Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Hickok off to solid start at Barbasol Championship in quest to maintain PGA TOUR status

Hickok off to solid start at Barbasol Championship in quest to maintain PGA TOUR status

LEXINGTON, Kent. – Kramer Hickok has been fortunate enough to become friends with Fred Couples, who is involved with some golf courses developed by one of his sponsors. When he goes to Palm Springs in the winter, the Texan often gets to play golf with the former Masters champion.  And whenever Hickok has questions, Couples is more than happy to share some words of wisdom born of nearly than four decades as a pro. With his rookie season on the PGA TOUR winding down and his playing privileges far from locked up for the 2019-20 season, Hickok acknowledges he’s been pressing. And while he hasn’t called his mentor, he knows just what Couples, the ultimate in a stress-free golfer, would tell him. “He would probably say, ‘Go watch some tape of me,’â€� Hickock said with a chuckle. “His motto and the way he handles himself on the golf course is exactly how I think everyone should handle themselves. “It’s just that calm, cool, relaxed, just enjoying everything that there is about the game of golf. It’s a game; we’re out here having fun. It is our job, but don’t let that get you carried away.â€� So, Hickok channeled his inner Couples on Thursday during the first round of the Barbasol Championship. The result was a 65, was his best score since the first round of the AT&T Byron Nelson back in May and left Hickok tied for fourth, just three strokes off the lead. The solid start is important. Kramer came to Keene Trace Golf Club this week ranked No. 155 in the FedExCup. He needs to be inside the top 125 when the Wyndham Championship is over in three weeks to keep his card, or 150th or better to maintain conditional status. This year, the Texas alum admits, has been a struggle. A winner on the Korn Ferry Tour last year and a two-time champ on the MacKenzie Tour-PGA TOUR Canada, Hickok simply hasn’t played the kind of golf he knows he can. Instead of focusing on birdies, he’s worried about FedExCup points and making cuts. When he missed the cut at the John Deere Classic last Friday, Hickok knew he needed an attitude adjustment. After all, just a few short years ago, he would have given anything to be playing on the PGA TOUR – and he knows there are plenty of people out there who would trade places with him right now. “You’re going to play your best golf when you are — for me at least — when I’m having fun and playing like I would when I was back home with my buddies,â€� Hickok said. “That’s the mindset that I’m trying to take going forward. Good golf takes care of itself. It takes care of all those things. “… All you’ve got to do is worry about each shot and smile and laugh a little bit, enjoy it. I mean, we’re out here playing golf for a living. It’s  been a dream of mine for so long. I kind of lost sight of that, that I’m out here living my dream, so just go have fun with it.â€� And make no mistake, Thursday was fun. Hickok started on the back nine and opened with a pair of birdies, then bounced back from his lone bogey of the day with another to make the turn in 34. Three more birdies on the front and a 23-foot eagle putt at No. 8 added up to 7-under. “It’s not like my game hasn’t been — I’ve been playing good golf, but I didn’t have the score to show for it,â€� Hickok said. “A little bit of that is, you know, … making a bogey and just maybe just not handling it very well, a little bit upset about it. “Today, (it was) just move on. Just be in the moment and have fun with it and enjoy the process. Just don’t worry about anything. Just go hit it.â€� His buddy Couples would have been proud.

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Kevin Na finishes strong to win Sony Open in HawaiiKevin Na finishes strong to win Sony Open in Hawaii

HONOLULU — Three shots behind with six holes to play, Kevin Na birdied three straight holes and finished with an up-and-down birdie from behind the 18th green for a 5-under 65 and a one-shot victory in the Sony Open in Hawaii. RELATED: Leaderboard | Winner’s Bag: Kevin Na, Sony Open in Hawaii Na won for the fifth time in his PGA TOUR career, and this one looked unlikely when he three-putted for bogey on the 12th hole at a time where there was no room for mistakes. He answered with birdie putts of 15, 10 and 6 feet, and the winning shot was out of the right rough on the par-5 closing hole at Waialae and ran just over the back of the green. He chipped to tap-in range for his last birdie. Na finished one shot ahead of Joaquin Niemann and Chris Kirk, and only one of them got a consolation prize. Niemann chipped in for birdie from 55 feet on the par-3 17th and got up-and-down with a long bunker shot on the 18th hole for a 66. Even so, he was runner-up for the second straight week in Hawaii. The 22-year-old from Chile was 45-under par in two events without a trophy to show for it. Kirk closed with his fourth straight round of 65 — that wasn’t enough to win on a soft Waialae with no wind — and his tough pitch from below the 18th for birdie proved to be massive. Kirk stepped away from golf in May 2019 citing alcoholism and depression. He was given a medical extension to make up for lost time, and this was the final event for him to regain full status. Needing nearly 150 FedExCup points at the Sony Open in Hawaii, his tie for second was worth 245 points. As for Brendan Steele, it was another year of disappointment in paradise, this one more of a slow leak. Steele last year had a two-shot lead with two to play and wound up losing in a playoff. This time, he made an 18-foot eagle putt on the ninth hole to take a three-shot lead into the back nine. He three-putted the easy 10th hole from nearly 80 feet, and his game was so tentative the rest of the way that he didn’t have a birdie chance inside 30 feet until the 17th hole. That was from 10 feet to tie for the lead, and he missed that. Steele also failed to birdie the 18th and closed with a 69. Na won for the fourth consecutive season, and he attributed the late surge to being happy at home with his wife and two children. He looked comfortable even when the Sony Open in Hawaii appeared to be slipping away. Once he made the 15-footer on the 13th hole, he started walking them in. “I knew there was a lot of birdie holes left,” Na said. “I was having fun out there.” Webb Simpson matched the low score of the final round with a 64 and tied for fourth along with Steele and Marc Leishman, who shot 30 on the back nine. Na finished at 21-under 259 and is assured of returning to Hawaii for two weeks next year, starting with the Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua. That course can be too big for him. Waialae proved to be a perfect fit.

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