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Brooks Koepka back to full strength after knee injury

LAS VEGAS – Brooks Koepka won three times last season, including the PGA Championship. Even more impressive, it turns out he was nursing a knee injury and wasn’t firing on all cylinders. Now he’s back to full strength. Look out. Koepka makes his season debut this week at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open and revealed that shortly after the FedExCup Playoffs, he had a painful procedure done on his left knee. “I wasn’t healthy. I had some stem cell (therapy) done on my knee. My patella tendon was partially torn,â€� Koepka revealed. “Got to go in there and inject it. I was watching it on the screen as they were doing it and it was probably one of the most painful things. I was screaming when they did it. “I limped out of there. I was limping for probably two, three days after, and then it’s just about trying to grow the muscles around it. Try to get strong again, rest it. That’s kind of how we went with it, doing a little rehab. The important thing was to not walk with a limp. Those three days you’re kind of off your feet.â€� Koepka began hitting full shots about a week and a half ago. He is excited about dedicating some time to practice, having not done so last season. Most assumed he didn’t practice on purpose; Koepka now says he had no choice. Last week, he spent time with his putting coach and swing coach and believes he’s ready to fire right out of the gate this season. “Last year I didn’t practice at all. I mean, I vocalized that, said I hadn’t practiced… I can finally practice again, which is nice, without pain,â€� he said. “My game feels really good right now. I’m prepared for a tournament for once. If you look at my results it’s always been the first week out I struggle, and that’s because I’m trying to figure out what I’m doing because I haven’t been able to practice. Second week out is a lot better and third week is good, but it’s nice to hopefully break that trend.â€� It is also the first time Koepka has been seen since losing the PGA TOUR Player of the Year vote in a battle with FedExCup champion Rory McIlroy. Having often looked for perceived slights to elevate his focus, Koepka was matter-of-fact. “I don’t play for awards. I just play to win, win trophies, win tournaments,â€� he said in his Wednesday press conference. “Yeah, it would’ve been great, but I think everybody in this room knows LeBron (James) has only won four MVPs and I’m pretty sure he’s been the best player for more than just four years. “I’ve got five, six years left of probably my prime I guess you could say. I want to see how far I can take it. I’m a little extra motivated. Feeling 100% is nice, but extremely motivated to see how far I can push it.â€�

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Fire forces Silverado evacuationFire forces Silverado evacuation

Several forest fires broke out across Napa and Sonoma counties early Monday morning forcing the evacuation of Silverado Resort and Spa just hours after the completion of the PGA TOUR’s season-opening Safeway Open. Powerful winds fanned the potent flames, causing untold damage to homes and businesses in the area with thousands evacuated, including some TOUR players in the early hours of the morning. The National Weather Service said the blazes were fanned by dry, northeast winds that gusted up to 50 mph in the valleys and 70 mph on mountaintops. One of the many fires breaking out was near Atlas Peak Road – and it blackened hundreds of acres in a famed wine-growing area northeast of the city of Napa and the Silverado Trail. With the flames approaching the golf course and resort, guests were swiftly evacuated. A handful of TOUR players caught up in the blaze tweeted about their experience. Kyle Thompson confirmed he fled in a rush, with no time to gather up belongings, calling the fire “really scary stuff�. “The whole ridge line above the course was on fire with winds pushing toward course,� Thompson tweeted. “We got out of there without packing a single thing.� “I’ve never run from a wild fire before,� Patton Kizzire said. Stanford graduate Maverick McNealy – who had played the Safeway Open as his first professional start – praised emergency services for their role in the evacuation. “Woken up by @Napa_City_Fire and evacuated tonight. First responders and emergency personnel are amazing. #napafire�, he tweeted. Authorities are still trying to contain fires all over the area as the damage continues to mount. 

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Spieth sticking to the gameplanSpieth sticking to the gameplan

SOUTHPORT, England – At high noon here Sunday, Jordan Spieth should have a full grasp of the gameplan he hopes will produce his third major title. Although he’ll still be 2-1/2 hours away from his opening tee shot in the final round at Royal Birkdale, he’ll have benefitted from watching the earlier coverage of The Open Championship on TV. He’ll see how the course is playing, where the pins are, how the greens are rolling, how the conditions are impacting scores. Will it be a tough, hang-on type of day like Friday? Or will he need an aggressive approach, the kind he used Saturday when Royal Birkdale handed out red numbers like it was last call at the local pub? Yet there are two things he already knows he must do: (bullet) Play like he’s tied for the lead. Spieth is 11 under par and goes into Sunday with a three-shot cushion over Matt Kuchar. The next closest pursuers – U.S. Open champ Brooks Koepka and Spieth’s fellow Dallas resident Austin Connelly — are six shots back. It would be easy for Spieth to simply lay back and wait for anybody to challenge him. To play safe. But taking a defensive posture would be a detriment. After all, trying to avoid making mistakes is a recipe for making more of them. “I think I will assume that we are tied for the lead,â€� Spieth said. (bullet) Hit as many greens as possible. One of the key strategies all week for Spieth has been staying out of Royal Birkdale’s pot bunkers. He’s found a few, but he’s made just four bogeys this week, all in the second round in rainy, windy conditions. He shot bogey-free 5-under 65s in the first and third rounds, and there’s every reason to think he can avoid trouble again Sunday, provided his driver cooperates to set up the crisp irons he’s displayed here. “It’s all about greens in regulation,â€� said Spieth, who hit 15 of them on Thursday and 14 on Saturday. “If the conditions are tough and you have to lay it further back and play further away from holes, so be it. But having a putter in my hand for birdie is the most important thing for tomorrow.â€� Spieth’s ability to execute his gameplan at Royal Birkdale is why he’s on the verge of adding the Open to his major resume and moving three-quarters of the way to the career Grand Slam. Entering Saturday with a two-shot lead over Kuchar, he knew early on that scoring conditions were incredibly favorable – even though he saw only one hole of Branden Grace’s major-record 62. Previously anticipating that pars would be a really good score, Spieth adjusted his thinking, approaching par as just “OKâ€� on Saturday. “Royal Birkdale, notoriously difficult, had just become one of the easier golf courses that we play for one round for the year,â€� Spieth said. “You just kind of got to change that in your mind.â€� By the time he arrived on the first tee Saturday, he had an additional gameplan. This one included Kuchar. “Our gameplan when we stood on the tee was, let’s push each other to separate and get this pairing tomorrow,â€� Spieth said. “That’s kind of what we wanted to do.â€� While Spieth shot 65, Kuchar shot a 4-under 66 that included a double-bogey at the par-4 16th in which he found a bunker and also three-putted. Kuchar is hoping to become the eighth consecutive first-time winner in a major, but that double may come back to haunt him. On Sunday, Kuchar won’t be worrying about separating from the pack. His focus now is pretty easy: catch Spieth. But even though Kuchar has plenty of success in match play-type environments – he won the World Golf Championships-Dell Match Play in 2013 — he plans to avoid any kind of head-to-head showdown with his playing partner. “I’ll be playing with him but not focused on him,â€� Kuchar said. “My goal is to go out and play Royal Birkdale. “I’ll know exactly where we stand but I don’t know how much that ever helps you. 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It was a harsh lesson, but one Spieth thinks ultimately will prove valuable. “I understand that leads can be squandered quickly, and I also understand how you can keep on rolling on one,â€� Spieth said. “It was a humbling experience that I thought at the time could serve me well going forward.â€� No matter the outcome on Sunday, Spieth doesn’t think the 2016 Masters will have a specific impact at Royal Birkdale. “If I don’t win tomorrow, it has nothing to do with that. It has to do with it was someone else’s day, and I didn’t play as well as I should have,â€� Spieth said. “And if I win tomorrow, it has nothing to do with that, either.â€� What it will come down to is simply this: executing his gameplan. Spieth’s been nearly flawless for the first three rounds. Difficult to imagine that Sunday will be any different.

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