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PGA TOUR players cope any way they can in melting heat of summer

Stewart Cink was a mess. It was the final round of the 2007 PGA Championship at Southern Hills in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Heat index: 109 degrees. Cink had been scripted to wear an orange shirt made of a synthetic, wicking material that breathed. It also reeked. An emergency call to his wife, Lisa, yielded a replacement shirt, which Cink changed into after ducking into a sweltering portable bathroom on the second hole. He left his toxic orange top behind. “Probably one of the top five grossest things I’ve ever left in a porta-john,� Cink says with a rueful smile. Welcome to summer on the PGA TOUR, where high-end sportswear can quickly morph into something best handled with salad tongs and a Hazmat suit. It is in this arena that the best players in the world and their caddies do whatever it takes to survive and even thrive. This week’s Quicken Loans National at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm is expected to be warm but not unbearable, with a forecast of 77 degrees and 70 percent humidity for the opening round. Talk to enough players and the ’07 PGA at Southern Hills, won by Tiger Woods and merely survived by Cink and others, comes up repeatedly. This year has been no picnic, either. The average high temperature in Dublin, Ohio, for tournament time, is 78 degrees, but the mercury hit a steamy 90 early in the week at the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide. Temps topped out at 99 at the Fort Worth Invitational at Colonial, where the winner, Justin Rose, said he drank 15 to 20 bottles of water a day and never saw the inside of a restroom. Asked how he survived, Rose says, “I played in Jakarta last December and that was as hot as Texas. Actually, I won in both those climates, so I must not mind the heat. Maybe it’s my South African upbringing. It’s not the English one, that’s for sure.� The week before Rose won at Colonial, the high of 91 at the AT&T Byron Nelson at Trinity Forest, where Aaron Wise won, felt even hotter for the lack of shade. Earth-scorching heat around the world The story of Cink and his stinky shirt notwithstanding, summer heat is no joke. Chad Reynolds, Nick Watney’s caddie, suffered heat stroke in the first round of the 2012 CIMB Classic in Malaysia. He wound up taking an IV drip in the first-aid room while Watney’s wife, Amber, stepped in for the last hole. Watney used a local caddie for the second round before reuniting with Reynolds and shooting 65-61 to win the tournament. Michael Greller, Jordan Spieth’s caddie, had to relinquish the bag in the third round of the Fort Worth Invitational last season, when the heat index soared to 108. Chris Stroud and Chris Couch required medical attention at the sweltering 2012 AT&T National at Congressional Country Club, where several caddies, fans and others also struggled. Tennis players have it worse. For one thing, they run more, and for another, blast-furnace heat bounces off the court and right back up at them through their melting soles. Then again, sometimes golfers have it pretty bad. “I worked when it was 127 in Perth,� says longtime caddie Tony Navarro. It was the mid-1990s, and Navarro was working for Greg Norman at the Heineken Classic at the Vines Resort. “In the mornings the wind would blow out of the west,� Navarro says, “which is off the coast, and then at about 11:30 every day it would switch and come out of the east, which is nothing but about 2,300 miles of desert: dead, dry heat.� Having grown up in Moline, Illinois, home of the John Deere Classic, Navarro thought he was prepared. This time, however, the heat caught him off-guard. He had flown all night to get to the Vines, which meant Moline to Chicago, Chicago to Los Angeles, Los Angeles to Melbourne, and Melbourne to Perth. He’d been in his hotel room a half an hour when the phone rang. “C’mon,� Norman said. “We’re going to go play.’� It didn’t work out; a bleary Navarro had gotten through only around six holes when Norman looked into his eyes and demanded he give up the bag. The dogged, dazed caddie protested, but made it just one more hole before the Shark insisted he turn the bag over to a boy in the gallery. “I walked the rest of the course with an umbrella over my head,� Navarro says. “I hadn’t seen the golf course, and it was Tuesday. I didn’t come to Perth for a haircut.� Who says golfers aren’t tough? The toughest among them might be those indefatigable world travelers like Navarro, players and caddies who are no stranger to stifling, equatorial heat. “The hottest I’ve ever been on the golf course was this place called Kota Kinabalu,� says Asian Tour veteran Anirban Lahiri. “It’s a Malaysian territory, but it’s on the Java Island. It was probably like 100, 102, but it was like 98 percent humidity. “Same thing with Brunei,� Lahiri adds. “Just standing around the driving range, you’re wet. You haven’t even hit a ball. I don’t like playing in cotton; you have to have the right fabric or you’re always pulling it away from you to get some air. You also need clothing that doesn’t smell; certain types of materials get really stinky. I don’t mind the heat; I’ve always played well.� Hydration: The earlier the better Pat Perez and his caddie, Mike Hartford, believe Perez momentarily blacked out in the heat at the 2007 PGA at Southern Hills. He not only remained upright, he shot a final-round 68 to finish T18. Fast-forward to the CIMB Classic at TPC Kuala Lumpur last fall, where it was 90 degrees and thick with humidity, and Perez played lights-out, shooting 24 under for his third win. “I just walk slow when it’s really, really hot,� he says. Rickie Fowler had another strategy at the Fort Worth Invitational at Colonial, where he finished T14. “I carried a little hand towel around,� Fowler said, “to throw some ice and water on it to wipe the neck and face and try to trick the body into not getting too hot.� Experts say the best defense against the heat is early hydration. If you wait until you’re on the course to start bolting water, you could already be too late. Also, water isn’t always enough. “I use electrolyte powder,� Lahiri says. “I usually start hydrating like an hour before I go out to practice and play. A lot of times if you start hydrating three or four holes in, you’ve already lost it; you’re already behind and now it’s going to take your body longer to absorb it.� Troy Van Biezen, a Dallas-based trainer who works with Jordan Spieth and several other TOUR pros, agrees. “Once you’re behind the 8-ball,� he says, “it’s hard to catch up.� The worst sign of heat distress is when a player stops sweating. Then there’s the headaches, dizziness, and muscle-cramping. “I honestly seem to struggle in the heat,� says Adam Hadwin, who grew up outside Vancouver, Canada, in a climate he describes as temperate. “Not necessarily struggling playing, but I get headaches. I try to pop as many electrolytes as possible.� He also limits practice time and seeks out air conditioning wherever possible. The story of Ken Venturi at the 1964 U.S. Open at Congressional has become legend. Venturi’s temperature reached a potentially fatal 106 degrees midway through the sweltering, 36-hole final day, and he lay on the locker room floor as concerned doctors and tournament officials looked down at his seemingly lifeless body. To keep playing, it seemed, was to invite disaster. “I’ve come this far, and I’ve never been this close,� Venturi said. “I’m going to try.� Against the advice of doctors, he not only kept playing, he won. Heat stress isn’t always so obvious; one symptom is far less visible, but still costly. “You deplete a lot of Vitamin Bs when you sweat, and the B complexes are very important for cognitive thinking and decision-making,� Van Biezen says. “When you’re dehydrated, you’re not aware of it, but sometimes you just don’t make those right decisions, maybe on the 12th or 13th hole on a Sunday. With the dip in blood-glucose, the brain isn’t getting what it needs.� Enjoying the heat To avert such problems, Van Biezen says, he instructs his clients to ingest a hydration product with Vitamin B and amino acids both the night before and the morning of a round. Caddies are also reminded to push bottled water, often with electrolytes, every three or four holes, and the right foods and post-round recovery drinks are also important. It’s all become second nature for clients like Fowler. “Summers in South Florida are hot, too,� he says, “but I prefer the heat over the cold.� Louis Oosthuizen agrees. “I enjoy the heat,� he says. “My body is better; it’s sort of looser. When it’s really cold and windy, it gets tough. I don’t get the same turn.� Lahiri says he feels like he has an advantage in the heat in the same way that, say, Padraig Harrington might have an advantage in cooler weather. Rose stresses the importance of proper nutrition, and says he didn’t practice much after his rounds at Colonial in order to keep fresh. Meanwhile, Perez keeps to his strategy of slowing things down, if not actually swapping tops. “Nah, I don’t change shirts,� he says. “You’re sweating like hell again five minutes later. Why ruin two?�

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Monday Finish: Jim Herman’s historic weekendMonday Finish: Jim Herman’s historic weekend

There's an old saying in sports that simply says, “Go hard or go home.” It is an apt line for the Wyndham Championship because if you find yourself in the field at Sedgefield Country Club and you're outside the top 125 in the FedExCup standings, it is the only option you have. Go hard or go home. With FedExCup Playoffs spots on the line a few players did just that. None more so than Jim Herman, who opened the week with a spot inside the top 200 at risk but ended it in dramatic fashion as the winner in Greensboro. Welcome to the Monday Finish where Herman and two others produced enough to extend their season and the final Playoffs field was set. THREE KEYS TO SUCCESS 1. When opportunity knocks, Herman knows you better be ready to take it. Herman has just 10 top-10s on the PGA TOUR from his 195 starts between 2010 and now. But the now 42-year-old can boast that three of those are wins. Herman might not be a regular contender on the PGA TOUR - in fact he came into Wyndham ranked a distant 192nd in the FedExCup standings, leaving him with a win or runner-up scenario to continue his season. But what he has been over the last five seasons is a pretty regular winner. He may have missed 27 cuts in his last 40 starts but there are plenty of players on TOUR who would switch places right now. 2. A record weekend. With four holes to go on Friday, Herman could have been forgiven for starting to crunch numbers in his head regarding staying inside the top 200 of the FedExCup and receiving a safety net for the 2020-21 season via a spot in the Korn Ferry Tour Finals. He was outside the cut line at 192nd in the FedExCup and was already planning what to do with his family over the next three weeks. But three straight birdies allowed him the opportunity to play the weekend and Sedgefield, and perhaps gain some momentum before the time off. That momentum came quickly with a 9-under 61 on Saturday, with a 29 on the back side, that rocketed Herman to the periphery of contention. While starting Sunday four back might seem a little far, perhaps he could snag the runner-up finish he needed to continue his FedExCup claims. Forget that. A Sunday 63 meant a weekend total of 134 - which equaled the lowest weekend total for a winner in TOUR history (Stuart Appleby, 2010 Greenbrier). Herman played his last 32 holes with 15 birdies, an eagle and just one bogey. Incredible. 3. A hot putter. Herman turned up at Sedgefield struggling with his putting and decided to change to a cross-handed grip at Wyndham. It was a masterstroke. He ended the week making 444-feet of putts with a 59-foot eagle on the par-5 fifth on Sunday the shot that catapulted him into serious contention. All in all, Herman gained +6.234 shots on the greens, ranking him third in Strokes Gained: Putting. But his tee-to-green game was equally impressive. Herman was fifth in Strokes Gained: Off the Tee and fourth in Strokes Gained: Approach the Green. "I got here, and these greens are so perfect, you’ve got to be able to start the ball where you’re looking with the correct speed, and cross-handed just gets the ball rolling a little bit better for me at the moment and just went with it," Herman said. Read more on his putting switch and everything to do with his win here. OBSERVATIONS Jobs may not have been on the line thanks to the COVID-19 reduced schedule but FedExCup Playoffs spots still were and that still brings pressure. While Herman was one man to blitz his way into the Playoffs, two others with impressive pedigree did the same. Major champions Zach Johnson and Shane Lowry were the other two players who did enough to move from the outside of the 125 into the field at THE NORTHERN TRUST this week. Johnson came in ranked 129th and finished No. 104 after a tie for seventh at Sedgefield. He had missed the Playoffs a year ago but would not be denied again. "I don’t like missing cuts, I don’t like missing the FedExCup, I don’t like not being a part of it," Johnson said. "When there’s events that you’re not qualified for, which has kind of been new to me in the last year or two, it’s frustrating. I say that, it’s also motivating." Lowry came in No. 131 and finished 122nd with his T23 at Wyndham. "You look at what I’ve achieved in the last year or two, stuff like that shouldn’t really be as stressful as it was, but it was," said the reigning Open champion. "It’s a big deal. We all know if we can make it to Boston that a good week there, you know, can do big things." Those to fall out of the top 125 were Charl Schwartzel, Fabian Gomez and Russell Knox. Check out a full rundown here. Webb Simpson and Sedgefield are a pretty decent match. No wonder Simpson named one of his children Wyndham given he now has eight top 10s at Sedgefield, including the win in 2011, from 12 starts. Simpson has now finished in the top 3, albeit without winning a second title on the course, in the last four seasons after a T3 this week. In his last 16 rounds at Sedgefield, Simpson has shot 68 or better, averaging out at 65.3125. He has won over $3.5 million at the venue. He also secured $1.2 million this week for finishing third in the Wyndham Rewards regular season race and as such is in great shape for a tilt at the FedExCup. Cinderella doesn't always get to the ball. Rob Oppenheim, a 40-year-old grinder who has spent his career bouncing between the Korn Ferry Tour and the PGA TOUR in the FedExCup era but who has yet to make the Playoffs, had a golden opportunity on Sunday. Playing in the final group, Oppenheim needed to stay high on the leaderboard to have a chance of breaking the drought but unfortunately slipped to a tie for 15th thanks to some critical late bogeys. In the end he was four shots adrift of his goal. QUOTEBOARD "I hit it the way I wanted, I felt like I started on my line and about halfway to the hole I thought I made it and it just snapped off. It was disappointing because I had two good looks the last couple holes and just wasn’t able to convert," – runner-up Billy Horschel on a chance to force a playoff on 18. "You get old pretty quick out here with the young guys. They make you feel inadequate off the tee and especially long irons. it’s mentally frustrating. To overcome it all and get here for a third time is pretty amazing." – Jim Herman "It’s an ‘almost’ week. Almost good, almost a low one every day. Today was an almost." Webb Simpson after a fourth top 3 in four years at the Wyndham without winning. "I wouldn’t be surprised if I’m in the same place next week and I wouldn’t be surprised having a chance to win," Jordan Spieth remains upbeat despite continued struggles. WYNDHAM REWARDS The Wyndham Rewards Top 10 is a season-long competition that offers a $10 million bonus for the 10 golfers who end the regular season at the Wyndham Championship inside the top 10 in FedExCup points. The player atop the standings will earn $2 million, with varying payoffs for the others through $500,000 for the 10th place finisher. Justin Thomas officially is the Wyndham Rewards champion after there was no movement in the final week of the regular season. Thomas takes top spot with three wins on the season thus far and Collin Morikawa was able to hold off Webb Simpson for second to get $1.5 million. Jon Rahm kept the 10th and last slot, 37 points ahead of Xander Schauffele. The top 10 combined for 15 wins in the 2019-20 Regular Season. SOCIAL SNAPSHOT

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Family memories continue to be built at PNC ChampionshipFamily memories continue to be built at PNC Championship

ORLANDO, Fla. – Fathers and sons and golf? The three have been joined together since there were sticks and small rocks and lone crooked flagsticks protruding from barren fields in Scotland, while kings still ruled. This week’s PNC Championship, which begins Saturday at Orlando’s Ritz-Carlton Golf Club, will garner extra attention as Tiger Woods, partnered once again with his 12-year-old son, Charlie, makes his return to golf following a horrific single-vehicle crash in Los Angeles in February. The 36-hole event, featuring 20 teams and played using a relaxed scramble format, will be televised by NBC to a national audience over the weekend. Many interested golf fans (and Woods’ fellow competitors) are waiting to get some inkling of where he stands in his arduous rehabilitation 10 months after his frightening accident. He counts himself a lucky man. That Woods is walking, let alone playing golf again, just days before his 46th birthday on Dec. 30 says something about his resolve, work ethic, stubbornness and steely resiliency. It also serves up a statement for the event in which he is playing and the true reason he is here. Woods said in an interview at his own Hero World Challenge two weeks ago that he is a long, long distance from competing on the PGA TOUR once more. Take away this weekend’s TV cameras and bright lights, strip the competition down to its very core, and Tiger might be as human as we ever have viewed him. As he tweeted when he committed to play on Dec. 8, he is playing as a dad. That’s all. A dad looking forward to playing the game he loves alongside his son, who seems to love it, too. Acorn, meet the tree. Charlie Woods stole the show at last year’s PNC Championship, showing off incredible skills for an 11-year-old, not to mention so many of his father’s famous mannerisms. Tiger was nervous for him, understandably, but Charlie thrived in the spotlight, showing off his dad’s laser focus, the spinning club twirls, and even his dad’s trademark fist pumps. Charlie’s 5-wood from 175 yards to 3 feet to set up an eagle-3 at the par-5 third hole in last year’s PNC made the evening highlights of every media outlet on the planet. Along with PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan and Jay’s dad, Joe Monahan, longtime IMG executive Alastair Johnston – the creator of the Father-Son event born in 1995 – joined Tiger and Charlie for a pro-am round at the PNC a year ago. Tiger was clearly different, Johnston said, so filled with joy to watch his son in the arena. Johnston has had an interesting window into the life of Tiger, not only through his management company, IMG, but as his former next-door neighbor back when Woods lived in the tony gated Isleworth enclave in Orlando. In fact, Woods was awash in accolades upon returning to Florida following his mind-blowing, 12-shot victory at the 1997 Masters, the first of his 15 major championships. He went out to retrieve his mail one day, and Johnston wanted to offer his own congratulations. You know, Johnston told Woods, you now are qualified to play in the Father-Son. “He looked at me as if I had three heads, and asked, ‘What’s that?’” Johnston said via phone on Monday. laughing. “I said, ‘Oh, you’ll see.’” Johnston, who worked side by side with Arnold Palmer for many years, made a terrific discovery during a stroll through the locker room one day during the 1995 Senior PLAYERS Championship in Detroit. There were courtesy phones set up for players to use. On one phone was Jack Nicklaus. Raymond Floyd was on a phone in a different corner. On a third phone, Dave Stockton. All three men had played that afternoon, but seemed much more interested to check in with home to see how their sons were doing in various college and junior competitions. Johnston had an idea: What if there was a tournament, a real competition, in which fathers could compete alongside their sons? And to make the tournament field elite, each father needed to be a major champion (winners of THE PLAYERS later were added). Eventually, what began as the Father-Son at Vero Beach’s Windsor Club in 1995 would evolve into something much more inclusionary, hence the name change to the PNC Championship. Today, the qualifications are to be a major winner (male or female) competing with a family member. Fuzzy Zoeller, Jerry Pate and Bernhard Langer all would compete alongside their daughters, and last year, Annika Sorenstam competed alongside her father, Tom. This week’s field includes LPGA No. 1 Nelly Korda, who is playing alongside her famous tennis-playing dad, Petr. Players have teed it up with stepsons. Bubba Watson is playing with his father-in-law. “Adding grandfathers,” Johnston explained, “allowed Arnold (Palmer) to compete, and nobody was objecting to that.” Many major champions who’d like to compete simply aren’t able because daylight limits the field to 20 teams, which makes for some tough late-year phone calls for Johnston. It’s not so much telling the famous major winner the news, but envisioning the conversation that person must then have with his relative to break the news. Johnston starts thinking about fields two and three years in advance, and said he is driven by “great narratives.” It intrigues him to see Watson, a three-time major champion, able to compete with his father-in-law. The Cinks – 2009 Open Championship winner Stewart Cink and his son, Reagan – were invited to return after they successfully paired for two PGA TOUR victories last season, with Reagan on his dad’s bag. Of course, there is no bigger, or more attention-packed, ongoing narrative than Woods hitting shots once more. A year ago, he let Charlie, who plays from forward tees, take care of many of the drives for the team, and this week, that unquestionably will be a point of strategy. “This is Dad’s ‘Take Your Kid to Work Day,’” Johnston said. “And Tiger and Charlie epitomized that. Tiger was very nervous for Charlie (last year, in Charlie’s debut). This year he’ll be relying on Charlie. “Without having done it last year, I don’t think Tiger would be playing this year. But the way Charlie handled it all … I knew that if there was a way of doing it, there was a good chance that Tiger was going to play.” So away we go. It’s a late-season “hit-and-giggle” event, as Tiger may affectionately call it, but don’t think the shots won’t count. They will and they won’t, but on a bigger scale, represent an important milestone and tiny step forward as Tiger Woods moves toward the future that remains uncertain. When Saturday dawns at the PNC, Woods will be there not as the man trying to break Sam Snead’s record for TOUR victories or a man contemplating resuming his pursuit of Jack’s major mark. Tiger Woods will be hitting shots as a dad, like many of us do on Saturdays. And there always is great importance in that.

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