Day: April 10, 2018

Masters champ Patrick Reed doesn’t have an equipment sponsor and here’s whyMasters champ Patrick Reed doesn’t have an equipment sponsor and here’s why

SportsPulse: Patrick Reed won his first green jacket in impressive fashion. However, as Trysta Krick explains, Reed has become somewhat of a villain in the golf world. Masters champion Patrick Reed doesn’t have an equipment sponsor this year after leaving Callaway Golf after last season. Here’s how he explained the decision during an interview with CNBC on Monday. “The biggest thing was I wanted to be different,� Reed said. “It’s hard to believe that there is one company that makes 14 perfect golf clubs and a perfect golf ball for every player.� A day after winning the 82nd Masters by one shot, Reed made appearances in New York, where he visited the top of the Empire State Building and the New

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Stanley Cup playoffs 2018: Everything you need to knowStanley Cup playoffs 2018: Everything you need to know

Hockey fans can once again look forward to the Stanley Cup, the venerable championship tournament that crowns the victor of the National Hockey League on a seasonal basis. The 2018 Stanley Cup Finals will soon get underway and offer no shortage of intriguing storylines. The Pittsburgh Penguins are looking

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Power Rankings: Mets, Pirates making movesPower Rankings: Mets, Pirates making moves

Our weekly Power Rankings feature the Mets at No. 10, up one spot from last week. Too low? Perhaps. The weekly rankings weigh not only how the teams are performing in present times, but also how we see them winding up at the end of the season. A top-10 ranking means we see them qualifying for the postseason. But are they one of the elite teams?

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Confidence Factor: RBC HeritageConfidence Factor: RBC Heritage

With the first major of year in the books it’s off to Hilton Head for decompressing at the RBC Heritage on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina. The iconic lighthouse, Calibogue Sound and smells from the low country boils will set the atmosphere around this event. Harbour Town Golf Links will serve as the host again as 132 players in an invitational field celebrating 50 years on TOUR will participate in a hit-and-giggle after the Masters. Er, not really. While the pressure of playing major championship golf is in the rear-view mirror for 31 players this week, the entire field will have to tackle this Pete Dye-Jack Nicklaus design with 500 FedExCup points and a prize pool of almost $7 million dollars on the line. Playing one yard short of 7,100 and to Par-71 (36-35), the winner will take home $1.26 million and doesn’t have to worry about his status on TOUR for the rest of this season and the next two. I’d suggest this is anything but an “off” week and that includes for gamers as well! As shown by the list of recent champions below there is hardly a pattern when it comes to picking winners. Trying to crack the code this week will present a challenge as this track has changed recently. This is event No. 2 at Harbour Town after Hurricane Matthew swept through in latter part of 2016. The course wasn’t damaged or the routing changed, but there were plenty of trees that didn’t survive and have not been replaced. The course now sees more sunshine and feels more wind and that increases the degree of difficulty as it can play firmer and faster. Brian Gay’s 2009 tournament record of 20-under-par is probably safe, regardless of coastal weather as benign wind won’t stop the sun from drying the place out. Troy Merritt, who’s not in the field this week, was the second man to post 61 in 2015 after David Frost in 1994. Similarly to Frost he did not win the tournament. TALES OF THE TAPE As we look back to look forward, the last three winners have been “firsts” at Harbour Town. Furyk picked up his first win since the 2010 TOUR Championship for his second victory at Harbour Town. Anytime Furyk wins an event the first thing that should spring to mind is accuracy matters. While it’s not THE determining factor this week, Furyk gives plenty of clues and what it takes to win. What isn’t listed above is that the weather was perfect and that’s the exception, not the rule at this event. Merritt’s 61 in Round 2 should have been a clue! Furyk, using lift-clean-and replace with the rest of the field, came from four shots off Merritt’s lead in the final round to force a playoff. The playoff was with Kevin Kisner, not Merritt, who closed with 64. Rounds 2, 3 and 4 ended up being the second, third and fourth-easiest rounds in the history of the event as Furyk joined the group of nine other multiple champions at this event. It was also Braden Grace’s first top 10 on the PGA TOUR. For the second year in a row, Grace checked off a first at Harbour Town as his victory was the first on TOUR for the South African. He entered the week, as 28 of the past 34 champions did, coming off the Masters experience (MC) and off a previous win earlier in the year. Grace flipped the Furyk script and used his power and a superb wedge game as he pounded Harbour Town with 66 in the final round. Similarly to Furyk he began the final round adrift, three shots behind Luke Donald’s 54-hole lead. Only John Senden went lower on Sunday (65) as not even a third of the field were in red figures. Grace’s winning score of 275 (-9) tied 2014 champion Graeme McDowell for the only single-digit winning total since 2005. Grace became the 11th first-time winner and 11th international winner as the wind gusts and cool temperatures kept scores up. In 48 previous events a South Carolinian had never slipped on the plaid jacket or collected the biggest check here. Rookie Wesley Bryan, born in Columbia, put an end to that streak with his first win on the PGA TOUR. Bryan became the first player since Carl Pettersson in 2012 to win without having played the Masters the week prior. This year, he won’t have that to worry about as his victory propelled him into the field last week where he MC. Bryan, like the two winners above him, had to climb out of a hole on Sunday as he trailed Jason Dufner by four shots before righting the ship. Bryan became the fifth consecutive winner to win while trailing by three or more shots in the final round. He was the 12th player to break his maiden on TOUR at this event and the second in a row. He became the first player and just sixth overall to win in his first attempt since Boo Weekley in 2007. The pressure is on in his first defense as he’ll be reminded no defending champion has MC since Davis Love III in 1993. NOTE: Golfers inside the top 25-ish in each statistic on the 2017-18 PGA TOUR are listed only if they are scheduled to compete this week. * – Finished inside the top 10 at RBC Heritage since 2013 or is a former champion. SG: Tee-to-Green Rank Golfer 2 Paul Casey 4 Dustin Johnson 8 *Kevin Chappell 11 Luke List 13 Scott Piercy 15 *Bryson DeChambeau 18 Charles Howell III 19 *Kevin Streelman 20 Francesco Molinari 21 Zach Johnson 22 Adam Hadwin 23 Chesson Hadley 27 *Patrick Cantlay Scrambling Rank Golfer 3 *Kevin Streelman 5 *Kevin Na 6 *Aaron Baddeley 7 *Webb Simpson 8 Paul Casey 10 *Brian Gay 11 Cameron Smith 14 *Brandt Snedeker 26 *William McGirt 27 *Zach Johnson SG: Putting Rank Golfer 3 Greg Chalmers 7 *Brian Harman 8 *Kevin Kisner 9 *Whee Kim 10 *Webb Simpson 14 Dustin Johnson 14 Peter Malnati 16 *Wesley Bryan 17 *Graeme McDowell 20 Patton Kizzire 20 Emiliano Grillo 22 *Matt Kuchar 25 *Luke Donald Par-4 Scoring Rank Golfer 3 Dustin Johnson 9 *Marc Leishman 11 Cameron Smith 11 *Kevin Chappell 11 Ryan Palmer 11 *Brian Harman 17 Scott Piercy 17 *Kevin Streelman 17 Patton Kizzire 22 *Ben Martin 22 Tyrrell Hatton 22 *Stewart Cink 22 Emiliano Grillo 22 *Zach Johnson 22 *Webb Simpson Harbour Town Golf Links will require plenty of patience, skill and a bit of target golf, just as Pete Dye would prefer. Usually this was a track where similar to last week would require a few loops in tournament play to get it figured out. Tell that to the rookie who won last year and the other three in the top 10! As with any great course, multiple styles should be able to flourish and the three winners above confirm that theory. Coastal golf will always involve a bit of wind and weather just as Dye courses will make players think twice before pulling the trigger. With the extra sun and wind a firm and fast track can develop. The TifEagle Bermuda greens are some of the smallest on TOUR (think Pebble Beach) and have annually been the toughest to hit on TOUR. Installed after the 2015 edition, they have one more year of growth in their roots and should be more receptive. Once aboard players will have to handle the humps and bumps that come with Dye-Nicklaus designs. If the overhanging trees, small greens and Dye design angles aren’t enough there are 54 bunkers and 12 water hazards also to navigate. Speaking of navigating, I’m leaning back on the players who have been rolling lately with a sprinkle of the veterans, not the other way around. The other very interesting angle this week is how those who played 72 holes at Augusta hold up over 72 holes this week. Sure, it’s a flat, coastal walk but I have the feeling this is one that they’ll take for the team. Be warned. Course Ratings: 2015: 26th-most difficult of 52 played; -0.51 strokes below par. 2016: eighth-most difficult of 50 played; +1.285 strokes above par. 2017: 29th-most difficult of 50 played; -0.324 strokes below par. Rob Bolton’s Power Rankings will give you more juice for the week so make sure you stop by. It’s also who I trust with the weather each week so pay attention! NOTE: The groups below are comprehensive to assist in data mining. Inclusion doesn’t imply automatic endorsement in every fantasy game as all decisions are specific to your situation. CONFIDENCE MEN Selected golfers with multiple cuts made sorted by rank on the tournament’s money list. BUILDING CONFIDENCE Sorted by best finish, selected golfers who are either finally finding form on the course or are still relatively new to the tournament but have enjoyed some success. OTHER SIGNS OF CONFIDENCE Sorted by most recent top 10s, selected golfers for whom it’s been a few years since their last.

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Davis Love III and his call for the wildDavis Love III and his call for the wild

When Davis Love III was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame last year, he came ready with props. The wooden driver he used in his first U.S. Open in 1998. The metal one his son Dru had in the bag when he made his Open debut earlier that summer with Love caddying. The crystal vase his father won for leading the first round of the Masters the year Love was born and the identical one he received for doing the same in 1995. And a turkey call. But not just any turkey call. This one was made by Neil Cost, who Love called the “Tiger Woods of hand-carved turkey call makersâ€� during his induction speech. As accomplished a golfer as Love is, as consummate a professional, he is equally invested in the things he loves doing outside the ropes. Cooking barbecue, for one. Snowboarding in the winter. Hunting deer and catching tarpon and red fish. Turkey hunting is his favorite, though. “Everybody always asks me, if you had to pick one thing, what would you pick? And I said, well, can I pick per season?â€� Love says. “But honestly if I had to pick one thing, it would probably be spring turkey hunting. I just like turkey hunting. It’s the most challenging, entertaining thing.â€� Unfortunately, the season, which generally runs from March until mid-May, conflicts with some of Love’s favorite golf tournaments. Tournaments like THE PLAYERS Championship, the PGA TOUR’s showcase event that he was won twice, and the Masters, the major championship he always seemed destined to win. But Love, who turns 54 on Friday, makes time whenever he can. The hunt starts early in the morning, about a half hour before the sun even comes up. The sounds as the forest comes to life are mesmerizing to Love. “That’s the best thing, you go out there, it’s dark and … then you hear a few birds starting to wake up and an owl hoots and the turkey gobbles and the birds get going and the crows get raucous and the turkeys gobble at the crows,â€� Love says, a smile crossing his face. The turkeys have spent the night in the trees. You didn’t know that? Well, you’re not alone, and Love was patient as he explained what he calls the “chess matchâ€� of hunting them. “Turkey hunting is one of those sports like fly fishing that people don’t casually do it,â€� Love says. “It’s like you have to be kind of all in. There are a lot of intricacies to it. “Calling turkeys is probably one of the most challenging things to learn in hunting.â€� Love has a collection of turkey calls, so many he joked that night in New York City, that his wife Robin would probably like them all to go to the Hall of Fame to “keep Dru and I from making racket in our house.â€� While he says many people just go to their local outdoors shop, he has some real keepsakes like that one by Cost. “Having one handmade or you make them or historical stuff is a whole‘’nother little world,â€� Love says. The calls are as varied as the clubs in Love’s golf bag. Yelps, cackles, clucks, gubles, kee-kees and even purrs emit from diaphragm, slate and box calls, each one designed with to elicit specific responses from the turkey. And then the games begin. “The gobblers gobble to assemble hens and you’re calling hens and trying to get him to come out of his way for you to get close enough to see him or shoot him,â€� Love explains. “And so there’s, there’s a lot of back and forth. You’re not just sitting in a tree waiting for a deer to walk by. There’s a lot of back and forth and a lot of strategy. You kind of know what they want to do during the day and you kind of have to get ahead of them or in front of them.â€� Love remembers the first time he took his daughter Lexie turkey hunting when she was a kid. She, too, was amazed by the cacophony of sounds she heard on that serene spring day. “I took her out there and the owls just let off and they were just going bananas, and she’s like are those monkeys?â€� Love says. “I said, no, we don’t have any monkeys in Georgia. But you don’t hear that. “People just don’t hear those sounds unless you go down in the swamp in the spring. You can’t imagine turkeys talking. Even if you’re a deer hunter, sometimes you don’t, you just really don’t hear that because you’re not out there in the spring.â€� A wild turkey, which grows up eating nuts, berries and insects, is more muscular and lean than his domestic cousin. His legs are powerful and he can reach speeds of up to 25 mph. The meat is predominately dark and has a more intense, gamey flavor. “It’s free range. Organic,â€� Love says. “We hunt and we always say if we’re shooting something we’re eating it. We’re not just shooting something just to shoot it. “But they’re not that good, they’re tough and chewy. Like your yard rooster, he’s not quite as good as the Sanderson Farms chicken that you get at the grocery store. “Nobody’s serving a wild turkey really for Thanksgiving. They’re serving the ones from Mr. Sanderson’s farm.â€�

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