Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Golf’s Controversial New Rule

Golf’s Controversial New Rule

Alex Myers discusses a new rule that allows golfers to keep the flagstick in while putting and the player who is smartly taking advantage.

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Live blog: WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play, Day 2Live blog: WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play, Day 2

AUSTIN, Texas — The second round of the group stage at the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play will be played Thursday. A total of 32 matches are set for Austin Country Club. The round-robin format continues through Friday, with the 16 group-stage winners advancing to the weekend’s single-elimination play. PGATOUR.COM is on the scene in Austin and will provide live coverage throughout the day. Watch PGA TOUR LIVE | Printable bracket | Live leaderboard | Day 1 match recaps

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How we got to 82How we got to 82

In his autobiography, “The Education of a Golfer,â€� Sam Snead recalled a conversation he had one afternoon at Griffith Park, site of the 1937 Los Angeles Open. Snead wrote, “Henry Picard walked up and asked, ‘How are you hitting, Sam? I hear you are bending them halfway to Santa Monica.’â€� Snead, who had been struggling with accuracy off the tee, primarily with a hook, wrote of his chat with Picard: “I’m so wild I’ve about decided to quit the tour and go home.â€� Snead then recounted that he hit some drives to show Picard what he meant. The two pros talked about the positioning of Snead’s feet, and then Picard asked to look at Snead’s driver and said, “This stick is too whippy for you. Your hands are too fast for such a light and swingy club. I’ve got an Izett driver in my car that might be the answer for you.â€� CHASING 82 With his win at the Masters, Tiger Woods now has 81 official PGA TOUR victories, one shy of Sam Snead’s all-time record. For a detailed look at Tiger’s 81 wins, check out our special section. Picard returned with the George Izett persimmon model. Snead liked what he saw (and felt) and the two made a little transaction – Picard charged Snead $5.50 – and a week later, with the hook under control, Snead won his first big tournament, the Oakland Open, using the stiff-shafted, 14 1/2-ounce club. Long after his retirement, Snead reserved a special place for that driver in his Hot Springs, Virginia, home. He never lost sight of how important the club was to him, estimating that three-fourths of all his victories — official and otherwise — came with that driver in his bag. Snead would occasionally bring the club out and show it to friends, and he always treated it with reverence. Said Jack Snead, Sam’s oldest son, “That old driver, that’s what meant the most to Dad. That driver meant more to dad than all the other stuff — the trophies, the medals — put together. It meant everything.â€� Well, almost everything. At some point early in Sam Snead’s career, when the Virginia native started winning and winning and winning golf tournaments, the PGA of America, the ruling body for professional golfers in the United States until 1968 when the touring pros broke away and established the PGA TOUR, sat down with Snead and went over his list of victories. The PGA then compiled Snead’s resume. In the “Official PGA Tournament Record Book,â€� Snead’s first official victory is listed as the “Virginia Closed Pro, 1936.â€� In later editions, that tournament had various names, the “Virginia Closed Professional,â€� the “West Virginia PGAâ€� and finally the “West Virginia Closed Pro.â€� Whatever the name, the record always showed that tournament as Snead’s first official win. But did that tournament actually exist? And if so, what exactly was it? Those were always questions that lingered at PGA TOUR headquarters since there was so little information about the West Virginia Closed Pro. Snead said the tournament was real but had no trophy to show for his work, and any check Snead would have received for the win had long ago been cashed. Even yellowed newspaper clippings were hard to find. Compounding matters, a restaurant in The Greenbrier in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, the course Snead represented for much of his professional career, displays a photo of a young Sam Snead (with no hat!) striding down the fairway with pros Billy Burke and Johnny Farrell. It’s a photo that claims to be from the West Virginia Closed Pro but is actually a shot of Snead playing a Greenbrier exhibition with Burke and Farrell. So what exactly was the West Virginia Closed Pro? In 2010, the Charleston Daily Mail ran a piece that unearthed information on that 83-years-ago tournament. A Greenbrier press release, dated July 9, 1936, that Ann Snead, Sam’s daughter-in-law, found in an old scrapbook early in 2013, verified the Daily Mail’s findings. The Greenbrier hosted the tournament simultaneously with the West Virginia Amateur, but the “Closed Proâ€� nomenclature meant no amateurs could play. Snead shot rounds of 70-61 in the one-day, 36-hole professional tournament, defeating nearby Logan Country Club Head Professional Clem Weichman by 16 strokes. It was certainly an impressive feat. But should that tournament have shown up on Snead’s “officialâ€� record? Was it really an admissible TOUR event? And therein lies the rub. It was a Snead win, of that there is no dispute. But since the entire field consisted of local pros from in and around West Virginia and Virginia, and since none of the stars of the day entered, not even TOUR pros from the area—Bobby Cruickshank, Chandler Harper and Denny Shute—its place in history is somewhat dubious. Should it have been considered official? Snead insisted it was, and that was enough for the PGA of America to include that tournament as win No. 1 on his resume. It was a victory that started Snead on his way to becoming the TOUR’s all-time winningest player and one of the best to ever walk professional fairways. The PGA TOUR has also always recognized that win, partly because it was Snead’s first win, partly because of the way Snead romanticized it and partly because when the TOUR became its own entity, it merely adopted the PGA’s record book. If there were a question about the West Virginia Closed Pro, what of Snead’s other wins, the remaining 81 with which the TOUR gives him credit? What’s official? What isn’t? The record clearly shows what Snead didn’t win, famously finishing second at the U.S. Open four times but never able to complete the career Grand Slam by capturing the title. He added 53 additional TOUR runner-up performances during his career. Accepted and certified are most of his other wins, including his three Masters titles, his three PGA Championships, two Western Open titles, as well as his eight victories in Greensboro and six at the Miami Open. Most of the tournaments on his list of wins are unassailable. Some are not, a faction believing Snead’s five victories in team events (two with Ralph Guldahl, two with Jim Ferrier and one with Vic Ghezzi) should be removed from consideration. The 1946 World Championship of Golf, a four-man event, held at Tam O’Shanter Country Club outside Chicago, is another victory some would like to discard from Snead’s list because, the dissenters say, four players does not a tournament make, regardless of purse size, which, for the time, was considerable. While various golf observers wanted to drop Snead’s victory total somewhere into the 70s, Snead always contended his once-and-for-all total should have been 89. That number, however, never made it into The Slammer’s narrative, either. For many years, the TOUR put Snead’s victory total at 84. Then after a 1987 examination of professional golf history, the PGA TOUR reduced that number to 81 before it finally settled on 82 when the TOUR began recognizing The Open Championship as an official victory for any player who won golf’s oldest tournament, something Snead did in 1946 at St. Andrews. In all, the PGA TOUR also documents Snead winning an additional 62 tournaments not part of his official total. These include 17 West Virginia Open wins, an LPGA title (the Royal Poinciana Plaza Invitational, played on a par-3 course in Palm Beach, Florida, making him the only male to win an LPGA event) and the Havana Invitational in Cuba. The TOUR removing certain tournament wins from his record disappointed Snead, a decision he couldn’t understand and never accepted. “They took those wins away from me,â€� Snead often commented to his son, Jack. Snead, inducted in 1974 as an original member of the World Golf Hall of Fame, took that frustration to the grave. He died in 2002, four days short of his 90th birthday. With Tiger Woods No. 2 on the TOUR’s all-time wins list with 81 after winning his fifth green jacket Sunday at the Masters, he can now tie Snead with his next victory and pass him with two more to become the new record-holder. Thus, Snead’s 82-win total – and the questions surrounding it – are bound to resurface. Jack Vardaman, Snead’s friend and attorney, “It’s easy to say for Tiger what was official. It’s much, much harder to say that for Sam’s career,â€� There were some things he didn’t do. But he did win more tournaments than anybody else. That was important to him. In January 1986, the PGA TOUR convened a panel that consisted of journalists and PGA TOUR staffers, and the task for those seven men was to compile data from tournaments between 1934 and 1979, events that in many cases didn’t have complete results. The idea was that the TOUR would unveil a historical statistics project that could then be the foundation of the ranking of all PGA TOUR players, regardless of the era in which they played. A year later, Deane Beman, PGA TOUR Commissioner at the time, assembled a nine-person panel, and it was the members’ job to address the subject of what tournaments the TOUR would consider official and unofficial from the list of events recognized in the TOUR’s statistical system. The panel consisted of author Al Barkow; Joe Black, past president of the PGA of America; Joe Dey, the first TOUR Commissioner; former TOUR player Jay Hebert; Jack Tuthill, a retired TOUR Tournament Director; and Herbert Warren Wind, a noted golf writer, mainly for The New Yorker. Representing the TOUR were TOUR employees Gary Becka, Cliff Holtzclaw and Steve Rankin. On a Tuesday afternoon at Augusta National Golf Club prior to the beginning of the 1987 Masters – 10 years before Tiger would win his first major at Augusta National — these nine men met and spent an afternoon making the determination. The main takeaway from the meeting was that the panel amended the “unofficial tournamentâ€� list from the previous group’s determinations and changed the record to include tournaments of “historic significance.â€� That was key verbiage. Among the other criteria used in the determination were the purse size and the quality of the field in a particular event, the bulk of which had already been researched. In “The History of the PGA TOUR,â€� the committee noted that “at the conclusion of the meeting, the panel had reviewed each event previously in the ‘unofficial’ column in our study and made its recommendation of which events on the list were of historic significance.â€� In defense of the process – which was admittedly light on time spent – this was no easy assignment and the final decision meant it was impossible to satisfy everybody, even if the panel, as Becka explained, went in with no preconceived ideas and made judgment calls based on the available data. “We had a job to do, and we did it. We did what we thought was right,â€� Becka explained. Becka also mentioned that while Snead became something of a cause celeb because of the decision, the work the panel did was not simply a Snead project but rather the TOUR undertaking and determining to the best of its ability what happened throughout its history. The decisions famously affected Snead — both positively and negatively — but they also impacted numerous other players. The verdict, as it related to Snead, stated that the early years of the Bing Crosby Pro-Am (now the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am) would be deemed official because of the “historical significanceâ€� clause, thanks to the fact that tournament existed then (and still does). That designation for the Bing Crosby-hosted event actually helped Snead’s record because Snead earned official victories for his 1937, 1938, 1941 and 1950 “Crosbys,â€� which were previously unrecognized. Yet even those additions cause heartburn for some today, with the 1937 tournament an 18-hole affair, the ’38 and ’41 tournaments 36-hole events and the 1950 “Crosbyâ€� a 54-hole tournament, declared a tie, with Snead, Jack Burke Jr., Smiley Quick and Dave Douglas. All earned official-victory designations because darkness set in on the final day without a winner emerging, and a next-day playoff was out of the question because of the players’ travel requirements. In addition to the four “Crosbyâ€� wins, the committee also bestowed official wins on Snead for his 1952 and 1957 Palm Beach Round Robin titles, already crediting him with Round Robin victories in 1938, 1954 and 1955. Because of the new standard defined by the panel, though, the committee elected to remove nine tournament titles from Snead’s official-win total, most notably his Greenbrier Invitational victories in 1952, 1953, 1958, 1959 and 1961, the latter two tournaments played at The Greenbrier but renamed the Sam Snead Festival. Also gone from his tally were the 1952 Julius Boros Open, the 1940 Ontario Open, the 1942 Cordoba Open and the 1953 Texas Open, which the record book credited Snead with winning, a tournament actually won by Tony Holguin. That Snead received credit for winning the San Antonio tournament meant the PGA of America and the PGA TOUR essentially perpetuated an error for many years. The panel noted the purse for the 24-player Julius Boros Open that Snead won didn’t meet the minimum threshold, while the 1940 Ontario Open (in Canada) featured only one regular TOUR player (Snead), with the Cordoba Open in Argentina inviting only two non-South Americans to play, Snead and Jimmy Demaret, with Snead winning by 10 shots. For those reasons, the TOUR dropped the victories and not because they were contested outside the U.S., at one time a popular notion. So just like that, Snead went from 84 wins to 81. As they might ask in Argentina, ¿Esta contento vos, Sam? No. No he wasn’t. Vardaman, the Harvard-educated attorney, often heard Snead talk about his loss of tournament victories during their friendly golf matches in Hot Springs, Virginia, at The Cascades. Sitting in his spacious 11th-floor Williams & Connolly office on 12th Street Northwest in Washington, D.C., a space with an original oil painting of Snead hanging on one of the walls, Vardaman leaned back in his chair and said, “Sam complained forever about the TOUR taking away the tournaments. I think Sam always figured his place in history would be defined by the number of tournaments that he won. It wasn’t going to be for winning 11 in a row, winning 11 tournaments in one year or even a career Grand Slam. There were some things he didn’t do. But he did win more tournaments than anybody else. That was important to him. “Losing those tournament wins,â€� Vardaman continued, “always gnawed at him.â€� So, on January 25, 1996, a little less than nine years after Snead’s record changed, Vardaman, on Williams & Connolly letterhead, authored an impassioned five-page letter to then-PGA TOUR Commissioner Tim Finchem, essentially laying out Snead’s case. The attorney was in opening-argument form. The letter began: Dear Commissioner Finchem, I am writing on behalf of Sam Snead to request that you reexamine the PGA Tour’s determination of the number of Sam’s tournament victories. For the reasons stated below, we think the PGA Tour should credit Sam with 89 significant tournament victories. Vardaman, who has argued numerous cases in front of the U.S. Supreme Court during his career, was ready to fight for his golf partner in pro-bono fashion. And Vardaman wasn’t just some attorney trying to right an injustice for his client. Vardaman was the former general counsel of the United States Golf Association, an accomplished amateur golfer in his own right who had won his fair share of tournaments and is a member of four golf clubs. Vardaman, like his client, felt the TOUR had erred, with the Greenbrier Invitational/Sam Snead Festival omissions his main point of contention. “My view is that if it was viewed as official at the time by the ruling body of golf, the subsequent ruling body shouldn’t go back and declare it unofficial,â€� Vardaman explained. “It’s a little bit presumptuous of the TOUR to say, ‘We’re going to go back and determine what was official and what wasn’t official, what was important and what wasn’t important, when somebody else ran the whole Tour. “It’s like if somebody went back and said some of Babe Ruth’s home runs were in a different field and the field wasn’t up to Major League specs so we should take those away,â€� Vardaman added. Ironically, despite the frustration Snead felt about his loss of wins, the 1987 statistical analysis led to this: The TOUR determined that in three different, meaningful statistical categories that took into consideration 1) the Ryder Cup points system used in the 1980s, 2) tournament performance based on the percent of a tournament’s total purse, and 3) a lifetime points-based system constructed to reflect career top-25 finishes, Snead came out on top in all three metrics. Translation: He was the TOUR’s best player. That gave Snead some ammo, and he did revel to the late Dave Anderson of the New York Times after the release of the data, noting that he finished ahead of No. 2 on the TOUR’s list, Jack Nicklaus, who won his 73rd and final TOUR event at the 1986 Masters. “Jack’s where he should be. Second. I like that,â€� Snead said to Anderson. Maybe that bit of notoriety was something of a soothing balm to Snead, however it didn’t take away the sting of losing those tournament titles. As Vardman reiterated, the PGA of America never recognized those Greenbrier Invitational/Sam Snead Festivals because they either didn’t offer the minimum-accepted-purse amount, were played opposite officially sanctioned events — or both. His contention, naturally, was that it should have. For instance, The Greenbrier, an elegant, small-town hotel and resort in White Sulphur Springs, held the 1959 Sam Snead Festival at its course opposite the PGA’s Arlington Hotel Open, hosted by an elegant, small-town hotel and resort in Hot Springs, Arkansas. While Snead won his eponymous 1959 Festival by 11 strokes over Mike Souchak in a field that also included E.J. “Dutchâ€� Harrison, Bruce Crampton, Doug Sanders, Jim Turnesa and Gary Player, it was Gene Littler who was beating Jim Ferree in Arkansas by a stroke, with Doug Ford, Tommy Bolt, Cary Middlecoff and Tony Lema among the 99 players entered. Two years later, Snead defeated Canadian Stan Leonard by a stroke at the Festival while holding off Player, Arnold Palmer and Peter Thomson. Approximately 860 miles away, the PGA was conducting the newly named Hot Springs Open, and Sanders was beating the likes of Middlecoff, Boros, Al Geiberger and Tommy Aaron. Such was the nature of professional golf back then, two tournaments of equal stature played simultaneously, the organizers hustling to attract the best players to their events. Only one tournament, though, part of the official schedule. “The designation of something as official, like Arkansas, as opposed to the other, Greenbrier, which had more stars, well it makes no sense. Which is more historically significant, the one that had the best players or the one that was considered ‘official?’ That seems to me to be exactly what the panel was saying they were not going to do,â€� Vardaman reasoned. He was just getting started. “Sam won a lot of tournaments. Tiger has won a lot of tournaments. But due to the lack of accepted criteria given the change between the PGA of America and the PGA TOUR, the different ruling bodies of golf, it just seems wrong to me to start taking things away from somebody.â€� Beman, who spearheaded the effort to clean up the TOUR’s record books and classify tournaments before retiring in 1994, said, “Some judgments had to be made, and I think they were the right judgments.â€� Finchem, who received the 1996 letter from Vardaman, had his staff again examine the record and chose not to make any of the changes Vardaman requested. “It’s always difficult to compare different generations, whether it’s tournaments or players,â€� Finchem said. “With the data we had, we did what we thought was fair and reasoned, understanding how different professional golf has been over the years.â€� To Finchem’s point, Snead played when match play and four-ball team events were common, where tournaments didn’t necessarily start on Thursday and end on Sunday and 36-hole finishes on the final day and 18-hole playoffs were not unusual. Simple feuds also factored in, and that brings up the question of the 1949 North and South Open, a significant event that began the same year the PGA of America opened up shop – 1916 — and ran through 1951 (World War II interrupted the 1943 event), with all the tournaments played at Pinehurst’s famed No. 2 Course. However, in 1947, 1948 and 1949, the PGA didn’t recognize the North and South as official. Back then, the Tufts family, the owners of Pinehurst, as the story goes, had a dispute with the PGA of America about money. While the North and South went on during those three years as usual, the PGA didn’t acknowledge its existence on the official schedule. That’s important because in Snead’s PGA TOUR official record, his 1949 North and South victory doesn’t count. His 1941 and 1950 North and South wins do. “Again, one of the criteria we used in determining if an event was official was whether or not it appeared on the official schedule that year. Those three years of the North and South weren’t on the schedule, so we accepted that and didn’t count them,â€� Finchem explained. “That decision by us didn’t just affect Sam’s victory record but Jim Turnesa’s (1947) and Toney Penna’s (1948), as well.â€� During his PGA TOUR Champions years, starting in the late 1970s, Snead became close friends with former Golf Digest editor Don Wade after Wade wrote a magazine story on The Slammer. For each subsequent Snead piece Golf Digest ran, Wade was the writer, and the two men knew each other well. “Sam never said much publicly about his loss of tournament wins,â€� said Wade, who died in 2014. “But I do know his feeling was that he beat the best players who were out there, and he felt it was an arbitrary decision by the TOUR on getting to the final number (of wins). “Sam, like all of the guys back then, had tremendous pride in what he accomplished. He was proud of his wins, and that decision to reduce the number was hard for him to take.â€� For a while it seemed a fait accompli that Woods would eventually catch and pass Snead on the all-time victory list, maybe as soon as 2014 after he won five titles in 2013. Injuries and other issues kept Woods winless between his final win of 2013, the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational, until he broke through at the season-ending TOUR Championship last fall. After he secured win No. 80, in Atlanta, it took him just six starts in the 2018-19 PGA TOUR season before claiming No. 81. Five years ago, Jack Snead readily admitted that Tiger would slip past his father on the all-time list. “First and foremost, both are terrific champions, two of the best the game has ever seen. Rather than compare the two eras, I like to think of both Sam and Tiger as great players and recognize all they have meant to both the PGA TOUR and golf in general,â€� said PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan, who succeeded Finchem in 2017. Monahan also agrees with Finchem, knowing comparing eras is far from scientific. “The PGA TOUR today is vastly different from the PGA TOUR of Sam’s era, especially in those early years when we sometimes played 36 holes in one day, players traveled from tournament to tournament by car and the equipment players used and course conditions were not what they are today,â€� Monahan rightly noted. “Compared to the way TOUR events are currently operated, our tournament structures differed significantly during the prime of Sam’s career, as well. With all that in mind, it’s challenging to evaluate players’ careers coming from two separate eras of our history. I know my predecessors care deeply about the game and were guardians of PGA TOUR golf. I am confident they made the best possible decisions based on available information, and I trust their judgment.â€� Snead passed away 17 years ago. Very few of his player contemporaries remain, and one by one his close friends have passed. One of those was West Virginia native Bill Campbell, who admitted four months before his death in 2013 that Sam’s spot on the top of the winner’s chart was likely coming to an end. His comments, however, came before Tiger’s five-year winless drought began. “There was always a lot of argument about how many wins Sam had, whether it was 81 or 82 or whatever the number was. He fussed around about that, and I’m not in a position to say what the number should have been one way or the other,â€� said Campbell, the legendary career amateur and USGA and Royal and Ancient administrator who first met Snead when Campbell was 14 and he attended, with his dad, the 1937 West Virginia Open at Guyan Country Club. A year later, Snead asked Campbell to play with him in a pro-am at The Greenbrier. “By then I was a pretty good junior player and playing with Sam was something. This was my first experience with the great man.â€� Added Campbell after a short pause, “This much I know: Sam was a great winner.â€� But was Snead the greatest? For now, the record book says he is, and only one other player is close enough now to say whether that will continue.

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The news that changes everythingThe news that changes everything

Ryan Palmer had been checking his smart phone all day, sneaking glances between shots during the RBC Canadian Open Pro-Am last year to see if his wife Jennifer had called. She was back home in Texas, waiting for the results of a biopsy. A mammogram the previous week had uncovered an abnormality that doctors felt warranted a closer examination. Not until that evening, when Ryan was having dinner with his caddie James Edmondson and some friends, did Jennifer finally reach him. He stepped outside the restaurant to take the call. The news was not good. Jennifer had stage 2A invasive ductal carcinoma. “It just hits you in the gut,â€� Ryan recalls, the memory clearly still fresh. Ryan’s fellow PGA TOUR pro, Stewart Cink, also knows what it’s like to get that sucker punch. Only he was at home in Atlanta after forgetting to commit to the Zurich Classic last year, his first such gaffe in 20 years on TOUR. His wife Lisa delivered the news to him in person. “Absolutely, without a shadow of a doubt, that was God’s hand,â€� Lisa now says. She had gone in for a follow-up appointment early that week. She hadn’t felt a lump in her breast. She just thought something wasn’t “right.â€� The doctors agreed – in fact, Lisa had a mammogram, ultrasound and biopsy all in one day. “She told me afterwards that the mood in there was really serious and somber and not very upbeat at all,â€� Stewart said. The next day, the phone rang. Stewart and Lisa were meeting with the staff of their charitable foundation. This time, it was Lisa who stepped outside. Within seconds, Stewart followed her onto the front porch. Lisa had written some things in a notebook, and then she looked up at her husband, clutching the phone to her chest. “She said, I want to know my grandchildren,â€� Stewart recalls. “And there was not a lot more for her to say. I knew what that meant.â€� Lisa, who had led an extremely healthy lifestyle, has stage 4 invasive ductal carcinoma. The cancer had spread to her lymph nodes and was metastatic. With those two diagnoses, life for the Cinks and Palmers has changed forever. Stewart and Lisa met in high school. He was going out with a girl she played softball with – “He dated a lot of my friends, actually, which was interesting,â€� Lisa says – and the two eventually ended up in a class together where they became better acquainted. Their friendship blossomed into romance at Georgia Tech, and the two married at age 20. They have one son, Connor, who was born while the couple was still in college, and another Reagan, who is two years younger. Stewart and Lisa are empty nesters now. Connor graduated from Clemson last year while Reagan has followed in his parents’ footsteps and attends Georgia Tech. He’ll be a junior in the fall. “Do the math – we’ve been married over half our lives,â€� says Stewart, who’s now 43, as is his wife. “I feel like she’s been my soulmate before we ever met in 10th grade. She’s been part of me since birth, I feel like.â€� Ryan and Jennifer also met in high school in their hometown of Amarillo. But it wasn’t until the summer before her senior year at Texas A&M — Ryan was a year behind — that they began dating. “I saw him out at a party or something, and then he called me and said, hey, let’s go have dinner and play some golf,â€� Jennifer remembers. “I’m actually a terrible golfer, so I mainly just sat in the cart but that’s pretty much how it all began.â€� Jennifer was first attracted to Ryan’s smile – “He just lights up a room,â€� she says – and his positive attitude. He didn’t dwell on a bad round. He didn’t blame it on his clubs, either. Ryan was motivated, too. “It was never an option for him not to be a professional,â€� she says. “You know what I’m saying? That was his goal.â€� Jennifer had goals of her own, too, though. She graduated from A&M in 1998 and went to dental school, getting her degree in 2003. She practiced in Colleyville, a Dallas-Fort Worth suburb, for a while and still keeps her license current. Ryan finally got his TOUR card for the 2004 campaign, and he asked Jennifer to come to Pebble Beach with him. The couple married in June of that year. “After that week, he just said, ‘hey, do you want to try this full time?’â€� she remembers. “We didn’t really know what the future was going to hold golf-wise. So, we basically took a leap of faith.â€� Although they are similar in age, Stewart and Ryan were at different stages of life last year when their wives were diagnosed with cancer three months apart. While the Cinks’ boys are grown and living on their own, Jennifer and Ryan have two young children. Mason is 10, a huge hockey fan, while Madelyn turns 8 in August. After Ryan got that life-changing phone call from Jennifer, he wanted to come home immediately. She convinced him to stay in Canada, though. After all, there was nothing he could do; it wasn’t like she was having surgery the next day, and RBC, after all, is one of Ryan’s sponsors. It just hits you in the gut. The couple went to the PGA Championship where Ryan finished 42nd and then returned home where Jennifer had a lumpectomy. A week later, while Ryan was playing The Barclays (now called THE NORTHERN TRUST), they got the news that the cancer, already invasive in the breast, had spread into the lymph nodes. So Jennifer started chemotherapy on Sept. 19, the week after Ryan was eliminated from the FedExCup Playoffs at the BMW Championship despite a tie for fourth at Crooked Stick. It was also his 40th birthday. “He still got to have a fun little party the weekend before,â€� Jennifer says. “We had it in the works for several months so we went ahead and had the party.â€� Had Ryan made it to the TOUR Championship, Jennifer said she likely would have waited to start the chemo. At that point, though, Ryan announced on the Ryan Palmer Foundation Facebook page that he was taking time off to be with Jennifer and their kids. “He has a lot of family and friends and supporters who follow that so he just felt like that would be a good way for us to get prayer,â€� Jennifer says. Ryan did not play on TOUR again for four months, returning to competition at the Sony Open in Hawaii earlier this year. Mr. Mom did a “fabulousâ€� job, Jennifer says. He got the kids ready in the morning, often making Mason’s favorite, an omelet, for breakfast and took the kids to school. Although friends put together a meal train three nights a week, Ryan was more than happy to throw a few steaks on the grill, which is his specialty. While he did take time to play some golf, hoping to stay sharp for his return, Ryan also pitched in and did some light housework, helping Jennifer’s mom — who lives nearby — keep things tidy when the chemo took its toll. Turns out he’s a rare bird who actually likes to do laundry, too. “That’s what I needed to do,â€� Ryan says. “I was blessed that I was able to stay home the whole time.â€� “There were times when I said just go play this week, you should go get some competitive rounds in and he said, no, this is where I need to be, this is where I want to be,â€� adds Jennifer. “… It was something he really wanted to do for our family.â€� Stewart and Lisa had been looking forward to this time in their lives. With both sons essentially on their own, the couple was planning to travel the world as Stewart, the 2009 Open Championship winner, played golf. Turns out, that’s exactly what they’ve done, although always on Lisa’s schedule. “There’s not a lot I want to do without her,â€� Cink says. The first week of chemo – she had nine rounds administered through a port in her chest – is usually the worst. The second was a “maybe,â€� Stewart says, and by the third, Lisa usually felt like her old self. The first treatment was May 9, 2016. Three weeks later – “We kind of went to three-week months,â€� Stewart notes – he decided to play at the DEAN & DELUCA Invitational. Lisa had friends visiting in Atlanta and family, including the boys, nearby. So he went to Fort Worth by himself. He shot rounds of 72-75 and missed the cut. “I learned really fast that I wasn’t ready to be out there,â€� says Stewart, who purposely arrived on Wednesday so he could avoid some of the inevitable, albeit well-meaning, questions from his peers. He admits both he and Lisa were “emotionally wrecked.â€� Two weeks later, though, Lisa felt well enough to go with her husband to the FedEx St. Jude Classic. The change of scene was good for them both, and Lisa has made new friends as well as connected with the old. “I just don’t think the house would be a good place to be for a long, long time when you’re going through something like this,â€� Stewart says. “Those four walls start to close pretty fast.â€� In an interview with PGA TOUR Entertainment for a special on the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston where her doctors are based, Lisa said she wasn’t surprised her husband put his golf on hold to focus on her. “That’s who he is, and it’s the relationship we’ve been blessed with,â€� Lisa explained. “And of course, it meant everything to me. I don’t know how people do it alone.â€� The weeks at home allowed Stewart to go with Lisa to her various appointments and treatments. Understanding what is about to happen gives him some semblance of control. “Sometimes when she’s emotional, it’s hard to hear correctly, decipher what the doctor is saying,â€� Stewart explains. “So my role is to take down notes and ask questions and get facts straight so that later on, when she sort of takes deep breaths and can understand it, we can have a conversation and I can kind of spit it back the right way.â€� Lisa says her husband was a great “filterâ€� for what he calls a “firehose of information.â€� She was told not to Google treatments or symptoms, which she thinks is great advice. “But he was so good about hearing the information, researching the information, and giving it to me as I asked or he thought I needed it,â€� she says. Long walks through the old neighborhood near the Rice University campus helped the couple “sort through all this immense amount of terrible information we were getting,â€� Lisa says. Also helpful was mindless entertainment like the shows on HGTV that they both like to watch, and the family and friends who gathered in Houston to lend support. “We had every stool, bench, chair (occupied),â€� she says. A year later, as the couple lives with the disease, Stewart has become the de facto spokesman for the family. There are many times when he feels helpless — “Hence, the faith,â€� Stewart says, adding that he has a list of Bible verses to rely on – and he finds it therapeutic to talk about Lisa’s situation. “It makes me feel like you care about it, for one thing,â€� Stewart says. “That’s a good feeling. You find that when you’re discussing it, you’re not thinking about the future, you kind of talk about what you already know. “It kind of keeps me a little bit grounded in the present.â€� Like Lisa, Jennifer had chemo, six rounds in her case, once every three weeks. Ryan and her friend, Jennifer Hill, who came up from San Antonio, went to every treatment. They weren’t just there for moral support, though – the two had a mission. So that she wouldn’t lose her long dark hair, Jennifer opted to use cold caps to try to cool the scalp during the chemotherapy. It wasn’t that she was vain. She was worried about Mason. “Mason got a little upset thinking about it,â€� Ryan says. “She did the hair preservation for him. So, that was pretty special.â€� The caps are housed in dry ice and cooled to between minus-15 to minus-40 degrees below zero, measured by an infrared thermometer. The caps have to be handled with gloves and changed every 30 minutes – for eight hours straight. That’s where Ryan and Hill came in. “They had to knead them with their hands to make sure all the gel was evenly distributed, and get them to the right temperature,â€� Jennifer says. “Then they’d have a timer and they’d take that one off and put the new one on.â€� It worked. With the exception of a few bald spots under her hair, Jennifer says you’d never know she was a breast cancer survivor. Most importantly, Mason was reassured. No matter how weak or nauseous Jennifer felt while undergoing the chemo or radiation, she got up and got dressed every day. She even made sure she put makeup on. “If you can, you want to try and be as normal as possible for your kids,â€� she said. “You don’t want them to feel like you’re sick. It’s just a difficult subject for a 7-year-old and a 10-year-old to grasp. “My son wanted very concrete answers. He wanted it to be black and white, not gray, and so when we couldn’t give him an exact reason as to why I had it, it was very hard for him.â€� Ryan was amazed at his wife’s strength. “She did more things than I could imagine her doing,â€� he says. And he was glad he could be there to reassure the kids. “In case they had questions, we were there to talk about it together,â€� he adds. “Of course, their fears were the worst. Obviously, Mason’s was. But the main thing is just letting them know nothing is going to happen. “Don’t think the worst because it’s going to be OK.â€� Last fall, Jennifer was able to go with Ryan and their families to see him inducted into the Texas A&M Sports Hall of Fame. She also took a three-day trip to New York City after Christmas and before her final chemo treatment on January 3. “It was kind of like a let’s celebrate that we’re through this one step,â€� Jennifer says. “(It was) a lot of walking, but I kept up with it.â€� When Stewart didn’t qualify for the FedExCup Playoffs last year, he and Lisa went to Switzerland on a busman’s holiday of sorts when he played in a European Tour event. “And I could not believe that in the middle of chemo, I’m getting to go to Switzerland and see this beautiful, just breathtaking place,â€� Lisa said. “And meet these kind, wonderful people that we got to meet and it was such a blessing.â€� Stewart and Ryan played together at the CareerBuilder Challenge and picked each other’s brains about life with cancer. Their wives have been in contact, too, texting prayers and positive thoughts. “I think they’ve been great for each other,â€� Ryan said. And at times, the support the couples have felt from friends on the PGA TOUR has been overwhelming. Flowers, cards, texts and phone calls have helped make the journey easier. Meagan Laird, Martin’s wife, who lives in Scottsdale, Arizona, even arranged dinners for the Palmer’s meal train. “She’s doing all this from out of town,â€� Jennifer says. “Isn’t that crazy?â€� Zach Johnson’s wife, Kim, had a quilt made with a small pocket in the back where friends of Stewart and Lisa left spiritual messages. Lisa took the quilt with her to PET scans and was able to “know that these people have prayed for me.â€� And when Lisa went out to Memphis, her first tournament since being diagnosed, the PGA TOUR Wives Association had a special surprise at their annual event at the St. Jude Children’s Hospital. The kids at the hospital had made cards and posters for her. “I just couldn’t imagine why these children, there are having to suffer, they’re pouring out love on me,â€� Lisa says. “And it was such a gift and it was such an encouragement to know how strong these children were. “It gave me a lot of encouragement that I can do this, too.â€� There has been good news of late. Jennifer’s latest mammogram was clear, Ryan reported, and her treatments, which included radiation, will be done in August. Stewart wrote this in his blog on May 8: Amen! PET scan results looked good again today, basically unchanged from the past two, from November and February. Lisa is now in what the doctor called “sustained remission.â€� Cink and Palmer are in the field this week at Colonial. After an emotionally draining year for both men, their wives and their families, a few hours on the golf course each day now offers a chance to step back into their old lives. Their thoughts, however, will never stray far from Lisa and Jennifer and the battle against the toughest of foes.

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