Day: November 13, 2022

2022-23 Rookie Ranking2022-23 Rookie Ranking

The Rookie Ranking for the 2022-23 PGA TOUR season has been transitioned into a thread on my Twitter account. Every tournament’s mini-recap will be accompanied by a table of my subjective ranking of all 28 rookies. The first 16 rookies were among the top 25 in the regular season of the 2022 Korn Ferry Tour: Tyson Alexander; Erik Barnes; Trevor Cone; Harrison Endycott; Ben Griffin; Harry Hall; S.H. Kim; Brandon Matthews; Taylor Montgomery; Vincent Norrman; Augusto Núñez; Kevin Roy; Davis Thompson; Trevor Werbylo; Kevin Yu; Carl Yuan The other 12 rookies qualified via the 2022 KFT Finals: Dean Burmester; Eric Cole; Thomas Detry; Nico Echavarria; Austin Eckroat; Tano Goya; Brent Grant; Philip Knowles; Matti Schmid; Sam Stevens; Kyle Westmoreland; Carson Young Also, as I did with Rookie Watch during the super season of 2020-21, I’m tracking notable non-members in a separate thread on Twitter. My latest tweets are visible below. If you click or tap on either, it will take you directly to the original. NOTABLE NON-MEMBERS

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Tony Finau cruises to win at Cadence Bank Houston OpenTony Finau cruises to win at Cadence Bank Houston Open

HOUSTON — Winning used to come hard for Tony Finau. Now he’s making it look easy. Staked to a four-shot lead Sunday at the Cadence Bank Houston Open, Finau stretched it to eight shots on the back nine and sailed to his third PGA TOUR victory of the year after two wins last season. With three bogeys that only affected the margin, he closed with a 1-under 69 and won by four. Finau won only once in his first 185 tournaments upon joining the PGA TOUR. Now he has four in the last 30 tournaments, including three in this calendar year. “I’ve always had belief, but confidence when you win is contagious,” Finau said. “I’m starting to put together a full-package game.” It certainly showed over four days at Memorial Park. Finau seized control with a 62 in the second round ahead of the change in weather and was superb in his bogey-free round of 68 in Saturday’s cold and wind. No one came close to catching him on Sunday. He finished at 16-under 264 and started the new season with a win — moving to No. 12 in the world ranking — after shaking off some rust in a missed cut last week at Mayakoba. PGA TOUR rookie Tyson Alexander won the B-flight, and it was a big deal. Alexander made a 30-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole for a 66 and moved out of a tie for second to be the sole runner-up. That was worth enough FedEx Cup points that it should be a virtual lock that he qualifies for the postseason next summer. “Great week for me,” Alexander said. “I wish Tony would have taken the week off.” Ben Taylor missed his 25-foot birdie putt on the 18th for a 70 and finished third. Finau said he felt uncomfortable with such a large lead at the start of the round, and he conceded he had some doubts about how he would play. Those didn’t last terribly long. He rolled in a 15-foot birdie putt on the second hole, and then quickly pulled away from the field. Finau holed a 7-foot birdie putt on the fifth, made a 40-foot birdie putt on the par-5 eighth and capped off the front nine with a 20-foot birdie putt. That gave him an eight-shot lead, and from there it was matter of staying upright. “It was one of those days I fought and fought, and I made a lot of nice putts that calmed me,” Finau said. “I’ve never been in this position. I had a lot of nerves. Overall, as the round went on, I felt better. I was happy to get the `W’ today.” He didn’t make a bogey until the 10th hole, and then he dropped two more shots along the back nine from a bunker and with a long three-putt. Even so, no one ever got closer than the four-shot margin at the end of the round. Alex Noren had a 68 and tied for fourth to move to No. 45 in the world. He will need to stay in the top 50 by the end of the year for any hope of a Masters invitation. Masters champion Scottie Scheffler closed with a 67 and tied for ninth. He needed a win to replace Rory McIlroy at No. 1 in the world. McIlroy is playing next week in Dubai to wrap up the DP World Tour season, while Scheffler will next play at the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas, a 20-man field that includes host Tiger Woods.

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Tommy Fleetwood wins first title since 2019 in South AfricaTommy Fleetwood wins first title since 2019 in South Africa

SUN CITY, South Africa — Tommy Fleetwood saved his best for last with a final-round 67 to come from behind and retain his title at the Nedbank Golf Challenge on Sunday as he ended a three-year winless drought. The Englishman moved up from a tie for seventh overnight to finish 11 under par overall and win by a stroke from New Zealand’s Ryan Fox (68), who was hoping to go top of the season rankings with a victory in Sun City but just missed out after making a bogey on the last. Fleetwood won in Sun City in 2019 but was the defending champion after the 2020 and 2021 tournaments were canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic. He kept his nerve when others around him faded on the final day, making four birdies on his opening nine and rebounding from a bogey on No. 12 with an incredible eagle on the par-5 No. 14 when he holed out from a bunker. He made pars the rest of the way home to become the first player since compatriot Lee Westwood in 2011 to win back-to-back titles at the Nedbank. Fox was the first-round leader after opening with a superb 64, raising his hopes that he could win in Sun City and overtake Rory McIlroy at the top of the European rankings ahead of the season-ending World Tour Championship in Dubai next week. He would have had a chance if not for the bogey five on No. 18 — his only bogey of the round — that allowed Fleetwood to win. Fox stays second in the season standings behind McIlroy, while Fleetwood is fourth heading to Dubai. McIlroy wasn’t playing at the Nedbank Challenge. Shubhankar Sharma (69) was third. Rasmus Hojgaard and Thomas Detry had shared the third-round lead but couldn’t hold on through a final day that was interrupted by rain. Hojgaard carded a 4-over 76 to finish tied for eighth while Detry’s final-round 77 saw him tumble to a share of 13th. European Ryder Cup captain Luke Donald was another man in with a chance at the halfway point but his search for a first European or PGA TOUR title in a decade came undone over the weekend as he shot 73 and 75 in his final two rounds to be one of those tied with Detry in 13th place.

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