Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Presidents Cup Insider: Abraham Ancer aiming for Presidents Cup momentum at Mayakoba Golf Classic

Presidents Cup Insider: Abraham Ancer aiming for Presidents Cup momentum at Mayakoba Golf Classic

PLAYA DEL CARMEN, Mexico – At 5 feet, 7 inches tall, Abraham Ancer is one of the shortest of the seven players representing Mexico at this week’s Mayakoba Golf Classic at El Camaleón Golf Club. RELATED: Woods announces U.S. captain’s picks | Els announces International captain’s picks That’s OK, though, because he’s casting the longest shadow. Ancer, 28, made history earlier this year when he was one of eight players to earn a spot on the International Presidents Cup Team, which will take on the U.S. at Royal Melbourne, Dec. 12-15. He is the first Mexican to make the International side. “It’s a big deal for a Mexican to be on that team,â€� said countryman Carlos Ortiz. “We’re all going to be watching.â€� That’s a sentiment shared by others, but Ancer, who last season finished 21st in the FedExCup, has been admittedly slow to let it sink in. He’s simply been too busy. “I know it’s big,â€� Ancer said at El Camaleón Golf Club, where he played a rain-delayed nine holes in the pro-am Wednesday. “I get so caught up in like just playing good every week. I’m just so focused when I’m doing that, kind of (need to) take a step back and really think this is something that’s never been done before, which I’m really proud of and I’m really excited. “Hopefully,â€� he added, “it helps get some kids to kind of get their eyes on golf a little bit more, and here in Mexico especially, help grow the game for sure.â€� Ancer opened plenty of eyes when he won the Australian Open by five shots almost exactly a year ago. The victory was at The Lakes in Sydney, and the next week saw him finish second (with Roberto Diaz) to winner Belgium at the ISPS Handa Melbourne World Cup of Golf. Somehow, Ancer, who was born in South Texas but grew up in Reynosa, Mexico, had a knack for playing in Australia, a skill that presumably will come in handy at the Presidents Cup. “Abe is really great with controlling his ball flight … which you need down in Australia,â€� said Jason Day of Queensland, a captain’s pick on the International Team who last played Mayakoba in 2009 (T28). “That’s a good plus for him to go back to a country that he feels very comfortable in.â€� Ancer came into the new season telling himself that as the highest-ranked Mexican player, he had to play like it. But he missed the cut at the Safeway Open and Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. After more ho-hum finishes at THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES (T57) and ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP (T41), he decided to slow down and try and enjoy the game, after which came an encouraging T4 at the World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions in Shanghai. Now he comes to Mayakoba, where his best was a T9 two years ago, with one eye on making a good showing for the home crowd and one eye on the upcoming Presidents Cup. “I have a good relationship with all team members,â€� he said, when asked whom he’d like to play with at Royal Melbourne. “I’ve been doing practice rounds with Adam Scott, Jason Day, C.T. Pan. I haven’t played a lot with Louis (Oosthuizen). I have played a lot with (Marc) Leishman, Cameron Smith, so I feel I’ll be glad to play with any of them. I’ll enjoy and learn playing with them, and maybe they could learn something from me, and we’ll do a good teamwork.â€� And whom would he like to play in singles? The answer is ambitious, but not surprising. “I would like to play against Tiger,â€� Ancer said, “but the truth is that our objective is to do everything we can to win. Winning a match in the singles would be very special, so we need to try to get the Cup. … Obviously playing here and playing good this week will be a lot of help going in there with a lot of confidence, so I’m looking forward to do that.â€�

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Abraham Ancer has a collection of meaningful putters, bags and golf clubsAbraham Ancer has a collection of meaningful putters, bags and golf clubs

He stopped short of calling himself a collector. But when Abraham Ancer actually thought about it, he admitted that he has about 60 putters at his home in San Antonio, Texas. “I have a ton of putters just because sometimes I go through phases of tinkering and trying other putters and making my gamer jealous, as I like to call that,” Ancer says. “So, I like to maybe see something different for maybe a week or so. “And then I go back to my gamer.” Ancer normally plays with an Odyssey No. 5 putter. But in that rather vast collection are a couple of counterbalanced putters that help him refine his rhythm and set-up when he needs to put that gamer in its place. Not all of the putters in his collection are the kind that Ancer, who won the World Golf Championships-FedEx St. Jude Invitational in August, might put into play on the PGA TOUR, though. Some are very special — “one of ones that you can’t find anywhere else,” he says. “And that’s the stuff that I kind of like.” There’s a replica of his gamer with an insert made of a Damascus metal that that you can only get in Japan, for example. And the ones that Joe Toulon, Callaway’s putter guru, made that are stamped with the logo of Ancer’s tequila company, Flecha Azul. “So, there’s a bunch of cool ones that maybe to the naked eye would be like just a normal putter, but it has something that a lot of people don’t know and it’s pretty cool to me,” Ancer says. Ancer keeps 10 or so of the putters leaning at the ready against the wall in his office while the others are housed in the closet. He says when people come to visit, the first thing they do is grab one of the putters and hit a few. “The ones that I actually practice with, or like to see, they’re in my office where the putting mat that I use is,” Ancer says. “So, whenever I’m not doing much, I just get on there and practice a little bit. … “But when I move to my next home, I want to do an actual display of all of my favorite ones, so people can see them and do not keep them just in a closet. I feel bad just having them in there.” Ancer also has golf bags and other meaningful clubs — besides all those putters — that he’s used during his career that he’d like to put on display. One set is the bag, irons and driver that he used when he turned pro in 2013 after earning a degree in multi-disciplinary studies from Oklahoma. Ancer also has the bag that he received when he played in the 2019 Presidents Cup – and the man who is currently ranked No. 4 in the International Team standings will likely add another one of those in 2022. Plus, Ancer is a two-time Olympian, so those bags are special, too. “So that stuff, that just means a lot to me,” Ancer says. “And clubs that I, along the way, have played and, and remembered I’ve hit good shots with or whatever it is. I like to keep the bag that I use and the clubs that I use at the time.” Ancer, who was born in McAllen, Texas, and has dual citizenship, says he probably has seven bags on display at his house in San Antonio. But there are others at his childhood home in Reynosa, Mexico – including his dad’s golf bag and the clubs he used when he first started playing golf. Ancer’s father, Abraham Sr., who died in 2014, was the one who introduced him to the game. He used to take his son to Club Campestre de Reynosa when Ancer was still in diapers, and the precocious youngster started hitting balls as soon as he could stand. “So (my dad’s clubs) definitely hold a lot of sentimental value and I definitely want to keep them forever,” Ancer says. Some of the clubs Ancer used when he was a kid are also safely stored away in Mexico, as well. “Those are some great memories,” he says. “I was tiny, but I grew up playing with way longer clubs than I needed to. I was never like fitted. So that’s why a lot of people that see me play now, I stand really far away from the ball because I just got used to that.”

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