Day: August 16, 2017

The Flyover: Quick look at the Wyndham ChampionshipThe Flyover: Quick look at the Wyndham Championship

THE OVERVIEW The projected lowest number is 352. According to the PGA TOUR’s ShotLink team, that’s the minimum number of points needed after this week’s Wyndham Championship to make the 125-man field advancing to the FedExCup Playoffs. A year ago, the No. 125th player after Wyndham had 454 points. In 2015, it was 458 points. In 2014, it was 438 points. If the projections (the high-end projection is 363 points) hold after this week, 352 points is significantly lower than in recent years. In fact, it would be the lowest minimum points since 2011, when it took 334 points to make the Playoffs. Why the decrease? With FedExCup points now determining which players get their PGA TOUR cards, the FedExCup tie tables were adjusted this season in order to more closely align with the money list (which previously had been a determining card factor). The changes placed greater emphasis this season on high finishes, particularly top 10s – much like the standard purse breakdown. Theoretically, more points are now weighted at the top – and with four players winning three or more tournaments this season, that point distribution was weighted even more. Consider this: the top four in points going into Wyndham are Hideki Matsuyama (three wins), Justin Thomas (four wins), Jordan Spieth (three wins) and Dustin Johnson (three wins). They’ve combined for 10,694 points. A year ago, the top four in points going into Wyndham had a combined 9,500 points. By collecting nearly 1,200 more points, the top four have made the points list more top-heavy this season. Based on the 352 projection, that means 122 of the 125 players in points have already accumulated enough points to make the Playoffs – meaning that three spots are still up for grabs. The three players currently inside the top 125 who are not yet at 352 points are Seamus Power, Daniel Summerhays and Geoff Ogilvy. They are wearing the targets at Sedgefield that all others outside the top 125 now have their sights on. (Click here to see the live projected points standings). It’s the story within a story that makes the Wyndham Championship so intriguing each season. Sunday didn’t go the way he wanted at the PGA Championship. Hopefully he’ll focus on the positives from last week. His results on TOUR this season seem eerily similar to his results going into the 2015 Wyndham … which he won at age 51. His first win. His best major finish. It’s been quite a two weeks for Stroud, who’s reaping the benefits for his perseverance. THREE PLAYERS TO PONDER THE FLYOVER The 507-yard par-4 18th is the longest par-4 at Sedgefield; it was also the toughest hole on the course last year, playing to a stroke average of 0.301 strokes above par. That made it the sixth toughest closing hole on the PGA TOUR last season. Here’s an overview of the hole. THE LANDING ZONE The par-4 eighth is the easiest and shortest par-4 at Sedgefield, with a scorecard length of 374 yards. In two of the four rounds last year, the hole played at 351 yards. No player drove the green; the longest recorded drive was 318 yards. With a bunker guarding the left front of the green, and other bunkers along the fairway to the right of the landing zone, the play for most is to land short of the left bunker, leaving a short wedge shot. Players still have to guard against the creek running up the left side; 10 players took penalty strokes last year. Here’s a look at where all drives landed in 2016. WEATHER CHECK PGA TOUR meteorologist Stewart Williams says potential scattered afternoon showers and thunderstorms are in the forecast for Thursday. Added Williams: “Looks like an approaching cold front will keep the chance for showers and thunderstorms in the forecast Friday into Friday night. The front should slowly push to the south of the Triad on Saturday, decreasing our chances for thunderstorms as we go through the day. Partly cloudy skies can be expected on Sunday with highs in the upper 80s.â€� For the latest weather news in Greensboro, North Carolina, check out PGATOUR.COM’s Weather Hub. SOUND CHECK It’s a great course, a lot of character. You’ve got to hit a lot of different shots off the tees, into the greens, a lot of different clubs. I enjoy golf courses like that. ODDS AND ENDS 1. EASY GREENS. Last season, the greens at Sedgefield played as the second-easiest greens to hit from inside 125 yards of any course on TOUR. Players hit the green in 1,829 of 2,055 attempts (89 percent) from inside this distance. 2. 54-HOLE JINX. In the last 17 PGA TOUR events, the 54-hole leader has failed to convert that lead into victory a total of 15 times. The only player in that span to win after carrying the third-round lead is Jordan Spieth, who did it at both the Travelers Championship and The Open Championship. 3. TOP 5 OPPORTUNITY. Kevin Kisner, who at No. 9 is the highest-ranked FedExCup player in the field, is the only player who can move inside the top 5 should he win this week. 4. THREE OF 16. Of the 16 players who have qualified for the FedExCup Playoffs every year, three are in the Wyndham field – Bill Haas (34), Ryan Moore (67) and Luke Donald (105). All three are guaranteed a Playoffs spot for the 11th consecutive year.

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Kisner contending for FedExCup while awaiting second childKisner contending for FedExCup while awaiting second child

GREENSBORO, N.C. – Any pain Kevin Kisner felt from his inability to win last week’s PGA Championship was quickly erased when he got in the car Sunday evening for the 2 ½-hour drive home to Aiken, South Carolina. “The best part about having a family is they don’t really care,â€� Kisner said. “It was on to watching ‘Beauty And The Beast’ about 30 minutes after that 18th hole. We watched ‘Beauty And The Beast’ and ate (fast food) in the car.â€� Kisner led the first three rounds of last week’s PGA Championship. He was one shot ahead entering Sunday, but a final-round 74 dropped him into a tie for seventh. Kisner reached 7 under, one shot behind Justin Thomas’ winning score, after birdies at 14 and 15, but he played the final three holes in 3 over, including a double-bogey at the last hole. Kisner is getting right back in the saddle, though. He’ll tee off at 1 p.m. Thursday in the first round of the Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina. Kisner is paired with two former FedExCup champions, Henrik Stenson and Bill Haas. Kisner is No. 9 in the FedExCup standings. He’s all but guaranteed a spot in the TOUR Championship, which would be his seventh event in an eight-week span. He’ll make his Presidents Cup debut the following week. It would be a busy stretch for Kisner under normal circumstances. That same family that helped Kisner forget his painful finish at Quail Hollow will soon be growing, though. His wife, Brittany, is expecting the couple’s second child Sept. 16. That’s the third round of the third event of the FedExCup Playoffs, the BMW Championship. Kisner said they’ll induce labor Sept. 11, three days before the BMW, though. They have not learned the child’s gender. The Kisners have a 3-year-old daughter named Kathleen. Kisner is playing this week because the Donald Ross-designed Sedgefield Country Club is a good fit for the South Carolina native, and the Wyndham offers him another opportunity to climb the standings before the FedExCup Playoffs begin. Kisner won this season’s DEAN & DELUCA Invitational and lost a playoff with partner Scott Brown at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans. He’s the highest-ranked player in the FedExCup standings in this week’s field, and could move to No. 5 with a win. The top five players in the FedExCup at the TOUR Championship can “control their destinyâ€� by clinching the Cup with a win at East Lake. “It’s a tight race all the way to the end,â€� Kisner said. “We felt as good as this golf course is for me, it will be a great way to catapult up the standings and have a better chance to win the FedExCup. Obviously that’s a goal of ours to start the year, not only get to East Lake (site of the TOUR Championship), but to have a chance to win the FedExCup.â€� Kisner didn’t arrive at Sedgefield until Wednesday afternoon, shortly before his 3:30 p.m. press conference because his wife, who’s 35 weeks pregnant, had a check-up. He’ll tee off Thursday without having seen the golf course this week, but he can rely on good memories here. He’s finished in the top 10 in his past two starts at Sedgefield, shooting a final-round 63 last year to finish T10. His T7 last week at the PGA Championship was his first top-10 in a major. “I’m excited where we’re headed,â€� Kisner said. “If I can keep playing the way I’m playing, I’ll have plenty of chances to win.â€�

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