Made a mental mistake hitting my putt too hard. Pounded a bunch of waters and got it back at the end.â€� Jon Rahm: “It really is tough. There’s been some putts where you’re like standing on it and couple sweat drops came down. I’m like, Oh, boy. That’s why I had to move back. Your hands get sweaty. Just be patient and take a couple extra seconds to hit the ball and make sure you stay hydrated.â€� Stewart Cink: “I think the main thing is it’s really the first heat of the year we’ve experienced. You have to go back all the way to, you know, well back into 2016. So we’re just not accustomed to it. Not yet. It’ll be hot like this again in Memphis. Who knows? Could be hot anywhere. We’re getting to that time of year.â€� Paul Casey: “It’s not good. I’m a dry heat kind of guy. God forbid what this place is like in the summertime. Texas is just so extreme. … All credit on the people coming out and watching. I don’t know how they do it. I don’t know how they drink and watch golf in this kind of heat, but I’m glad they do.â€� Webb Simpson: “My trainer says hydration is more important before and after than during [a round]. I’ve just been drinking about a 1,000 ounces of water a day.â€� Kevin Kisner: “Didn’t bother me. I’m fine with it. I love it.â€� CALL OF THE DAY   ODDS AND ENDS Webb Simpson has played Colonial’s Horrible Horseshoe (hole Nos. 3, 4 and 5) in 1 under this week. That three-hole stretch is the toughest on the course. Closest chasers Paul Casey and Danny Lee are each even par for those holes … Until Jordan Spieth won last year, the 54-hole leader at Colonial had not won in the previous seven years … Paul Casey has played seven rounds on the weekend at Colonial, and has broken par each time, including Saturday’s 2-under 68. In his three previous final rounds, his average is 67. … Sergio Garcia’s 1-over 71 dropped him into a tie for eighth, five shots off the pace. Meanwhile, Phil Mickelson shot a 1-under 69 and moved into a tie for 32nd, 10 shots back. BEST OF SOCIAL MEDIA #TopTracerGoals pic.twitter.com/f3JvpPWASb — PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) May 27, 2017 If only it was this easy.#QuickHits pic.twitter.com/CH7cnWss42 — PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) May 27, 2017 147 yards to 11″. 🎯#QuickHits pic.twitter.com/qoG6SwarN4 — PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) May 27, 2017

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Spieth’s caddie knocked out on the TOUR’s hottest daySpieth’s caddie knocked out on the TOUR’s hottest day

FORT WORTH, Texas – Jordan Spieth was walking down the 11th fairway Saturday when his caddie Michael Greller broke the news: The stifling heat had made it impossible for him to finish out the third round at the DEAN & DELUCA Invitational. “This is my last hole,â€� Greller said. So after completing the 11th, Greller left the course to receive medical treatment while Spieth’s trainer Damon Goddard took up the bag. Spieth eventually finished with a 2-under 68 that leaves him at 4 under for the tournament and tied for eighth. He’ll start Sunday’s final round five shots behind leader Webb Simpson, and he said Greller will be back on the bag for the slightly cooler (mid-80s) day. “Mike said he’ll be plenty fine by tomorrow,â€� Spieth said. “[He] just needed to pack it in, otherwise something really bad could have happened. It was a no-brainer situation.â€� Temperatures climbed to 96 degrees – with a heat index of 108 – Saturday on the hottest day of the PGA TOUR season. “Everybody is talking about it,â€� said Stewart Cink, who had the second best round of the day, a 4-under 66 (Emiliano Grillo shot a 65). “It’s like Topic No. 1 in the locker room and on the range. It’s hot. I think the main thing is it’s really the first heat of the year we’ve experienced.â€� Added Simpson: “It’s 100 degrees out there. Knowing that caddies are going down, we were just trying to stay upright.â€� Greller, already feeling ill, knew before Saturday’s round that he might not last, so he confidentially told Goddard – who was already planning to be at the course — to be prepared to take over. Once the round started, Greller made several restroom trips; Spieth thinks it was to find shade and pour water over his head. At one point, Greller said he had stopped sweating, and realized that was a problem that needed to be solved. But not until the 11th fairway did Spieth realize the full extent of the problem. “I was kind of surprised,â€� Spieth said. “I guess he had told Kelly (Kraft, Spieth’s playing partner) at some point during the round. Kelly asked if he was OK. I thought he was acting a little strange, a little quiet. I guess it just got him early on today.â€� Said Goddard: “I saw [Greller} fading a little bit earlier, even in warmups. He’s a trooper. On 12, I got tapped in and we said let’s go.â€� It’s not the first time Goddard has carried Spieth’s bag in an emergency situation. At the 2014 Shell Houston Open, Greller became ill, and Goddard filled in for the first round – with Spieth shooting a bogey-free 2 under. The streak didn’t continue Saturday, as Spieth three-putted the 14th for a bogey. But he bounced back with two birdies on his last three holes. “We actually had a blast towards the end there,â€� Spieth said. “Both of us kind of got a little off for the first few holes in the middle of the back nine there, and then we were able to grind it out and finish strong. “Yeah, it’s a little awkward, but I ended up setting off stuff and doing everything, so kind of slows the pace down a little bit.â€� Besides training Spieth, Goddard trains Kraft, who also lives in Dallas. That gave Goddard a chance to see both players up close in the same pairing. “It was actually good timing for Greller to go down,â€� Goddard. “Now I can see them in game-time scenarios. It was good. It was fun.â€� And it was hot.  

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