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Pete Dye: The genius who loathed plans

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – The bank was hesitant to approve the loan without plans, and the initial cost estimate from golf architect Pete Dye to create TPC Sawgrass did not include specifics on what the Stadium Course might actually look like.  But Dye – hired in the late 1970s by then-PGA TOUR Commissioner Deane Beman to build the TOUR’s signature course that would permanently host THE PLAYERS Championship – finally relented and drew up his vision on some nearby blueprints. “It was like pulling teeth, getting plans from Pete,â€� remembers his project manager, Vernon Kelly. With those plans in place and financing secured, Dye and his team went to work. As they prepared to walk the course that first day – the only real tangible evidence of the layout were the survey lines down the center of each hole – Kelly turned to Dye and said, “Wait a minute, I forgot something.â€� MORE ON DYE: Players praise Dye’s legacy | Dye passes away at age 94 He made a beeline back to the parked truck they had driven to the site. Inside were those plans that Dye had submitted to the bank. Kelly grabbed the documents, then ran back to his boss, who was eager to get moving. “What are those things?â€� Dye asked. “Oh, these are the plans,â€� Kelly replied. “We don’t need those,â€� Dye responded. “Put those back in the truck. I don’t want to see ‘em again.â€� It’s a funny story that Kelly tells some 40 years later, but it’s also reflective of the approach that Dye – the World Golf Hall of Famer who passed away in January at the age of 94 – used when designing courses. Sure, he could draw up a set of plans if necessary, but most of the time he operated best when he was tinkering and constantly evaluating, and re-evaluating his work. Plans were considered guidelines (or sometimes nuisances) rather than details to be strictly followed.   He needed room for creativity, to act upon his inspirations. He needed fluidity, able to improve something at any given moment, to act on his impulses. The last thing he wanted was to be caught in a corner, hands tied, unable to make something better. He was an artist, one who enjoyed the process perhaps more than the finished product. “Pete always said the saddest day for him was the day we had to grass a golf hole because he couldn’t tinker with it anymore,â€� said Bobby Weed, who apprenticed under Dye in the late ‘70s before striking out on his own. “He would tinker and he would rub on it right up until they were grassing. And I will say there’s been occasions when we’ve gone back and ripped out the grassing, ripped out the irrigation, and made a few more changes. Never say never on a completed golf course. “If Pete had a feeling there can be something that can be improved upon, nothing was going to stop him. He had an eye that no one else had. He saw things differently, and he saw things when no one else did.â€� That vision helps explains his ability as golf’s ultimate barnyard engineer, a term of endearment for people who are able to identify and solve problems simply by relying on the resources at hand. Or as industrial artist Sudhu Tewari defines it, “part science, part art and a whole lot of experimentation.â€�  A combination of common sense, creativity and ability to think on your feet – that seems apropos for Dye, the man with the Midwest roots who didn’t get locked in by plans and who found workarounds that become legendary solutions. Take, for example, the iconic 17th at TPC Sawgrass, the island-green hole for which Dye is most recognized. It wasn’t originally in Dye’s initial plans (not that he was looking at those anyway). The 17th was created as a solution to solve a problem. When Beman tasked Dye to build a “stadiumâ€� course that would allow fans to watch the action from different levels instead of standing behind each other with no gradient, the challenge was huge. After all, the swamp land that the PGA TOUR had purchased in North Florida – 417 acres for the sum of a single dollar, a bargain from most perspectives, although some, after looking at the actual land, suggested the TOUR had overpaid – was essentially flat. There were no natural mounds to work off, so Dye had to create them. In addition, Dye also had to cap the fairways and build the greens, adding the kind of undulation throughout those 417 acres that would test the world’s finest golfers. And he wanted to do this with his own signature design to allow any player in the field to win, as long as that player produced the best golf. That involved creating eye candy that might deceive some but certainly keep things honest on the scorecard. The bottom line is that he needed to move sand. Lots of it. And the best sand on the site just happened to surround the current location of the 17th green. The bulldozers had their starting point. “We kept trying to find sand to finish the course ‘cause we really didn’t have any money at that time to buy sand,â€� Kelly says. “So wherever we could find it, we basically used it.  “I remember very well, we got toward the end of the job and he told Alice [his wife], ‘You know, I don’t know what to do. I’ve got a 17-hole golf course here.’ And Alice said, ‘Well, you know, how about an island green?’â€� Adds Beman: “By the time we took all that dirt out of there and all that sand out of there, all we had was a huge lake. And then we had to figure out, OK, what kind of hole are we going to build? “It was originally designed not to be a complete island green, but a peninsula that had a small landing area to the left. And ultimately Pete and Alice decided that the most unique thing would be to have an island green.â€� It was a brilliant solution to a sticky problem, but in this instance, Dye did not get everything he wanted. He wanted the hole to be 165 yards long. Beman put his foot down. “We’re going to play this from about 130 yards, 135 yards, or we’re going to have a riot on our hands with our players,â€� Beman says. “So we came to an accommodation that has turned into being a pretty good mutual decision.â€� Moving sand was one thing. Figuring out the water issues became an equally Herculean challenge for Dye’s problem-solving skills. After all, the swamp not only was flat but also, of course, full of water. Natural drainage had been cut off when the A1A By-way was installed between the course and the nearby Atlantic Ocean. Dye had to figure out a new way to drain the area, but he simply couldn’t eliminate all the water. After all, part of the natural beauty of the location was the tree cover, and Dye did not want to lose that. He needed to find the proper balance. “If you appreciably change the water cover,â€� Kelly says, “you would’ve lost the trees.â€� His barnyard engineering skills again put to the test, Dye found the solution with multiple miles of corrugated drainage pipes. The trees were saved, the water had a place to flow to – and Dye turned a swampland into one of golf’s most celebrated courses. “Another one of those examples to me of just how good a designer Pete was,â€� Kelly says. “Drainage is one of the mechanical things that people don’t think about when they about a great golf course.â€� Mechanical is one thing. Creativity is another. Beman was asked if he ever tried to get inside Dye’s mind, to understand why he designed something a certain way, why a hole was shaped or a feature added that, on the surface, might not have appeared obvious. Beman replied that it would’ve been futile to figurer out Dye’s thought process. “I never tried to do that,â€� he says. “My impression of Pete was that he didn’t work off the plans very well, didn’t like to. “And actually, Pete Dye building a golf course is not cheap because he’s going to move dirt around until he finds what he likes to look at. And so, it’s not just of the plan and you put it here and here’s a green and here’s exactly what the elevation should be.  “He wasn’t satisfied until it fit his eye.â€� His eye often included elements that other designers had never considered – railroad ties being one of his signature ingredients, a way to create visual challenges while also adding to the look of a course. As Kelly jokes, “What I heard about when I first started with the TOUR was that Pete Dye designs are the only golf courses that could potentially burn down.â€� Dye’s barnyard engineering even extended to actual barnyard animals at TPC Sawgrass. Needing to rid the parcel of land of its thick underbrush and brambles and vines, as well as keep the grass trimmed in a budget-friendly manner, Dye brought in goats to handle the job.  “We would fence off a small area and put the goats in there and they would clear just about everything up to a 5-foot height that they could reach,â€� Kelly said. “And then we’d move ‘em to another area.â€� The goats were, according to Kelly, “very effective.â€�  This week during THE PLAYERS Championship, there will be tributes to the man who designed this legendary course, the man who ditched his own plans to carve out a masterpiece, this man considered a “master of maskingâ€� by Beman, because he can make “a course look more difficult than it actually is.â€� Dye is gone but his legacy will endure – each March when the TOUR holds its signature event, and the other 11 months when those of lesser handicaps make their pilgrimage to Ponte Vedra Beach in order to check the Stadium Course off their bucket lists. Each one will learn — as Bobby Weed did so many years ago while working with Dye on another of his famed courses, Harbour Town – that it’s not what you plan, it’s what you do. “He did his drawing with a tractor and a bulldozer, out in the field,â€� Weed says. “One of the things I really learned is don’t be afraid of changing, don’t be afraid of tearing it up and starting over. If it didn’t fit his eye, he was going to continue to shape and mold and rub on it until it felt good to him. … “Pete always said, ‘Show me a golf course built from a set of plans, I’ll show you a bad course.’â€� Forty years ago, Dye began construction on the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass. He sent the plans back to the truck — and then he built one of golf’s greatest courses. Remembering Dye at THE PLAYERS The late Pete Dye, designer of the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass, will be honored in a variety of ways at THE PLAYERS Championship this week. A permanent plaque will be unveiled on the first tee box that will include a quote from Dye: “It is a great bit of personal satisfaction to be asked by the TOUR members to build their golf course.â€� Three large panels on the side of the Fan Shop will include quotes about Dye from Tiger Woods and Jack Nicklaus, along with a tribute image of the 17th hole. Former PGA TOUR Commissioners Deane Beman and Tim Finchem, along with Bobby Weed, Jerry Pate and Vernon Kelly — all involved in different ways in the story of TPC Sawgrass – will be special guests to discuss Dye’s legacy. NBC, which is broadcasting THE PLAYERS, will show special vignettes to recognize Dye. Pete Dye courses on the PGA TOUR Thirteen different Pete Dye-designed courses have hosted PGA TOUR events: PGA West Stadium (California), American Express TPC River Highlands (Connecticut). Travelers Championship TPC Sawgrass Stadium Course (Florida), THE PLAYERS Championship Crooked Stick (Indiana), PGA Championship, BMW Championship TPC Louisiana (Louisiana), Zurich Classic of New Orleans) Oak Tree National (Oklahoma). 1988 PGA Championship Nemacolin Woodlands Mystic Rock (Pennsylvania), 84 LUMBER CLASSIC Harbour Town (South Carolina), RBC Heritage TPC San Antonio (Texas, AT&T, Canyons), Valero Texas Open Austin Country Club (Texas), World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play Kingsmill Resort (Virginia), Kingsmill Whistling Straits (Wisconsin), PGA Championship Kiawah Island Resort (South Carolina), 2012 PGA Championship Most wins on Pete Dye courses

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Phil Rodgers passes away at age 80Phil Rodgers passes away at age 80

He was the final member of an impressive triumvirate of golfers born in San Diego during The Great Depression – Gene Littler and Billy Casper the others – and as a young pro he was widely considered the equal to a contemporary named Jack Nicklaus. But if Phil Rodgers’ PGA TOUR career didn’t match its promise or reach the standards of those other men, he did something that is a rarity in today’s world. He took ownership. As honest as he was brash, Rodgers told golf.com’s Alan Bastable in 2008 that “I wanted to win more, but something always stopped me. I couldn’t do what my mind wanted me to do. I probably talked myself out of being a great champion more than I talked myself into it.� Rodgers’ 17-year PGA TOUR career included just five victories but was noted for the absence of major championship success that Nicklaus, Littler and Casper all had. That was difficult for some to rationalize, especially those who watched Rodgers’ great success as a junior, a collegian, an amateur, and a two-time winner in his first full PGA TOUR season, 1962. “He was so good, it was frightening,� former PGA TOUR player John Schroeder told Tod Leonard of the San Diego Union Leader. “Mechanically, he had it.� But what Rodgers also had and always used effectively was an unyielding passion to teach the game. That came shining through as stories circulated upon the news of Rodgers’ death Tuesday morning in his University City home in San Diego with his wife of 33 years, Karen, by his side. Rodgers was 80 years old and had battled leukemia for more than 15 years, though he appeared to handle that as flawlessly as he did bunker shots. Leonard, in his tribute to Rodgers, said the gregarious instructor might have been in a wheelchair, but up until a few months ago he was still at his post, teaching the game he loved at The Grand Del Mar in San Diego. Reacting to the news of Rodgers’ death, Nicklaus on his social media account expressed his heartfelt condolences: “My heart hurts today after the passing of dear friend, Phil Rodgers . . . Terrific ball-striker & great short game, he became a gifted teacher. Miss him already.� In fact, were he capable of re-writing the PGA TOUR record books, Nicklaus would affix two major championships beside Rodgers’ name, with an asterisk. That’s how strongly Nicklaus felt about his friend’s contribution to what took place in 1980, the year the Golden Bear turned 40. Not only had Nicklaus in 1979 recorded his first winless season since turning pro in 1962, but good gracious, he had missed the cut at the 1978 PGA and finished T-33 at the 1980 Masters, meaning he had failed to triumph in six straight majors. Even worse, “it was almost to the point where I had to putt around bunkers,� Nicklaus once told reporters. Unable to stand over a chip shot, Nicklaus called Rodgers, who came to North Palm Beach, Fla., and spent two weeks with his longtime friend. A few weeks later, Nicklaus won his fourth and final U.S. Open, then he added a PGA Championship, the penultimate triumph in his record parade of 18 majors. “Phil totally revamped my short game and gave me confidence,� Nicklaus once gushed to Sports Illustrated. And if you wanted a summation of Rodgers’ ability, no one offered it with more praise than Nicklaus, who told Bastable: “If you ever watched him hit the ball, if you watched his short game, if you watched him putt, you would say, ‘How could anybody ever beat him?’ � Nicklaus wasn’t alone, because Rodgers as a junior and collegian left others feeling similarly. Former PGA TOUR Commissioner Deane Beman, who called Rodgers “a lifelong friend,� recalled the first time their paths crossed, at the 1954 U.S. Junior Amateur at Los Angeles CC’s North Course. “I was a hot-shot kid from the East and when the tournament was over, I spent a week in LaJolla playing golf with Phil. We were 16 and I’ll tell you what I’ve said 100 times over the last 65 years – Phil Rodgers at 16 was an accomplished ‘professional’ golfer. He could have left high school right then and been successful on the PGA TOUR. “We played with Gene Littler (then 24 and a PGA TOUR member) that week and Phil beat him. That’s how good he was.� Born April 3, 1938 (Littler was born in 1930, Casper in 1931), Rodgers won the 1955 national Jaycee Junior Golf Championship (Nicklaus was in the field), earning a $1,000 scholarship. He chose to attend the University of Houston, “a sort of training camp for aspiring pro golfers,� wrote Walter Bingham in a feature story on Rodgers for Sports Illustrated in 1963 that included a cover headline: “Phil Rodgers: The Brashest Man in Golf.� Bingham, of course, had to time the college story just right, because Rodgers played in just three tournaments, all of which he won. The exclamation point was the 1958 NCAA Championship at Taconic Golf Club in Williamstown, Mass., where he and teammates Jackie Cupit and Jim Hiskey – both former PGA TOUR players – led the Cougars to No. 3 in a string of five consecutive titles. Not only did Rodgers shoot 69-70 to be co-medalist during the team portion of the competition, but in the individual phase he overwhelmed Purdue’s John Konsek, 8 and 7, to leave college undefeated. “Phil knew more about golf than any kid we’ve ever had here,� Houston’s late and great coach, Dave Williams, told Bingham. “But I couldn’t understand him. I never knew what the guy was going to say. After he beat Deane Beman in the second round (of the NCAAs), I went up to shake hands with him. “That’s the last time that’ll ever happen, he yelled to me. ‘What do you mean, Phil?’ ‘That’s the last time I’ll ever be over par on this track,’ he said. It was, too.’ � While Nicklaus came along to star on the 1959 and 1961 Walker Cup teams and win U.S. Amateur and NCAA titles, Rodgers chose to enlist in the Marines, though he didn’t exactly see the world. Instead, he served his stint right in San Diego and was able to keep his golf game sharp. Which is why, Schroeder told Leonard, that “it was neck and neck to see who was best,� Nicklaus or Rodgers. Eerily, they were of similar builds – “stocky� or “pudgy� or “stumpy,� depending on whose correspondence you read – with blonde hair and fans often had to do a double-take when they saw them together back in the late 1950s and early 1960s. But while Rodgers conceded to Leonard that no matter how he conducted his career, “I never would have been in Nicklaus’ category,� he loved to tell the story of that one category in which he was an equal. Eating steaks. Legendary for preferring it the color of his favorite wine, red, at Augusta National Golf Club it only mattered to Rodgers that he and Nicklaus could have it whenever they wanted. So, they had filets for breakfast, a New York Strip for lunch, and Chateaubriand for dinner. “They finally came to us and said, ‘No, you can’t do that. You can only have one steak per day.’ � After his stint in the Marines ended in 1961, Rodgers joined the PGA TOUR for 14 tournaments, but oh, how he hit the ground running in 1962. Tied with Fred Hawkins through 54 holes in the LA Open at Rancho Municipal GC, Rodgers closed with a sizzling 62 to win by nine. “Rodgers is golf’s golden boy today,� exclaimed golf writer Jerry Wynn, who expressed a theme that was prevalent in those days when it came to the flamboyant Rodgers. “He’s not only good, he knows he’s good.� Laughed Beman, “Oh, yeah, he was cocky. But he could back it up. He had complete control of all aspects of his game.� Chances for major championship glory slipped from Rodgers’ grip early in his career. Stubbornly, he refused to take an unplayable lie from a tree at Oakmont in Round 1 of the 1962 U.S. Open, took a few whacks at it, made a quadruple-bogey or else he might have won that, not Nicklaus. Then, at the 1963 Open Championship at Royal Lytham & St. Annes, Rodgers got whipped in a 36-hole playoff against Bob Charles, 140-148. Rodgers had been surrounded by World Golf Hall of Famers for so many years – mentored at La Jolla CC by Paul Runyan, who often had Rodgers play blindfolded to appreciate how to “feel� his way around a golf course; nurtured in teenage games against the likes of Sam Snead, Ben Hogan, Byron Nelson and Ralph Guldahl; befriended by Nicklaus; a local hero alongside Littler, who won two majors, and Casper, who had three. But the iconic success that each of those men enjoyed never filtered down to Rodgers. He won twice in 1962, his first full year on the PGA TOUR, added another win in 1963, then two more in 1966 (notable for being the first wins by a player using a long putter that he “anchored�). But that was it. There were no more wins and Beman is among the many who often wondered why. “Hard to say,� said the former commissioner. “Maybe he was so damn good he didn’t realize you had to keep working at it.� While Rodgers shouldered responsibility – “I never thought I did my job as well as I could have or should have,� he told Leonard – his legion of friends, colleagues, and contemporaries praised him for his passion and for excelling as not only a man who designed wedges for Cobra, but as one of the game’s greatest instructors. “When I lived in Orlando (in the 1980s), I used to visit Phil over at Grand Cypress,� said Brad Faxon. “He used to hit bunker shots with just his left hand and he’d beat all of us. He had a great eye and was also one of the first teachers to use technology developed by Ralph Mann, looking at bio-mechanics. Such a great teacher and character.� In six seasons on the PGA TOUR Champions, Rodgers won just once, but his presence was always a treasure. “With the passing of Phil Rodgers, the game of golf lost a true gentleman and a man who sincerely impacted the lives of those around him,� said PGA TOUR Champions president Greg McLaughlin, who noted that he and some players were pleased to see Rodgers just a month ago at the Insperity Invitational. “It was wonderful to watch everyone light up in his presence,� said McLaughlin.

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Henrik Stenson wins the Wyndham Championship, getting hot for FedExCup PlayoffsHenrik Stenson wins the Wyndham Championship, getting hot for FedExCup Playoffs

GREENSBORO, N.C. – Notes and observations from Sunday’s final round of the Wyndham Championship, where Henrik Stenson shot a final-round 64 to reach a tournament-record 22 under and edge rookie Ollie Schniederjans (64) by one. Webb Simpson (67) finished third, four back, while a handful of players moved into the all-important top 125 in the FedExCup. For more coverage from Sedgefield Country Club, click here for the Daily Wrap-up. STENSON CLOSES DOOR Technically, Henrik Stenson was tied with countrymen Jesper Parnevik and Carl Pettersson as the most decorated male Swedish player ever, all of them having won five times on the PGA TOUR. In reality, Stenson was first among equals. Those other guys hadn’t won The Open Championship, the TOUR Championship and the 2013 FedExCup. In any case, Stenson put the matter to rest at Sedgefield, where he reeled off three straight birdies on holes 15-17 to edge a surging Ollie Schniederjans and collect his sixth PGA TOUR win. In the process, Stenson bolstered his chances for the upcoming FedExCup Playoffs, moving from 75th to 23rd going into the opening tournament, THE NORTHERN TRUST. “It’s certainly a good time to start firing,â€� he said. “We know the kind of damage you can do during the Playoffs when the points are up to four times the normal season, right, so if you get hot and keep on playing well, certainly a chance to challenge for the overall. “… It’s the first step, and delighted to get a win this year.â€� Stenson’s previous three starts at the Wyndham had yielded two missed cuts and a WD with the flu, but he needed a start to get to 15 tournaments on TOUR. And this time he changed things up, taking his driver out of the bag and using only a 3- and a 4-wood off the tees, plus some long irons. The 41-year-old also stuck with a decision he made at the recent World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational, using four wedges for the first time in his career. After he’d salted away the victory with a tough two-putt par from behind the pin on 18, Stenson said it was the first of his 20 professional victories that came without a driver in the bag. It was also his first win since The Open last July, when he outdueled Phil Mickelson, then 46, in a classic. Was it especially gratifying to push back a challenge from a 24-year-old like Schniederjans in this, a season in which his young peers like Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas have reigned? “It’s always good to beat the 24-year-olds,â€� Stenson said with a bemused smile. “And the 34-year-olds, and sometimes the 46-year-olds.â€� SCHNIEDERJANS EYES EAST LAKE Ollie Schniederjans likes to say he’s on his own trajectory, which is worth remembering given the success of peers like Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas. The soft-spoken Schniederjans didn’t even take up golf until he was 12 — he was into baseball and basketball — but got good fast, reaching No. 1 as an amateur and becoming an All-American at Georgia Tech. Now the hatless rookie is hitting his stride on TOUR, thanks in part to a newfound belief in his putting and his putter, a Callaway Toulon that he put in the bag this week. He birdied three of the last four holes Sunday, when he was the only player in the field who went without a bogey. “Probably the best I ever played for four days,â€� he said. “I putted awesome all week.â€� (He was sixth in the field in strokes gained: putting at +1.825.) Schniederjans moved from 74th to 39th in the FedExCup, the significance of which was not lost on him. As a member of the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets and a resident of Alpharetta, about 30 minutes away from East Lake, he has played the TOUR Championship venue numerous times. He’ll need to move up just nine more spots in the standings over the next three tournaments, when points are quadrupled, in order to get there for the season-ender, Sept. 21-24. “The goal to start the year was to make it to the TOUR Championship, so this is a huge boost,â€� Schniederjans said. His best score on the course? “I think 64,â€� he said. CALL OF THE DAY ACES WILD IN FINAL ROUND Roberto Castro made a hole-in-one at the 174-yard third hole on the way to a final-round 66 and a T28 finish. Then things got crazy. Ben Crane started the week at 147th in the FedExCup, so he needed to make a big move in order to play his way to New York and the first Playoffs event, THE NORTHERN TRUST. With scores of 69-64-72-67, Crane didn’t quite get it done, never contending and finishing T37. But he got a great consolation prize when he aced the 172-yard 16th hole at Sedgefield, a master stroke that — as the first hole-in-one there this week — brought 105,000 Wyndham rewards points for not only Crane but also his caddie, Joel Stock. “It’s been a special week,â€� said Crane, who stayed with friends in Greensboro. “And then, you know, kind of playing pretty good but need something to get over the hump. Got to 16 there and hit a beautiful shot. As soon as I hit it: ‘Oh, be right, baby.’ “Sure enough, it landed two paces short there and rolled in just like a putt. You know, most PGA TOUR players — I have to brag — don’t nail the celebration, but Billy Horschel and I did a lot of choreography work beforehand and nailed it, did the right high-fives, the caddies did the right high-fives. … It was awesome. We had a lot of fun with it.â€� Crane’s fate was similar but different than that of Martin Flores, who also aced the 16th two hours later. Although Flores did not get the Wyndham points — only the first golfer to ace the hole got the prize — he shot a final-round 63 to tie for seventh, as did playing partner Cameron Smith (63). The difference: While Smith was already squared away for the FedExCup Playoffs, Flores played his way in, moving up from 139th to 118th.   “I was really thankful that I got to watch Cam hit first,â€� Flores said of his hole-in-one at 16, “because that kind of changed a little bit of how hard I was going to hit my 8-iron.â€� ODDS AND ENDS Ryan Armour (64, T4) had missed the cut in his three previous starts at the Wyndham, in 2007, 2008 and 2015. But with a slight equipment modification this time — new shafts — he finished in the top 10 for the first time since a T6 at the 2007 Valero Texas Open. Armour, 41, moved from 187th to 159th in the FedExCup. … Shane Lowry (67, T7) notched his first top-10 finish since a runner-up at the 2016 U.S. Open. … Three-time Wyndham winner Davis Love III, vying to become the oldest TOUR winner at 53, shot a final-round 69 to finish T10, his first top-10 since winning the 2015 Wyndham. He was making his 746th official start on TOUR. … Matt Every, who opened with a 61, finished strong, too, with a 66 to finish 13th — a promising result at the end of a season in which he missed 20 cuts. He still has one more year of full eligibility on TOUR from his win at the 2015 Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by MasterCard, a tournament that offers a three-year exemption for a win. … Hunter Mahan, who came into the week at 197th in the FedExCup, shot an even-par 70 to tie for 16th, his best result of the season. Mahan, who once reached as high as fourth in the Official World Golf Ranking, moved up 15 spots to 182nd in the FedExCup.   BEST OF SOCIAL MEDIA

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How to watch The RSM Classic, Round 4: Featured Groups, live scores, tee times, TV timesHow to watch The RSM Classic, Round 4: Featured Groups, live scores, tee times, TV times

Round 4 of The RSM Classic takes place Sunday from Sea Island, Georgia. Talor Gooch continues his strong run of form to lead by one heading into the weekend with Sebastian Munoz, and Seamus Power among those in pursuit. Here’s everything you need to know to follow the action. Leaderboard Tee times HOW TO FOLLOW Television: Saturday-Sunday, 1 p.m.-4 p.m. (Golf Channel). PGA TOUR LIVE: Thursday-Friday, 9:30 a.m.-4 p.m. (Featured Groups) Radio: Thursday-Friday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday-Sunday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio). TOURCast: Get shot-by-shot info in real time with shot tracks and video with TOURCast. TOUR Pulse: Get the PGA TOUR app to utilize TOUR Pulse, which provides users the ability to experience a mix of content, such as video highlights, written hole summaries and stat graphics on every player after every hole they complete. MUST READS Talor Gooch seeking first win at The RSM Classic Spieth and wife welcome first child Sigg looks to become next Georgia Bulldog to make it big

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