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Bryson DeChambeau makes hasty exit, expensive U-turn

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Bryson DeChambeau shot 68 in the third round of the Wells Fargo Championship on Saturday morning, briefly getting to within three of the lead. Not 24 hours earlier he was on a plane to Dallas, headed home after missing the cut. (Not!) What happened in between those two events was a madcap misadventure that left him short of sleep. When it was over and DeChambeau had made a double bogey on 18 and shot 68 that got him to 1 under total, it was left to a caddie to perfectly sum up what had happened. “You got your calculations wrong,” the caddie said as DeChambeau, the Mad Scientist, strode past him on the way to the stately, white clubhouse to sign his card. DeChambeau could only smile. He certainly had. “I learned my lesson for sure,” he said. The chaos began Friday, when DeChambeau triple-bogeyed the par-5 seventh hole, his third-to-last hole of the day. He birdied the eighth but thought he needed to birdie the ninth, as well, and left the property dejected after failing to do so and signing for a 3-over 74, 2 over par total. At the time it looked iffy whether those at 1 over would make it to the weekend, so DeChambeau figured he had zero shot at making the cut. He gathered his things, boarded a private plane back home to Dallas, and settled in for the roughly three-hour flight with headwinds. He got quite a surprise in the middle of it. His agent texted his manager, Connor Olson, to say that with wind buffeting the course, Bryson had moved up to 68th place and had qualified for the weekend rounds, after all. DeChambeau couldn’t believe it. “Sure enough, conditions kept getting worse,” he said, “and by the time I landed I was in 64th or 63rd or whatever. I looked at Connor: ‘Well, whoops, that was a mistake.’” Team DeChambeau quickly ran through their options. The flight crew had worked too many hours, and to get a new one would require a minimum six-hour advance notice. So a hasty U-turn was out. They decided to spend the night in Dallas and leave early in the morning. Very early. DeChambeau went home and got a workout in before going to bed at around 8 p.m. He logged about five hours before waking up for his 2:45 a.m. flight. He slept for some of that, and he and the team landed in Charlotte at 5:45, drove to Quail Hollow, about a half an hour away, and arrived at 6:20 a.m. He threw on his clothes in the locker room, then went out to the range. “Very tired, yeah,” he said after the round, which he played with Shane Lowry (75). “This morning was not easy. But, you know, for whatever reason I just feel like the more weird things happen to me, the greater my resolve sometimes can be and today was a case of that.” He admitted he thought about not coming back, but not for long. And the solid round made it easier to laugh off the chaos and expense of flying halfway across the country, twice. “It’s very (costly),” he said. “Way too expensive. But the thing is, I have a chance to go make a good check this week and I think that would offset it. So, if I was to not come back and withdraw, lose world ranking points and all that – I had to incur the cost. It’s my fault.”

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With the Charles Schwab Challenge, scheduled for June 11-14 at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, the PGA TOUR is set to lead the way as professional sports begin to emerge from a nearly three-month quarantine amid the coronavirus pandemic. As to how it will do that, the answer is very carefully. “It’s really a layered approach that we’ve taken, and the heart of it is social distancing,â€� the TOUR’s Senior Vice President and Chief of Operations Tyler Dennis told reporters Wednesday on a call that also included Chief Tournaments and Competitions Officer Andy Pazder and Senior Vice President of Tournament Administration Andy Levinson. That layered approach will include plenty of testing. Players and caddies will be expected to comply with medical questionnaires, thermal (temperature) readings and RT-PCR nasal swabs. It will start before they travel to tournaments and continue when they arrive. “We’re excited about how the PGA TOUR can play a role here in the world’s return, if you will, to enjoying things we love and doing so in a responsible manner,â€� Dennis said. Pazder concurred, calling this moment “a unique opportunityâ€� to lead the way. Players such as Brooks Koepka, Rory McIlroy and Brendon Todd have said they’re in and will do whatever is needed to return to competition. All three will be in action at Colonial, and McIlroy has said he’ll play the first three tournaments back, which will also include the RBC Heritage (South Carolina) and Travelers Championship (Connecticut). (For more on McIlroy’s schedule, click here.) Asked this week if he had any reservations, McIlroy said, “I don’t think so. If you take necessary precautions … face cover … washing hands … practicing social distancing, I really do think it is possible. If everyone follows guidelines, I don’t see why it’s not possible. Will be comfortable with logistics. I feel comfortable getting back out there.â€� Specifics were outlined in a document sent to players Tuesday. The plan was two months in the making and formed with input from PGA TOUR medical adviser Dr. Tom Hospel and the Federal Coronavirus Task Force, plus other specialists and laboratory directors, and in consultation with other professional sports leagues. The TOUR will provide masks and sanitizer at tournament sites, part of a significantly enhanced disinfectant and hygiene program. The number of people allowed inside any structure concurrently will be monitored and restricted. Most important will be a comprehensive testing and screening program that seeks to protect all involved. “For the player and caddie group,â€� Levinson said, “we are going to be providing that group with a pre‑travel testing program, and the purpose of this is really for those individuals to understand whether or not they have the virus before they travel to a tournament market. “And then upon arrival,â€� he added, “everyone will report to a testing area, likely at a designated hotel, where they will undergo all three screening methods: The questionnaire, thermal reading, and a PCR test. … Everybody who comes on‑site at our events will have to go through a questionnaire and thermal screening before entering the property, and participation is a condition of competition.â€� Although the results of PCR tests can take up to three days or longer, Levinson said the TOUR is working with local laboratories in an effort to shave that waiting time down to “a matter of hours instead of a matter of days.â€� One caveat: It must be done without taking resources away from local communities. “We’re actually studying this very carefully,â€� Dennis said, “and everything we’ve designed is being done in a way that does not do that.â€� Anyone who presents with an elevated temperature will consult with a tournament physician, and in certain cases go from there to COVID-19 testing. “In the event we have a positive test,â€� Levinson said, “we will comply with all local health authorities as well as CDC guidelines, and that would include isolating that individual and may require a period of isolation or an extended time.â€� The TOUR will support players with specialized medical care and supplies throughout the isolation period, he said, “and any player or caddie who were to test positive during an event would receive a stipend associated with the cost of that isolation period.â€� Healthy players and caddies will have access to chartered jets between tournament sites. With the TOUR’s relaunch a month away, it’s all about minimizing risk. Levinson freely admits there is no way to eradicate that risk completely, not yet, but as the players and caddies know best, with the toughest recovery shots there never is.

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Alex Smalley’s wild ride from Wyndham invite to TOUR cardAlex Smalley’s wild ride from Wyndham invite to TOUR card

GREENSBORO, N.C. — Alex Smalley’s life changed as he was about to hit his approach shot to Sedgefield Country Club’s ninth green. He just didn’t know it yet. It was March of last year, and he was playing 18 holes at his home course with Mark Brazil, executive director of the Wyndham Championship, and two of the tournament’s sponsors. As Brazil pretended to take a phone call, the other two men started talking about the PGA TOUR’s Regular Season finale. Had Smalley ever thought about playing in the PGA TOUR’s annual stop at Sedgefield? Of course he had. In fact, he told them he’d tried before, missing a playoff at the Monday qualifier by a shot the summer after he’d graduated from nearby Duke University. “You know there’s an open spot this year,” one of the sponsors told him, pausing for effect before adding firmly, “For you.” Smalley stepped away from the ball as he digested the unexpected, and welcomed, news. “He was kind of bewildered by it,” Brazil said last week, laughing as he remembered the scene he filmed on his phone. “… And I go, ‘Yeah, it’s true. Are you going to say yes or are you just going to stand there?’ It was a great moment.” The Wyndham Championship is a home game for Smalley, who has lived in Greensboro since 2017 and been a member at Sedgefield since 2020, but it’s special for another reason. It’s also where Smalley, thanks to that sponsor exemption from Brazil, authored the clutch performance that ultimately moved him from the world of Monday qualifiers and mini-tours and onto the PGA TOUR. It’s a reminder that each week on TOUR can be a life-changing one, even for players who aren’t hoisting the trophy on Sunday. Smalley returns to Sedgefield a year later in the midst of a successful rookie season. He ranked 63rd in the FedExCup, assured of keeping his TOUR card for next season and currently inside the cut line to make the BMW Championship, the second of three FedExCup Playoffs events. His season has included a runner-up at the Corales Puntacana Championship – another event that proved crucial to his career – and top-10s at the Genesis Scottish Open (T10) and Mexico Open (T6). Smalley turned pro in late 2019 after a successful amateur career. He represented the United States at that year’s Walker Cup, was medalist at the 2016 U.S. Amateur and in 2018 and ’19 became the first player since Rickie Fowler to win the prestigious Sunnehanna Amateur in consecutive years. The COVID-19 pandemic interrupted his first full year as a pro, however, and left Smalley in search of places to play. His path to the TOUR became clearer after receiving a sponsor exemption into the Corales event in September 2020 and finishing T14. He’d play Monday qualifiers and keep writing letters to tournament directors in search of sponsor exemptions. If he kept playing well and amassing points, he might be able qualify for the Korn Ferry Tour finals and compete for a TOUR card. “And so we went that route pretty aggressively for the rest of the fall and the good portion of the next rest of the year,” Smalley said. Jay Overton – to whom Smalley says he also owes a huge debt of gratitude – came through with another invitation when the Corales Puntacana Championship was played again in March 2021. Again, Smalley did not disappoint, tying for 22nd to earn more points. By now, Brazil had taken notice. He rarely gives out invitations four months in advance and he’d never invited a Sedgefield member to the Wyndham, in part because its vital position as the final event of the Regular Season makes each spot in the field extremely valuable. “But this kid can play,” he said. Smalley made another cut after Monday qualifying for the John Deere Classic (T47). When he teed it up at the Wyndham Championship, Smalley figured he needed a top-40 finish to qualify for the Korn Ferry Tour Finals. That week in Greensboro started out inauspiciously, with Smalley three-putting two of his first three holes. He fought back to shoot 68, then fired a bogey-free 64 to easily make the cut. But he entered Sunday with no margin for error after shooting 2-over 72 in the third round. That final round was up and down, but with four holes standing between him and the KFT Finals, Smalley delivered. He birdied the final four holes – all of them on putts of 15 feet or less – to finish T29 and elicit tears of joy from his family. Looking back, he estimates that even two birdies in his final four holes would’ve left him one point short of his goal. “He wasn’t intimidated by it at all,” Smalley’s mom Maria said. “I actually remind him of that a lot. I’m just like, okay, close it — just like you did at the Wyndham.” Of course, the performance at Wyndham wouldn’t have meant much if he didn’t take advantage of it. But a fourth-place finish at the Nationwide Children’s Hospital Championship ensured his spot on the PGA TOUR this season. “I owe a huge debt of gratitude to the Wyndham Championship, and Bobby Long and Mark Brazil, for giving me a chance to prove myself,” Smalley said. “I certainly wouldn’t have my TOUR card right now if it wasn’t for them.” Brazil says Smalley’s successful quest last year is “one heck of a story. It’s guts and determination and he’s a grinder. He’s got a lot of grit to him.” Smalley hides it under a gentle, soft-spoken demeanor, however. He’s thoughtful and smart, graduating Duke with an environmental science degree (and a 3.6 grade-point average to go along with his 71.3 scoring average). Although he was born in Rochester, New York, he moved to the Raleigh area when he was 2 and considers himself “100% North Carolinian.” His family, which includes a younger sister Katie who is studying to become a zookeeper, is close-knit, the kind that gathered at 8 p.m. each night to watch their favorite movies or TV shows together and still loves going to DisneyWorld. “I grew up on those (Disney) movies and just something about them that brings a sense of joy to me, just the songs and the soundtracks,” Smalley said. “We play this game every night at dinner, we have the Disney app, and we can see how long the wait times are at rides. And my sister pulls up the map and she’s like, okay, how long do you think the line is at this ride?” His grandmother gave Smalley a set of plastic clubs when he was a toddler, and his mother remembers him hitting balls in his snowsuit in the winter. As Smalley grew older, he played baseball and was on a travel hockey team, but he learned to love golf when he and his dad, Terry, a biochemistry professor who was once a single-digit handicapper, hit the course on the weekends. “We would have a cart and I would hit the ball and run after it and my dad was like, Alex, we have a cart, we can ride to go get the ball,” Smalley said with a smile. “But he said I would always run after it.” When he was 8 or 9, Smalley boldly announced to his mother that he was going to play on the PGA TOUR one day. The two remember the day distinctly, and Smalley is still amazed that he’s doing what he envisioned at that young age. “It’s pretty crazy to think about, but this sport has been a huge part of my life for 15 of the 25 years that I’ve been alive,” he said. “So, it’s been quite the ride so far and hopefully I have a number of years left.” He took lessons for several years until the pro suggested Smalley – who shot 60 in a junior club championship and became seasoned while playing in the winter national junior series in Pinehurst — find another teacher with more experience working with highly talented players. Since graduating from Duke, Smalley has been seeing short game guru David Orr, who is based at Pine Needles, but still doesn’t have a swing coach. That said, his parents, who caddied for him extensively during his junior, amateur and early pro career, are a good sounding board when things go awry. The couple, both scientists who have their doctorates, know his tendencies and body language and often can recognize when there is what they call “drift” even when he can’t feel it. They help their son stay focused and not get bogged down with the kind of things he can’t control, which the family has dubbed “lights and music.” Smalley’s mom, an analytical chemist by training, has also kept a close watch on his stats since his junior days, helping to identify areas for improvement. “She loves looking up stats like dude, you need to do better on this — 25th on the PGA TOUR is this in putting and you’re this and you need to make more of your 10- to 15-footers,” Smalley said, laughing. His career, Maria said, is like a family business. “We’re all one big team and it works,” she said. Smalley still lives at home – yes, he knows it’s a little “weird” for a PGA TOUR player to say – but the hectic schedule that has seen him play in six different countries in the past year hasn’t allowed much time to look for a place of his own. As for a welcome-to-the TOUR moment? Well, it’s been a more gradual process for the man whose first two events were a baptism-by-fire when he qualified for the 2017 U.S. Open as an amateur and the 2020 Waste Management Phoenix Open. Gone are the days of Monday qualifiers and last-minute tee times, however. A lot has changed in a year. “It’s been crazy,” he said, “but I wouldn’t change it for anything because it’s been one heck of a ride.”

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Jason Day could miss PGA Championship, U.S. OpenJason Day could miss PGA Championship, U.S. Open

Torrey Pines specialist Jason Day is in danger of missing the U.S. Open at the iconic coastal venue and could leave next week’s PGA Championship, or this week’s AT&T Byron Nelson, at any stage for the birth of his fourth child. The Australian has always put family first and said wife Ellie is due in early June but hits full term on her pregnancy this Friday, leaving him on call for an early departure as he looks to recapture past success in Texas. The last time he missed a major – the 2012 Open Championship – was for the birth of Dash, the couple’s first child. “If I’m playing golf, whatever, it doesn’t matter. I just want to make sure that I see the birth of our fourth child … I could get a call this week or next week. Ellie’s two to three centimeters dilated and 15% effaced, and her belly has already dropped. In the next four weeks it can come,” Day said. “If it happens to be on Sunday at a major championship where I’m in contention, it happens. You got to do it. I’m not going to miss it because I’m in contention. It would be nice to win, but family is forever.” The former Dallas resident claimed the first of his 12 PGA TOUR wins at the 2010 AT&T Byron Nelson and has four top-10s from his five tournament appearances – the sort of success he desperately needs if he’s to find his way into the field for June’s U.S. Open. While the PGA Championship comes sooner, Day circled the 2021 U.S. Open at Torrey Pines on the calendar as soon as it was announced in 2014 – a year before he would win the first of his two Farmers Insurance Open’s at the San Diego venue. He had finished runner-up at Torrey just a few months earlier and having won a Junior World title there as a kid the former world No. 1 had always loved the venue. His passion grew over time, particularly as he watched Tiger Woods win time and time again on the edge of the Pacific Ocean, including his epic triumph at the 2008 U.S. Open. But despite finishing inside the top five in half of his 10 U.S. Open appearances, the 33-year-old is yet to be exempt for the tournament and at 62nd in the world rankings sits on the outside looking in as key qualifying dates approach. Day must find a way inside the world top 60 on either May 24 (after the PGA Championship) or June 7 (after the Memorial Tournament Presented by Nationwide) to qualify as he’s already stated he does not intend to join sectional qualifying in his hometown Columbus because of a sponsor conflict. “I haven’t even thought about missing a major championship in a very long time. I’m obviously on the border of missing (Torrey). I’ve got to play well in the next two weeks,” Day said. “Obviously I would love to play the Torrey Pines U.S. Open because I’ve had a lot of success around that golf course.” His 2021 has been far from stellar thus far and he suits up in Texas off two straight missed cuts and with just one top-10 (T7, AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am). Day admits his confidence has taken a hit as distractions puncture his game and his once dominant putting prowess has waned. The 33-year-old has returned to work with former mental coach Jason Goldsmith, who was with him during his near year-long stint as world No. 1 in 2015-16, as he looks to rediscover some old swagger. First step is getting through the moments of doubt and finding love in the grind again. “I’m just trying to build that confidence. I feel like my game is starting to come around nicely and I’m starting to feel good about it,” Day said. “I know I’ve got to keep persisting. If I don’t do it, it’s not going to be enjoyable for me. If it’s not enjoyable for me, I may as well retire. I can’t play the way that I’m going and beat my head against a wall, essentially. “But, then on the other hand I’m like, ‘No, you can’t quit. You got to keep pushing, stay persistent, stay positive, patient, keep moving forward,’ and it’ll come back. Right now I’m trying to do that.”

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