Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Christiaan Bezuidenhout quickly becoming household name on TOUR

Christiaan Bezuidenhout quickly becoming household name on TOUR

ORLANDO, Fla. - By now, you know the name, if not the golfer. Christiaan Bezuidenhout. It's a whopper. Twenty-two letters, with an extra ‘a’ thrown into the first name for good measure. As names go, not only is Bezuidenhout cumbersome to stitch onto a golf bag, but it is not very autograph-friendly. Like, say, a Ben An. How unfortunate. If Bezuidenhout maintains the trajectory he has shown the past 22 months, tasting success around the globe, there should be many youngsters chasing after it. Bezuidenhout, from South Africa, is only 26 years old, and already has ascended to 35th in the Official World Golf Ranking. Scaling that highly comes with nice perks. In addition to playing six major championships in 11 months, Bezuidenhout - C-Bez, as his manager calls him - will tee it up this week in the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play in Austin. He is in Group 7 along with former Masters champions Patrick Reed and Bubba Watson, as well as talented Chilean Joaquin Niemann, against whom he will play his first match Wednesday at Austin Country Club. Bezuidenhout has won on South Africa's Sunshine Tour, on the European Challenge Tour, and on the European Tour, winning back-to-back on the latter in December. When he captured the Alfred Dunhill Championship (by four) and South African Open (by five), he became the first European Tour player to win back-to-back since Justin Rose in 2017. Bezuidenhout owns three European Tour victories, defeating Spaniard Jon Rahm on Rahm's home soil at the 2019 Andalucia Masters for his first victory in Europe. His next conquest: the United States. Bezuidenhout has set up camp in a condo within a few hundred yards of the Bay Hill Club & Lodge, Arnie's Place, and is hoping to play good enough in 12 allotted PGA TOUR starts to pile up enough FedExCup points to earn temporary membership for 2020-21. Helped by a T7 at Bay Hill a few weeks ago, he finds himself with 160 points, more than halfway to the 288.035 points that he needs. "The goal is to get myself based over here and and play full-time," he said. "I want to compete against the best players in the world, and the PGA TOUR is the ultimate place to play golf." He has a game that isn't all that flashy, but rounded, solid, and unfailingly rock-steady. Bezuidenhout is not overly long off the tee, but can move it out there 300-310 yards when he is striking it well, which is long enough. His strength is in his short game. He's a quality chipper and a very good putter. He loves to work on the putting, typically spending two-and-a half hours a day on the practice green performing drills, honing his touch. Through 16 PGA TOUR rounds this season, he ranks first in Strokes Gained: Around-The-Green and is 25th in Strokes Gained: Putting. On the European Tour in 2020, he ranked third in average putts per round (27.98), nearly a stroke and a half ahead of the European Tour average. "He putts it really good," said South African Branden Grace, who, like Bezuidenhout, rose through the junior ranks as part of the Ernie Els Foundation. (Bezuidenhout enjoys a terrific relationship with Els, who has has provided him valuable advice. He often visits with him, or exchanges texts with him.) "Christiaan played really well at the end of the year, winning those last two events in South Africa. It really pushed him up in the World Ranking. He's a great player. Keep an eye on him." Bezuidenhout's story is one of early adversity, plenty of personal pain, and ultimately, of significant triumph. At the age of 2, Bezuidenhout was with his parents in a supermarket in South Africa when he reached for a random two-liter Coca Cola bottle and drank from it. When his parents turned around to check on their son, he was on the ground, unconscious, foaming at his mouth. The bottle from which he drank had rat poison in it. Young Christiaan was rushed to the hospital and spent a couple of weeks in Intensive Care. The poison impacted his nervous system, and would affect his speech. Since his youngest days, Bezuidenhout has spoken with a stutter. He was diagnosed at 4 with severe anxiety. He had a difficult time speaking publicly, and dealt with challenging days when he was in primary school. Sometimes the words in his head didn't come out at all. He often was bullied when trying to speak, or read, in class. "I never showed that it hurt me," he said. "When somebody laughs, I'd just laugh with them. I never wanted them to see that it affected me. I'd let it go. And then when I got home from school, I'd just do my own thing, you know?" Christiaan's "thing" became golf. The game soothed him. He came from a golf family, and was hitting balls by the time he was 4. Self-admittedly a loner, and having no interest to compete in team sports, Christiaan found golf to be the perfect escape. He didn't need anyone else to hit balls, or play, and didn't need to talk to anyone. On the grounds of his humble golf club in Delmas, a small farming town outside of Johannesburg, Bezuidenhout would venture to the third fairway of the town's little nine-hole course, empty his shag bag of balls, and hit 7-irons and 9-irons at a tall tree in the middle of the fairway. When he needed to hit longer clubs, he'd gather up his golf balls and head to a lengthier par-5 hole, smashing them for hours. For him, every golf ball struck was therapeutic. When he started to win junior tournaments, officials knew his situation, so he'd be allowed to gather his trophy and go, not making the traditional winner's speech. When Bezuidenhout wasn't playing junior events, it was back to Delmas, hitting balls until his hands gave out, or the sun dropped from the sky. "We had about 60 members at the club, very small," he said. "Not a great golf course. Nine holes. So I'd play nine holes, 18 holes, 27 holes, hit balls. chip and putt. Play some more holes. That's what I did, every day, after school. I never wanted to be anything else but a professional golfer." He was on medications for years, and at 14, as his golf was beginning to blossom, drew a two-year suspension from competition for taking beta blockers. (The suspension later was reduced to nine months.) It kept him from competing at the World Amateur, and crushed his spirit for a time. For Bezuidenhout, it was one more setback to fight through. Three years ago, Bezuidenhout was bumping along as a young professional, sitting outside the top 500 in the World Ranking, when he met up with fellow South African Grant Veenstra, a former professional who had turned to coaching after a 12-year career on the Sunshine Tour. Veenstra is short and stocky and in-your-face direct, and will openly tell you his style isn't for everyone. He has had some nice success as a coach, mentoring pros such as Richard Sterne, Dean Burmester, Haydn Porteous and promising up-and-comer Jayden Schaper, who finished second to Bezuidenhout at the Dunhill. Bezuidenhout showed up as anyone might with a potential new instructor. He brought his clubs and figured he'd hit some balls. Veenstra had other thoughts. "Pack your clubs away," he told him. "We're going to the pub." There, over a handful of brandy and Cokes, Veenstra wanted to explore Bezuidenhout's story. What were his fears? Did he ever back off down the stretch of a tournament to avoid the champion's duties of speaking at a trophy ceremony? And just how good did he want to be? "I wanted to hear it from him, and we cleared up all of that," Veenstra said. "We had a great talk. It broke the ice. The next morning at 8 a.m., we started hitting golf balls." The two keep a regimented program of maintenance for Bezuidenhout's game (four hours of golf, then physio and strength work), and have worked recently to push Bezuidenhout into becoming a more consistent ballstriker. His solid hits, especially with the driver, are fine; one of Bezuidenhout's biggest strenths is how straight he hits the ball. His mis-hits, however, often come up woefully short, which in turn leaves him long irons in, which makes it difficult to hit greens, and consequently, to score. Surprisingly, even when he has won, Bezuidenhout said he only had one, sometimes two good ballstriking rounds in those weeks, relying mostly on his razor-sharp short game to pull him through. "I tend to change my clubface angle at the top (of the swing), and it falls open. It doesn't start online," he said. "That's why I'm working a lot on getting my clubface squarer, stronger, so that I can hold that position in my swing. As soon as I master that, I think I'm going to be a different player, more consistent in my game. That's what's been lacking the last couple of years - putting four solid ballstriking rounds together. If I'm a more consistent ballstriker, and iron player, then those top 30s can become top 10s." Even with a costly bogey/double bogey finish at the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, Bezuidenhout tied for seventh, his best finish on the PGA TOUR. He will play this week's WGC-Dell Match Play, the Masters and the RBC Heritage, hoping to wrap up his FedExCup points quest, and then re-assess his schedule going forward. Veenstra marvels at Bezuidenhout's consistency, his mental toughness, and his ability to adjust to what he has in his game on a given day. He said Bezuidenhout does not get down on himself. Case in point was the 2020 Arnold Palmer Invitational. Bezuidenhout had a grand opportunity on Sunday, playing in the second-to-last group alongside Rory McIlroy. But he struggled mightily in very tough conditions, shooting 79 and plummeting to T18. Four days later in the first round at THE PLAYERS, Bezuidenhout bounced back by shooting 65. That next morning, Commissioner Jay Monahan announced the PGA TOUR season was on hold because of COVID-19. Bezuidenhout returned home to South Africa for three months. "The ability to bounce back, that's the sign of a great player," Veenstra said. "Christiaan's 15th club is his mind. He has a very strong mind on how to turn it around, and he rarely lets a round get away from him. "He is a man who is all about structure. To see him climb, and to see his game improve, it's been amazing. We still have goals to achieve going forward. We want to be top 20 in the world for 20 years - that's where we are going with it." Just as he has grown as a player, Bezuidenhout has grown to be very comfortable with who he is, and how he speaks. His thoughts and words have eloquence, and just take a little more time to be delivered. Told that his story of perseverance could serve to inspire young children who are dealing with situations similar to his, he nods modestly in affirmation. "Hopefully, I do," says the man who has as much depth to him as his 22-letter name might suggest. "Golf has helped me a lot. It helped me to deal with it. ... It's not a secret. I don't have to hide it, or be ashamed of it, or who I am. I'm fine with it. I'm happy with who I am."

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Updates from THE PLAYERS ChampionshipUpdates from THE PLAYERS Championship

UPDATED MONDAY, MARCH 14 (10:55 a.m. ET): Final-round tee times for THE PLAYERS Championship will be from 11 a.m. – 1:01 p.m. ET in threesomes off Nos. 1 and 10. (Click here for how to follow the action live) UPDATED MONDAY, MARCH 14 (8 a.m. ET): Round 3 resumed at 8 a.m. ET. UPDATED SUNDAY, MARCH 13 (7:32 p.m. ET): Round 3 at THE PLAYERS was suspended due to darkness at 7:32 p.m. ET. Round 3 is scheduled to resume at 8 a.m. Monday morning. UPDATED SUNDAY, MARCH 13 (3:15 p.m. ET): Round 3 got underway at 3:15 p.m. ET, one hour later than originally scheduled. The 71 players who made the cut teed off in threesomes off both tees. The final group of Sam Burns, Tom Hoge and Harold Varner III is scheduled to tee off at 5:16 p.m. UPDATED SUNDAY, MARCH 13 (1:35 p.m. ET): The approximate start of Round 3 has been adjusted to 2:50 p.m. ET, with tee times running to 4:50 p.m. ET. UPDATED SUNDAY, MARCH 13 (10:20 a.m. ET): Round 3 tee times will be approximately 2:15 p.m. to 4:15 p.m. ET, with players in threesomes off of Nos. 1 and 10. The ball will be played as it lies for the third and fourth rounds after lift, clean and place was in use for the first two rounds. UPDATED SUNDAY, MARCH 13 (8:30 a.m. ET): The second round of THE PLAYERS Championship resumed at 8:15 a.m. ET. UPDATED SATURDAY, MARCH 12 (6:29 p.m. ET): The second round of THE PLAYERS was suspended at 6:29 p.m. ET for darkness. It will resume at 8:15 a.m. Sunday. Sixteen of the 24 groups originally scheduled to tee off Friday afternoon began their second rounds Saturday (no one completed more than four holes Saturday); the remaining eight groups will begin their second round Sunday morning. Twenty-two players originally scheduled to start their second round Friday morning will complete their second round Sunday; none of those players have more than four holes remaining. UPDATED SATURDAY, MARCH 12 (Noon ET): Play resumed at noon ET. Second round tee times for the first wave will be from noon-2:01 p.m. ET. Second wave tee times for Round 2 are scheduled for approximately 5-7:01 p.m ET. UPDATED SATURDAY, MARCH 12 (10:30 a.m. ET): Play will resume at noon ET. UPDATED SATURDAY, MARCH 12 (7:15 a.m. ET): Due to severe weather this morning, Round 1 will not resume until 12 p.m. ET at the earliest. UPDATED FRIDAY, MARCH 11 (3 p.m. ET): Play was officially called for the day at 3 p.m. ET and will not resume any earlier than 11 a.m. ET on Saturday because of forecasted storms in the morning. Forty-seven players still need to complete their first round. “Unfortunately, the weather conditions are not providing us any relief,” Chief Referee Gary Young said Friday afternoon. A “severe” weather system is projected to arrive somewhere between 8-10 a.m. Saturday. “Our desire is to not have anyone on the property at that time,” Young said. TPC Sawgrass has received nearly 3 inches of rainfall in the previous 48 hours, Young said Friday afternoon. The numerous delays mean THE PLAYERS will have a Monday finish for the first time since 2005. “We are into a Monday finish,” Young said. “We know that.” Young said further delays may not leave enough time for a potential playoff, however. THE PLAYERS conducts a three-hole playoff in the result of a tie at the end of regulation. There is no rain in the forecast for Saturday afternoon or Sunday, but players will face with cold temperatures and high winds. The overnight temperature between Saturday and Sunday is expected to drop into the 30s. UPDATED FRIDAY, MARCH 11 (12:40 p.m. ET): Multiple weather delays over the first two days of THE PLAYERS, combined with an ominous forecast, mean the tournament may be headed for its first Monday finish since 2005. After less than half the field completed its first round on Thursday, just four hours of play were completed Friday morning before heavy rain forced players from the course for the second straight day. Forty-eight players had yet to complete their opening rounds when play was suspended because of standing water on the greens and approaching lightning. Despite grounds staff furiously squeegeeing water from the greens, the persistent precipitation finally conquered the course and players were forced off at 11:15 a.m. ET. On Thursday, storms forced players from the course for more than four hours, allowing just 69 players to complete the first round. If players cannot return to the course Friday afternoon, THE PLAYERS is likely headed for its first Monday finish since Fred Funk’s incredible win as a 48-year-old in 2005. “I would say, if we do not get back out on the golf course by the end of the day, then we are into that situation,” chief referee Gary Young said. “We’ve been crunching some numbers, and yes, we are coming close to that point now. We’ve received about 2 1/2 inches of rain at this point in the last 24 hours. The golf course has reached a point where it’s unplayable, and we will ride this out as long as we can this afternoon. If a window of opportunity presents itself, we’ll get back out there later today.” Young said the forecast suggested this outcome was more hopeful then probable. While the storm could pass, the expected deluge could leave the course in need of some significant love before it is playable again. “In our meetings with Wade Stettner, our meteorologist, and looking at future models, there is the possibility that this area that’s settling in right now could move slightly to the north. We are right on the border of the models that we were looking at,” Young said when explaining why players were not being sent home early. “We were on the southern border of this system, and if for some reason it lifts a little bit to the north, it could provide us a window of opportunity. At that point we’ve got to evaluate the golf course and make sure that it is in proper condition for us to get back out there.” As the players sought shelter, the forecast showed continuing rain and lighting at least through 4 p.m. ET. As for Saturday, more severe winds have prompted a gale warning. Officials are likely to send players off split tees after the second round is completed and a cut made, and are also considering foregoing a repairing between the third and fourth rounds. “At this point, we’re just battling, trying to make up for lost time. We also know that the conditions we’re going to be facing tomorrow with the winds that are predicted, the pace of play is going to be slower as well,” Young added. “In speaking with Wade, they’re anticipating some winds that could be in the area of 60 miles per hour as it comes through. So, we’re going to prepare for that overnight. The superintendent and his crew are going to need proper time to pick up debris and get the golf course back in condition. So, there’s a lot of variables involved.” UPDATED FRIDAY, MARCH 11 (11:15 a.m. ET): Play was stopped for Round 1 at 11:15 a.m. ET due to dangerous weather as a large storm system continued to hit TPC Sawgrass. The first round resumed at 7:15 a.m. ET and the morning wave of Round 1 was completed at 7:48 a.m. ET. UPDATED THURSDAY, MARCH 10 (6:36 p.m. ET): The first round of THE PLAYERS Championship was suspended due to darkness at 6:36 p.m. ET. The first round is scheduled to resume at 7:15 a.m. ET on Friday. The first wave of second-round tee times is scheduled for approximately 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. ET. Fifty-four of the 72 players in the afternoon wave began the first round Thursday (none completed the round). No one in Thursday’s afternoon wave completed more than seven holes Thursday before play was suspended due to darkness. UPDATED THURSDAY, MARCH 10 (3:14 p.m. ET): Round 1 resumed at 3:14 p.m. ET. Nearly a half-inch of rain (0.45 inches) fell on TPC Sawgrass during the delay of 4 hours, 14 minutes. Sixty-nine of the 72 players in the morning wave completed the first round Thursday (all but the group of Hank Lebioda, Henrik Norlander and Taylor Pendrith). UPDATED THURSDAY, MARCH 10 (11 a.m. ET): More than one inch of rain (1.3 inches) fell overnight at TPC Sawgrass, delaying the start of the first round one hour to 7:45 a.m. Play was suspended at 11 a.m. ET due to dangerous weather. Seventy-two players were able to get their rounds started before the suspension. Will Zalatoris (11 holes), Harold Varner III (11 holes) and Tommy Fleetwood (10 holes) were tied for the lead at 4 under before the horn sounded. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9: PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – PGA TOUR officials are confident they’re prepared for what is shaping up as a potentially tricky stretch of weather at THE PLAYERS Championship. On the eve of the opening round at TPC Sawgrass the extended forecast calls for a high likelihood of thunderstorms over the opening three days. Perhaps more ominously, there could be four different wind directions throughout the tournament. As an ominous precursor, the Stadium Course was evacuated early Wednesday afternoon as storms approached the area. Saturday could prove especially challenging with 20-30 mph sustained winds, and even heavier gusts, expected out of the west/northwest. Thursday brings an 80% chance of storms and winds of 10-18 mph out of the west/southwest. The forecast for Friday sits at 90% chance of storms with an east/southeast wind of 6-12 mph. “Rain and thunderstorms are likely both Thursday and Friday as a frontal boundary drops into northern Florida and stalls,” TOUR meteorologist Wade Stettner said in his forecast Wednesday. “This front is forecast to bring periods of rain with embedded thunderstorms over the two-day period.” Temperatures are also expected to drop significantly on Sunday with a high of just 54 degrees. The wind will switch to a 12-22 mph challenge out of the north/northeast in what, weather depending, would be the final round. “By Saturday morning a strong cold front is forecast to arrive and bring additional thunderstorms,” Stettner’s forecast continued. “This front should clear Ponte Vedra Beach by noon Saturday with dry conditions for the remainder of the weekend. Gusty winds will develop behind the front on Saturday with peak gusts over 30mph at times. Much colder temperatures are forecast this weekend.” In anticipation of the high weekend winds, and the potential for weather delays over the opening two days, officials will pay especially close attention to green speeds and pin locations during the set-up process. With the natural drainage on and around the greens only a few pin locations would be severely affected by rain, but high winds could render some spots unusable. For example, it’s unlikely there would be a hole close to the water at the par-4 fourth and island 17th holes. “We will once again meet this afternoon with the agronomy staff with the latest information at our disposal and obviously adjust our plans accordingly,” Chief Referee Gary Young said. “We are confident we will be as prepared as possible for what lies ahead. We are meticulous in every aspect but it is certainly fair to say Saturday’s winds are a point of focus for us, particularly as we could be finishing up Friday’s round on Saturday, so that affects Friday’s set up as well. “We need to keep in mind we could have a good amount of Friday’s round playing in that Saturday wind,” Young continued, “and they are opposite winds, so we need to find something that works well for both and that’s a challenge.” While in perfect weather officials would prepare and maintain firm and fast greens, the current forecast calls for a gradual decrease from top speed – as the tournament begins Thursday – to as much as an inch or an inch and a half slower speeds by Saturday. That would presumably eliminate the possibility of balls oscillating and even rolling away on the putting surfaces. Officials will take care to make it a gradual change rather than a big overnight shift so players don’t have to make significant adjustments. “Thankfully we’ve got time to make adjustments because we know what’s coming, so that helps in the planning,” Young said. “We have our target speeds for the high winds and we just need to get to that as slowly as possible.” Defending champion Justin Thomas was hoping for the best but also preparing himself for the worst. “I’ve heard horror stories from Tiger and Freddy and some guys about having to hit 5- or 6-iron into 17 on those cold north wind days, and I haven’t experienced that,” Thomas said. “When you get wind and cold temperatures like that, it’s just a different animal, and it’s really just a survival-type thing. “It’s not like I’m going into this week preparing any differently… I don’t get too wrapped up in the draw or what’s the weather going to be like Friday or what’s the wind going to be, because at the end of the day, weather people are wrong all the time.” Adam Scott, the 2004 champion, has experienced tough weather at TPC Sawgrass before. THE PLAYERS the year prior to his victory here, and the tournament the year after it, were played in tricky weather. “It’s a long time ago, but I was around for Davis Love’s win in 2003 when it was horrible, and Fred Funk’s win in 2005, that wasn’t good weather either,” Scott said ahead of his 20th PLAYERS start. “I think we played almost 36 holes on Monday that year because of all the weather delays. When this sort of weather happens the guy who really has his game in shape comes to the top. He can make those adjustments on the fly when he stands on the tee and it is a different wind than the day before, but you just easily pick the shot you need to compensate. Those in control of their swings will be the ones to watch.”

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Corales Puntacana shines after quick turnaround for TOUR eventCorales Puntacana shines after quick turnaround for TOUR event

With the opening tee shots struck on Thursday, the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship becomes the first PGA TOUR event to be played twice in the same season in 70 years. But the way tournament director and head professional Jay Overton sees it, the 182 days that separate Hudson Swafford's win in September with Sunday's crowning of a champion are only part of the story. Consider this. When Corales Puntacana was postponed a year ago in March in the wake of the pandemic, the tournament was just two weeks away from being played. The grandstands and hospitality venues had already been erected. The course was roped off. The volunteers were ready to serve. All the work that goes into staging a PGA TOUR event had been completed - just as it was in September and again this week. But there was one important thing missing. "Now, keep in mind that the way I perceive it - and this is a more a sense when you have 100% build-out - this is the third event we’ve had in 365 days," Overton says. "We just didn’t have players the first time." Overton said that he and his staff started planning for this week's event the day after Swafford won in September. They made smart decisions, like storing as many things on site as possible rather than in warehouses 40 miles away. The quick turnaround - in tournament time, at least - proved beneficial. "If you think about it, all tournaments go from a calendar year to a calendar year and change volunteers, change rules, change protocols," Overton says. "But in this particular case, it’s almost an identical situation - limited spectators, limited volunteers. … "So, it’s just been so much smoother and so much easier because it’s still in everyone’s memory. Exactly what we did six months ago. I hadn’t really focused on that until I’ve seen what’s gone on this week. So, the volunteers haven’t forgotten what to do. A staff hadn’t forgotten what to do. "It really was an easy gear up and it’s just been fun." Overton says the resort contemplated closing the Tom Fazio-designed course for an extended period of time after the tournament in September due to the various worldwide travel bans. But enough property owners decided to stay on the island that the course remained open, and golf was played every day. The six months since Corales Puntacana was last played has also allowed the course to flourish. The growing time was needed after the supply chain for fertilizer and chemicals from the United States and Canada was shut down from April until August due to the pandemic, and their reserves depleted. "We had to use everything that we still had, or that we could gather on the Island, to get the course in as good a shape as we could for the event (in September)," Overton recalls. "In all honesty, we had about a three- month, four-month period there where we’re just trying to keep the course cut and survive. … "So, the course after the tournament was a little stressed out. I think you could see that probably on the weekend. But then things began to open up and we were able to get the course back. "I don’t think the course has been any better than it is this week. All the challenges that we had last year proceeding the tournament, we didn’t have those this year." Jordan Harris, one of the PGA TOUR rules officials on site this week, says the course has "rebounded tremendously" compared to where it was in September and calls the turf "excellent." So, there will be more flexibility with hole locations that will make the course play similarly to what is normally seen in March. And best of all, the players are back for the second time in six months. Overton says his phone was "ringing off the hook" with players wanting to play in September once the PGA TOUR announced its Return to Golf last summer. This week has been no different. Granted, there was some uncertainty at the time given that Corales Puntacana would be the TOUR's first international stop. But the precautions taken, and strict protocols observed - even down to those 12 tees and pencils handed out in sanitized baggies, Overton noted - made players feel more secure. Corales Puntacana also ushered in some semblance of normalcy on the PGA TOUR when a 20-team pro-am was played in September - the first since the Return to Golf began. There was strict coronavirus testing for the amateurs, as is the case this week for the Wednesday event that featured 42 teams. And has been the case on TOUR for the past month or so, a limited number of fans will be in attendance. No tickets were sold but invited guests, property owners and members will be allowed at Nos. 1, 9, 16, 17 and 18 where there will be bleachers around the green. Charley Hoffman, a member of the PGA TOUR Policy Board, says the safety measures in place eventually made him feel comfortable with traveling internationally to play in September. And those protocols, as well as the beauty of the island, prompted him come back this week. "I had big doubts that we’d ever be able to come down here in September," Hoffman admits. "Like I said, the safety that they — the Dominican did, and their tourism did to keep us safe out there was amazing. To throw on top of that a pro-am, and they tested everybody. "It was just nice to have some interaction back with the fans and the sponsors. It went on without a hitch and it was great to be back. This week, adding a few invited guests, it’s going to be nice to hear some claps and cheers, which I feed off of. "I think the majority of us, we would all rather play in front of a few fans, I think we can gain momentum from that or maybe even have them cheer us out of a rut we’re in." Swafford said he told his caddie earlier this week that it felt "kind of like yesterday we were here making a putt on No. 18 to win by a shot. And he was only half-kidding. Like Hoffman, he was worried about leaving the United States, but he and his wife "embraced" the opportunity to take a vacation and possibly find a degree of normalcy. Swafford was the only player to shoot four rounds in the 60s as he broke a 4 ½-year victory drought. "It was unbelievable how the Dominican and Grupo Puntacana ran the event," Swafford says. "… It was truly incredible what they pulled off and accomplished as the first international event and really kind of broke away from the PGA bubble of having — you know, being stateside. I thought they did a phenomenal job and just looking forward to being back here."

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Fantasy golf: One & Done, A Military Tribute at The GreenbrierFantasy golf: One & Done, A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier

It’s that wondrous time of the season when we’re running dry on short-listers but elated when at least one of the usual suspects the unburned is out there contributing to his FedExCup points total. Independence, indeed. What’s hilarious, although as good as an indictment on my disappointing effort in the long-term as any, is that 11 of the 15 golfers in my Power Rankings at A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier are still on my board. Seriously think about that. We’re at event No. 36 and I’m swimming in possibilities. Only Tony Finau (No. 1), Webb Simpson (No. 2), Phil Mickelson (No. 6) and Brian Harman (No. 9) are unavailable. I don’t suspect that you’re in similar waters because many of the guys at my disposal would have made sense – and were recommended in this space – earlier this season. Finau lines up well everywhere. He among the MVPs of the bridges to whom we turn at various points when converging trends and horses for courses are in short supply. Look no further if you can plug him in now. The same can be said of Russell Henley, who captures the attention of my brethren. No doubt that’s in part due to the fact that Finau is no longer available to any of us. Elsewhere, even if defending champion Xander Schauffele was contending regularly – he’s been hot and cold in recent weeks – the advice is to let him go about his first experience in that role alone and appreciate how rapidly he’s risen on our radar as a go-to in just his second season with a PGA TOUR card. If the Wyndham Championship wasn’t on the horizon (in mid-August), Webb Simpson would look tantalizing right now. However, if you’re chasing, burn him now. Done. Ever since Jimmy Walker reconnected with the kind of form that we expect without the challenge of Lyme disease, he’s been inside my circle for The Old White TPC. His superb record on the course warrants enough confidence and faith, but that’s multiplied given subscribers to recency bias might be dissuaded by uninspiring results as the largest images in the side-view mirror. That slots him as the perfect hired gun for those of us in pursuit. Then there’s Charles Howell III. How is it early July and we’re still talking about him! He just turned 39, but he’s playing as if he’s given strokes to Father Time. He’s not included in Future Possibilities below only because it doesn’t include the first half of 2018-19. I joked last week that two-man gamers should burn him already if he’s “somehow still on your board,” but lo and behold, I haven’t turned to him in my one-man format. Glance at my performance and realize quickly that the joke is on me. Two-man gamers should target J.B. Holmes, Andrew Putnam and Joaquin Niemann. FUTURE POSSIBILITIES NOTE: Select golfers committed to the tournament are listed alphabetically. Future tournaments are sorted chronologically and reflect previous success on the courses on which the tournaments will be held in 2017-18. The numerical values in parentheses represent the order of relative confidence of where to use each golfer if multiple sites are listed (e.g. 1 for strongest, 2 for next-strongest and so on). To present weighted confidence in real time, numerical values will not change all season no matter how many tournament remain listed for each golfer. All are pending golfer commitment. Kevin Chappell … WGC-Bridgestone (2); Dell Technologies (3) Tony Finau … Greenbrier (2); Canadian (4) Bill Haas … Wyndham (2) Brian Harman … John Deere (3) Russell Henley … Greenbrier (2) J.B. Holmes … Greenbrier (5) Kevin Kisner … Wyndham (6) Phil Mickelson … Open Championship (5) Ryan Moore … John Deere (3); TOUR Championship (6) Kevin Na … John Deere (9); Wyndham (3); THE NORTHERN TRUST (11) Scott Piercy … John Deere (6) Webb Simpson … Greenbrier (5); Wyndham (1) Brandt Snedeker … Canadian (3); Wyndham (4) Jimmy Walker … Greenbrier (8); Dell Technologies (7) Bubba Watson … Greenbrier (8); WGC-Bridgestone (1); TOUR Championship (4)

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