Day: July 15, 2018

Emergency 9: John Deere Classic, Round 3Emergency 9: John Deere Classic, Round 3

Catching Up Is Hard to Do The second round of the John Deere Classic resumed at 6:38 a.m. CT on Saturday. Eighty-two golfers survived the 36-hole cut, thus triggering the 54-hole cut of low 70 and ties. With 2.3 inches of rain overnight, the local rule for preferred lies on closely mown areas was in play for the third round and threesomes were sent off split tees. Inclement weather then suspended the third round at 10:38 a.m. After another 0.8 inches of rain fell, play resumed at 1:11 p.m. Continuous play lasted until 5:53 p.m. when inclement weather halted action for the third time in just over 24 hours. Forty-five golfers were stranded until 7:12 p.m., but all finished the third round before dark. Following the Leader After building a three-shot lead at the midpoint, Michael Kim expanded his cushion to five strokes with a third-round 64. He concluded it with four consecutive birdies, all after the second weather delay, to post 22-under 191. With a 66 or lower in the final round, he’ll beat Steve Stricker’s tournament record of 258 in 2010. It’s no wonder why Kim is poised to enter the record books at a tournament that began in 1972. He’s putting up historical numbers. Through 54 holes, he co-leads the field in fairways hit (35 of 42) and leads in both greens in regulation (47) and proximity to the hole (24 feet, six inches). If the aerial assault wasn’t enough punishment on the par 71, he also ranks second in both strokes gained: putting and one-putt percentage. It’s video-game golf on beginner mode. Something will give on Sunday, however. Of 203 qualified for official statistics, Kim ranks 195th in final-round scoring average of 73.14. Hurl into the equation that he’s 161st in the FedExCup standings with only five more weeks before the Playoffs and that he’s not yet exempt for next season, and that five-stroke margin is more valuable than it appears. What a -Goon Maybe that whole thing about the third time being the charm is the real deal. After a T6 at the Quicken Loans National and T30 at Greenbrier (where he entered the final round inside the top 10), Bronson Burgoon stands alone in second place at TPC Deere Run tonight. He walked off his third round with three straight birdies and leads the field in par-5 scoring at bogey-free 9-under with three eagles and three birdies. Moving Day Tyler Duncan is capturing our attention once again. After making the cut by two strokes (for his 10th consecutive payday), the PGA TOUR rookie carded an 8-under 63, best in the field in the third round and a personal-best aggregate of 82 scores. With it, he vaulted 34 spots on the leaderboard and into a share of 12th place entering Sunday’s finale. With 5-under 66s, Patton Kizzire and C.T. Pan rose 31 spots. Both are tied for 34th place. It was a long time coming for the two-time TOUR winner this season as Kizzire hadn’t signed for lower than a 68 since the fourth round of the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship (66). This proves why TPC Deere Run is a track where a touring professional can find his form. Moving Day: Wrong Way Ryan Blaum and non-member Dylan Meyer started the third round inside the top 25, but both shot 1-over 72 to plummet 31 places on the leaderboard before landed at T55. Meyer presented promise entering the tournament with top-20 finishes at the U.S. Open and Quicken Loans National. With his equivalent of 92 FedExCup points, he’d rank 184th among members, so he’s all but a lock to qualify for the Web.com Tour Finals if he doesn’t earn a 2018-19 PGA TOUR card sooner. First-round leader Steve Wheatcroft settled for an even-par 71 in the third round to post 12-under 201. It’s a smack in the face after starting it tied for second and only three swings adrift of Kim. The 54-hole cut snipped 11 who failed to finish inside the low 70 and ties the second time through this week. Notables among this grouping include Chesson Hadley, Bill Haas, Ryan Palmer and Andrew Putnam. First Impression Of the 11 golfers inside the top 10 on the leaderboard, only Matt Jones (3rd), Andres Romero (T5), Robert Garrigus (T7) and Johnson Wagner (T7) are PGA TOUR winners. Kim still has complete 18 holes to break through for his first victory, but with his comfortable overnight lead and the bevy of non-winners in pursuit, the odds are good that the tournament will crown its fourth first time winner since Jordan Spieth emerged from a three-man playoff in 2013. Brian Harman (2014) and Bryson DeChambeau (2017) also converted. Know Thy Enemy These were the top-10 most owned in PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO. Congratulations, but … Because the Official World Golf Ranking’s strength-of-field [SOF] rating of the John Deere Classic is only 99, the winner will not receive an exemption into the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational. Winners of tournaments with a SOF rating of 115 and greater are awarded a spot in the field at Firestone, including this week’s Scottish Open (312), so the champion in the Quad Cities will have to punch his ticket another way. Seven golfers already exempt into the WGC competed at the JDC. Through 54 holes, tournament debutant Francesco Molinari is positioned at T12, fellow first-timer Austin Cook is T30, Patton Kizzire sits T34 and Andrew Landry is T39. Defending champion Bryson DeChambeau withdrew during his opening round, while both Si Woo Kim and Aaron Wise missed the 36-hole cut. Study Hall The third-round scoring average of 68.99 is the lowest at TPC Deere Run since last year’s 68.19, also in the third round. … There were eight bogey-free scores in the third round to bring the tournament total to 26. … Harold Varner III, who has one of those bogey-free scores (second-round 65), continued his red-hot form with a 66 in the third round. He’s alone in fourth place at 15-under 198 after a career-best-tying T5 last week. … Local favorite Zach Johnson jumped 26 spots to T39 with a 67. … Three-time JDC champ and all-time tournament earnings leader Steve Stricker dropped 25 spots to T49 with a 71. The 51-year-old was the only qualifier at the Constellation SENIOR PLAYERS Championship inside the top 50 of the Charles Schwab Cup standings who didn’t commit to the fourth major of the season on the PGA TOUR Champions.

Click here to read the full article

Martin Truex Jr. pours it on, rolls to repeat Kentucky winMartin Truex Jr. pours it on, rolls to repeat Kentucky win

Martin Truex Jr. sealed a dominant performance Saturday night at Kentucky Speedway, holding on for his fourth Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series win of the season. Truex started from the Busch Pole and led 174 of the 267 laps in the Quaker State 400 presented by Walmart. His second straight win at the

Click here to read the full article

Michael Kim extends lead at John Deere ClassicMichael Kim extends lead at John Deere Classic

SILVIS, Ill. – Michael Kim turned 25 on Saturday, but you’d be crazy to call him a late-bloomer. It’s just that, well, Kim hasn’t won yet on the PGA TOUR. Terrible, right? And at his age! When you’re a member of golf’s overachieving high school Class of 2011 (Spieth, Thomas, Schauffele, Berger, Jonas Salk, etc.), you get used to seeing frowny faces at cocktail parties when it comes out that you haven’t won a major or three, or at least invented a vaccine. But there’s good news. Kim, who won the Jack Nicklaus Award as college player of the year in 2013 (Cal), may be on the verge of joining his baton-twirling classmates after extending his lead Saturday at the rain-delayed John Deere Classic. He birdied five of his last six holes for a third-round 64 and leads by five over Bronson Burgoon (66) going into the final round at soggy TPC Deere Run. “All the guys I played against in the 2011 class, I felt like I was just as good as those guys,â€� Kim said. “Seeing them do those things, win majors, win tournaments, is really motivating trying to keep up with them. It’s just been added motivation for sure.â€� Matt Jones (66) is six back, while Harold Varner III also shot 66 to go into Sunday seven back. Returning to the course to finish his second round at 8 a.m. Saturday, Kim bogeyed the 18th hole for a 64 for a three-stroke lead halfway through the tournament. In this, his third season on TOUR, it marked the first time he had led after any round. He wasted no time in extending it after the second rain delay Saturday. Heavy rain delayed tee times two and a half hours, sending the leaders out at 2 p.m., but Kim settled in with birdies at the second and sixth holes to maintain momentum. He later pulled off a nifty par save at the par-3 12th hole, pointing the toe of his putter down to pop his ball out of the rough left of the green and watching it roll to within a foot of the hole. He had birdied the 13th hole before another rain delay gave way to his late fireworks as he began to run away from the field. Players were afforded lift-clean-and-place rules on the rain-saturated course. Born in Seoul, South Korea, Kim grew up in La Jolla, California, same as Schauffele, whom he’s known since they were 12 years old. They played against each other in junior golf, when Kim more than held his own. Professionally, though, it’s been another story. Now based in Houston, Kim has kept his head down while following his own slow-and-steady path. He was 48th in Web.com Tour money in 2014, and 13th the next year, earning his call-up to the PGA TOUR. He made 22 cuts in 29 starts as a rookie in 2016, when he finished 118th in the FedExCup Playoffs, and last season brought his best golf yet, a T3 finish at the Safeway Open and final ranking of 100th in the FedExCup. That got him into THE PLAYERS Championship. In other words, Kim has gotten better every year since turning professional. How he plays at the Deere on Sunday will go a long way toward determining whether that trend will continue. So far the signs are very, very positive. OBSERVATIONS COOK LEADS ROOKIE RACE: Austin Cook shot a third-round 66 and sits at 9 under. That’s not exactly in contention for his second win, but he’s looking better and better in the race for Rookie of the Year with Aaron Wise. “Coming into this year it was a goal, and Aaron and I are in a good little battle right now,â€� said Cook, 27, who won The RSM Classic last fall. He cautions that he’s playing against the field, not just Wise, whose progress he is nonetheless monitoring as they battle it out in the FedExCup. “I’m aware that last week I jumped right in front of him,â€� said a smiling Cook, who finished T5 at A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier to move up three spots to 24th, while Wise missed the cut to drop to 25th. The two may be further apart still after this week, as Wise missed his fifth straight cut, by one, despite a second-round 67 at TPC Deere Run. Next week, Cook (like Wise) will head to Scotland to play The Open for the first time. He is expecting culture shock, so much so that he laughed about potentially bringing ketchup packets to eat. Turning serious, Cook said, “I’ve done pretty good in the wind; Sea Island blew pretty strong this year, and I hit the ball pretty good that week. Hopefully I can keep it going over there.â€� QUOTABLES I have my wife, mom, dad, two grandpas, and a couple buddies. SUPERLATIVES Low round: 63, Tyler Duncan. Longest putt: 74 feet, 4 inches, by Joaquin Niemann (68, 7 under) at the par-4 fourth hole, which he birdied. CALL OF THE DAY For play-by-play coverage of the third round at the John Deere Classic, listen at PGATOUR.COM. SHOT OF THE DAY

Click here to read the full article

Magic Johnson Reveals What Sold LeBron James On Joining LakersMagic Johnson Reveals What Sold LeBron James On Joining Lakers

LeBron James elected to leave Cleveland, Ohio, for the bright lights and sandy beaches of Los Angeles this summer, as the star forward signed a contract to play for the Los Angeles Lakers. James inked a four-year, 153.3 million deal with LA, which is vastly different than the “one-and-one� deals he was signing when he was a member of the Cleveland Cavaliers. The move perplexed many because while young and talented, the Lakers don’t yet possess the necessary pieces to win an NBA championship even with James on board. Well, president of basketball operations Magic Johnson revealed that in his meeting with James on the night of June 30, the 33-year-old star was sold on the Lakers’ plan to not rush and build for the long haul.

Click here to read the full article

Michael Kim leads John Deere ClassicMichael Kim leads John Deere Classic

SILVIS, Ill. — Michael Kim took a five-shot lead Saturday at the John Deere Classic in a third round delayed twice for a total of roughly 4 hours because of bad weather and concerns over lightning. Kim, who has just one top-10 finish in 84 career PGA TOUR starts, shot a 7-under 64 — closing with four straight birdies — for a three-day total of 22-under 191. Bronson Burgoon (66) is 17 under and Australian Matt Jones (66) is 16 under. Harold Varner III (66) is alone in fourth place at 15 under. Andres Romero of Argentina is 14 under after shooting 64, as is Sam Ryder (67). Tyler Duncan had the day’s best round with a 63. 

Click here to read the full article