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Power Rankings: Fantasy golf advice for the FedExCup Playoffs

Promise. That’s the essence of the FedExCup Playoffs in a single word, but it stands for more than one thing. Qualifying means fully exempt status for the 2018-19 season, the guarantee for finishing inside the top 125 of the FedExCup standings entering the four-event series. It’s the definitive in advance of the opportunity presented during the Playoffs itself. While an individual sport challenges the definition of the PGA TOUR’s Playoffs, what’s not different about this system is that anything can happen. My annual Power Rankings takes into account the usual variables that project success and inject trends that have emerged during the Playoffs. Scroll beneath the 30 golfers ranked for more insight and intel. POWER RANKINGS: FEDEXCUP PLAYOFFS RANK PLAYER COMMENT Seeded second and in possession of an it-factor unto his own. Unflappable and fearless, he’s in the strongest position of any defending FedExCup champion. Also defending at TPC Boston. The 4-seed has gone 14-for-14 with two wins among eight top 10s in 2017-18. Finished ninth in last year’s FedExCup after going T10-T10-T2-T10 in the Playoffs. Won at Aronimink (BMW) in 2010. Beware the PGA TOUR’s best putter. Two wins and a T2 among 11 top 20s in just 16 starts this season. Two top fives at both Ridgewood (2010, 2014) and TPC Boston (2010, 2011). The 6-seed. First FedExCup appearance in five years. While he opens 20th, it’d be an upset if he’s not among the top five entering the TOUR Championship and a member of the Ryder Cup team. If you ever wondered how difficult it is to win the FedExCup, he debuted last year as the 6-seed and went T3-T4-T5-T7 to finish “only” fifth. Opens this edition 13th despite a curtailed schedule. Top seed also is No. 1 in too many stats to list, but short-term inconsistency suggests a lack of focus and over-reliance on natural ability. Defending THE NORTHERN TRUST on a different course. Poised to spoil as the 43-seed. Hadn’t opened worse than eighth (twice) in his first five appearances. Won the 2015 FedExCup. Solo second at TPC Boston last year. Putting is improving. It hasn’t mattered where or when, he’s shown up and delivered. With so many notable performances in the biggest events, he feels low seeded 23rd. Fifth on TOUR in adjusted scoring. The 10-seed is on the Ryder Cup team and headed to East Lake for the fifth straight year, so he’s chasing Player of the Year honors. Finished T4-T5-T6 in last three appearances at TPC Boston. THE PLAYERS champ seeded seventh is evidence of a guy in his prime. The transformation with his putter has been remarkable. TPC Boston winner in 2011. Two top fives at East Lake. Talk about the shot of adrenaline at Sedgefield what with the opening 59 and wire-to-wire victory. Four top 10s in last eight starts and 30th in points. The 2012 FedExCup champion. From 2015-2017, he finished 13th, fifth and 11th, respectively, in the FedExCup. In the last nine Playoffs events, he’s posted two seconds, two fourth- and three fifth-place finishes. Opens 16th. This should be fun. At 12th in FedExCup points, he’s the only non-winner inside the top 16. Two runner-up finishes among eight top 10s in 2017-18. Already his fourth Playoffs appearance. It’s fair to wonder how the 3-seed will, well, fare in these non-majors, no? He’s managed only two top 30s in a combined nine starts in the first three Playoffs events from 2015-2017. To no one’s surprise, he thrived in his Playoffs debut last year with top 20s in all four events. At 78th, he was the lowest seed to reach East Lake. This time, he’s 14th and licking his chops. Erased all doubt over his commitment to excellence on the PGA TOUR in the last two months. His ability to sustain top-shelf form means he’s a target as the opening 8-seed. The 28-seed is seeking to become the first to successfully defend a title at the TOUR Championship. Since then, he’s recorded a trio of T2s, including at TPC Sawgrass and Carnoustie. Perhaps he’ll remember he finished a respective second, third and first in the FedExCup in last three Ryder Cup years. Opens 21st but dissatisfied with his season. Two-time champ at TPC Boston. Heating up again and, oh, how timely. T22-T17-T6 in last three starts. Seeded 33rd and fifth on TOUR in both total driving and GIR. Advanced to East Lake in five out of six attempts. A virtual lock to advance to East Lake for the second straight year, the 18-seed recorded two runner-up finishes and a pair of T5s this season. Inside the top 10 in both total driving and GIR. Chasing fourth appearance at East Lake but opens as the 40-seed. Was a respective 17th, 11th and ninth in the last three Playoffs. Still has ax to grind. Ninth in strokes gained: putting. Uncharacteristic stumble at Travelers (MC) is ancient history. He’s 4-for-4 since with a pair of top 15s. Seeded 22nd, he’ll be defending the BMW (different course). Third at TPC Boston in 2017. Started the season near the bottom of the graduate reshuffle category, yet debuts at 42nd in points. Modified his late schedule to be ready. Ranks seventh in strokes gained: putting. Opens 11th in points, so he’s a lock for the TOUR Championship, but with a Ryder Cup berth presumably on the line, he’ll need to improve on lackluster form over his last six starts. Enigmatic, mercurial, confusing. No matter how you define him, he’s compelling. Still cutting his teeth in the Playoffs, but he’ll appear in all four events starting ninth in points. Three-time winner in 2017-18 is seeded fifth, but he limps in without a top 30 in last four starts. Only one top 25 at TPC Boston in 11 tries (T16, 2011), but top 10s in last two starts at East Lake. Although he won at Greenbrier in early July, the 19-seed is a mild sleeper to contend for the FedExCup given his apt to get crazy-hot. T9 at Ridgewood in 2014 and T6 at TPC Boston in 2017. At 56th, he’s the lowest opening seed featured here. The terrific fit with Ridgewood is the key for the ball-striker. T18 last year at TPC Boston. Top 20s in his last three starts. The clubhouse leader for the Rookie of the Year award splashes as the 31-seed. Went 21-for-26 with a win among eight top 25s thanks to a reliable blend of accuracy off the tee and putting. The sharpshooter hung on to open 24th, but he’s managed only one top-35 finish in his last eight starts. Has experience at both Ridgewood and TPC Boston with a T9 at the latter in 2014. Championships in professional sports require a blend of success both during the regular season and in the postseason. This is no different on the PGA TOUR, but there’s many routes to the same destination. All three iterations of the Playoffs points system (2007-2008; 2009-2014; 2015-present) yielded FedExCup champions who opened the Playoffs as the No. 1 seed. Tiger Woods opened at the top en route to both of his FedExCup titles (2007, 2009). Jordan Spieth joined him in 2015. Dustin Johnson begins the 12th edition at No. 1, but the door is open for all comers. In the most impressive display of fulfilling promise, Billy Horschel opened 69th in 2014 and missed the cut in the first event to fall to 82nd. He then went T2-Win-Win to take the FedExCup. Two years later, Rory McIlroy won two Playoffs events, including the TOUR Championship in a playoff, to prevail after opening as the 36-seed and slipping two spots with a T31 to start the series. THE NORTHERN TRUST at Ridgewood Country Club is reserved for all 125 Playoffs qualifiers. The course in Paramus, New Jersey, hosted the opener in 2008, 2010 and 2014. Full-season points are carried into the tournament. FedExCup points earned in the Playoffs are quadrupled, thus making possible the surprises often experienced in any playoffs. After the conclusion of THE NORTHERN TRUST, the top 100 in the updated FedExCup standings will advance to the Dell Technologies Championship at TPC Boston in Norton, Massachusetts, the only site the tournament has ever known. Only the first two events in the Playoffs will include 36-hole cuts, but if more than 78 golfers survive either cut, there will not be a secondary cut of low 70 and ties. At the Playoffs midpoint, the top 70 will qualify for the BMW Championship, this year contested at Aronimink Golf Club in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania. It underwent full-scale modifications since it last hosted the Quicken Loans National in 2011. The top 30 in FedExCup points at the conclusion of the BMW Championship will comprise the field for the TOUR Championship at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta. It’s hosted every edition of the event since 2004 and thrice prior. (Just as Monday’s Power Rankings for THE NORTHERN TRUST focused on only that tournament and Ridgewood as host, each of the tournaments will receive individualized Power Rankings.) No matter the scoring system, all of the top-13 seeds entering the Playoffs have always advanced to the TOUR Championship. Since 2015, 17 golfers who started the Playoffs outside the top 30 worked their way into the season finale. The worst opening seeds in each edition to turn the trick were Daniel Berger (46th in 2015), Sean O’Hair (108th in 2016) and Patrick Cantlay (78th in 2017). Also since 2015, a top-33 finish in THE NORTHERN TRUST has been enough to survive and advance to the Dell Technologies Championship. From there, all top 20s at TPC Boston spawned berths into the BMW. In each of the last three Playoffs, exactly four golfers who started the BMW outside the top 30 in points qualified for the exclusive field at East Lake. All but three of the 12 recorded a top-10 finish in the BMW: Harris English (32-seed in 2015; T19 at BMW), Xander Schauffele (32-seed in 2017; T20 at BMW) and Sergio Garcia (34-seed in 2017; T12 at BMW). Once in the TOUR Championship, if any of the top-five seeds wins the tournament, he will win the FedExCup, a five-year TOUR exemption and a spot in the Sentry Tournament of Champions (if not already eligible). In addition to that chance for all 30 in the field, carte-blanche scheduling for 2018-19 is already guaranteed. Exemptions into the first three majors, the WGC-HSBC Champions and the WGC-Mexico Championship will be extended. For those finishing inside the top 60 in points, spots in the CIMB Classic and THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES this fall are made available. The top 70 will receive coveted tee times for the Arnold Palmer Invitational and Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide Insurance, both of which reward their champions three-year TOUR exemptions. The top 80 in the final FedExCup standings will be exempt into the Charles Schwab Challenge (at Colonial Country Club), while all 125 can book trips to the CareerBuilder Challenge, THE PLAYERS Championship and the RBC Heritage. All of the tournaments cited here are invitationals. So, for first-time Playoffs qualifiers in particular, they represent the next level of regular competition on the circuit. TOUR status and schedule guarantees aside, there’s also the not-so-small matter of the FedExCup bonus money up for grabs. The FedExCup champ will pocket $10 million of the $35-million prize fund. That trickles all the way down past the Playoffs participants. Even the top 25 who didn’t qualify (those ranking 126-150 in the overall standings) receive $32,000 apiece. ROB BOLTON’S SCHEDULE PGATOUR.COM’s Fantasy Insider Rob Bolton reviews and previews every tournament from numerous angles. Look for his following contributions as scheduled. MONDAY: Rookie Ranking, Reshuffle, Medical Extensions, Power Rankings (THE NORTHERN TRUST) TUESDAY*: Power Rankings (FedExCup Playoffs), Sleepers, Facebook Live, Fantasy Insider WEDNESDAY: One & Done THURSDAY: Champions One & Done * – Rob is a member of the panel for PGATOUR.COM’s Expert Picks for PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO, which also publishes on Tuesdays.

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Ryan Armour wins first PGA TOUR title in style at Sanderson Farms ChampionshipRyan Armour wins first PGA TOUR title in style at Sanderson Farms Championship

JACKSON, Miss. – Move over youngsters, there’s still room at the top for the old guys. On the same weekend 37-year-old Justin Rose won the WGC-HSBC Champions, 41-year-old Ryan Armour polished off a sensational week of golf on Sunday at the Country Club of Jackson, shooting 4-under 68 to run away with the Sanderson Farms Championship. For more of what unfolded in Jackson, click here for the Daily Wrap-up. Armour’s fourth-straight round in the 60s was good for a five-shot victory over Chesson Hadley, and his first PGA TOUR title, in his 105th TOUR event. He won $774,000, and 300 FedExCup points. He is the fifth first-time champion in the last seven years for this event, but unlike the last three winners here, Armour is far from a fresh-faced 20-something. Instead, he’s a journeyman who joined the TOUR 10 years ago and has split his time between the PGA TOUR and Web.com Tour, going four years (2011-14) without making one PGA TOUR start. At some point, he said, he realized he needed to quit trying to stay with the young, big hitters, and stick to what he does best, a somewhat boring but awfully effective game of fairways and greens, fairways and greens. He did it remarkably well on Sunday, hitting 15 of 18 greens and 10 of 14 fairways. After a windy, bone-chilling third round on Saturday, the weather was a bit warmer on Sunday – and Armour stayed hot. For the week, he ranked third in driving accuracy, first in proximity to the hole on approach shots, second in strokes gained putting – and next-to-last in driving distance. He also led the field with 28 birdies for the week, including six on Sunday. And even when he did experience a hiccup with a three-putt bogey on No. 16, he followed that with a 45-foot birdie bomb on No. 17. It was a remarkable display of cool, calm and collected for a guy who showed very little emotion all week. Armour started with a five-shot lead and was never really challenged, even when local favorite Jonathan Randolph shot 29 on the front and shot up the leaderboard, at one point getting within three strokes of Armour. “What he did today was phenomenal,â€� said Scott Strohmeyer, who was in the final group with Armour. “Coming out of the gates, knowing he was probably nervous, every shot was just where he wanted it, and then he made some putts. His putter was hot this week.â€� Armour said it probably wasn’t his best putting week, but  “the combination, the fairways, the greens, the putts – that was the best it’s ever been.â€� The win, said Armour, is “a big monkey off my back, I’m not going to lie. There’s a lot of emotions running through my head right now. … It’s great. It’s job security, which I’ve never really had out here. It’s vindication, I guess. That wouldn’t be a good word. Validation is a better word, that you don’t have to hit it 330 in the air to win golf tournament. I hit a lot of fairways. I hit a lot of greens. I made a lot of putts.â€� Strohmeyer, who shot 71 and finished T4 in his first PGA TOUR event, led the tournament in average driving distance at 314 yards, some 50 yards farther than Armour. There were times Sunday when the two didn’t seem to be in the same zip code while hitting their second shots. Asked how he ignores the longer hitters and sticks with his game plan, Armour said: “First, you giggle. It’s pretty funny how far Scott hit it today. He’s the longest guy I’ve ever seen, without a doubt. But somehow you have to believe in something out here, which is I don’t hit it 330. “The fact is, I hit fairways and greens, and somehow that works.â€� Going back to the Wyndham Championship in August, when he finished T4, Armour has made 63 birdies and been 41 under par in his last 10 rounds. He said his coach gave him a new five-year plan in April. “Maybe I’m getting there a little quicker,â€� he said, smiling. “I made some tweaks this summer, and right before Greensboro I made some equipment changes that have paid off.â€� OBSERVATIONS ON FIRE: Randolph, who grew up in the Jackson area, played at Ole Miss and calls Country Club of Jackson his home course, poured in seven birdie putts on the front nine to go from T9 to alone in second place at 14 under when he made the turn. The fun stopped on No. 10, with a bogey, and he played the back in 2-over 38, good for the second-best round of the day, 67. He finished T3, far better than his previous best TOUR finish of T8. “I never got nervous,â€� Randolph said. “I wasn’t shocked about that, but it was really relieving to feel like I belong out here. … To not execute on the back nine stings a bit, but there will be more years.â€� VIVA LAS VEGAS: Strohmeyer’s 71 included five birdies and two costly double-bogeys. Still, his T4 was a fantastic finish when you consider this: It was his first PGA TOUR event, and he earned his spot in the tournament by holing out a bunker shot on the third playoff hole in the Monday qualifier – after having to go through the Thursday pre-qualifier. He has no playing status on the PGA TOUR or Web.com Tour, but the top-10 finish earned him a spot in next week’s Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in Las Vegas. “I’m just excited to have another tournament to play in,â€� said Strohmeyer. “After missing at the First Stage [of Q-School], I didn’t know if I was going to play again this year.â€� Asked what the last 10 days have been like, he said: “If I got in, it was like, ‘I know I can do this,’ but then to actually do it, to play in the final group, and (finish) in the top 10, it’s truly a dream come true.â€� BIG MARGIN: Armour’s five-shot win marked the largest margin of victory for this tournament since Frank Connor beat Brian Mogg by that amount in 1988. MOVING UP: Hadley’s second-place finish following a T3 at the Safeway Open moved him from No. 24 to No. 6 in the FedExCup. QUOTABLE “We used to call those Randolph runs, and I got on one today. My college coach used to tell me, you better keep making birdies when you can, because eventually it’s going to stop.â€� – Jonathan Randolph, on his front-nine seven-birdie binge “I think the love of competition, which is what drives most of us. I have loved to compete since I was a kid. Plus, I don’t know what else I would do.â€� – Ryan Armour, on what has kept him motivated during some of his lean years as a pro. SUPERLATIVES Low Round: Ricky Barnes fired a bogey-free 6-under 66 to move from T43 to T10. Longest Drive: Scott Strohmeyer hit it 374 yards on the par-5 14th. Longest Putt: 46 feet, 8 inches, by Steve Wheatcroft. Toughest Hole: The par-4 16th hole played to an average of 4.507, yielding just four birdies. There were 25 bogeys, seven doubles, and one triple made there on Sunday. Easiest Hole: The par-5 11th played to an average of 4.64. There were two eagles made there, plus 31 birdies and 34 pars. CALL OF THE DAY SHOT OF THE DAY BEST OF SOCIAL MEDIA

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