Day: August 15, 2020

Season’s final stretch in full swing at Wyndham ChampionshipSeason’s final stretch in full swing at Wyndham Championship

GREENSBORO, N.C. - There's no rest for the weary. Not when you're at the Wyndham Championship and it's the final week of the PGA TOUR's regular season with the FedExCup Playoffs looming large next week. RELATED: Leaderboard | Four-way tie for lead after Round 2 | Projected FedExCup standings Si Woo Kim is a prime example. The co-leader - Kim's tied for the top spot after matching 65s in the first two rounds - has played every single tournament since the TOUR's Return to Golf in June after a three-month hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic. That means the Wyndham Championship, a tournament he won in 2016, is Kim's 10th straight event. Let that sink in a little bit. And even after that marathon stretch, Kim still arrived at Sedgefield Country Club this week in dire need of FedExCup points. He was ranked No. 121 and was hardly safe to make the Playoffs which start next week at THE NORTHERN TRUST at TPC Boston. The other three players tied for the lead with Kim are on similar runs but are safely in the Playoff bubble. Tom Hoge and Talor Gooch, who shot 65 and 68, respectively, will be seeking their first PGA TOUR titles this week while Billy Horschel, the 2014 FedEx champ who had a 64 Friday, is vying for his sixth. Horschel has only missed the Wyndham Championship once since 2011, and he's finished 11th or better three times in his last four starts here. With the compacted TOUR schedule, though, and the hopes of a long Playoff run, Horschel wasn't sure a trip to Sedgefield was in the cards this year. "I knew if I played here there would be a lot of tournaments in a two-and-a-half month window, but with my position in the FedExCup, I felt like it was vital for me to come here and try to accumulate more points," said Horschel, who ranks 50th. "So, after Sunday I flew home and spent two days there and I flew up here Wednesday morning. It was just nice. It was nice to not be here Monday, Tuesday and sort of grind it out. So, I know I’ve got several more weeks left to play golf and I’ll just do a good job of being smart with my practice. "Thankfully, the game’s in a good spot. I don’t have to really grind too hard, which helps a lot in that aspect." There are a total of 35 players within four strokes of the lead heading into a third round fraught with uncertainty with a weather forecast that calls for heavy rain and thunderstorms. And even without the potential downpour to soften things up, Sedgefield figured to be generous - already giving up four 62s this week and even relinquishing a 59 to Brandt Snedeker in 2018. One of those 62s was shot in the first round by the popular Harold Varner, who grew up in Gastonia, North Carolina, and graduated from East Carolina. He's not putting much stock in the meteorologists as he looks for his first PGA TOUR victory, though. "I've got to hit more fairways," said Varner, who only hit nine in shooting a 69 on Friday but still starts the weekend one stroke off the lead. "They said it was supposed to rain all day today, but it didn’t. I’m always glass is half full, so we’ll see what happens. "I don’t control that, so we’ll just do what I do best, play golf." Hoge, who opened the season with a career-best runner-up finish at The Greenbrier, and Gooch have played in nine of the 10 tournaments since the break, each taking the week before the PGA Championship off to recharge. Like Horschel, their FedExCup position is solid — Hoge ranked 38th at the start of the week and Gooch clocking in at No. 66. The goal is to be among the 30 who get to the finale at East Lake where anyone can win the $15 million FedExCup bonus, though, so every bump helps. For Gooch, Friday marked the first time he'd ever shot 65 or lower twice in a TOUR event - as well as the first time he'd made the cut in two Wyndham Championship starts. "It was solid," he said. "I got off to kind of a slow start yesterday on the front nine and kind of got it going on the back and just carried that momentum all the way through the round. Anytime you shoot 65, it doesn’t matter who, what, when, where, why, you’ve done some good." Paul Casey, who's three strokes behind after a 66 and riding momentum after a tie second at the PGA on Sunday, is making his fifth straight start. He can't remember ever doing that in his professional career and admits he's trying to conserve energy while looking to win his fourth TOUR event. That said, he'd also like nothing better than to add three more starts to the five he's already made and advance to Atlanta for the fifth straight year. He moved from No. 121 to 54th with his runner-up finish at TPC Harding Park. Tempering expectations will be key. "It would be real easy to stand on the first tee yesterday and expect, you know, brilliant golf like I played on Sunday or all week last week," Casey said. "Then if you don’t play it, then you’re putting yourself between a rock and a hard place. "Yeah, no question. Just expectations is always the best way to be, but it’s hard. I made a really good jump up the FedExCup last week and I want to keep that going. … I want to make it to East Lake because I feel like — well, if you want to win it, you’ve got to be there." First, though, there's a tournament to try and win in the Piedmont Triad of North Carolina.

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Four-way tie for Wyndham Championship lead after Round 2Four-way tie for Wyndham Championship lead after Round 2

GREENSBORO, N.C. — Tom Hoge maintained a share of the lead Friday at the Wyndham Championship, this time alongside Si Woo Kim, Talor Gooch and Billy Horschel. Hoge, tied for the first-round lead with Harold Varner III and Roger Sloan, kept in front with a steady 2-under 68 to get to 10 under par. RELATED: Leaderboard | Simpson, Todd feed off friendly energy | Projected FedExCup standings Hoge, whose best-ever TOUR finish was a second at A Military Tirbute at The Greenbrier this season, was asked what it would take for his first PGA TOUR win. “There’s a lot to that question,” he said. The answer could be as simple as regaining his first-round form when he had seven birdies, an eagle and one par. This time, Hoge was more up and down with five birdies and three bogeys. Kim, whose first TOUR victory came here in 2016 and made history a year later as the youngest-ever winner of THE PLAYERS Championship, shot a 65 to move up. Kim got it going on the front nine (his final nine) after starting with nine consecutive pars. He had six bogeys coming in, including the final two holes to move on top. Kim’s approach shots down the stretch were on target — his final five birdie putts were all from 12 feet or closer. He said the rough at Sedgefield Country Club was “more sticky and deep” this year. “It helps more to hit fairway, that’s really important,” Kim said. “That’s why I hit it more, try to focus on … the fairway.” Like Hoge, the 28-year-old Gooch is seeking his first TOUR victory. Like Kim, Gooch shot 65 to get into the foursome on top. It was the first time on TOUR Gooch, who opened with a 65, had multiple rounds that low in the same event. He had six birdies, including two of his final three holes, to move up. “Anytime you shoot 65, it does’t matter who, what, when, where, why, you’ve done some good,” he said. Horschel shot 64 and had birdies on four of last six holes, including a tricky 7-footer on his final one, the ninth, to join the lead group. Horschel won the 2014 FedExCup and said this time of year charges him up. “I like it when the pressure’s on and everyone’s looking at you and you need to step up and doing something special,” he said. The four were a stroke ahead of Harris English (67) , Varner (69), Andrew Landry (65), Doc Redman (64) and the Open champ Shane Lowry, who shot a 63 to tie for Friday’s low round with Jason Kokrak. Lowry did not get to defend his major when the tournament was cancelled due to the pandemic. He also entered the week at 131 in FedExCup points, outside of the upcoming Playoffs. After a bogey on his second hole, Lowry had six birdies and an eagle to move into contention. “Obviously, I’m outside the FedExCup number and out of Boston next week, so I need to keep playing some good golf and try and polish off a good week,” he said. Kokrak was in a group of seven one shot further back along with past Wyndham champ Webb Simpson, who shot his second straight 66. Those three strokes back included Patrick Reed (68), Paul Casey (66) and Tommy Fleetwood (64). A pair of major champions in the thick of last week’s PGA Championship in Brooks Koepka and Justin Rose did not make the cut. Koepka had a 70, including a triple-bogey 7 on the 10th hole, to finish at 2 over, 12 shots behind. Rose rallied to a 67 after an opening 73, but his even-par was not enough to continue. “Not physically tired, more mentally,” said Koepka, who’s played in sixth straight tournaments with the Playoffs ahead. “But I’ve got the weekend off.”

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