Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Jon Rahm part of six-way tie for lead at Mexico Open at Vidanta

Jon Rahm part of six-way tie for lead at Mexico Open at Vidanta

PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico — Jon Rahm is the biggest star in the Mexico Open at Vidanta and he lived up to his billing Thursday, chipping in for birdie and making a late eagle putt for a 7-under 64 and a six-way share of the lead in the first round. RELATED: Leaderboard | Jon Rahm returns to roots in opening 64 at Mexico Open at Vidanta Jonathan Byrd, Brendon Todd, Trey Mullinax and Monday qualifier Bryson Nimmer also were at 64 from the morning wave. Nimmer played his final five holes in 5 under, including a bunker shot he holed out for eagle on the par-5 sixth hole. Kurt Kitayama faced the strength of the afternoon wind and made nine birdies, getting up-and-down from behind the green on the par-5 18th for his 64. The Mexico Open is part of the PGA TOUR schedule and inherits the history of a national open that dates to 1944. It takes the place of the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship that was at Chapultepec in Mexico City for four years through 2020. Rahm knew very little about the Vidanta Vallarta course except that he felt comfortable off the tee, and it showed. The Spaniard missed only one fairway, and three greens. He opened with a 15-foot birdie putt on the par-5 12th hole, but it was the chip-in from 30 feet on the 13th that really got him going. He had to save par on the 10th and 11th holes at the start of his round. “I hadn’t hit my best irons shots early on,” Rahm said. “Chipped that one in from an uncomfortable lie and a tough one. That was a huge bonus. I think a lot of people obviously would look at the eagle on 7, but that one early on was a huge booster.” The eagle on the 311-yard seventh hole was set up by a big drive to the middle of the green on the par 4 and a 40-foot putt that gave him a share of the lead. Rahm also made birdie on each of the three par 5s on the back nine, and perhaps his finest shot was his approach from 206 yards to just inside 4 feet for birdie on the par-4 fourth. Nimmer finished with a blaze of good shots. After a 12-foot birdie putt on the par-3 fifth, he holed out for eagle, pitched to 2 feet on the reachable seventh and made a 12-foot birdie putt on the par-3 ninth to close out his round. Aaron Rai, Aaron Wise, Sahith Theegala and Scott Brown were at 65. Rai and Theegala could use top finishes this week to move up in PGA Championship points and try to secure a spot at Southern Hills in three weeks. Next week is the final event for players to qualify in points, which is PGA TOUR earnings. Rahm and Abraham Ancer (71) are the only players from the top 20 in the world at the Mexico Open. That allowed for players like Byrd, who has status as a past champion, to get in. He improved his status with a pair of cuts made in the fall. He tied for ninth at Pebble Beach, which got him into the Waste Management Phoenix Open. Byrd has managed to get in 10 tournaments so far, and feels he is getting some momentum. “I started the year thinking I might get in 15, looks like I might get in more like 20. I’m just happy to have starts,” Byrd said. “And my game’s good, so trying to stay aggressive and see what I can make of it.” Byrd went out in 29 and reached 7 under for the round with a birdie on the par-5 12th. He added a bogey and a birdie the rest of the way. Patrick Reed won the WGC-Mexico Championship at Chapultepec two years ago. He had six birdies in his round of 68, leaving him three shots behind. The wind off the Pacific began to blow as Rahm and other starters had an hour or so to go in their rounds, so the Spaniard will have that to contend with on Friday. “We had no wind for 13, 14 holes. It’s very, very scorable,” Rahm said. “Once the wind starts going 20, 30 miles an hour, this golf course starts showing some teeth.”

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The Drew Charter School's golf teams support each other on the road to successThe Drew Charter School's golf teams support each other on the road to success

They met dignitaries, received rings, got semi-famous. But Solomon Dobbs' wild ride as a member of the Charles R. Drew Charter School squad that won the Georgia Class A boys' golf championship in 2019 - the first all-Black high school team and first public school in Atlanta to do so - is over. Dobbs has moved on. He now plays on the golf team at Morehouse College in Atlanta, where he earned a 3.7 grade-point average last semester. Because of the pandemic, he lives at home and takes his classes on Zoom. But at least three days a week he gets in his Hyundai Elantra and drives to Drew Charter's home course, East Lake's Charlie Yates Golf Course, a nine-hole Rees Jones design, where he practices amongst his old coaches and teammates. Because it's never really over. "They're my family," says Dobbs, 18. If you need a break from the chaos and the fear, from the torrent of tragedies, from polling figures brought to you at all hours because, you know, Nov. 3, then behold Dobbs and Drew Charter. Something is definitely going right here. This marks the 20th playing of the TOUR Championship at East Lake, Bobby Jones' old stomping grounds and the centerpiece of a comprehensive community revitalization in Southeast Atlanta. Support from the TOUR Championship reached $3.5 million last year - a tournament record - which went to the East Lake Foundation, Grove Park Foundation, Purpose Built Schools Atlanta and the First Tee of Metro Atlanta. The East Lake Foundation, in turn, supports Drew Charter, which is churning out citizen golfers like Dobbs. Golf continues to be the catalyst for it all. Or is it family? Sarai Dobbs, Solomon's little sister, is a rising senior who is expected to challenge for the No. 1 spot on Drew's girls team in the spring. She hit the ceremonial first tee shot at the TOUR Championship in 2017, while Solomon did it twice (2016, 2018). "I did better the second time," he says. "The first time I couldn't see the ball." Sarai, too, admits she was nervous. "People are there watching, you're on TV, you can get anxious and overwhelmed, but I was really excited to hit it." She striped it down the middle. Their parents, Tobar, managing partner of a real estate equity firm, and Leslie, a human resources manager for a digital company, have watched in awe and delight. Neither comes from a golf family, but when they enrolled their kids at Drew Charter, a cradle-to-college school (pre-K through 12th grade) where golf is taught in P.E. by instructors from The First Tee, it didn't matter. "Having our children attend Charles R. Drew Charter School was probably one of the best decisions my wife and I have ever made," Tobar says, "because it's had such a tremendous impact on them and their education. Of course, golf has been a focal point of that. The leadership at Drew has been absolutely phenomenal at creating an educational model, and having them participate in that educational community has been a godsend for them and our entire family." Solomon continues to be connected to the TOUR Championship. Thursday afternoon, the day before the tournament begins, he will join Jakari Harris, another Atlanta junior golf product who recently graduated from Hampton University, an HBCU in Virginia; TOUR pros Zach Johnson and Ryan Palmer; plus two celebrity guests for a closest-to-the-pin contest in the Golf With A Purpose Charity Challenge at East Lake. His long-term goal is to return to Drew as the golf coach. Joe Weems, the current coach, welcomes it. "One of the great things about coaching," says Weems, 47, "is teaching others to coach." He talks with pride about "the pipeline" - the team's Cook brothers (Jalon and Matthew), Leonard brothers (Marcus and Myron), and McCrary siblings (Christopher and Jordan). And the Dobbs family, of course. And others. Upperclassmen. Underclassmen. Varsity. J.V. Middle-school prospects. Like any family, Drew golf alumni keep in touch and share their successes. Anthony Ford, formerly the Eagles' No. 1 player, is at North Carolina A&T on a golf scholarship. Connor Mason, another player from the 2019 state championship team, plays for the College of Wooster. Treveon McCrary is vying for a spot on Savannah State's team. Simone Obelton, the first female golfer to represent Drew at state, will graduate from Tuskegee as an engineer. This year's girls team, with Sarai Dobbs, Hailey Fisher, Adia Barnes and Shelby Ross, may be Drew's best shot at a state title, assuming the season happens. Weems' biggest regret from last season - canceled, alas, due to the pandemic - was that the girls didn't get a chance to compete. "Sarai has been our No. 1 for a long time," he says. "She's been our rock. She's been really a great leader, but we like to move it around and give all our kids a chance to lead. Last year Hailey was captain, and Sarai supported her. There's a lot of kids who look up to Sarai and she knows that." The success of the golf program has been contagious, with Drew adding a J.V. program last year. Athletic Director Tracy Edwards - a former basketball player at Georgia who was teammates with Angie Ball, Bubba Watson's wife - tried the sport and is now hopelessly addicted. "I've set some future goals for myself to be competitive, thanks to the kids," Edwards says. "My best was 108, so I'm still taking notes and trying to find the right clubs and different things. "It's humbling and full of life lessons," she adds. "It's a good game to learn." As for the chaos and fear in America, and tragedies that seem to roll in like the tides, Edwards and others at Drew Charter are acutely aware of what's happening in the wider world. They know the names Jacob Blake, George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and others. When will it end? "The only way we will stamp out racism in this country is through unity," Tobar says. "Each one of us must stand up to racial injustice wherever, and whenever, it is encountered. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said it best: ‘Injustice anywhere, is injustice everywhere.' We are human beings. We can calculate the speed of light, and we can colonize outer space. Surely we can rid this country of its racist tendencies, traits, and habits, but only if the will to do it exists." Drew Charter had peaceful protests after Floyd's death, underlining the school's commitment to equality for all people and bringing closure to systemic racism and oppression. "We want to be a beacon of hope for our community," Weems says. "A model of excellence where we break all of those stereotypes that people might have about African American golfers. Be the best, show integrity, and when faced with racism make sure to fight it in a positive way." Being excellent means continuing to practice hard, work out in the off-season, eat right - the team's second-year strength and conditioning coach sees to that. It means keeping family close even while widening the circle to help nearby high schools that might be less golf-savvy. And it means support for alumni like Solomon so that he can help others coming up through the pipeline. The family is thriving, the connections growing ever stronger. Two decades into the partnership between the TOUR Championship and East Lake, there's so much going right.

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