Day: September 28, 2019

Emotional Champ in position for second win at SafewayEmotional Champ in position for second win at Safeway

NAPA, Calif. – Cameron Champ has had to fight hard not to break down on the course.  Jeff Champ, his father, welled up with tears as the sun dipped low Saturday evening, Cameron a few feet away indulging reporters with stories about the man who started it all, Grandpa Mack. RELATED: Tee times | Leaderboard “I mean, he’s the most loving man I know,â€� Cameron said after shooting a third-round 67 to take a three-shot lead over Adam Hadwin (67), Sebastian Munoz (67) and Nick Taylor (70). Mack Champ – Jeff’s father, Cameron’s grandfather – is in hospice care with stage IV stomach cancer at home in Sacramento. The Champ family has been shuttling back and forth between there and Napa, where Cameron has written “POPSâ€� on his shoes and golf balls. It was Grandpa Mack, after all, who taught his grandson the game he once wasn’t even allowed to play. “Oh, it would be huge,â€� Cameron said, when asked what it would mean to win. Despite failing to birdie any of the par 5s, Champ shot one of the best rounds of the afternoon starters, who saw the toughest wind. He cited his college years at windy Texas A&M for steeling him for the Safeway, and now, almost exactly a year since he won in just the second start of his rookie season at the Sanderson Farms Championship, he’ll go for PGA TOUR win No. 2 Sunday. “When he’s hitting it straight, it’s hard to catch up because he’s 40 ahead of me and he’s got wedge or 9-iron when I’m hitting 5-iron or something,â€� said Collin Morikawa (70, 10 under, four back), who played with Champ on Saturday. “But it’s awesome to watch. I’ve watched and I’ve grown up playing with him a lot. I’ve always seen how far he hits it.â€� Champ is one-for-one with the 54-hole lead (Sanderson). One suspects his focus will be tested at the Safeway, but focus is precisely what his grandfather has preached most. “Me and my dad, we always laugh about it because he always says, ‘Stay focused, stay focused,’â€� Champ said. “Like, ‘OK, Pops.’ He just said, ‘Play free,’ and that’s what I’ve been doing. It’s been nice. I haven’t made any of the mistakes, simple … up-and-downs in front of the greens, I felt like I was struggling with those all last year.â€� Grandpa Champ’s other big saying: “It’s not where you come from, it’s where you’re going.â€� (So often has he heard it that Cameron had the words stamped on his wedges.) Mack Champ endured racial discrimination as he grew up in Columbus, Texas, about 75 miles west of Houston. He caddied on a nine-hole course for 75 cents a loop, but wasn’t allowed to play there. Not until he was stationed overseas with the Air Force did he begin to learn the game, teaching himself the swing in part by reading “Sam Snead’s Natural Golf.â€� Son Jeff Champ was not a golfer but a minor-league baseball player – a catcher, like Earl Woods. As a result, it wasn’t until the arrival of Cameron that Mack had a willing student to impart the lessons he’d learned in golf, and, much later, someone to walk the fairways with. When Cameron won the Sanderson last season, Mack was brought into the victory celebration by iPhone. “We did it for you, Grandpa,â€� Jeff said. “We did it for you.â€� Despite his late tee time (5 p.m. ET with Munoz, who will go for his second victory in as many weeks), Cameron Champ said he didn’t plan any more trips to visit his grandfather until after the tournament. Although he would dearly love to bring the trophy to Sacramento, he said the dire situation with “POPS,â€� who hasn’t been eating, has put golf into perspective. “Whether I shoot 80 tomorrow or whether I shoot 65, I really don’t care,â€� he said. “I’m just going to focus on, you know, putting my best round together and whatever that’s going to be tomorrow, it’s going to be.â€�

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Cameron Champ shoots 67, leads by three at Safeway OpenCameron Champ shoots 67, leads by three at Safeway Open

NAPA, Calif. — Even as he bolted to the top of the leaderboard at the Safeway Open, Cameron Champ’s mind was elsewhere. Champ’s grandfather, Mack, is in hospice battling stomach cancer and the family has been commuting back and forth between the tournament and his hometown of Sacramento, about 65 miles northeast of Silverado Resort. “It’s been a pretty emotional week,” Champ said Saturday after shooting a bogey-free 5-under 67 in windy conditions to take a three-shot lead into the final round. “He just made me realize there’s a lot more to life than golf. His thing is he likes to say `focus’ a lot. Me and my dad always laugh about it. like, `OK Pops.'” Champ has certainly looked focused this week. He opened with a 67 on Thursday, had two bogeys and a six birdies for a 68 on Friday, then moved into the lead with steady iron play and strong putting. Champ narrowly missed a sixth birdie on No. 17 after nearly driving the green. He had a 14-under 202 total despite playing the four par 5s without a birdie. “I’m certainly happy with the position I’m in,” Champ said. “I know if I can get in the fairways on those (par 5s) and kind of do what I did today, it will be a good day.” Champ didn’t make the trip to visit his grandfather following Friday night’s round and was uncertain of his plans after taking the lead. Closing out Sunday with his second PGA TOUR victory would provide Champ and his family a much-needed lift. “It would be mind-blowing, honestly,” Champ said. “I’m going to continue doing what I’m doing. Whether I shoot 80 tomorrow or whether I shoot 65, I really don’t care. I’m just going to focus on putting my best round together, and whatever that’s going to be tomorrow, it’s going to be.” Sebastian Munoz (67), Adam Hadwin (67) and Nick Taylor (70) were 11 under, and Chez Reavie (69), Collin Morikawa (70), Justin Thomas (71) and Nick Watney (72) followed at 10 under. Munoz, the Sanderson Farms Championship winner last week in Mississippi, got back into the mix with six birdies. That followed an uneven second round when the 26-year-old Colombian had a double bogey and an eagle. “I’m just playing a little more fun, a little more loose and having fun,” Munoz said. Second-round leader Bryson DeChambeau was 8 under after a 76. DeChambeau bogeyed Nos. 3 and 10, double-bogeyed No. 13 then ran into big trouble after hitting his second shot on No. 18 over the grandstands around the green and into a patch of reeds. Following a lengthy discussion with course officials and a delay of at least 20 minutes, DeChambeau took a drop and flopped a shot back over the grandstands onto the green 10 feet from the pin. He two-putted for par.

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Watney’s driver inspires Scott to adjust setup at Safeway OpenWatney’s driver inspires Scott to adjust setup at Safeway Open

In addition to playing his way into contention through 36 holes at the Safeway Open, Nick Watney also inspired an equipment setup change by another contender this week at Silverado, Adam Scott. While Scott was playing a practice round with Watney earlier this week, Scott took a liking to Watney’s driver setup. According to Titleist TOUR rep J.J. VanWezenbeeck, Scott saw Watney’s 11.5-degree TS3 driver and liked the look and performance of it so much that he requested to have one built. It should be noted that 11.5 degrees is comparatively a lot of loft to have on a driver for PGA TOUR players; according to Titleist, only one other player in the Safeway Open field has a driver that measures 11.5 degrees of loft. Most other PGA TOUR players use drivers that have between 8-and-11 degrees of loft. Come competition time on Thursday, Scott had the Watney-inspired driver setup in the bag. Scott, making his 2019-20 season debut this week, was previously using a TS3 driver at 9.5 degrees with an A1 SureFit hosel setting. After playing with Watney, he switched into a TS3 driver at 11.5 degrees with a B1 SureFit hosel setting — the same head setup as Watney’s. Scott did, however, continue using his familiar Graphite Design Tour AD-DI 8X shaft that he had previously. On Thursday, Scott — averaging 323.4 yards off the tee — fired a 7-under-par 65 to share the first-round lead with Andrew Landry. He cooled off on Friday with a 73, though, and sits at T15 entering the weekend. Watney, who’s had his 11.5-degree driver in play since the 2019 Desert Classic, shot rounds of 69 and 65 to move into solo second behind Bryson DeChambeau, his playing partner in Saturday’s final twosome. Watney’s driver is equipped with a Mitsubishi Tensei CK Pro White shaft.

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