Day: January 7, 2020

Horses for Courses: Sony Open in HawaiiHorses for Courses: Sony Open in Hawaii

Island hopping continues in Hawaii as the TOUR shifts from the newly redone Plantation Course on bucolic Maui to the hustle and bustle of the classic Seth Raynor Waialae Country Club in Honolulu on Oahu. The traffic on the course, and island, increases this week as 144 players comprise the first full-field event of calendar 2020. The top 60 and ties will play the weekend for a piece of a $6.6 million prize purse with the winner taking home $1.188 million plus 500 FedExCup points. Waialae CC stretches only 7,044 yards (Par-70) and has hosted the event since 1965, so course form plays a massive angle. Bermuda greens and tight driving targets usually provide the challenge but this week, the trade winds will also keep scoring at a premium. The classic layout has only crowned two debut winners this century and only two more under the age of 30 since 1999 so experience, in the wind and on the course, matters this week. With gusty conditions in the forecast, experience and ball-striking receives extra emphasis. Of the 144 players entered, 23 knocked the rust off last week in Maui. Over the last 21 events, 15 champions played the week prior in the winner’s-only event. Justin Thomas (2017) and Ernie Els (2003) are the only two to win both Hawaii events back-to-back to kick off the year. RELATED: Power Rankings | Expert Picks Recent Winners 2019: Matt Kuchar (-22, 258) Became the third winner since 2012 to also win the previous year at Mayakoba. … Just the second player 40 or older to win this century. … Played the previous week on Maui. … Top nine in EVERY major statistical category other than Strokes-Gained: Around-the-Green. … Led the field in GIR and Ball-Striking. … Won in his 14th attempt. Notables: Only four over-par rounds posted from the top 28 players in benign conditions. … Andrew Putnam (2nd) and Brian Gay (T22) both gained over 10 strokes on the greens. … Corey Conners closed 64-64 for T3 after qualifying on Monday. … Noted wind player Marc Leishman cashed T3. … Top 28 were 10 under or better. @GolfOdds has set this year’s winning total for 270.5. #Windy. 2018: Patton Kizzire (-17, 263) The 2017 Mayakoba champion defeated James Hahn on the second playoff hole to win in his second visit to Waialae CC. … Joined the previous four winners by finishing in the top five in Strokes-Gained: Putting. … Third-consecutive winner who did NOT finish in the top 55 in driving accuracy. … T1 Par-3 scoring. Notables: James Hahn fired 62 in Round 4 to force a playoff. … Tom Hoge led by one after 54 holes and missed the playoff by a shot. … Brian Harman led by three after 36 holes (64-63) before cashing T4. … Webb Simpson’s furious finish (63-65) secured T4. … 10 under was good for T25 and there were only five over-par rounds from those 31 golfers. 2017: Justin Thomas (-27, 253) Completed the Maui-Honolulu double as he set the course record (59; Round 1) and the tournament record to win by seven shots. … Set the TOUR record for best 36-hole score (123) and tied the 54-hole mark (188). … Led by seven after 54 holes over Zach Johnson. … Top four in all Strokes-Gained categories minus Around-the-Green. … Won in his third attempt. Notables: Kevin Kisner posted 60 in Round 3 and eventually cashed T4. … Johnson signed for 61 in Round 2 and played in the final group (T6). … Chez Reavie closed the proceedings with 61 to hit T8. … The top 44 players were 10 under or lower. Key stat leaders With gusty conditions in the forecast and a winning total expected around 10 under, this week is going to look different to previous editions at Waialae. Getting the ball in the hole is going to trump scoring for me this week. Top golfers in each statistic on the 2019-20 PGA TOUR are listed only if they are scheduled to compete this week.  * -  previous top-10 finish here since 2015 Strokes-Gained: Putting  4  Graeme McDowell (first appearance)  5  *Andrew Putnam  7  *Patton Kizzire  9  Vaughn Taylor 11 *Webb Simpson 12 *Brandt Snedeker 14 *Pat Perez 19 Peter Malnati 20 *Kevin Kisner 22 Patrick Rodgers 23 Sam Burns Strokes-Gained: Approach-the-Green  2  *Justin Thomas  3  Emiliano Grillo  5  Hideki Matsuyama  9  *Corey Conners 13 *Chez Reavie 14 *Webb Simpson 15 Talor Gooch 17 *Matt Kuchar 18 *Russell Knox 19 Keegan Bradley 24 Nate Lashley 25 Joaquin Niemann 28 *Marc Leishman Bogey Avoidance  2  *Webb Simpson  4  *Charles Howell III  6  *Matt Kuchar  7  *Scott Piercy 10 Vaughn Taylor 13 Matt Jones 14 Sungjae Im 16 *Justin Thomas 17 Bud Cauley 22 *Rory Sabbatini 25 Patrick Reed Mahalo Justin Thomas: T16 or better in four of five starts the last five years. … Also owns 61 from debut event in 2015. … Scoring average is 66.56 and is 51 under his last three trips. Charles Howell III: Leading money winner at the event and he’s never won! …  18 visits, 18 paychecks. … Hit the top 10 in five of his last 10 starts and 10 overall. … 23 rounds in the red and counting and 61 of 68 career rounds 70 or better. Matt Kuchar: Last six have gone for WIN, T13, T3, T8, T5 and T5. Frequent Fliers Marc Leishman: Never missed in 10 trips. … Of 40 rounds, nine have gone for 65 or better. … Eight of 10 paydays T28 or better. Webb Simpson: Never missed in nine trips. … 11 of 35 rounds 66 or better. … T20 or better last five visits. Brian Gay: Cashed 16 of 19 career including 16 of his last 17. Wait, What? Brian Stuard: Made six of seven weekends with four top-10 paydays and 67.23 scoring average. … Top 10 last two years. Hudson Swafford: 67.32 scoring average in six tries; three top-10 paychecks including T3 last year. Jimmy Walker: Last repeat champion in 2015 hasn’t found his mojo in his last three visits. Caution. Pat Perez: Almost half of his 17 appearances have ended up in the top 25 with half of those in the top 10, but his last three (MC-81-T69) have been clunky.

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Sloan’s passion for hockey remains strongSloan’s passion for hockey remains strong

Roger Sloan grew up dreaming of winning Stanley Cups and Olympic gold medals. He’s a Canadian, after all, and hockey is as much a way of life there as it is a sport. Even now, as Sloan gets ready to tee it up at Waialae Country Club this week at the Sony Open in Hawaii, hockey is a part of his life. And it’s not just because the 32-year-old is a big fan of the Calgary Flames. Sloan, who is in the midst of his third season on the PGA TOUR, plays regularly in a men’s league in Houston, where he eventually settled after earning a degree in finance from the University of Texas-El Paso.   “It’s something I’m fairly good at,â€� Sloan says. “It’s just, it’s good to keep me athletic. … So, when we’re back home we kind of lace them up with the boys and you know, just go around for a good skate.â€� Sloan, who tied for second last year at the Puerto Rico Open, says he usually plays once a week during the season when he’s back in Texas taking a break from the TOUR. He plays forward on a team called the Backside Five. “It’s a good group of guys,â€� Sloan says. “The league I play in is actually very competitive because there’s a lot of guys that used to play professionally over in Europe that are now in the oil and gas industry, you know, with Houston being a hub for (that). “There’s a lot of Canadian hockey players that have migrated down for their work. So, the league is actually very competitive which, which is good and pushes me to be able to be better.â€� Hockey, of course, is a much more physical sport than golf. But Sloan says he doesn’t worry about, bruises, broken bones or bloodied noses. “You can get hurt in the gym, you can get hurt skiing and you can get driving to the golf course,â€� he says. “There’s so many things. So, you know what injuries are all around us, but you know, I can hold my own on a hockey rink.â€� Sloan, who made the FedExCup Playoffs for the first time last season, started playing golf when he was 11 years old. His family had recently moved to Merritt, British Columbia, a town of just over 7,000 where some of the Academy Award-nominated movie “The Sweet Hereafterâ€� was filmed. Playing hockey was a given. But there was no little league baseball in the area so what was Sloan supposed to do in the summers? His father Curtis, an avid golfer, had the solution – he gave his son a set of MacGregor junior clubs.   Sloan, who was valedictorian of his high school class, learned the game at Merritt Golf & Country Club, a nine-hole layout where he holds the course record of 58 for two trips around the course. He made three eagles and eight birdies that day while one-putting 11 greens. The accountability of golf was attractive to Sloan, who played four years at UTEP, posting four top-10s as a senior and making the NCAA regionals. But he really enjoyed the team atmosphere of hockey and has many great memories of playing with his friends — both on the ice and inside the house where he remembers breaking doors and putting holes in the walls.   “I think when I look back at it, the whole being a Canadian playing hockey, your whole life revolved around hockey,â€� Sloan says. “Whether you’re playing organized hockey or whether it was just after school, you know, when all the guys have grabbed their sticks and skates and they’d go to the rink in the neighborhood to even playing a little hallway hockey (or) as kid playing on your Nintendo or whatever it was — you’re always occupied with hockey. … “So many friendships I still have today were started with my hockey teammates.â€� As Sloan became more serious about golf, though, he quit playing hockey. But he started skating again about five years ago. “I took about a 10-year break, so I’m not nearly as good as I as I once was,â€� Sloan says. “Like I said, it’s a good cardio workout. Keeps me athletic and I just really enjoy it.â€� For now, though, the ocean breezes and swaying palm trees on Waikiki Beach offer a nice diversion.

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