Day: January 13, 2020

TOUR players beef up Australian bushfire reliefTOUR players beef up Australian bushfire relief

HONOLULU – Maybe it was some sort of cosmic karma that helped Cameron Smith win the Sony Open in Hawaii. Australian PGA TOUR players in the Sony Open field – with help from some friends – added over $175,000 to help boost bushfire relief efforts in their home country, taking the current total from the TOUR community to well over a $250,000. The six Australians in the field in Marc Leishman, Smith, Matt Jones, Rhein Gibson, Cameron Davis and Cameron Percy, plus American Parker McLachlin, all pledged funds per birdie and eagle made during the tournament to the ongoing fire crisis down under. Together, they raised over $30,000, despite difficult conditions with high winds and rain throughout the week at Waialae Country Club. And the figure will continue to rise as further matches are added. Karma seemed part of the narrative as Smith came from behind to force a playoff with a birdie on the 72nd hole and earlier, Leishman holed out for an eagle on Sunday from 130 yards to boost the cause. Leishman’s Begin Again Foundation has over $9,000 of straight donations to add plus their pledge to match $5,000 of those contributions. Personal sponsors and friends of the four-time TOUR winner also added to his birdie/eagle pledge, which takes things up at least another $6,000. Related: International Team announces bushfire relief donation | Smith: Sony Open win means ‘that little bit more’ The Presidents Cup, which was recently held in Melbourne, Australia, and the PGA TOUR pledged to match any figures raised up to $125,000 by players at Waialae. Smith and Leishman were both members of the International Team in the competition. In another significant show of support the Presidents Cup, confirmed at the conclusion of play that they will provide the full $125,000 regardless of the final totals. On Saturday, the International team also pledged to send $125,000 from their Presidents Cup charitable funds towards the relief efforts. “It’s amazing that, as always, the TOUR steps up. When things are bad, we always say the TOUR is like a big family and it really is,â€� Leishman said. “It’s good that we are helping out my fellow Australians who really need it. These bushfires are an ongoing crisis that continues to cut a devastating path right across Australia so support from the global community is crucial. It has been heartening to see the resiliency of the Australian people and to see the firefighters and volunteers from around the world coming together to continue this important fight. “But the scale of the destruction is huge and it will continue to take a team effort from every corner of the globe as we look to the future. The fires are expected to burn through the Australian summer and coming months and the families who lost loved ones, homes and priceless memories will feel the effects for years to come. So too will our unique wildlife so all support is greatly appreciated.â€� To date, more than 10 million hectares (over 38,610 square miles) have been burned across Australia’s six states – an area about the size of Leishman’s adopted American state of Virginia. For comparison, the 2019 Amazon rainforest fires burned more than 7 million hectares, while California’s wildfires combined to burn just over 100,000 hectares in 2019 and 404,000 hectares in 2018. Multiple fires are still causing problems. There have been at least 27 lives lost and destruction of homes is in the thousands. The unique wildlife of the country has also taken a cataclysmic hit, with estimates of more than a billion animals being affected. There are fears some smaller species could face extinction or functional extinction – where the species declines to a point where they no longer play a significant role in their ecosystem. Smith’s win was extra special, given his uncle Warren has lost his house and farm in the fires. He hoped it helped add some smiles to otherwise devastating times. “Every birdie putt I had, just meant that little bit more. Rather than kind of wanting to make it I almost felt like I had to make it,â€� Smith would say after his victory. “I realize Australia is doing it tough right now and the focus in probably not on my golf for good reason. But hopefully it gave a few people reason to smile for a moment of two. “Uncle Warren drove back to his place the other day and what he found was quite devastating. I kind of saw the photos and the only thing he had left was a little shed that him and his son built a few months back. “We’re a tight knit family and it kind of hit everyone pretty hard. It’s good to do something good, and hopefully puts a smile on their face.â€�

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Numbers to Know: Sony Open in HawaiiNumbers to Know: Sony Open in Hawaii

Cameron Smith won the Sony Open in Hawaii on Sunday for his second PGA TOUR title, and first individual win. He also won the 2017 Zurich Classic of New Orleans with Jonas Blixt. Smith, 26, moved to fifth in the FedExCup after defeating Brendan Steele in a one-hole playoff a Waialae. RELATED: Sony Open win means ‘that little bit more’ | Winner’s Bag | International Team announces Australian bushfire relief donation  Here’s a closer look at the best stats from Smith’s win in Hawaii: 1. BOUNCE BACK: Two holes into the tournament, Smith didn’t look destined for the winner’s circle. He bogeyed his first hole Thursday, then made a triple-bogey 7 on the next hole. He is the first player since at least 2003 to win after playing the first two holes in 4 over. ShotLink, which began in 2003, records the starting hole for each round. 2. ON A ROLL: Smith played his next 16 holes in 4 under to shoot 70 in the first round. His putter helped him dig out of that early hole. He gained +4.8 strokes on the greens Thursday. He went 4 for 5 from 10-15 feet – TOUR players made 30% of putts from that range last season — and sank putts of 21 and 15 feet. It was the second-best Strokes Gained: Putting round of Smith’s career, surpassed only by the +5.0 he gained in the second round of this season’s Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. Contrast that to the final three rounds this week, when Smith didn’t sink a single putt from outside 10 feet. He did hole nine of 11 attempts from 7-10 feet in the final three rounds, though. That’s a 82% make percentage. 3. STEELE’S SUNDAY: Steele started the final round with a three-shot lead and looked to have the tournament in hand after holing a bunker shot on the par-3 11th. He played the final seven holes in 2 over, though. He bogeyed 13 and 17 to sign for a final-round 71. Steele led the field in Strokes Gained: Putting through three rounds but was last in the field in that statistic Sunday. He was just 1 for 5 from 4-8 feet in the final round and didn’t make a putt outside 6 feet. 4. WEBB’S CLOSE CALL: Webb Simpson could have joined the playoff with a birdie at the par-5 finishing hole, but he missed the fairway right and couldn’t reach the green. It was another close call for Simpson. In his last 11 starts, he has four runner-up finishes and this third-place finish. His worst finish in that stretch is T30. Simpson’s worst finish in three starts this season is T7 at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. He finished runner-up in his previous start, losing a playoff to Tyler Duncan at The RSM Classic. Simpson is fourth in Strokes Gained: Approach this season and 12th in Strokes Gained: Putting. Since the RBC Canadian Open – the start of this 11-event stretch – Simpson has been the second-best putter on TOUR and fourth in Strokes Gained: Approach. 5. MORE TO COME FROM MORIKAWA: Simpson finished runner-up to Rory McIlroy at RBC Canadian Open. That’s where Collin Morikawa arrived on the scene as well, finishing T14 in his pro debut. There are some other similarities between the two. Both are strong iron players who have shown a penchant for going low. Morikawa is second on TOUR in Strokes Gained: Approach since the RBC Canadian Open (see above). Their shared consistency also is worth noting. They’ve both made 16 consecutive cuts, the second-longest active streak on TOUR (Tommy Fleetwood leads that category with 31 in a row). Morikawa finished T21 this week but he held the first-round lead with an impressive 65 in tough conditions. It was his 18th round of 66 or lower since turning pro at the RBC Canadian Open. That’s two more than anyone else on TOUR in that span. Simpson is second in that category.

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Trail Blazers hope to shift momentum vs. visiting HornetsTrail Blazers hope to shift momentum vs. visiting Hornets

The Portland Trail Blazers reach the midway point of their schedule viewed as one of the bigger underachievers in the NBA this season. The Trail Blazers reached the Western Conference finals last season but possess a dismal 16-24 record entering Monday night’s home game against the Charlotte Hornets

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