Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Meet Tom Kim, the Internationals’ Chief Energy Officer

Meet Tom Kim, the Internationals’ Chief Energy Officer

Tom Kim may be just 20 years old, but he’s set to be a CEO. No, not in the ilk of a Silicon Valley start-up. Kim isn’t going to don a V-neck and skinny jeans and learn to code. He’s prepared to be the Chief Energy Officer for the International Team in this week’s Presidents Cup at Charlotte’s Quail Hollow Club. The third-youngest participant in Presidents Cup history, Kim has vowed to bring the same infectious personality and style that has led to an incredible rise through the ranks in the last few months. Kim first popped on many fans’ radars after his third-place finish in the Genesis Scottish Open, followed by another top-10 at the Rocket Mortgage Classic. Then there was the thrilling win at the Wyndham Championship, where he started the tournament with a quadruple-bogey and ended it with a 61 to win by five and become the second-youngest winner on TOUR since World War II (only Jordan Spieth was younger). Kim nearly made it to the TOUR Championship after starting the season without status, finishing 32nd in the FedExCup, and is now 22nd in the world ranking after beginning the year at No. 131. Kim also stormed his way into a spot on the International Team with his strong summer, earning one of six automatic spots on Trevor Immelman’s squad. That pleased the International captain, who’d been watching Kim for a while on the recommendation of noted instructor and good friend Claude Harmon III, who happened across Kim during a practice round. The more Immelman saw, the more he liked. “He’s an incredibly mature, well-rounded guy for just being 20,” Immelman says. “He’s the real deal. There’s no doubt about it. He’s got this this enthusiasm that is palpable.” And it is that enthusiasm that might just be Kim’s best weapon in Charlotte this week. Kim lives by the motto of giving his all every single time. No regrets. His parents have drilled it home and he subscribes to the theory. The challenge ahead of the International Team is momentous. Kim knows this. The U.S. Team has never lost the Presidents Cup on home soil and is a dominant 11-1-1 overall in the competition. But it doesn’t worry him one bit. Kim knows all about underdog status. He knows records are there to be broken and the past is just that, the past. Failure only stays failure if you don’t respond to it. And he won’t be sitting in a corner of the team room in silent mode. Far from it. “I hope to just get the energy going (for the team),” Kim said. “I’m a lot younger than all the guys on the team, so hopefully I can bring that young energy and just be a kid out there and have all the fun we can. We know it will be tough but as long as we come together as a team, we’re going to have a chance. So, I intend to be a good energy out there for the team.” The International Team has a long history of great Asian players. From the early pioneers like Tsukasa Watanabe, Shigeki Maruyama and Masashi ‘Jumbo’ Ozaki to K.J. Choi (now a captain’s assistant) and Y.E. Yang into the new breed like Hideki Matsuyama, Si Woo Kim and Sungjae Im. There are a record four South Koreans on the International Team this year: Kim, Sungjae Im, Si Woo Kim and K.H. Lee. Traditionally, Asian players have been somewhat quiet in the team environment. Many factors, including the language barriers and reserved culture, may have contributed to this. But in the most recent Presidents Cup in 2019, the addition of Choi as an assistant and the youthful exuberance of Im showed a new blueprint. Im was a standout as a rookie for Captain Ernie Els at Royal Melbourne with a team-leading 3.5 points earned with a 3-1-1 record. Only a huge U.S. Singles fightback on Sunday kept the Internationals from winning again at Royal Melbourne. Im was one of seven rookies for the Internationals in 2019. This year’s team has a record eight rookies. “It worked well in 2019. There was a real cleanout, a very fresh young team and there was a vibe of no scar tissue and incredible excitement,” team stalwart Adam Scott said ahead of his 10th Presidents Cup. “The new guys had spent their lives watching the Presidents Cup and were stoked to be in it. In teams before, it had been a grind for a lot of long-time players, including myself, of taking it on the chin a lot and not getting any good results. “It was so fun to see the enthusiasm of the young fellas coming in and Ernie did a fantastic job inspiring them. And Trevor has done a great job carrying that over. That fun vibe will continue with all the fresh blood in the team this time around and if we can get the momentum going, we might just shock the world.” Scott has advocated for Kim to be part of that narrative this week and the youngster is keen to take on the challenge. But don’t call him the next Sungjae Im. Or the next anything. He is the one and only Tom Kim and he’s out to make sure you remember it. He doesn’t do ‘normal’. After all – he was born Joohyung Kim but insisted on changing to Tom after becoming obsessed with Thomas the Tank Engine. He speaks three languages. He turned pro at 15. He gave up sugar during the recent TOUR season to maintain peak fitness. And while growing up he watched DVDs about Tiger Woods until they started to fade, he’s not out to copy his idol – except in one facet. Mindset. This was reinforced recently watching “The Last Dance” documentary about Michel Jordan’s NBA career a handful of times. “To be the best, you have to think very, very differently, and I think the guys out here who have had success are like that,” Kim explains. “Jordan, Tiger, Justin Thomas, whoever it is… they have their own unique sense, and I also think that I have a unique sense. That’s the thing I really look up to because Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods, they’re very all unique and they excelled in their sports.” Kim has quite the backstory. After leaving Korea, he lived in multiple countries as a child – China, Australia, the Philippines, and Thailand were all part of his journey as his father, Chang-ik Kim, turned from professional golfer to teaching pro. Tom was in Melbourne as a 9-year-old during the 2011 Presidents Cup, but his family couldn’t afford tickets to attend the tournament. At 13, when the Cup was in his native Korea, he’d moved to the Philippines but kept a very close eye on things. He turned pro right around the 2017 Cup as the Internationals were trounced at Liberty National and was again a keen observer as a 17-year-old three years ago. “I was watching in 2019 and I told myself, man, how cool would it be to be able to represent that team,” Kim recalls. “I know Sungjae pretty well, and he’s bragged about being on that team when I wasn’t there. It definitely was a motivation factor seeing him play and wishing that hopefully I can get on the team. I didn’t really think that this year I’d be able to play. I was pretty far away, but the last few months have been exciting for many reasons. And to make this team is a big part of that. I’m very excited.” Kim arrives at Quail Hollow with veteran caddie Joe Skovron on his bag. The former long-term caddie to Rickie Fowler was on the bag when Fowler won at Quail Hollow back in 2012. It might be the start of taking things to the next level. Scott thinks Kim is already well and truly on his way. “He’s the perfect player we need,” Scott continues. “He’s a guy with red hot form and confidence and he can match it with the best of the TOUR. If he plays his game like we know he can, he becomes a real weapon in match play. He’s not afraid to play his best and he’s not afraid to speak up either. I already feel younger around him.” Sounds like he’s a great CEO already.

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Ooh, chocolate drops! Plantation Course gets a new/old lookOoh, chocolate drops! Plantation Course gets a new/old look

ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. — Davis Love III got his hands dirty before this year’s RSM Classic. Love’s golf-course architecture firm, Love Golf Design, led a dramatic renovation of Sea Island’s Plantation Course. Love didn’t just peer at the project’s plans. “Pete Dye told me you’re not a golf course architect until you get on the equipment and build it yourself,â€� Love said. And that’s what the World Golf Hall of Famer did, hopping on a bulldozer to shape some of the sharp angles and old-school features that will be on display this week during the PGA TOUR’s annual visit to Sea Island. The Plantation Course will be used, along with the neighboring Seaside layout, on Thursday and Friday. The RSM’s weekend rounds will be played on Seaside. The Plantation Course’s new look is a blast from the past, drawing upon the course’s history and other attributes common to golf’s Golden Age designs. Plantation is the oldest course at Sea Island. The Walter Travis design opened as a nine-hole course in 1928, shortly before the Seaside nine that was designed by Harry Colt and Charles Alison. “We like classic design,â€� Love said. “We feel like this is a historic resort and it needs a historic-looking course.â€� Plantation’s historic feel had faded after nearly a century of play and a renovation in the late 1990s. This latest renovation draws upon the designs of architects like Travis, Seth Raynor and C.B. MacDonald. Those men designed some of Love’s favorite courses, including Chicago Golf Club, Mountain Lake in Lake Wales, Florida, and two courses in Charleston, South Carolina: Yeamans Hall and Country Club of Charleston. It was a collaboration between Love, his brother Mark, and Scot Sherman, an architect with Love Golf Design who worked closely with Dye for many years. They replicated those classic courses by creating sharp angles and straight lines, producing a look that was distinctive from the neighboring Seaside course and its big, bold bunkering. The renovated Plantation course also offers more of the scenic views that its neighbor is known for. The new course is flatter – many Golden Age designs were built on flat ground – and brush was cleared to offer more views of the Atlantic Ocean and St. Simons Sound. Some of Plantation’s new greens are squared-off instead of round. Flat bunkers with vertical grass faces were built. Railroad ties provide a stark delineation between grass and water. Grass mounds known as “chocolate dropsâ€� were placed on several holes.  A Principal’s Nose bunker, inspired by the one at St. Andrews, was built on the 10th hole and odes to other old-school template holes, like the Redan and Punchbowl, were built at Plantation. These features are evident from the start, as the “chocolate dropsâ€� are visible from the first tee and the new green evokes the Biarritz design that was often built by Macdonald and Raynor. Railroad ties front the second green. These long, wooden boards are often associated with Dye’s designs, but it’s a concept that he got from his travel to Scotland. It’s another look Love enjoys, as he’s won five times at the Dye-designed Harbour Town and twice at TPC Sawgrass, which host the RBC Heritage and THE PLAYERS Championship, respectively. Plantation’s third hole is a par 3 inspired by the Redan green that has been replicated many times over. Love looked at pictures of the Redan at Yeamans Hall as he drove a dozer on this hole. Some other notable features are the Thumbprint green on No. 11 and Punchbowl on 13. The thumbprint, like the 18th hole at the Old White TPC, has a central bowl, as if someone pressed their thumb into the center of the putting surface. A Punchbowl green is lower than its surrounds, obscuring it from view while also allowing shots to funnel onto the putting surface. The renovation also created some new closing holes. Travis designed the 14th hole as a par 5, but it was later divided into a par 4 and par 3. This most recent renovation returned the 14th to a par 5. The large, central bunker is another feature typical of Macdonald and Raynor courses. It forces players to choose between four potential lines off the tee: left, right, short and long. The 15th and 16th holes from the original routing were brought back. Fifteen is a short par 4, while the 16th is a short par 3 with a double-plateau green and penal pot bunker. The course will finish on a par 5 that features chocolate drops, railroad ties and flat bunkers. “It’s a great example of all the features which influenced us in one place,â€� Sherman said.

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TOUR Insider: New Love surfacesTOUR Insider: New Love surfaces

WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, WV. – Davis Love IV, or Dru as he is better known, admits it is hard to watch the likes of Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas be so successful, so quickly. He’s got nothing against them. He just wants to be like them. You see the son of soon to be Hall-of-Famer Davis Love III is part of their generation. He was a college teammate of Thomas at the University of Alabama. He competed with these guys for years only to be hampered by multiple injuries. And as such, he’s had to be patient. “When you’re sitting around watching Jordan Spieth chip in to win his 10th time and he’s the same age as you it makes you think a little bit,â€� Dru said as he gets set play the Greenbrier Classic, just his second PGA TOUR start as a professional. “But at the same time, I just got out of school. I just got done. Jordan only went for one year so he’s got four years on me. Do I think I’ll win ten times over the next four years? We will see.â€� Of course, Love IV has been watching quality golf for a long time. His father has 21 PGA TOUR wins including two PLAYERS Championships and a PGA Championship. Dru was alive for 13 of the wins, and could realistically remember about eight of them. Now they’re playing against each other. He also saw other great players in their prime. Life on TOUR is not an intimidating thought for the kid who first beat his dad at age 19. “He grew up inside the ropes,â€� Davis says. “Dru putted for Fred Couples in a U.S. Open practice round, nine holes, and got to hit shots on major championship courses and walk inside the ropes and hang out in the locker room with Tiger Woods. “So if he comes out on TOUR, some of the things that intimidate guys won’t intimidate him. He blends right in. If he gets out here, he’ll feel like he can belong and compete.â€� And that is exactly what 23-year-old Dru is hoping to do. Having missed the cut at the recent U.S. Open – with dad Davis on the bag – he now is trying to garner as many sponsors invites as he can for the remainder of the season, trying to get enough non-member points for either special temporary membership or more likely a spot in the Web.com Finals. Currently 200th place on the FedExCup list has 57 FedExCup points. Finishing 14th alone this week at The Old White TPC course would bring 57 points. That number will rise over these last seven weeks but Dru knows just a couple of good performances can give him a chance at his dreams. He’s battled through the pressure of being the son of a legend and feels he’s come out the other side. “I have a lot of confidence in myself,â€� he says. “Sometimes I think you don’t get full credit for things you do. You know, shoot 63, and, oh, you’re just Davis Love’s son; then you shoot 80, and how could you do that? You’re Davis Love’s son. “So growing up, in high school you get a lot of that. But none of it at this level. Guys know what it takes to be good and what it takes to get here. Just because my last name is Love doesn’t mean I automatically get to be good at golf. I’ve had it to work at it my whole life and I’ve had to grind through a lot of things. “If I can stay healthy, I’ve proven that I can get good pretty quick.â€� While Spieth, Thomas and co have hit the ground running Dru has had to battle through multiple injuries. He tore ankle ligaments in his freshman year, broke his wrist in a sledding accident the year after and then tore rib cartilage in his debut TOUR event at the RSM Classic in late 2015. “Then the next year I had a very healthy year and played great. Won a college event and won the state Am. Had a pretty successful year,â€� he recalls. But just as things were looking up, he damaged his left shoulder and surgery plus an eight-month recovery followed. “After I had that surgery I got a little bit down and was a little upset that I kept on getting hurt when I felt like I was doing some good things,â€� Dru said. “My dad helped me out a lot trying to stay positive. I think the weeks leading up to having surgery I just couldn’t wrap my head around it.â€� Davis remembers the angst his son faced but continued to preach patience. “It was unfortunate, but, again, he’s got to look at it like now is my chance, and I’m healthy now and ready to go now,â€� Davis said. “He played with Jordan Spieth on a recruiting trip way back, and they looked like they both had the same potential. So he knows how those guys play, and he’s beaten them. “He really knows his game and where he stacks up and what he has to work on. Should give him confidence that he can compete down the road.â€� While the pair won’t play in the same group on Thursday and Friday at the Greenbrier this week, they both will be gunning for the win. And if they happen to be coming down the stretch Sunday in contention – don’t expect dad to go easy on his boy. “Another kid to try to beat and keep up with,â€� Davis says of Dru. “I always remember (my dad) never let up no matter what. He made us compete every time we played golf. It wasn’t just go out and goof around and play golf. Made us compete and keep score and putt everything out. “I still get into him. There are no gimmes on tour, so there shouldn’t be any while we’re playing on Mondays. It’s fun.â€� Dru knowingly nods as his father recounts their battles. “It doesn’t matter if it’s coming down the stretch Sunday or a Monday afternoon practice round, he’s going to try just as hard to beat me,â€� Dru adds. “I get it from him. We are both super competitive. And I don’t want to lose in anything I do. We’ve had some good runs at each other the last couple years now that I’m catching up to him a little bit.â€� Dru laughs when recalling the first time he beat his dad. It was 2013 at Frederica Golf Club and they both eagled the final hole. “He looked at me and said, what was that for? I said, 64. What about you? He goes, 65, and turned around and walked off.â€� But, if Dru does beat him on the 72nd hole for the title this week… you can be sure dad won’t walk off. He’ll be the first one to congratulate his boy.

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