Slow-ripening success

You can count Pat Perez out of the kale-and-crunches revolution. The defending champion at this week’s OHL Classic at Mayakoba much prefers the comforts of his couch and the TV remote, and at 41 he’s not part of the PGA TOUR’s youth movement, either. Having made it to his first TOUR Championship at East Lake at the end of last season, when players in their 20s won a record 28 times, Perez was asked where he fits in. “I’m the old guy,â€� he said, drawing laughter. No one was laughing, though, when on Oct. 15 he won the CIMB Classic at TPC Kuala Lumpur, giving him two wins in a span of less than 12 months. The old guy had won by four strokes, and he’s not the only graybeard who is just now hitting his stride. Perhaps inspired by New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady, who’s yet to show any signs of a drop-off even after turning 40 this summer, the Fab 40s on the PGA TOUR are enjoying a mini-moment. Perez will enter his title defense at Mayakoba as the current FedExCup points leader. Charley Hoffman made his first Presidents Cup team at age 40 after being selected as a Captain’s Pick by U.S. Team Captain Steve Stricker. The other Captain’s Pick was 47-year-old Phil Mickelson, who extended his streak of having played in every Presidents Cup. Two weeks after Perez’ win, Ryan Armour — also 41 and the most accurate driver on TOUR last season (72.7 percent) — won for the first time in 105 starts at the Sanderson Farms Championship. That same day, 41-year-old Henrik Stenson – who won the 2016 Open Championship at age 40 – tied for second at the World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions. Meanwhile, Paul Casey, 40, is playing the most consistent golf of his career. In his last 11 starts, he’s finished inside the top 20 10 times, including three top-5s in the FedExCup Playoffs. Last week, Tiger Woods, 41, announced he will return to competition at the Hero World Challenge later this month. As for Perez, not only is he the defending champ this week at Mayakoba, he’s the current FedExCup points leader. Five other 40-somethings are inside the top 20 – Armour (9), Alex Cejka (13), Stenson (T-15), Mickelson (18) and Casey (20). As Casey joked this summer, “Apparently life begins at 40.â€� Not that any of this has come easily. In fact, you might say it’s been a long time coming. On a Talk of the TOUR podcast last week with host John Swantek, Armour noted that he had no place to play as recently as 2013. Then he made a few simple but crucial adjustments, starting with a healthy living pledge. “My wife was just like, ‘OK, listen, we’re going to go forward with this,’â€� Armour said. “‘We’re going to eat better, we’re going to exercise more, we’re just going to be healthy individuals, and no matter what happens with the golf, we’ll always have that.’â€� Armour also abandoned his misguided efforts to get longer. Instead, he changed shafts to bolster his brand of precision golf, then finished T4 at the Wyndham Championship in August, his first top-10 in more than a decade. (Incidentally, the tournament was won by the 41-year-old Stenson). A runner-up at the Web.com Tour’s Nationwide Children’s Hospitals Championship secured Armour’s TOUR card for this season, and at the Sanderson Farms, he became the eighth player since 1970 to get his first win at 41 or older. OLDEST FIRST-TIME WINNERS (SINCE 1970) Woods has won 79 TOUR titles, second-highest total of all time behind Sam Snead’s 82. Of course, none of those have been since he’s turned 40 (he’ll turn 42 on Dec. 30). Given his shaky health the last few years while undergoing a series of back surgeries, there’s no guarantee he’ll be able to add to that total. On the flip side, there is certainly hope he can continue his chase of not only Snead’s win total, but Jack Nicklaus’ 18 majors. Nicklaus, Snead, Ben Hogan, Gary Player and Lee Trevino all won major titles after turning 40 – Nicklaus and Hogan, in fact, won three majors each after 40. Since 2011, the Open Championship has been won by 40-somethings four times — Stenson in 2016, Mickelson in 2013, Els in 2012 and Darren Clarke in 2011. Asked last week about Woods, Els urged patience in light of the 14-time major winner’s back problems, but added, “If we can do it, he can certainly do it.â€� Legendary range rat Vijay Singh has the most wins by a player in his 40s since 1970, with 22. Kenny Perry is in second place with 11, and Steve Stricker won nine times. Perez, Armour and Woods would love to emulate any of them, and Perez is clearly off to the best start. Given truth serum, though, all three would probably take Fred Funk’s 40s. The likeable, straight-hitting Funk won five of his eight TOUR titles after turning 40, including THE PLAYERS Championship in 2005, when he was 48. He played in the Ryder Cup that year and made the 2003 and 2005 U.S. Presidents Cup teams at ages 47 and 49, respectively. “I got comfortable in my own skin,â€� says Funk, now 61 and the father of an aspiring TOUR pro, former Texas golfer Taylor Funk. “I was determined to work hard and see how good I could do.â€� Funk had good role models when it came to work. His mother, Ruby, ran a labor-intensive custom drape-making business. His older brother, Bernie, worked hard at jobs ranging from the fire department to the civil air patrol. Fred got his first job as a paper boy when he was 8. He later worked as a newspaper delivery driver and the University of Maryland golf coach. By the time he got out on TOUR, Funk was in his early 30s, and when he kept progressing into his 40s, he was keen to make up for lost time. “Whereas a lot of the guys my age, they’d come straight out on TOUR after college,â€� he said, “and they were maybe burnt out.â€� Not Funk. He kept at it. As for Perez, he’s a harder worker than he lets on. “I’m such a different person than I was 17 years ago, even like five years ago,â€� Perez said after winning the CIMB. “I’m learning how to play the game and learning how to play my own game and stay within myself and that kind of stuff. I’m a late bloomer.â€� Just as dogged persistence can fuel successful 40-somethings, so, too, can a change of heart. Jay Haas, who wanted to be active on TOUR upon the arrival of his son Bill, rededicated himself to the game and racked up eight top-10 finishes in 2003 at 49, when he made his second Presidents Cup team. With eight more top-10s in 2004, Haas made his fourth Ryder Cup team at age 50. “Jay is an example of a change of mindset,â€� Funk says. “Because when he reignited his drive, he went to a level that he was never at before and made those teams. He flipped a switch.â€� Kenny Perry also rededicated himself late, with the goal of making the 2008 U.S. Ryder Cup team that would face Europe at Valhalla, in Perry’s beloved home state of Kentucky. The results were astounding: Perry won three times on TOUR at age 47, getting to 14 victories so suddenly he began to talk about reaching 20. (He ended with 14.) “I guess 47 is now the new 30,â€� Perry said at the time. His turnaround spoke to his focused work but after winning the 2008 John Deere Classic, his third victory in seven weeks, he cited guile, too. Asked if a 27-year-old Perry would have won that day at TPC Deere Run, he gave an emphatic no. “I wouldn’t have had the nerves to handle all that,â€� Perry said. “Knowing my golf swing was out of sync and out of kilter. I knew my putter was so good. I knew if I get it on that green, I would have a chance to make a putt. I couldn’t have won like that 20 years ago.â€� Jack Nicklaus won the Masters at 46. Two months later Raymond Floyd, 43, won the U.S. Open, the last of his four majors. Mark O’Meara won the 2008 Masters and The Open at 41, going from a nice player (and a Pebble Beach specialist) to a member of the World Golf Hall of Fame. Last week Rod Pampling returned to the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in Las Vegas, where he was the defending champion after breaking through the year before at 47. Asked about winning during a season that was dominated by players in their 20s, Pampling called it the beauty of golf. “We might not feature as often as the young guys do,â€� he added, “but when we’re there, we have a chance. We know how to win, so the experience comes rushing back. So the key is just when it comes, you know, we’re prepared for that and we can, hopefully, take advantage of it — which we did last year.â€� This week’s stop at El Camaleon Golf Course, a roughly 7,000-yard par 71 Greg Norman design that wends through mangrove jungles, limestone canals and oceanfront stretches of sand, seems particularly 40s-friendly. It’s even 50s-friendly. Funk won there in 2007 when he was 51. Perez, whose second win ties him with Mickelson and Stenson for most victories by players 40 or older since 2013, won’t have to think back too far if he gets into contention. Neither will Armour, whose Sanderson Farms win was the 20th by players in their 40s in that time span. The two recent winners will both play Mayakoba. Hoffman will be in Mexico, too, as will D.A. Points, 40, who won the Puerto Rico Open last season. Take note, Tiger. Being “the old guyâ€� isn’t a bad business these days.

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Monday FinishMonday Finish

Welcome to the Monday Finish, where we’re still trying to replicate Jordan Spieth’s bunker shot. Looks like we’re going to be here a while. FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1. The aftermath of a milestone is the perfect opportunity for reflection, and it may be time to admit we’ve failed to appreciate the true level of Spieth’s talent. Every little lull in his game, like the two consecutive cuts he missed in May, lead to questions about his game. But Spieth’s victory at the Travelers Championship, and the dramatic fashion in which he did it, serve as a strong reminder that he is a special talent. This was the 10th victory of his career. He’s only 23 years old. It’s impressive for a player to earn his PGA TOUR card before turning 24. Spieth already owns two majors and a FedExCup. The high standard he set in 2015 makes people under-appreciate what he’s accomplished since. He’s won two times in each of the past two seasons, and he ranks high in every possible metric: fourth in the FedExCup, third in the Official World Golf Ranking and second on the U.S. Presidents Cup team rankings. No, he’s not immune to bad weeks, but they should be placed in a larger context. We’re watching Spieth compile a resume worthy of the World Golf Hall of Fame. Those who have talked about Spieth’s slumps may just be too impatient. Since October 2014, he’s never gone more than 12 PGA TOUR starts without a win. Spieth and Dustin Johnson are the only players to post multiple victories in each of the past two seasons. In 16 starts this season, Spieth has seven top-10s, including five finishes in the top three. Spieth’s dramatic hole-out did more than net another PGA TOUR win. It reminded us of what he’s capable of. 2. Spieth’s win continued an impressive run for the 25-and-under set. It used to be that any player in his 20s was considered young, but now we see a growing contingent of players who are racking up victories before they turn 25. There have been 12 wins this season by a player 25 or younger. Eight different players have combined to win those 12 titles. Justin Thomas has three wins this season, while Spieth and Hideki Matsuyama have two wins apiece. The other winners this season who were 25 or younger at the time of their victory are Jon Rahm, Cameron Smith, Si Woo Kim, Daniel Berger and Mackenzie Hughes. 3. Berger may have cost himself a spot on last year’s Ryder Cup team at last year’s Travelers Championship, but this year at TPC River Highlands he all but clinched his spot on Team USA. Berger, who lost a three-shot lead in the final round of last year’s Travelers, made up a three-shot deficit Sunday to catch Spieth before falling in a playoff. The runner-up finish moved Berger to fourth in the U.S. Presidents Cup standings. Berger isn’t short on confidence, or distance, and should fit in quite well as a rookie on the young team. Half of the top 10 players in the U.S. point standings would be representing their country for the first time in professional competition. The five potential newcomers are Berger, Justin Thomas, Kevin Kisner, Kevin Chappell and Brian Harman. The win also moved Berger to eighth in the FedExCup as he looks to make his third consecutive TOUR Championship. He finished 11th in the FedExCup en route to winning the 2015 Rookie of the Year Award, and was 26th last year. 4. Rory McIlroy’s putting woes continue. He finished 17th at the Travelers despite ranking 69th (out of the 74 players who completed 54 holes) in Strokes Gained: Putting “Tee-to-green, I’m right where I need to be,â€� said McIlroy, who ranks 65th in the FedExCup. “(I’m) driving the ball as well as I ever have, and hitting my irons pretty good. If I could sharpen up the short game a little bit and just convert a few more chances I’m giving myself, I feel like I’ll be right there for the next few weeks.â€� Hunter Mahan, who beat McIlroy in the championship match of the 2012 WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play, was one of the players who tied McIlroy last week at TPC River Highlands. Mahan’s game has fallen on hard times. He began the week ranked 215th in the FedExCup and 889th in the Official World Golf Ranking. The T17 was Mahan’s first top-50 finish since he finished 43rd at the Farmers Insurance Open in January 2016. Mahan now ranks 195th in the FedExCup and 723rd in the world ranking. 5. Before Spieth’s bunker shot overshadowed all that occurred last week at TPC River Highlands, the play of Monday qualifier Chase Sieffert was among the week’s interesting storylines. Seiffert, a Florida State teammate with Berger and Brooks Koepka, was one shot off the lead after birdieing his first hole Saturday, but faded to weekend rounds of 72-71 to finish 43rd. He had the opportunity to be the first Monday qualifier to finish in the top 10 this season. Only four Monday qualifiers have posted top-25s. This was the second successful qualifying attempt this season for Seiffert, who finished T74 at The RSM Classic. FIVE INSIGHTS 1. This probably should come as no surprise, but Spieth was among the week’s best from around the green. He finished second in Strokes Gained: Around-the-Green, averaging +1.51 strokes gained per round. It was the best performance around the greens by a winner this season (at a tournament where all four rounds were measured by ShotLink). Rod Pampling averaged +1.30 Strokes Gained: Around-the-Green in his win at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, while Kim averaged +1.23 in his win at THE PLAYERS Championship. 2. Perhaps Spieth’s iron play should get more credit, though. He leads the PGA TOUR in Strokes Gained: Approach-the-Green this season, and ranked seventh in that category at the Travelers Championship (+1.25). Spieth average proximity to the hole on approach shots (27 feet, 0 inches) was nearly 15 feet better than the field average (41’, 8â€�). Spieth won despite not having his best stuff with his putter, finishing 31st in Strokes Gained: Putting (+0.57). 3. This was just the fourth time this season that a player has won after losing strokes to the field off the tee. Spieth ranked 56th in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee last week, averaging -0.26 strokes per round. Spieth owns two of the four wins this season by a player who lost strokes to the field off the tee. He also did so in his win at the AT&T Pebble Beach 4. Spieth joined Tiger Woods as the only players in the modern era to win 10 times by the age of 24. Woods won 15 times before he turned 24. It’s impossible for Spieth to match that number, as he’ll celebrate his 24th birthday on July 27. 5. This is the 10th week this season that Spieth has ranked in the top five of the FedExCup. TOP THREE VIDEOS 1. That rake throw. 2. I feel like we’ve seen this before. 3. Until Sunday, this was my favorite Jordan Spieth bunker shot of the week.

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Featured Groups roundtable: Sony Open in HawaiiFeatured Groups roundtable: Sony Open in Hawaii

The PGA TOUR visits a classic venue, the Seth Raynor-designed Waialae Country Club, for this week's Sony Open in Hawaii. Several big names made the short trip from Honolulu to Maui after competing in last week's Sentry Tournament of Champions, while the majority of the field is making its first start of the calendar year. RELATED: Full tee times Below are some of the players to keep an eye on this week, including Sentry champion Harris English, the man he beat in a sudden-death playoff (Joaquin Niemann) and defending champion Cameron Smith. We've assembled our team of writers to answer a question about each Featured Group, as well. Enjoy. THURSDAY Collin Morikawa, Webb Simpson, Marc Leishman – Leishman is 37. Webb is 35. Collin is just 23. What will Collin's resume look like when he's 36? SEAN MARTIN: For reference, Dustin Johnson is 36 years old. He's also a generational talent. He has 24 wins, including two majors. Morikawa is already ahead of Johnson's pace - DJ didn't win a major until 2016 - but I think anything over 15 wins and two majors is a big success for Morikawa. That's a resume that will get in the World Golf Hall of Fame, after all. CAMERON MORFIT: Impossible to say, but Morikawa is such a special case because his mental game is as sharp as his iron play. I'm confident in saying he'll have at least 10 TOUR wins by then, and we'll see him representing the Stars and Stripes on multiple Ryder and Presidents Cup teams. Also, he's so good from tee to green, like Garcia, that I'm going to say Morikawa wins THE PLAYERS Championship somewhere in there, too. BEN EVERILL: Double digit TOUR wins is on his horizon and I wouldn't be surprised if he follows in Dustin Johnson's footsteps by way of winning at least once every season. I think he will be a major presence in the big tournaments and perhaps jag a few more but history shows you can be one of the best and still have the stars not align in those. Sergio Garcia, Joaquin Niemann, Hideki Matsuyama – Matsuyama tied for last at Kapalua. Niemann tied for first (before losing in a playoff). Matsuyama is 21st in the world ranking. Niemann is 31st. Who ends 2021 ranked higher? MARTIN: Niemann is trending in the right direction, with seven top-25s in his last nine starts, but I'm not selling Matsuyama yet. He and Niemann both tied for third at the BMW and Matsuyama also was runner-up at the recent Vivint Houston Open. It was an awful putting performance last week but I think his ball-striking is enough to keep him among the game's elite. MORFIT: Matsuyama is dangerous at the Sony, where he went 74-67-67-66 for T12 last year, but I'm going to have to go with Niemann based on their massive disparity on the greens. Matsuyama needs to figure something out with the putter; Niemann is already there. EVERILL: Man, this is a tough call. I'm all in on Niemann being a star and rising through the ranks but Hideki is usually so rock solid. I expect a bounce back from Matsuyama this week. Kapalua greens are not for him. And he has Phoenix coming up. So Hideki - but just. FRIDAY Carlos Ortiz, Sungjae Im, Cameron Smith – They're Nos. 16, 17 and eight in the FedExCup, respectively. Who finishes the season ranked highest? MARTIN: Sungjae Im. The Super Season means more opportunities for golf's iron man. He seems to have turned things around after struggling for a few months. He was T5 at the Sentry in addition to his runner-up at the Masters. MORFIT: Im looks like he could be lining up for a massive season, and I see he's No. 1 in this week's Power Rankings. Still, I'll go ahead and pick Ortiz here on the theory that he's streaky and dangerous once he's full of self-belief, as he was when he won three times in one season on the Korn Ferry Tour. EVERILL: Smith. This is certainly with some bias as Im is no doubt going to play more and have a chance at more points but I think Smith will shake off some of his mid-season lethargy this time around and finish high in some big events. He was runner-up at the Masters (along with Im), after all. Harris English, Adam Scott, Matt Kuchar – Who has more wins in the remainder of the season? English or Kuchar and Scott combined? MARTIN: English. To be honest, this win probably should have come sooner. His 11 top-10s since the start of last season are the third-most on TOUR (behind only Justin Thomas and Bryson DeChambeau). I expect another win out of him this season, while I'm not sure we can say the same about Scott and Kuchar. Scott's win at last year's Genesis was his first since 2016, and Kuchar has been winless in five of the last six seasons. MORFIT: English is going to have a big year, and I'll say he has more wins than those other two guys combined. In a way, he's riding a hot streak of two straight wins after his victory with Kuchar in the (unofficial) QBE Shootout. And I think it's very possible English will win the Sony, where he had three straight top-10 finishes from 2013-15. EVERILL: I rate English highly after seeing him close up last week but if the measure is from now on - I'll go with Scott/Kuchar. And by that I mean Adam Scott. I see Scotty winning again this season and while English is by all means capable, multiple-win seasons are hard to come by.

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