Month: July 2020

Nate Lashley’s iron play was locked in at last year’s Rocket MortgageNate Lashley’s iron play was locked in at last year’s Rocket Mortgage

Perhaps no dominant performance in recent memory on the PGA TOUR was more surprising than that of Nate Lashley at the 2019 Rocket Mortgage Classic. Not only did Lashley become just the third player this decade to win a TOUR event as an alternate, he led outright after all four rounds and finished six strokes ahead of runner-up Doc Redman. Lashley ranked 20th for the week in approach shot proximity, but that doesn’t tell the entire story about his pinpoint iron play. Repeatedly – especially on the weekend – Lashley put himself in great scoring positions and took advantage of those opportunities. In rounds three and four, Lashley hit seven approach shots inside eight feet, the most of any player in the field on the weekend at Detroit Golf Club. While the field’s average birdie make for the week was 14 feet, 11 inches, Lashley left himself just over 10 feet on his birdie conversions. Lashley converted 46% of his birdie-or-better opportunities over the course of the tournament, his career-best performance over 72 holes on the PGA TOUR. Readers familiar with ShotLink’s proximity statistics may be wondering how a player who hit it that close, that often, did not rank higher in the weekly statistics. A couple of stray numerical outliers are to blame there: twice, Lashley went after the 17th green in two, winding up more than 130 feet away from the hole. These two figures skewed Lashley’s average a bit, masking an otherwise sterling week approaching the greens in Detroit. Of Lashley’s 28 birdies that week, 22 came on putts of 10 feet or less. He hit 14 approach shots within 20 feet in his third-round 63 that gave him a six-shot lead. There are five players since 2010 to win a PGA TOUR event wire-to-wire and by six strokes or more. Four of those winners – Rory McIlroy, Jason Day, Justin Thomas and Martin Kaymer – have been world number one at some point in their career. Nate Lashley, an alternate who had everything going for him that week in Michigan, is the fifth. With his victory, Lashley became the first player to win wire-to-wire and by six strokes or more for his first PGA Tour title since Jose Maria Olazabal at the 1990 NEC World Series of Golf.

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Quick look at the Rocket Mortgage ClassicQuick look at the Rocket Mortgage Classic

Time to get revved up for some Motor City action as the PGA TOUR returns to Detroit for the Rocket Mortgage Challenge. Despite a significant history of golf in Michigan and even the Detroit metro area, last season’s tournament at Detroit Golf Club represented the first top level golf in Detroit proper. And it produced perhaps the best feelgood story of the season as Nate Lashley led from the green light to the checkered flag. Lashley was the last player in the field and clearly not expected to contend. The fact he was even playing on the PGA TOUR was seen as a huge achievement given he lost his parents and girlfriend to a tragic plane crash in 2004 as they returned from watching him play in college. It was others who failed to contend. Lashley would eventually win by six shots in a goose bump inducing display. What incredible story awaits us this year? RELATED: Featured Groups, tee times | Power Rankings | Expert Picks THREE PLAYERS TO PONDER THE FLYOVER Detroit Golf Club is an old classic Donald Ross design that invites you to showcase your skills. Hopefully we will see plenty of sublime skills at the 3-1-3 challenge holes. Using the Detroit area code as a base the tournament will offer the chance for players to make significant charitable impact while playing the par-5 14th, the par-3 15th and the par-4 16th during each round. The first golfer to go 3-1-3 will have a $313,000 contribution made in his name towards the Rocket Giving Fund charities connected to digital access and Detroit’s digital divide. In addition, each eagle at 14 earns a $5,000 donation, each ace at 15 earns a $25,000 donation and each birdie at 16 results in a $5,000 donation. Get an in-depth look at the challenge and those holes here. LANDING ZONE The par-4 18th at Detroit Golf Club features a narrow ditch running down it just waiting to swallow a ball and create all sorts of drama for those looking to finish on a high. Last season it was the second hardest hole in the tournament, playing to a 4.113 over the four rounds. Nine double bogeys and two triple bogeys showed you might need a Lashley type lead to be secure as you hit the 72nd tee. From the tee precision is key. You must split the bunkers guarding both sides to have the best chance at holding the toughest green on the course. Those hitting the short grass off the tee actually played the hole fractionally under par… but those that didn’t all had struggles. Here’s a look at how players placed their tee shots and the results they garnered from them. WEATHER CHECK From PGA TOUR meteorologist Stewart Williams: “High pressure will provide hot temperatures as we go through the rest of the week into the weekend with highs in the low 90s. There will be some weak upper level energy moving across the state on Friday that could produce an isolated shower or thunderstorm as it passes. Otherwise dry conditions will continue with partly cloudy to mostly sunny skies expected with light winds averaging 5-10 mph each day.” For the latest weather news from Detriot, check out PGATOUR.COM’s Weather Hub. SOUND CHECK This course, it should be kind of a premium on hitting the fairways, so if the rough is a penalty this week, that’s probably the way it should be.In the mornings I usually have four eggs, five pieces of bacon, some toast and two Orgain protein shakes. Throughout the course of the day, I’ll have a GoMacro bar, a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, and at least two protein drinks on the golf course, and then after the round I’ll have one. After that, I’m snacking when I’m practicing after. Go back to the hotel, eat a dinner, steak, potatoes. Then I’ll have two protein shakes with it there as well. BY THE NUMBERS -46 – Bryson DeChambeau is a combined 46-under par since the Restart to Golf on the PGA TOUR, best of any player entering this week. -14 – Nate Lashley dominated the par 4s at Detroit Golf Club in 2019, playing them a field leading 14 under, tied for the best by a winner on TOUR last season. 5 – Number of rounds of 63 or better this season by Brendon Todd. Todd’s five rounds of 63 or better have come in his last 43 played on TOUR compared to just three rounds of 63 or better in his first 497 rounds on TOUR. 7 – Players in the field who have made the cut in all three of the PGA TOUR events since the Restart to Golf. They are Bryson DeChambeau, Viktor Hovland, Tyler Duncan, Lucas Glover, Mark Hubbard, Doc Redman and Brian Stuard. 51.52 – Percentage the field who hit their drives over 300 yards, marking the third highest percentage of drives over 300 yards of any course last season. 1,895 – Number of birdies the field made last season at Detroit Golf Club, marking the second-most of any course. SCATTERSHOTS Flash Gordon… After a T3 finish last week at the Travelers Championship, 23-year-old Will Gordon accepted Special Temporary Membership on the TOUR and now looks to ride the momentum. The 2019 SEC Player of the Year shot a career best 61 at Travelers on the way to his second top-10 from eight starts. Will Peter Kuest, James Nicholas or Sahith Theegala be able to follow in his footsteps this week as young stars trying to pave their own path? Health and Safety… The PGA TOUR has been committed to learning from an operational standpoint and adjusting its extensive COVID-19 health and safety protocols in place in order to mitigate risk and promote the health and safety of all involved, including players, caddies, staff and volunteers. With that in mind, the TOUR made the following changes last week: additional testing for those traveling on the charter flight between events; potential withholding of the stipend program if a player tests positive after not following protocols; the return of the TOUR fitness truck to encourage use of on-site facilities; in the COVID-19 pre-tournament testing process, players, along with all other individuals “inside the bubble,” will now not be allowed on host facility property until first being cleared with a negative in-market test. Course deets… Donald Ross designed both courses at Detroit Golf Club (1916) with renovations done by Robert Trent Jones, Arthur Hills and Bruce Hepner. It plays to a Par 72 at 7,340 yards. There are 87 bunkers but just one water hazard. There has been some re-routing for the tournament, including using a hole from the South Course. The South’s first hole will function as the tournament’s third hole and will be played from the North Course’s first hole tee box. The usual eighth hole and ninth holes, will be No. 1 and No. 2 for the tournament. The oak tree located to the right side of the tee box on the original No. 1 was bent by Native Americans to mark the trail when traveling from Detroit to Saginaw. Major pedigree… Three major winners have been head pros at Detroit Golf Club. Nine years before he was hired at DGC, Alec Ross won the 1907 U.S. Open, posting four rounds in the 70s to win by two strokes at Philadelphia Cricket Club (his brother and course designer Donald finished 10th). Following Ross as head pro was Horton Smith, the inaugural Masters winner (1934) who would win again in 1936. And after Smith was Detroit native Walter Burkemo, who had won the 1953 PGA Championship at nearby Birmingham Country Club. George Bayer also held the job for some time, a four-time PGA TOUR winner known for long drives. He finished inside the top-15 at the Masters, PGA Championship and U.S. Open during his career. For more things to know about DGC check this out.

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Rocket Mortgage Classic, Round 1: Leaderboard, tee times, TV timesRocket Mortgage Classic, Round 1: Leaderboard, tee times, TV times

The PGA TOUR’s Return to Golf continues Thursday in Round 1 of the Rocket Mortgage Classic at Detroit Golf Club. The star-studded field features players such as Rickie Fowler, Bryson DeChambeau, Patrick Reed, Webb Simpson, Hideki Matsuyama, Bubba Watson and Jason Day. Here’s everything you need to know to follow the action. Round 1 leaderboard Round 1 tee times HOW TO FOLLOW Television: Thursday-Friday, 3 p.m.-6 p.m. ET (Golf Channel). Saturday-Sunday, 1 p.m.-3 p.m. (Golf Channel), 3 p.m.-6 p.m. (CBS). PGA TOUR LIVE: Thursday-Friday 6:30 a.m.-6 p.m. (Featured Groups), Saturday-Sunday 8 a.m.-3 p.m. (Featured Groups). Saturday-Sunday 3 p.m.-6 p.m. (Featured Holes). Radio: Thursday-Friday, 12 p.m.-6 p.m. Saturday-Sunday, 1 p.m.-6 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio). FEATURED GROUPS (ALL TIMES ET) Bryson DeChambeau, Patrick Reed, Hideki Matsuyama Thursday: 1 p.m. (No. 1 tee); Friday: 7:45 a.m. (No. 10) Bubba Watson, Jason Day, Brendon Todd Thursday: 12:50 p.m. (No. 1); Friday: 7:35 a.m. (No. 10) Rickie Fowler, Nate Lashley, Webb Simpson Thursday: 7:45 a.m. (No. 10); Friday: 1 p.m. (No. 1) Brandt Snedeker, Tyrrell Hatton, Sungjae Im Thursday: 7:35 a.m. (No. 10); Friday: 12:50 p.m. (No. 1) MUST READS Power Rankings Expert Picks The First Look How fast things can change at Rocket Mortgage Classic Getting dialed in on AREA 313 Challenge

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Class of 2020 a special one for Jim Furyk and familyClass of 2020 a special one for Jim Furyk and family

For some, the graduations were virtual. Other got their diplomas in drive-by ceremonies – a few even in drive-in theaters – as teachers and principals got creative in an attempt to honor the Class of 2020. Nothing was normal after the COVID-19 pandemic gripped the United States in March. Jim Furyk attended one of those socially distanced outdoor ceremonies with his wife Tabitha when their daughter Caleigh graduated from The Bolles School in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, in May. The guest list was limited to parents, with other family members watching on-line. “It was nice to see the kids get an opportunity to walk, and I think they were anxious to kind of say hello to everyone,” Furyk says. “They hadn’t really had a chance to see the class for a couple of months and went through their on-line schooling. “It was a little awkward, I think, obviously a little bit of a bummer the way it ended.” Caleigh, though, has a lot to look forward to – she is headed to Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee, where she will compete on the track team. Helping his daughter, who is a talented pole vaulter, decide on a college brought back a lot of memories for Furyk, who turned 50 on May 12. “I broke my thumb and I signed my letter of commitment to Arizona to play golf with a cast on my hand, so it was interesting,” recalls Furyk, who graduated from Manheim Township High School in 1988. “But going through the process of being recruited by University of Arizona was fun. It was also very time consuming and difficult. You’re trying to figure out your next plan in life and trying to pick a college is always stressful.” That said, Furyk remembers the excitement – and relief — he felt after choosing Arizona over Arizona State, North Carolina and South Carolina. He liked the fact that coach Rick LaRose wasn’t looking to change his unique swing – plus, the weather in Tucson was a plus for a kid who grew up in western Pennsylvania. “He gave us a little bit of rope, and for some students that isn’t a good thing, but for me it was a really good thing,” Furyk says. “Being there with a different golf swing, being very self-motivated, and I worked very hard having that opportunity to kind of grow and flourish and not have someone tell me how to play. He let me kind of grow and learn at my own pace, which was good for me.” Furyk said the COVID-19 crisis limited the time Caleigh could spend on campus at the various schools that she was considering. He and his wife and daughter had hoped to circle back to visit some of the colleges again, but with the nation’s shutdown that wasn’t possible. “I think as a parent you want to provide some guidance and some insight, but ultimately, I wanted it to be, and my wife wanted it to be, her decision,” Furyk says. “I think we’ve always really tried to, and I’ve kind of got a little bit of this from my wife and probably got a little bit from what my parents did, but Tabitha’s always wanted the kids to be able to make decisions and we’ve kind of treated them at times as they’re older or more mature than they actually were. “So, we just tried to provide some guidance and points and what was important, try to help her organize what’s important to you.” Caleigh is thinking about majoring in graphic design, but she is also interested in music. In that regard, Belmont has one of the best schools in the country, both from a creative standpoint and the business of music. “Hopefully, she’ll be able to combine a little bit of that love with the graphic design work as well,” Furyk says. “I think that it’s a good opportunity for her to join the track team there as well and compete. So, it’s something that she likes doing, and I think it’s a good balance. Something she works really hard at and to be balanced for her.” Furyk said Caleigh and her younger brother, Tanner, who recently completed his sophomore year at Bolles, have handled the coronavirus shutdown with maturity. Caleigh, who Furyk says hides her emotions like he does, was just getting back into form after an injury over the winter when track season was halted. Tanner’s lacrosse season was canceled, too. “I think we all gathered where it was going very quickly,” Furyk says. “I think kids may have held out some hope along the way. And then, little by little, they kind of said, maybe this isn’t going to work out.” So, proms had to be canceled, and graduations reimagined. But Furyk thinks the members of the Class of 2020 will be stronger because of what happened, and he expects big things. “The words that I keep hearing, whether it’s from their school, whether it’s from other parents, is that this class had to persevere through a little bit more than most and kind of have a little different finish to their school,” Furyk says. “And so, they’ll always be remembered for that, and I’m sure for the rest of their lives that’ll keep some things in perspective for them and probably also give them the confidence that we all persevere through many aspects of their life.”

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Rocket Mortgage Classic reminds how fast things can changeRocket Mortgage Classic reminds how fast things can change

Nate Lashley knew his life was about to change. He just didn’t know how much. “It was a little bit of a blur for me,” he said Tuesday. It played out in high-def for everybody watching at home, the unheralded Lashley’s surprising six-shot win at the inaugural Rocket Mortgage Classic at Detroit Golf Club last year. He was the last man in the field, ranked 353rd in the world, and no one else stood a chance. “Probably the job security,” he said of the biggest way his life changed, “and then getting into any tournament I can play, make any schedule pretty much that you want outside of a couple majors and some World Golf Championships.” Seven weeks and eight events remain before the start of the FedExCup Playoffs, and some, like Rickie Fowler (108th in the current standings) and Jason Day (96) come to Detroit needing to make a move. In just over two months the TOUR Championship will crown the FedExCup champion over Labor Day weekend. Should they be worried? Nah. Lashley is Exhibit A for how fast everything can change in golf, but then so are six of the seven players who have been No. 1 in the FedExCup this season and will play in Detroit. They hail from Chile (Joaquin Niemann, the first No. 1 of this season, for one week) and Colombia (Sebastián Muñoz, the second, for three weeks); South Korea (Sungjae Im, two weeks) and America (Lanto Griffin, Brendon Todd and current leader Webb Simpson). Start with Simpson, who has five top-10 finishes – including two wins – in seven starts this season. Last season he posted three runner-up finishes but no victories on the way to finishing 16th in the FedExCup. This season he’s turning those close calls into wins. “Justin Rose is kind of my inspiration,” he said after winning the RBC Heritage two weeks ago. “He seems like he’s always there every week. He works hard at his craft, and I just thought, you know, I have good weeks. I make it to the TOUR Championship. I’ve won a few times. But I really have a desire to be in that top 10 or 15 guys in the world ranking all the time and have chances to win, not just twice a year, but as many times as I can.” Most of the others who held down FedExCup No. 1 before him this season have their own stories of transformation. In many cases, they are rags-to-riches stories. “I’m trying to convince my family and my agent to let me buy something nice,” Joaquin Niemann said after winning A Military Tribute at the Greenbrier last September. He had been languishing outside the top 150 as of May 2019, but now he was FedExCup No. 1. Muñoz is the only player who has been in the top 10 for all 23 weeks of the season. He took the top spot after winning the Sanderson Farms Championship. “I just kept smiling to myself, reminding me, Oh, yeah, (the Sentry Tournament of Champions in) Hawaii is around the corner,” Muñoz said. “Oh, yeah, Masters. Like, Oh, yeah, I got job security for a couple years. It’s just like smile, then smile again.” Griffin, who assumed FedExCup pole position after he won the Houston Open, also sounded like a kid at Christmas when asked later about how his life had changed. Of course, that was partly because it was Christmas – or at least the Sentry Tournament of Champions. “So we got Mom the car around Christmas,” he said at Kapalua. “I wanted it to be a surprise, so she came down to my sister’s house, we did Christmas there, and we had it out in the back of her house with a bow on it, so she was — she loved it. She’s texted me four or five times since then, ‘I still can’t believe I have a Subaru.’ So that’s cool.” Todd was the next No. 1, and maybe the least likely. Currently down to FedExCup No. 6, he’s still up 201 spots compared to his position through week 23 last season. And he was 2,043rd in the Official World Golf Ranking in 2018 before embarking on a total reclamation of his game. On Sunday, Todd contended for his third TOUR victory this season (Bermuda Championship, Mayakoba Golf Classic) at the Travelers Championship before a freak bad round (75, T11). The Honda Classic winner Im was FedExCup No. 1 for the three month break necessitated by the pandemic. “There is a little bit of added pressure being the FedExCup leader and coming back to competitive play,” he said at the Charles Schwab Challenge, where he finished T10. He’s dropped off since then, with a MC at the RBC Heritage and T58 at the Travelers, but would anyone be surprised if he turned it around at the Rocket Mortgage? Jordan Spieth (59th in 2013) was the lowest ranked player with seven weeks left in the regular season to finish in the FedExCup top 10 (he finished eighth). As he knows all too well, as do Todd, Lashley and many others at the Rocket Mortgage, in golf it can all change in a flash.

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Chris Jones suggests he won't play without a long-term deal with ChiefsChris Jones suggests he won't play without a long-term deal with Chiefs

With the deadline for signing a long-term deal while on the franchise tag just over two weeks away, Kansas City Chiefs defensive tackle Chris Jones may be trying to assert some leverage into negotiations. In a reply via his Twitter account to a segment from the NFL Network discussing his contract situation, Jones said that [more]

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