Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting A month later, Cabrera Bello still in Florida, unable to return home

A month later, Cabrera Bello still in Florida, unable to return home

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Like the 143 other players in the field, Spain’s Rafa Cabrera Bello came to THE PLAYERS Championship last month only to see it canceled after one round due to the coronavirus pandemic. Unlike those other players, Cabrera Bello has yet to return home. For now, he and his family remain in the area. Accidental Floridians, if you will. “We’ve only been able to make decisions with the information we had at the time,� Cabrera Bello, who shot a first-round 68, said in a phone interview from his rental home in the Ponte Vedra Beach area. His wife Sofia and their 8-month-old daughter Alva Margareta are with him, as are his manager Richard Rayment plus Rayment’s wife Gabby and their daughter Nikki. The six, who normally live in the same apartment building in Dubai, have been scrambling like many others to shelter in place after many travel options became unavailable to them amid the COVID-19 crisis. “After THE PLAYERS,� Rayment said, “we thought, OK, what are we going to do?� The idea of getting on an airplane for the long trip back to Dubai was unappealing, and travel restrictions were going up fast. Where to go? What to do? Bernd Wiesberger of Austria, one of Cabrera Bello’s fellow competitors, caught one of the last flights back to Europe. “We decided to rent a place for two weeks,� Rayment said, “and then things changed quickly. The UAE closed its borders, so we had to find another home and got the one we’re in now for a month and possibly one more. So really we’re just here, on lockdown a long way from home. It’s crazy, what’s happening. “I’ve made so many calls I could be a travel agent here,� he added with a rueful laugh. Not that he’s complaining; he knows they’re among the lucky ones. Like all touring pros, Cabrera Bello, who stayed at the Sawgrass Marriott for tournament week, is used to being on the move. He had planned on going from THE PLAYERS to the Valspar Championship in Tampa, the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play in Austin, Texas, then the Masters in Augusta, Georgia. Rayment’s daughter, a lawyer, was going to be at Augusta National for the first time. Then everyone’s plans fell apart. Since THE PLAYERS was canceled, Cabrera Bello hasn’t played much golf. He may go out for a quick nine or hit balls around dinner time to limit contact with others in this social distancing environment. The news from Spain and in America is grim, but Cabrera Bello checks it regularly. Sometimes he puts a piece or two into a puzzle. He’s twice driven to Orlando to see his coach, David Leadbetter. When he must go shopping for groceries or other necessities for the family, he always takes precautions. It’s the new normal, and it’s how he’d want others to behave around his 89-year-old maternal grandmother, Egda. His only surviving grandparent, she lives with his parents back home in Gran Canaria, Spain, and all are doing well, he said. So are his siblings, and his friends. “I speak with them every other day, and send texts,� he said. “My brother is in Malaga, my sister in London. My wife’s family, her mom lives in Portugal, and her dad in Sweden. They are all safe and healthy. It’s more a concern for our grandparents who are high age and higher risk.� His mother, he added, is a doctor in a dialysis clinic, and has been told by the authorities in Spain to stand by in case she’s needed. So far, Gran Canaria has not emerged as a hot spot. Back in Ponte Vedra Beach, Team Rafa plan to stay for the rest of April and into May, at which point they might have enough information to decide what to do next. Maybe Cabrera Bello, who made the first-ever albatross at the 16th hole at THE PLAYERS in 2017, will even know enough to begin to formulate a schedule for what’s left of 2020. Meanwhile, he’s taking it slow and reconnecting with family and friends. He checks in with other Spanish golfers such as Sergio Garcia and Jon Rahm via What’s App, and has especially appreciated his extended time with new daughter Alva Margareta. “I like to set up routines like a normal family instead of seeing her for a week and then being away for a week,� Cabrera Bello said. “I’ve seen her for like 2-1/2 months straight right now, and it’s absolutely beautiful to watch the little improvements that she goes through every day. You try something with her and she can’t do it, and a week later she’s doing it. “We’re going to learn to enjoy every single day because in the blink of an eye things can change so dramatically,� he added. “The hardest thing is to see so much suffering and worrying about loved ones. I know the end of the tunnel is somewhere, but I just don’t know where it is.�

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Process leads Ryan Armour to best golf of careerProcess leads Ryan Armour to best golf of career

Believe in the process. Ohio State alum Ryan Armour has maintained that mantra over the past few years of a professional golf career that have seen him rise from the mini-tour grind, to the Web.com Tour, to the PGA TOUR – back down to the Web.com Tour, then back up to the PGA TOUR. ‘The process’ can be perceived as a generality, used by sports teams such as the Philadelphia 76ers and Buffalo Bills in reference to a rebuilding strategy that takes a holistic, long-term approach. But when broken down to its nuts and bolts, ‘the process’ means an unwavering commitment to a defined strategy, meant to increase performance over time. ‘The process’ means discipline backed by motivation. ‘The process’ came together for Armour in a big way at the Sanderson Farms Championship, where the 41-year-old won by five strokes over Chesson Hadley to secure his first PGA TOUR title. For a player who had earned just two prior top-5 PGA TOUR finishes in the first 18 years of his professional career, it meant validation of consistently staying true to ‘the process,’ regardless of the result at the time. It also means job security, in the form of a TOUR exemption through the 2019-20 season. When interviewed Sunday afternoon on the 18th green at the Country Club of Jackson, it was apparent that ‘the process’ had paid off. “I’m tearing up,â€� said Armour when asked to describe the emotion of the moment. “I’m not gonna lie. There were some lean times. Thought about quitting, but my wife wouldn’t let me. “It goes back to, ‘Have faith in what you do.’ If you believe in something, go do it. Work hard at it, and have fun doing it.â€� So what exactly is ‘the process’ for Armour? The Ohio native doesn’t like to reveal the specifics, but it consists of a defined on- and off-course plan that involves eating right, sleeping right, exercising right, and working on the correct things in his game at the right times. Armour and his New York area-based instructor, Jason Carbone, devised a five-year plan earlier this summer, and Armour admitted after his win in Mississippi that it came together ‘a bit quicker’ than he might have expected. Prior to the 2016-17 PGA TOUR Regular Season-ending Wyndham Championship, Armour made a list of goals for the week, both on and off the course, outlining ‘the process’ he intended to maintain for the week. The 1993 U.S. Junior runner-up (to Tiger Woods) finished fourth that week, his best showing of the season. Although it wasn’t quite enough to maintain his TOUR status, the finish gave him momentum that carried into the Web.com Tour Finals, where he placed second at the Nationwide Children’s Hospital Championship to secure his TOUR return. Throughout the week at The Ohio State University Golf Club’s Scarlet course, in front of avid fans and friends from his collegiate days, Armour again stuck to a defined plan that served him well – and set him up for a career-defining week at the CC of Jackson. “I won’t tell you what’s on it, but I did it,â€� when asked in Columbus if he again made a list of process goals. “Very similar what was on the list (at the Wyndham Championship). A little less focus on golf, and more on exercise and eating.â€� One might be inclined to ask, if the process is so effective, why does it take sometimes take so long for results to kick in? Simply put, life gets in the way. The life of a professional golfer means balancing family, practice, competition and travel, as well as the world’s various trials and tribulations. Armour is married with two young sons, and it isn’t always the easiest to stick to ‘the process’ 24/7/365, in a profession that requires being on the road for more than half the year. But powered by the unwavering support of his wife Erin – who has made healthy living a family focal point, and who is running this weekend’s New York City Marathon – and sons Patrick and Nicholas, Armour has propelled his game to new heights as he enters his 40s. “I think that’s when you forget it,â€� said Armour in Columbus, when asked how to stick to the process in times of struggle. “You forget to believe, ‘Hey, you’re working on the right stuff; you’re exercising correctly. You’re eating healthy. You’re getting the right amount of sleep.’ “It’s all a process, as I get into my 40s, that I have to watch. If I believe in it and stick to it, I mean, it’s shown it’s successful. “We’re running around the country, and I’ve got two little ones at home that I love playing outside all day with, and you sometimes neglect to take care of yourself first. That’s just the way it is.â€� If I believe in it and stick to it, I mean, it’s shown it’s successful. Armour turned pro in 1999, and it took him until 2004 to earn full Web.com Tour status. He played eight full Web.com Tour seasons, with three PGA TOUR seasons mixed in, before breaking through for his first Web.com Tour title at the 2016 Panama Claro Championship, which propelled him to TOUR status for the 2016-17 season. Although he had needed to regain his TOUR status for 2017-18 via the Web.com Tour Finals, Armour arrived at the Sanderson Farms Championship knowing he was playing some of the best golf of his life, as evidenced by his recent top-5 finishes at the Wyndham Championship and Nationwide Children’s Hospital Championship. It all coalesced over four magical days in Mississippi, where he became the oldest competitor to win on TOUR since Rod Pampling at the 2016 Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. The win in Jackson propelled Armour to No. 9 in the FedExCup standings while earning him spots in the 2018 Sentry Tournament of Champions, THE PLAYERS Championship and the PGA Championship. These are heady times for Armour, as he strives to emerge into a consistent contender on TOUR over the next few seasons. And if he sticks to the process, the sky’s the limit. “It just proves that if you keep grinding and keep working, believing in the process … the process will get you there,â€� said Armour after his 2016 win in Panama. “I don’t think you can do what we do and not believe in yourself.â€� There may be debate between Bills and 76ers fans regarding ownership of the ‘process’ mantra. But Armour deserves a place in the conversation, as well. –Royce Thompson contributed reporting.

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