Day: August 13, 2021

FedExCup update: Justin Rose rises up leaderboard, standingsFedExCup update: Justin Rose rises up leaderboard, standings

GREENSBORO, N.C. – Justin Rose is a big tennis fan. He particularly likes Roger Federer and what he calls the “grace and elegance” in the way the genial Swede conducts himself and plays the game. Rose feels like he can learn from Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic, too, though. The big three of tennis, who have each won a record 20 Grand Slam titles, swing freely and are always focused on their game plan, regardless of what circumstances might arise. “When they’re 15-30 down, they swing for the lines,” Rose said. “They don’t start chipping it back into the middle of the court, they commit to their shots. “Sometimes I find it easier to learn from other sports than I do in my own arena, probably just stubbornness of looking at other players and wanting to learn from them, but definitely when I see tennis players, yeah, they commit 100 percent.” And that’s exactly what Rose has done this week at the Wyndham Championship. He came to Sedgefield Country Club ranked 138th in the FedExCup and in danger of missing the Playoffs for the first time since they were created in 2007. But after rounds on 66 and 65 on the Donald Ross gem, Rose has moved inside the top 125, projected at 117th. Not only is Rose potentially playing his way to Liberty National next week, he’s got a chance to win for the first time since the 2019 Farmers Insurance Open, and 11th overall. He’s tied for fifth with Tyler Duncan and Brian Stuard at 9 under, five strokes off the pace being set by Russell Henley. “So far, so good for sure,” Rose said. “Objective number one is to make it to the Playoffs, but two, if you’re playing well this week, I know I need to finish top-10, but at the same time there’s no point limiting yourself to that kind of thinking at this point. “Winning would go a long way to kind of feel like you can compete in the Playoffs. Listen, that’s all way ahead of me, but tomorrow just kind of keep doing what I’m doing. I think this golf course suits good strategy and good patience, so those are some of the things I’m going to try to continue with over the weekend.” For Rose, who birdied the 72nd hole at the TOUR Championship in 2018 to win the $10 million FedExCup bonus, it’s already been a big week. He found out on Monday that he’d won the Payne Stewart Award, given annually since 2000 to a golfer who exemplifies the late pro’s character, sportsmanship and commitment to charity. He’s happy with the progress he’s seeing on the golf course, too. Rose has kept his mind clear and hit quality shots at the right time. In short, he’s doing what Federer and Djokovic and Federer would do. “Whatever the scenarios are this week, I need to be able to swing freely and commit through coming up the 18th hole with a chance to finish top-10 or a chance to win or whatever it might be,” Rose said. “It’s a great opportunity this week just to continue to kind of practice that kind of hopefully steppingstone back towards playing great.” NOTES: Matthew Wolff may have missed the cut at the Wyndham Championship, but he walked away with $1 million after winning the Aon Risk Reward Challenge. The competition is based on a player’s two best scores each week on a designated hole. He finished with a flourish, too, making birdie on the 15th at Sedgefield on Friday. “Obviously there’s a lot of money to be made out on TOUR, but I’m new out here and every little bit helps,” said the 22-year-old . “And Aon puts on a great contest, year-long contest. Just happy that I got it done. And I knew about it kind of the last couple months, so on the Aon know holes I was a little more nervous than I usually am, but played them pretty well and just came out on top.” … There will be no changes in the final Comcast Business TOUR Top 10 standings after Jason Kokrak, who came to Greensboro ranked No. 12, and Hideki Matsuyama, who was 14th, failed to make the cut. They were the only two who could have moved into the top 10, which is based on FedExCup points, this week. So Collin Morikawa, who won the Open Championship, will get the $2 million bonus. A total of $10 million is donated to the top 10 players with No. 10 earning $500,000. … Three of the six players tied for second after the first round – Scott Piercy, Michael Thompson and Ted Potter Jr. – came to the Wyndham Championship ranked outside the top 125 but were projected inside after the first round. But the hopes of making the Playoffs for Thompson and Potter ended on Friday after they missed the cut. Potter shot 64-77 and Thompson shot 64-74. … Tyler Duncan, who is tied for fifth after shooting 62 on Friday, is currently projected to move into the top 150 at No. 147. He is already exempt for the 2021-22 season by virtue of his win last year at the RSM Classic. … Two players are currently projected to move into the top 200, which would give the access to the Korn Ferry Tour Finals. Kiradech Aphibarnrat moved from No. 204 to 192nd after shooting 68 while David Lingmerth is projected to move from No. 205 to 197th after Friday’s 67. PLAYOFFS BUBBLE WATCH Here are the players who were projected to move in and out of the top 125 at the end of Friday’s second round at Sedgefield Country Club. PROJECTED IN Scott Piercy (126 to projected 80) – Piercy maintained a share of second after shooting 66 on Friday. He is tied with former Wyndham Championship winner Webb Simpson and Olympic silver medalist Rory Sabbatini. Rory Sabbatini (141 to projected 95) – Sabbatini did not make a bogey in his second round of 64. He has made 11 birdies and dropped just one shot to par over the first two rounds. Justin Rose (138 to projected 117) – Rose made his second eagle of the week in shooting 65 on Friday. PROJECTED OUT Ryan Armour (122 to projected 126) – Armour shot 68 on Friday but he missed the cut by one. He still has a chance to make the field for Liberty National but what happens is now out of his control. Patrick Rodgers (123 to projected 127) – Rogers rallied with a 67 but also missed the cut by one. He’s in the same boat as Armour. Bo Hoag (125 to projected 128) – Hoag followed up his 67 with a one-over 71 to miss the cut by a stroke, as well. The bubble boy will have to wait until Sunday night to find out his fate.

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Rickie Fowler set to miss FedExCup Playoffs for first time in TOUR careerRickie Fowler set to miss FedExCup Playoffs for first time in TOUR career

GREENSBORO, N.C. – Rickie Fowler called it a “little kick in the butt.” That’s because the popular PGA TOUR veteran will miss the FedExCup Playoffs this year after making an early exit on Friday at the Wyndham Championship. Fowler came to Sedgefield Country Club ranked 130th in the standings but ended up going backwards after rounds of 71 and 72. It’s the first time in Fowler’s 12-year TOUR career that he won’t finish inside the top 125. “It’s a bummer and I don’t want to be in this position,” Fowler said. “Never been here. I’m used to being in contention, ready to go to East Lake and go have some fun through the Playoffs. That’s not the case this year. … Go home and get ready to go. Put the work in and get after it.” With the exception of the news that he and his wife Allison are expecting their first child, a daughter, in November, it’s been an eminently forgettable year for Fowler. He’s only had one top-10 finish in 24 starts this season, and this is his ninth missed cut. Fowler, who was once firmly entrenched among the top-10 players in the world, has slipped from 38th to No. 110 and finds himself searching for regain his form. “Yeah, it sucks,” Fowler said. “I mean, I know what I’m capable of; I’ve been up there and played against the best in the world and been a top-5, top-10 player in the world for a number of years in my career. “I’m not in a position where I’m comfortable or where I want to be. … With the season ending now for me, it’s kind of just added motivation; hey, let’s figure out what we need to go do and let’s go do it.” A tie for eighth at the PGA Championship appeared to be a positive step, and Fowler followed that with a share of 11th at the Memorial Tournament. He came to Greensboro with some momentum, too, on the heels of three straight made cuts. “It’s not far off, but there’s a lack of confidence there after not having played well very much over the last two years, so part of it is just need to get that built back up,” Fowler said. “A big part of it, too, is the reason I had some of those good results is my ball-striking was a little bit better, but the putter finally got back to where it should be. “That’s been something I’ve been able to rely on throughout my career and growing up is I’ve always been a really good putter. Over the last couple years I haven’t been able to rely on that. Not that I should have to every week, but when I’m putting well, should be in contention and having chances to win tournaments. So having off ball-striking weeks and not making putts on top of that, miss cuts and go home early.” Fowler ranked 131st in Strokes Gained: Putting entering the Wyndham Championship. Fowler says missing the Playoffs has made him even more determined to regain the kind of form that landed him on three Presidents Cup and four Ryder Cup teams, as well as in the 2016 Olympic Games. The first step, he says, is a call with his team to figure out how to best use the three-week layoff during the Playoffs to his advantage. “I was telling (caddie) Joe (Skovron) out there today towards the end, obviously weren’t going to make the cut, so it was a little bit more like I operate best when I’m kind of told what to do,” Fowler said. “Like I love having my trainer, Derek, he’s there with us at home, on the road taking care of what I need to be doing in the gym. … If I had to go work out on my own, I probably wouldn’t do as well. “So just being efficient with time and taking advantage of the time that we do have, whether it’s in the gym, at the range, on the course. So that’s the big thing is just kind of lay out a plan that we all want to accomplish and take advantage of the time that we have and get after it.”

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Jim King, PGA TOUR and PGA TOUR Champions player dies at age 86Jim King, PGA TOUR and PGA TOUR Champions player dies at age 86

Jim King, a PGA TOUR and PGA TOUR Champions player, died of causes incident to COVID-19 on August 10 in Jupiter, Florida. King was 86. King, born September 7, 1937 in Chicago, attended college at Western Illinois, where he played both golf and was a linebacker on the football team. After finishing third at the Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Golf Championship, he qualified for the 1957 NCAA Championship. Two years later, he was the IAAC medalist. On the football field, the 1959 Leathernecks, under the direction of future NFL head coach Lou Saban, went undefeated (9-0), outscoring their opponents 303-104. Other future NFL head coaches on the coaching staff were Red Miller and Joe Collier. For his collegiate athletic success, WIU inducted King into its Hall of Fame in 1987. While football was not in King’s future after graduation, golf was. After turning pro, he made periodic PGA TOUR starts, playing in 27 tournaments between 1960 and 1963. He made his TOUR debut at the 1960 Yorba Linda Open in California, tying for 60th. His best finish that season was a tie for 43rd in late-November, at the Mobile Sertoma Open in Alabama. King joined the U.S. Army at the conclusion of the 1963 season, and he served in the military for three years, as a paratrooper. He returned to the TOUR for one tournament in 1967—the Western Open—followed by his most prolific year of play in 1968, when he played in 13 tournaments, making a career-high 10 cuts. That season, King enjoyed his first top-10 when he tied for eighth at the Magnolia Classic played opposite the Masters tournament in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. He had two additional top-10s, both coming in 1972—a tie for sixth at the Shreveport Classic and a tie for 10th at the Buick Open. King would play off and on for the next 15 years while serving as a PGA professional at various Florida golf courses. His final made cut came at the 1983 PGA Championship at Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California. He finished 87th. King also courted controversy during his career, the PGA TOUR suspending him from the USI Classic in Sutton, Massachusetts. During the second round at Pleasant Valley Country Club, King allegedly grabbed rules official Pete Sesso by the throat after Sesso had warned King of slow play and began timing him. Tournament Director Jack Tuthill, a PGA TOUR employee, disqualified King after the incident that took place near the 16th green, and Tuthill suspended King from playing “until further notice.” King didn’t play in four tournaments following the USI Classic and returned to action in late-September, at the B.C. Open, where he tied for 35th. When King wasn’t playing in PGA TOUR tournaments, he was active in state opens and competing on the TOUR’s satellite Tour. King was a two-time winner of the Florida Open, in 1971 when he was the head pro at President Country Club in Boynton Beach, and again in 1976 after he had accepted the teaching-professional position at Pompano Beach’s Palm-Aire Country Club. King turned 50 in 1984 and played 12 PGA TOUR Champions tournaments in 1984 and 1985. His first event was the 1984 Digital Middlesex Classic that resulted in a tie for 13th at Nashawtuc Country Club in Massachusetts. He added a tie for 14th at the Suntree Classic and a tie-for-13th finish at the Senior PGA Championship. He joined PGA TOUR Champions full time in 1986, posting one of two third-place finishes he would enjoy on the senior circuit. King shared third place with Charles Owens at PGA National Golf Club in Palm Beach, Florida, earning $15,250. He would earn his largest paycheck a year later when he finished solo third at the Greater Grand Rapids Open in Michigan, an effort worth $17,800. King finished 22nd on the money list that year, his best performance. He ended his career with 130 total appearances, his final tournament the 2001 U.S. Senior Open. King is survived by his daughter, Maria Ribeiro (Artur) and two grandchildren. Funeral services will be August 22 at the Aycock-Riverside Funeral Home in Jupiter.

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