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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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1st Round Match-Ups - E. Cole v M. Schmid
Type: 1st Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Eric Cole-115
Matti Schmid-105
1st Round 3 Ball - K. Kisner / E. Cole / D. Lipsky
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Eric Cole-135
David Lipsky+230
Kevin Kisner+350
1st Round 3 Ball - A. Baddeley / H. Higgs / M. Schmid
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Matti Schmid-115
Harry Higgs+175
Aaron Baddeley+400
1st Round Six Shooter - A. Noren / C. Conners / R. MacIntyre / R. Fox / S. Lowry / T. Olesen
Type: 1st Round Six Shooter - Status: OPEN
Corey Conners +320
Shane Lowry+350
Robert MacIntyre+375
Ryan Fox+500
Alex Noren+550
Thorbjorn Olesen+550
1st Round Six Shooter - C. Gotterup / Cam. Young / J. Rose / M. Wallace / R. Hojgaard / W. Clark
Type: 1st Round Six Shooter - Status: OPEN
Cameron Young+400
Rasmus Hojgaard +400
Wyndham Clark+400
Chris Gotterup+425
Justin Rose+450
Matt Wallace+450
1st Round Match-Ups - Cam. Young vs R. Hojgaard
Type: 1st Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Cameron Young-110
Rasmus Hojgaard-110
1st Round Match-Ups - A. Noren vs S. Lowry
Type: 1st Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Shane Lowry-155
Alex Noren+130
1st Round 3 Ball - C. Champ / A. Noren / R. Hojgaard
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Alex Noren+130
Rasmus Hojgaard+145
Cameron Champ+300
1st Round 3 Ball - C. Hoffman / D. Willett / D. Walker
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Danny Walker+150
Charley Hoffman+160
Danny Willett+220
1st Round Match-Ups - C. Conners vs T. Olesen
Type: 1st Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Corey Conners-150
Thorbjorn Olesen+125
1st Round 3 Ball - V. Whaley / W. Gordon / B. Kohles
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Vince Whaley+120
Will Gordon+200
Ben Kohles+225
1st Round 3 Ball - L. Griffin / R. Palmer / T. Olesen
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Thorbjorn Olesen-130
Lanto Griffin+210
Ryan Palmer+375
1st Round Match-Ups - R. MacIntyre vs R. Fox
Type: 1st Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Robert MacIntyre-150
Ryan Fox+125
Tournament Match-Ups - M. Wallace vs R. Fox
Type: Tournament Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Ryan Fox-130
Matt Wallace+100
1st Round Match-Ups - J. Rose v R. Fox
Type: Requests - Status: OPEN
Ryan Fox-115
Justin Rose-105
1st Round 3 Ball - R. Fox / T. Kim / C. Young
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Ryan Fox+160
Cameron Young+165
Tom Kim+200
1st Round 3 Ball - N. Dunlap / B. Snedeker / A. Schenk
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Brandt Snedeker+165
Adam Schenk+170
Nick Dunlap+185
1st Round Match-Ups - M. Wallace vs W. Clark
Type: 1st Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Matt Wallace-110
Wyndham Clark-110
1st Round Match-Ups - C. Gotterup vs J. Rose
Type: 1st Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Chris Gotterup-120
Justin Rose+100
1st Round Match-Ups - A. Hadwin / J. Knapp
Type: 1st Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Jake Knapp-120
Adam Hadwin+100
1st Round 3 Ball - W. Clark / J. Rose / A. Hadwin
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Wyndham Clark+150
Justin Rose+160
Adam Hadwin+220
1st Round 3 Ball - B. Garnett / J. Knapp / L. List
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Jake Knapp+120
Brice Garnett+210
Luke List+210
Tournament Match-Ups - C. Conners vs S. Lowry
Type: Tournament Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Corey Conners-120
Shane Lowry-110
1st Round 3 Ball - R. MacIntyre / S. Lowry / C. Conners
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Corey Conners+160
Shane Lowry+170
Robert MacIntyre+190
1st Round 3 Ball - C. Gotterup / E. Van Rooyen / M. Wallace
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Chris Gotterup+170
Matt Wallace+175
Erik Van Rooyen+180
1st Round Match-Ups - S. Power v R. Hisatsune
Type: 1st Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Ryo Hisatsune-135
Seamus Power+115
1st Round 3 Ball - R. Campos / P. Malnati / S. Power
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Seamus Power-110
Rafael Campos+240
Peter Malnati+260
1st Round 3 Ball - K. Vilips / M. McCarty / K. Yu
Type: Outright - Status: OPEN
Kevin Yu+160
Matt McCarty+170
Karl Vilips+190
1st Round Match-Ups - P. Fishburn v J. Svensson
Type: 1st Round Match-Ups - Status: OPEN
Jesper Svensson-125
Patrick Fishburn+105
1st Round 3 Ball - T. Mullinax / J. Bramlett / R. Hisatsune
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Ryo Hisatsune+130
Joseph Bramlett+200
Trey Mullinax+210
1st Round 3 Ball - P. Fishburn / C. Phillips / D. Skinns
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Chandler Phillips+145
Patrick Fishburn+150
David Skinns+250
1st Round 3 Ball - D. Hearn / A. Tosti / S. Fisk
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Steven Fisk+105
Alejandro Tosti+130
David Hearn+475
1st Round 3 Ball - F. Capan / C. Del Solar / T. Mawhinney
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Frankie Capan III+130
Cristobal Del Solar+160
Tyler Mawhinney+275
1st Round 3 Ball - T. Montgomery / M. Riedel / J. Matthews
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Taylor Montgomery+110
Matthew Riedel+180
Justin Matthews+275
1st Round 3 Ball - K. Roy / J. Svensson / R. Lee
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
Jesper Svensson+125
Kevin Roy+185
Richard T Lee+230
1st Round 3 Ball - W. Mouw / J. Pak / D. Ford
Type: 1st Round 3 Ball - Status: OPEN
David Ford+150
William Mouw+175
John Pak+200
ShopRite LPGA Classic
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Nelly Korda+550
Jeeno Thitikul+700
Jin Young Ko+1100
Rio Takeda+1200
Miyu Yamashita+1400
Ayaka Furue+1600
Chisato Iwai+1600
Mao Saigo+1600
Somi Lee+2200
Jin Hee Im+2500
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American Family Insurance Championship
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Alker/Langer+550
Cejka/Kjeldsen+750
Kelly/Leonard+1000
Bjorn/Clarke+1100
Cabrera/Gonzalez+1100
Cink/Toms+1400
Stricker/Tiziani+1400
Allan/Chalmers+1600
Green/Hensby+1800
Wi/Yang+1800
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Virginia
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+450
Jon Rahm+550
Joaquin Niemann+700
Tyrrell Hatton+1200
Patrick Reed+1800
Carlos Ortiz+2200
Lucas Herbert+2200
Cameron Smith+2500
David Puig+2500
Sergio Garcia+2500
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1st Round Six-Shooter - Group A - B. DeChambeau / T. Hatton / J. Rahm / P. Reed / J. Niemann / C. Ortiz
Type: 1st Round Six-Shooter - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+280
Jon Rahm+320
Joaquin Niemann+375
Tyrrell Hatton+500
Patrick Reed+600
Carlos Ortiz+700
1st Round Six-Shooter - Group B - C. Smith / S. Garcia / L. Herbert / D. Burmester / S. Munoz / B. Koepka
Type: 1st Round Six-Shooter - Status: OPEN
Cameron Smith+375
Lucas Herbert+375
Sebastian Munoz+425
Brooks Koepka+450
Dean Burmester+450
Sergio Garcia+450
1st Round Six-Shooter - Group C - T. Gooch / P. Casey / C. Tringale / M. Leishman / D. Johnson / R. Bland
Type: 1st Round Six-Shooter - Status: OPEN
Talor Gooch+350
Cameron Tringale+400
Dustin Johnson+400
Marc Leishman+450
Paul Casey+450
Richard Bland+475
1st Round Six-Shooter - Group D - T. McKibbin / B. Watson / C. Schwartzel / L. Oosthuizen / T. Pieters / H. Varner
Type: 1st Round Six-Shooter - Status: OPEN
Tom McKibbin+400
Bubba Watson+425
Charl Schwartzel+425
Thomas Pieters+425
Harold Varner III+450
Louis Oosthuizen+450
Bryson DeChambeau
Type: Bryson DeChambeau - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish-135
Top 10 Finish-350
Top 20 Finish-1200
Jon Rahm
Type: Jon Rahm - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish-115
Top 10 Finish-300
Top 20 Finish-1200
Joaquin Niemann
Type: Joaquin Niemann - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+100
Top 10 Finish-250
Top 20 Finish-900
Tyrrell Hatton
Type: Tyrrell Hatton - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+180
Top 10 Finish-150
Top 20 Finish-600
Patrick Reed
Type: Patrick Reed - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+290
Top 10 Finish+105
Top 20 Finish-400
Carlos Ortiz
Type: Carlos Ortiz - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+310
Top 10 Finish+115
Top 20 Finish-400
Lucas Herbert
Type: Lucas Herbert - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+310
Top 10 Finish+115
Top 20 Finish-400
Cameron Smith
Type: Cameron Smith - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+350
Top 10 Finish+125
Top 20 Finish-350
David Puig
Type: David Puig - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+350
Top 10 Finish+125
Top 20 Finish-350
Sergio Garcia
Type: Sergio Garcia - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+350
Top 10 Finish+125
Top 20 Finish-350
Brooks Koepka
Type: Brooks Koepka - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+400
Top 10 Finish+140
Top 20 Finish-300
Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+500
Jon Rahm+750
Collin Morikawa+900
Xander Schauffele+900
Ludvig Aberg+1000
Justin Thomas+1100
Joaquin Niemann+1400
Shane Lowry+1600
Tommy Fleetwood+1800
Tyrrell Hatton+1800
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Rory McIlroy+650
Bryson DeChambeau+800
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Collin Morikawa+2500
Ludvig Aberg+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Brooks Koepka+4000
Hideki Matsuyama+4000
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Giving back can’t start too early for HearnGiving back can’t start too early for Hearn

Just like so many of us, David Hearn’s life has been impacted by Alzheimer’s disease. His grandmother, Beatrice Carter, the woman he had so many fond memories of visiting in Toronto when he was young, battled what is the most common form of dementia for nearly a decade. Hearn’s great-grandmother suffered from the insidious disease, as well. The decline was steady. By the time Carter died nearly seven years ago, she sometimes had trouble recognizing members of her family, including Hearn. So, when her grandson was looking for a way to give back in 2015, he didn’t have to look far to find the cause he wanted to support. By the end of this year, the David Hearn Foundation – through its charity golf tournament and the sale of its signature wines and hats – will have raised roughly $500,000 to support the Alzheimer Society of Canada. He first got involved with his local chapter in 2011 and continues to lend a hand in his hometown. “There’s hardly anyone that I talk to that hasn’t been touched by the disease in some way or another,â€� Hearn says. “I feel very fortunate that I’m able to be in a position where I can help out and try to improve the care of the people around us. “Unfortunately my relatives aren’t around anymore that suffered from it, but if we can make it a little bit better for those people that are, it would be good.â€� This year’s David Hearn Charitable Golf Classic was an early sellout. The tournament, which began in 2012, will be played on Monday at Ontario’s Brantford Golf and Country Club, which is Hearn’s home course. The event caps a busy stretch for the 38-year-old Hearn, who is playing in the RBC Canadian Open this week at Glen Abbey. It’s a tournament near and dear to his heart. In 2015, Hearn nearly became the first Canadian in 61 years to win his national championship. He held a two-stroke lead entering the final round and ended up finishing third. Hearn’s foundation was launched later that year. Its focus is on initiatives that help create awareness about Alzheimer’s and how it affects various parts of the community. “I feel like we can raise a lot of money and make an impact when it comes to trying to care for people better,â€� Hearn explains. “I don’t think I can make as big an impact on the research and cure side. “So I wanted to focus more on trying to give back to the families and the people that are suffering from it as best I could.â€� Toward that end, the foundation has several innovative programs beyond Monday’s well-received golf tournament. For example, the sale of those David Hearn Foundation golf caps made by Levelwear raised $20,000 a year ago. The hats are once again on sale at www.davidhearn.ca. The same logo is on the David Hearn Foundation wines from Rockway Vineyards in St. Catharines, Ontario. One of the wines is a cabernet sauvignon-merlot blend and won a bronze medal in a Canadian competition last year. The other is a chardonnay-Riesling blend. “In that area of Ontario, especially that winery is really famous for its Rieslings,â€� Hearn says. “The grapes have a sweet quality to them because of the seasons and the cold.â€� Hearn, who estimates he’s got at least a case of each at home, is partial to the cab-merlot blend while his wife likes the white. He got to meet with the winemaker and provide input in the tasting process. “Obviously, they’re the experts, so I’m just giving a little bit of feedback,â€� he says. “But they did a great job, and they made it real easy for us.â€� Once available on a limited basis, primarily at the vineyard, the wine is now sold throughout Ontario in stores run by the liquor control board. A portion of the sales are donated to the DHF. “So it’s a good sign that it’s popular and the people are liking it,â€� Hearn said. And the partnership with Rockway is a match made in heaven in more ways than one. The vineyard also has a golf course where the David Hearn Kia Championship is held. The tournament is the finale of a six-event junior series hosted by the golfer and his sponsor Two of those junior golfers, Everett Craven, who is 13, and 8-year-old Johnathan Coffey, received the first David Hearn Foundation Kia Grants earlier this year and will be honored Monday night at the foundation’s charity event. Those grants allow the young golfers to make $4,500 donations to their local Alzheimer Society chapters. For Hearn, the giving back can’t start too early.

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Inside Josh Allen's legendary gear setup at Pebble BeachInside Josh Allen's legendary gear setup at Pebble Beach

Josh Allen, the decorated starting quarterback for the Buffalo Bills, is playing in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am alongside PGA TOUR pro Keith Mitchell for the second straight year. And, once again, Allen is turning heads with his golf equipment setup at Pebble Beach. In 2022, Allen went viral thanks to his custom TaylorMade Hi-Toe wedges, which were stamped with "QB1" and "17," and paint-filled with Buffalo Bills colorways (a starting quarterback is commonly called QB1, and Allen wears No. 17). This year, Allen showed up with the same wedges still in the bag, but he's added a few new show-stopping additions to his setup. As he revealed in a video interview with GolfWRX.com, Allen now has a custom Scotty Cameron Newport 2 TourType SSS putter. It's stamped with his name on the back bumpers, has "17" stamped on the milled face, and it's paint-filled with Bills colors. According to a tweet from PGA TOUR player Kevin Streelman, Allen worked with Scotty Cameron product manager Dan Eaton (a.k.a "Dan the Man") on the custom design. The Bills legend seemed quite pleased with Eaton’s work: "I friggin' love this thing," Allen told GolfWRX.com on Wednesday at Pebble. To keep the custom putter safe, Allen uses a Jordan 1 sneaker cover, which is plenty fashionable in its own right. Allen also recently added a new TaylorMade Stealth 2 Plus driver, equipped with a Fujikura Ventus TR Black 7X shaft. He fills out the rest of his bag with a TaylorMade Stealth Plus 3-wood, a TaylorMade P790 UDI 2-iron, and a set of TaylorMade P770 irons (4-9 iron). He uses OnCore golf balls. Follow the first-round action Thursday as Allen and Mitchell tee it up at Spyglass Hill at 12:14 p.m. ET.

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Finding a Ryder Cup partner for Tiger Woods not always easyFinding a Ryder Cup partner for Tiger Woods not always easy

Tiger Woods and Mark Calcavecchia were never supposed to play in Foursomes (alternate-shot) at the 2002 Ryder Cup at The Belfry. Birdie-machine Calcavecchia seemed more appropriate for Four-ball play, but two things led to the Tiger-Calcavecchia pairing. First of all, they were friends, having played practice rounds together, and “Calcâ€� wouldn’t be intimidated by Woods’ aura. And secondly, there was something Calcavecchia knew that U.S. Captain Curtis Strange didn’t, or at least didn’t seem to take into account: Playing with Ken Green and Payne Stewart, Calcavecchia had gone 4-0 in previous Ryder Cup Foursomes. “I actually had to talk Curtis into it,â€� Calcavecchia said recently. “I brought it to his attention. I said, ‘Let me play with Tiger, I’ll get you a win.’ “I would have thought, teeing off, that there was no way we could lose.â€� A lot of people have thought that way upon partnering with Tiger, who is coming off a seismic victory at the TOUR Championship at East Lake last weekend, the long-awaited 80th of his career at age 42. He is perhaps the greatest player in history, knows more about winning than anyone short of PGA TOUR victories leader Sam Snead (82), and would appear at first glance to be the perfect teammate. What could go wrong? Plenty, as it turns out. In seven Ryder Cups, Woods has had 12 partners in Foursomes and Four-ball play, going 4-8-1 and 5-8-0 respectively, for an un-Tiger-like 9-16-1 record in the matches that make up the first two days (and 16 of 28 points) of the competition. One of the stories heading into this week’s Ryder Cup at Le Golf National in Paris will be the U.S. Team’s effort to win on foreign soil for the first time since 1993. But to do that, U.S. Captain Jim Furyk may need to find a way to help Woods find a partner. His record in Ryder Cup Foursomes and Four-ball has been a head-scratcher, to say the least. Woods’ frustrations certainly haven’t been for a lack of trying. Three times, in ’99, ’02 and ’04, he has been paired with three different players in a single Ryder Cup. He settled down and went 2-2 with Furyk in ’06, and 2-1 with Steve Stricker in 2010. The Woods/Stricker tandem had been potent the previous year in the 2009 Presidents Cup, winning all four of their matches. But in the 2012 Ryder Cup at Medinah, they went 0-3 as the U.S. lost a heartbreaker. What gives? I think Tiger’s not easy to pair with people. Because the attention that he brings … you’re expected to win, and then you’re going up against the best players in (Europe), and over an 18-hole match. So, a lot of funny things can happen. As it turns out, it may not be that complicated. It’s the ball — or it was. Although Ryder Cups in America never abide by the one-ball rule, Ryder Cups in Europe used to do just that, forcing Foursomes teams to pick a ball (brand, compression, cover softness) and stick with it for the day. Woods played a soft, high-spin ball that was unfamiliar to the rest of the TOUR, sometimes leaving his partners to try and adapt on the fly. They didn’t always have much success. So it went for Calcavecchia as he and Woods never quite clicked at The Belfry and lost 2 and 1 to Europe’s Sergio Garcia and Lee Westwood. “I had a problem playing with his Nike ball,â€� Calcavecchia recalled. “I hit a couple iron shots that I thought were perfect and came up 30 feet short. And on a par-5 on the front nine, I thought I could carry this fairway bunker and it crashed into the lip, which surprised me. I basically hit his ball 10 yards shorter than I hit my ball. It just felt softer than the Titleist I was playing. “And neither of us played very well,â€� Calcavecchia added. “Tiger missed a couple 4-footers for par, which he never does, and on 14, the par-3, he half-shanked an 8-iron about 50 feet right and it buried in the corner of a bunker. I could barely get a club on it and we lost that hole. Prior to that, I’d hit a couple bad drives and put him in a bad spot. But that’s alternate-shot.â€� How bad was it? Garcia and Westwood won three holes with pars. The good news is that the one-ball rule is no longer in effect in Europe, allowing Foursomes teammates to each use their own ball off the holes where they tee off, simplifying the process. Woods, at least, believes the rule change might help him going forward, whether he’s paired with Bryson DeChambeau, as speculated, Phil Mickelson or somebody else in France this week.

“Now when you’re pairing guys — a little bit more on personality than your golf ball,â€� Woods said. “So that’s changed the alternate shot. … It’s so much easier now because we’re able to hit whatever we want off the tees. And that makes a world of difference.â€� Both he and DeChambeau play a Bridgestone ball, albeit different models. Woods calls it, “a firmer version of what I play.â€� Perhaps more indicative of a potential partnership, the two have formed a rapidly growing friendship, teaming up for practice rounds and also playing together in the third round of the Dell Technologies Championship, when DeChambeau shot 63 on the way to his second victory in as many weeks to start the FedExCup Playoffs. “If he goes around and shoots 8-under par every time, that will work,â€� Woods said. Shooting 65, as Woods did twice at East Lake last week, would also work. As for why his record isn’t better in Four-ball, more often called best ball in the States, NBC/Golf Channel commentator Justin Leonard says that’s more complicated. There’s heightened attention on anything Woods does; players are especially fired up to beat him (ask former No. 1 Greg Norman about being a target); and match play can be a fickle beast. “I think Tiger’s not easy to pair with people,â€� Leonard said. “Because the attention that he brings … you’re expected to win, and then you’re going up against the best players in (Europe), and over an 18-hole match. So, a lot of funny things can happen.â€� Funny things that as Joe Pesci might say are not exactly “hah-hah funnyâ€� for the Americans. Leonard, one of the 12 Americans who have partnered Woods, fared better than most; they halved a Foursomes match against Jesper Parnevik and Ignacio Garrido at Valderrama in 1997. Phil Mickelson has a different theory about Woods’ woes. “When you’d be partnered with him, you’d let him do all the work because he’s so good,â€� Mickelson said. “And you don’t get focused in on your own game and play our best golf.â€� Who will be Woods’ partner in France? That might be up to Woods himself; after all, he was a Vice-Captain until Furyk tabbed him as a captain’s pick. “Tiger tells you who he wants to play with; he’ll tell the captain,â€� Calcavecchia said. You get the sense that he’s probably right, be the year 2002 or 2018. As for Woods’ partner problems, though, the one-ball rule isn’t the only thing that’s changed over the decades. “It was a little bit different 15, 18 years ago than it is now,â€� Calcavecchia said, “especially with all Tiger has been through. He’s a little easier to be around. Whoever gets paired up with him, whether it’s DeChambeau or someone else, I think will feel more comfortable.â€� DeChambeau already sounds comfortable. “I don’t really want to say it,â€� he said, “but I think maybe we can potentially intimidate a couple of people out there. I think it would be kind of cool.â€� Your move, Captain Furyk.

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