Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Charlie Zink retiring from PGA TOUR following Presidents Cup

Charlie Zink retiring from PGA TOUR following Presidents Cup

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Longtime PGA TOUR executive Charlie Zink, whose distinguished career with the organization began in 1986, has announced his retirement, after fulfilling his role as Chairman of the recent Presidents Cup at Liberty National Golf Club in Jersey City, New Jersey. Zink, who initially joined the TOUR as Chief Financial Officer, eventually rose to Co-Chief Operating Officer, a position he held from 2002-2016, with oversight responsibility for many TOUR business areas. His duties included oversight of consolidated financial, executive board and administrative activities; TPC and Golf Course properties operations; The First Tee and World Golf Hall of Fame development and operations (since inception); and Championship Management Tournament activities, including THE PLAYERS Championship, the Presidents Cup and TOUR Championship. “Charlie’s primary responsibilities during his time as Co-Chief Operating Officer were extensive, during a period of enormous growth for the PGA TOUR,� said former PGA TOUR Commissioner Tim Finchem. “Charlie has played an integral role in the PGA TOUR’s growth and success over the past three decades, providing invaluable knowledge and leadership across a broad spectrum of our business areas,� said PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan. “The entire PGA TOUR family is extremely grateful for his many contributions, including his Chairmanship role of providing valuable oversight to assure the Presidents Cup’s successful first venture into the New York City market. We all wish Charlie the very best as he transitions into the next phase of his life. “It has indeed been a privilege to have this magnificent opportunity to work for the PGA TOUR and all of the players in a variety of leadership capacities over the past 31 years,� said Zink. “The PGA TOUR stands for the highest level of integrity and individual performance-based accomplishment, and it also has a keen focus on communities and charitable endeavors. I am extremely proud of the PGA TOUR, the players and all my colleagues, and I know we have a highly capable, professional team leading the TOUR’s efforts going forward. I have been truly blessed to be here.� Last year, Zink was named Chairman of the 2017 Presidents Cup, the biennial event between the U.S. and International Teams, which was held September 26-October 1.

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Justin Thomas hits almost all of his season-long goals in winning the FedExCupJustin Thomas hits almost all of his season-long goals in winning the FedExCup

ATLANTA – The season finally complete, the FedExCup trophy sitting beside him, Justin Thomas could finally reveal the goals that had driven him this season. He pulled out his cell phone, opened the list he’d created at 9:21 p.m. on Feb. 21 and read the 13 items listed under “16-17 goals.� Some of the benchmarks were about technical aspects of his game, while others focused on tournament results. He exceeded all of the latter with an impressive season that featured five wins. The checklist in his iPhone’s Notes app showed that Thomas wanted to win at least one tournament this season, play in the final two groups of a major, win one of the four majors, qualify for the TOUR Championship and make his first Presidents Cup team. He did all of those. Sunday’s achievement, winning the FedExCup, wasn’t on the list. Not because the season-long race wasn’t important to him, but because he recognized the difficulty of the task. “One week versus an entire year is tough,� Thomas said. “There’s a lot of great players out here. … If someone said, ‘You may not win one of these for eight years,’ it would (stink) but I could see it.� He doesn’t have to worry about that. He was the PGA TOUR’s best player from start to finish, and he confirmed that by winning the FedExCup. Most importantly, Thomas established himself as a closer. That’s a title that can be harder to earn than the FedExCup. All five of Thomas’ wins this season were by two or more shots, including three three-shot victories and a seven-shot win at the Sony Open in Hawaii. He broke 70 in the final round of all five of his victories, shooting 64, 69, 65, 68 and 66. “You just have to want to be there,� Thomas said. “You have to be comfortable being uncomfortable. I just enjoy that rush, the goosebumps you get.� Thomas fell one shot short of Xander Schauffele on Sunday at the TOUR Championship, but birdies on the 70th and 71st holes clinched the FedExCup. If Thomas didn’t birdie two of the last three holes, he was at risk of losing the larger prize to Jordan Spieth. That’s why his FedExCup victory, even if it came after he fell short in the season finale, was another example of Thomas’ clutch play this season. “The guys know if they’ve got it inside,� said Jim “Bones� Mackay, the longtime caddie for Phil Mickelson who now works as an NBC commentator. “Phil said to me very early on in his career, ‘Hey man, I’m going to win a lot of tournaments.’ I don’t think that’s something that you’re necessarily going to hear a ton out here, (but) Phil knew that he had ‘it.’� Thomas has shown a similar confidence on Sundays this season. His success started at the CIMB Classic in Malaysia, where a year earlier he’d won his lone PGA TOUR title. This time, he started the final round in second place, four shots behind leader Anirban Lahiri. Thomas shot a final-round 64 to earn his second PGA TOUR victory. Birdies at Nos. 16 and 17 gave him a three-shot win over Hideki Matsuyama. Thomas, who’d struggled during the final holes of his first win, said he felt “extremely comfortable� this time. It was a harbinger of things to come. Two starts later, Thomas took a two-shot lead over Matsuyama into the final round of the Sentry Tournament of Champions. Thomas birdied the final two holes at Kapalua for a three-shot victory. He was dominant one week later in Honolulu, putting on a record-setting performance in the Sony Open in Hawaii. Playing alongside Spieth, he shot a 59 in the first round, becoming the youngest player to do so. A final-round 65 gave him a seven-shot win and the lowest 72-hole score in TOUR history, 253. During those two weeks in Hawaii, Thomas displayed a “a tenacity, a confidence that it takes experience in order to build and to have,� said Spieth. “I really saw it at Sony. He was out in front of the field and really just kept himself out there.� With wins in three of his first five events, Thomas took a large lead in the FedExCup. With 1,614 points, he was 437 points ahead of Matsuyama and 860 ahead of Pat Perez, who was in third place. “After the Sony is when I felt like it had the chance (to be special) because of the three different ways that I won,� Thomas said. “I was able to experience three things that I hadn’t experienced before.�  His season hit a lull as he had to cope with the new demands that come when your career enters a new stratosphere, though. “I think it just threw me off a little bit,� Thomas said. “It set some expectations a little higher for me.� He was winless over his next 15 starts, with more missed cuts (six) than top-10s (four) in that span. He had fallen to fourth in the FedExCup standings when he arrived at Quail Hollow for the PGA Championship. Victory didn’t seem likely after a first-round 73, but he closed with three consecutive rounds in the 60s (66-69-68) for a two-shot victory. He said his third round may have been the most important of the week because he was able to grind out a score on a day when his swing was off. He exhibited the patience that was missing earlier in his career. “What he did there shows that he has that confidence no matter what the stage is, no matter where it is,� Spieth said. Thomas chipped in on the 13th hole, then made birdie at Quail Hollow’s difficult par-3 17th to all but end the tournament. He showed little emotion as he hit a 7-iron more than 200 yards onto a green encircled by water, then made the 15-foot birdie putt. Mackay called the tee shot “arguably the shot of the year.� “I thought that was a real show-stopper,� Mackay said, “and it spoke volumes for how tough and just great that guy is.� The final victory of the season came at the second event of the FedExCup Playoffs, the Dell Technologies Championship, where Thomas held off Spieth with a final-round 66.  Thomas had won once in 58 starts over his first two seasons, falling short several times on Sunday. Not this season. Jay Seawell, Thomas’ college coach at Alabama, drove to East Lake on Sunday to watch Thomas play his final round of the season. He remembered watching Thomas shoot a 30 on the final nine to win his collegiate debut. “He loves to win. Yeah he’s nervous, but this is what he loves. It’s a gift. His gift is that he loves this moment,� Seawell said. “His greatest attribute is that he wants to win. If something gets in the way of that, if it’s him or a shot or a lack of being able to do something, he always will adjust and get better at that.� He did, allowing him to accomplish goals that even he couldn’t imagine.

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Jon Rahm, Davis Thompson share 54-hole lead at The American ExpressJon Rahm, Davis Thompson share 54-hole lead at The American Express

LA QUINTA, Calif. — Jon Rahm got off to a hot start and shot a 7-under 65 on Saturday on PGA West’s Stadium Course for a share of the lead with PGA TOUR rookie Davis Thompson in The American Express. Thompson’s run of eagles in the Southern California desert finally ended as the 23-year-old carded a 67, also on the Stadium Course, to settle into a tie with Rahm at 23-under 193. Thompson, who had five eagles in leading through the first two rounds, just missed a 35-foot birdie putt on No. 18 that would have given him a one-stroke lead. Rahm, the world’s fourth-ranked player who won at Kapalua two weeks ago, and Thompson will make up the final group Sunday on the Stadium Course, which was one of three courses that hosted the first three rounds. J.T. Poston and Christiaan Bezuidenhout, who shot a 10-under 62 on the Nicklaus Tournament Course, were four strokes behind the leaders. Tom Kim, Harry Higgs, Sam Burns and Taylor Montgomery were another stroke back at 18 under. “Nothing but positive,” said Rahm, who will be playing for his ninth TOUR victory. “Ball-striking felt amazing. Hit a lot of great shots out there off the tee. Giving myself a lot of opportunities with the irons. Took advantage of quite a few of them. So very confident going into tomorrow and knowing that I’m going to have to shoot another low score if I want to have a chance to win.” Rahm came into Saturday trailing Thompson by two strokes. He teed off seven groups ahead of Thompson and took the lead with a blistering front nine that included four birdies and an eagle on the par-5 fifth. The Spanish star cooled off on the back nine with just two birdies and a three-putt bogey on par-3 17th that cut his lead to one, before ending his round with a par. Thompson birdied No. 12 to tie Rahm but then missed a short putt to bogey 14. He birdied the par-5 16th to tie Rahm. “It’s great. I feel like I don’t have anything to lose in my rookie year,” Thompson said. “Just kind of freewheel it. But I’m excited to play with Jon. He’s obviously a top 5 player in the world. He’s very good. But I’m excited about the challenge and just looking forward to tomorrow.” Thompson had four birdies on the front nine. “I felt like I stayed patient all day and made some putts,” he said. “Got off to a great start, which always helps. Up-and-downs on 5 and 6 were huge for me just keeping the momentum going. “I was really proud with how I stayed patient. Didn’t really force anything. Made a bad bogey on 14, but came back and birdied 16. So it was a good way to finish.” The field includes five of the top seven players in the world and 10 of the top 20. Second-ranked Scottie Scheffler was in a group of six at 17 under that included Dylan Wu, who had six straight birdies on his first nine in his round of 11-under 61 at the Nicklaus Tournament Course. Sixth-ranked Xander Schauffele was in a group of five at 15 under, that also included Tony Finau and Jason Day. No. 5 Patrick Cantlay and No. 7 Will Zalatoris were 11 under.

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Scott Langley, Brian Gay share lead at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-AmScott Langley, Brian Gay share lead at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – Certainly, surprises are as much a part of the landscape at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am as surf crashing to the shore and celebrity frolics. Think Ted Potter Jr. as your 2018 winner, and this year’s co-leaders after 7-under 64s in Thursday’s first round, Scott Langley and Brian Gay. Potter, after all, hadn’t won since 2012. So, with that in mind, the surprise carried over to yesterday’s first round with Langley, who is winless in 123 PGA TOUR starts, and Gay, who hasn’t won since 2013 and doesn’t have much of a track record here on the Monterey Peninsula, posting stellar efforts at Monterey Peninsula Country Club’s Shore Course. “I’ve always enjoyed this course, so it was nice to come out here and play a good one,� said Gay, whose only top 10 in this tournament came a year ago. But five straight birdies, starting at the par-4 fifth, got him to the turn in 29 and birdies on three of his final four holes easily offset one long bogey to polish his lowest score in the 36 rounds he’s now played in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Langley, who had eight birdies in a 12-hole stretch, was introduced to the golf world with a share of 16th place as an amateur at Pebble Beach in the 2010 U.S. Open, has never quite carried that amateur success into the pro ranks. So, yes, it would be considered a surprise to see his name atop the leaderboard, but it’s not like Thursday’s opening round didn’t offer up a serious sense of norm. In fact, there were familiar faces everywhere, most notably two of those in a six-way tie for second at 6-under – Phil Mickelson and Jason Day. Like Gay and Langley, Mickelson and Day, played at Monterey Peninsula, which had the lowest field average (68.904). But unlike Gay and Langley, Mickelson and Day have layers of success in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am – four wins for Lefty, plus two seconds, two thirds and two other top 10s, while Day was T-2 a year ago and has finished top 10 five times. When you factor in two-time champion Dustin Johnson and 2017 winner Jordan Spieth both firing 5-under 66 at Monterey Peninsula and the season’s only two-time winner, Matt Kuchar, posting 67, also at MPCC, there is no shortage of star power. You just might have to look beneath a few umbrellas and several layers of clothing to recognize it the next few days. “When you have four or five layers on over the next few days with a lot of wind and rain, that’s very hard to play some good golf,� said Day, emphasizing the need to get off to a fast start. “So, you just tried to get something low and propel yourself up there.� No surprise that Mickelson opened strong, given his brilliant resume here. It’s just that he played MPCC in a fashion that even made him laugh. “History was made today,� said Mickelson. “To the best of my knowledge, it’s taken me 27 years and a few months to hit all the fairways in a single round of competition.� Truth is, Lefty has done that a few times in his career, but not for a long while, but forget the specifics; truth is, he did play beautifully, especially on his homeward nine with five birdies for 32. In unison with Johnson and Spieth and Day and all those who started quickly at Monterey Peninsula, Mickelson said it was imperative, given the forecast. “This was a day that we had great weather, the courses were very scoreable and so you need to take advantage of that.� On a day when the field averaged 72.00 at Spyglass, 71.404 at Pebble, and 86 players broke par, there were surprising names who did take advantage. But it was no surprise that some expected heavyweights did, too.

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