Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Rickie Fowler’s late equipment change pays off in Round 1 at Valero Texas Open

Rickie Fowler’s late equipment change pays off in Round 1 at Valero Texas Open

SAN ANTONIO — Last year, a change in iron shafts propelled Andrew Landry to his first PGA TOUR win at the Valero Texas Open. Landry switched to Nippon’s Pro Modus3 Tour 105X model late Wednesday in his Ping iBlade irons in search of more height and spin and, as the saying goes, the rest is history. Could history repeat itself? Rickie Fowler sure hopes so. Fowler installed True Temper’s Dynamic Gold S-400 shafts into his set of Cobra irons Thursday and was pleased with the early results. Fowler took advantage of good scoring conditions in the morning at TPC San Antonio AT&T Oaks Course and fired a 4-under 68 in the opening round of the Valero Texas Open. Related: Si Woo Kim opens with 66 | Insider: Bowditch upbeat in back recovery | Landry’s fearless attitude “What I’ve been playing has been working,” he said of True Temper C-Taper S+ shafts, “but just looking for that little bit better.” Fowler said he had been thinking about making the change in hopes of gaining a little more spin on his mid irons. The S-400 shaft is the same model he already uses in his wedges. On Tuesday, Fowler had Cobra’s Ben Schomin build 7-irons with eight different shafts for testing. It’s unusual for players to make equipment switches the week before a major, but Fowler downplayed the timing ahead of the Masters. “There’s no way to get an idea of what it’s going to do unless you put it in play,” he said. “You’ve got to take that risk to find out and I’m happy with how it performed so far.” Fowler, who trailed Si Woo Kim by two strokes, was proudest of a wedge he hit at No. 11, his second hole of the day, which set up a short birdie putt. “It was just a nice little hold-off high-cut wedge into the back right pin there. Really hit it exactly how I wanted to,” he said. “It doesn’t happen that often that you hit a perfect shot, how you draw it up landing in the right spot and finishing where you want it. So to have that happen on the second hole of the day definitely gave me confidence moving forward.” Fowler also highlighted his 9-iron from the rough at the ninth that flew with his preferred trajectory and hit the green and stopped. Fowler is making his first appearance at the Valero Texas Open and said the golf course provided a fair test for his iron play. “There’s some great approach shots in here,” Fowler said. “You’ve got to be pretty spot on with your numbers and how your bringing the ball in, the height, whether you’re skipping it back or trying to stop it pretty quickly. It’s a fun test. I wouldn’t mind seeing a little breeze around here, just add a little more ball-striking on top of that, even though it is already a ball-striking golf course.” 

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Kizzire embodies ‘floodgates’ theory of winningKizzire embodies ‘floodgates’ theory of winning

With everyone else having long-since packed up and headed home, Patton Kizzire outlasts James Hahn with a par on the sixth hole of a sudden-death playoff to win the Sony Open in Hawaii. Welcome to the Monday Finish, where Kizzire built on his breakthrough win at the OHL Classic at Mayakoba last fall to become the first multiple winner this season. He also takes over the top spot in the FedExCup. Not bad for a guy who until two months ago was winless in his career. FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1. Kizzire is mentally tough. Because even the winners on TOUR are gloriously imperfect, the trick is to not get bogged down in the messy details. Kizzire is used to that. Hitting fairways at a 58.7 percent clip this season, he is 187th in driving accuracy. But he makes it work with solid putting (.829 in strokes gained: putting, 20th best on TOUR) and scrambling (63.03 percent, 47th). “My golf game is a roller-coaster,â€� Kizzire said after outlasting Hahn. “It always has been. I’m up and down and all around.â€� Case in point: the first hole of the playoff, the par-5 18th, where Hahn was looking at a makeable birdie putt and Kizzire, facing a delicate third shot, tried to get too cute and dumped his ball in the bunker. His caddie, Joe Eter, gave him a pep talk. “Yeah, that was a little rough, no pun intended,â€� Kizzire said. “I caught a little rough between my ball and the club and came up short, and I showed my caddie all the grass that was on the face. He said, just get that thing up and down, man, and we’ll see what happens.â€� Kizzire did just that, and when Hahn’s birdie try stayed out, Kizzire had staved off elimination. “Joe was big,â€� he said of caddie Eter. “He was big all week. He kind of gave me a kick in the rear end when I needed it and made me laugh when I needed to.â€� 2. Hahn has age on his mind. There were lots of positives for Hahn, who was 2-0 in playoffs before losing this one. After starting the day seven shots off the lead, his nine-birdie, one-bogey 62 was the low round of the day. It was also his best since a 10-birdie effort in the third round of the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide last season. And his play at the Sony would seem to bode especially well considering Hahn is beginning a stretch of five starts in five weeks. But Hahn said he doesn’t do moral victories, copping to uncertainty about how many more chances he might get (he is 36), and stressing the need to convert those chances into victories. “Everything I’m doing is great on the golf course,â€� Hahn said. “But you get to this level where you might only have two, three, four opportunities to win out on TOUR. These guys are really good. Dustin Johnson is going to get a couple. You know Jordan Spieth is going to get a handful, Justin Thomas. So, any time you have an opportunity to win and you don’t close the deal, I feel like it’s just one less opportunity for me. “So I feel really defeated right now. I probably sound that way. I probably feel like the most depressed guy in the room. Sorry. We didn’t get nuked, all right? But it’s one of those things where, at the end of the day, I’m going to be replaying all the bad shots that I hit and how I can improve, and that’s just the kind of person I am. I just keep grinding and just try to get better.â€� 3. Hoge classy in defeat. In retrospect, the worst place to be on the back nine, if not the whole golf course, may have been the bunker left of the 16th green. Tom Hoge and playing partner Brian Harman each wound up short-siding themselves in that bunker, and with little green to work with, neither could so much as hit the putting surface. 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I just need to tighten things up a little bit.â€� Year-to-date, Thomas is sputtering at -.428 (T173) in strokes gained: putting. Spieth, meanwhile, sounded a similar refrain. Although it’s a tiny sample size of just eight rounds this season, he’s even further down the list at -.678 (201st) in strokes gained: putting. “I’ve got a lot of work to do with the putter,â€� he said. “It’s as simple as that. Everything else is plenty ready to win.â€� FIVE INSIGHTS 1. Sunday’s playoff marked the longest ever at the Sony, and the longest on TOUR since Bryce Molder outlasted Briny Baird in six holes at the 2011 Safeway Open. 2. It was a well-played six holes, with Kizzire and Hahn both making birdies at the 18th hole the second time they played it. And the third. Hahn seemed to tire, though, mentioning his failure to eat enough throughout the day after making bogey at the par-3 17th hole to end it. 3. 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Q&A: NBC Sports’ Tommy Roy on producing the Presidents Cup broadcastQ&A: NBC Sports’ Tommy Roy on producing the Presidents Cup broadcast

This year’s Presidents Cup at Quail Hollow Club will mark Adam Scott’s 10th consecutive appearance in the biennial event. He won’t be the most-experienced man on the grounds at Quail Hollow, however. Tommy Roy, the lead golf producer for NBC Sports, has been in the chair for every Presidents Cup since 2000. It is his duty to capture not just the important shots, but also the emotions that are inherent with international team events. PGATOUR.COM recently sat down with Roy to understand how he plans on transporting the passion in Charlotte, North Carolina, to the fans watching on TV. (Answers have been edited for brevity and clarity.) PGATOUR.COM: What is different about broadcasting team match play as opposed to individual stroke play? TOMMY ROY: You’re playing for a team, for your captain, for your country, and because of that the pressure is ratcheted up way more than a stroke play event where you’re just playing for yourself. Let’s compare it to a major, where, if you are in contention you’re playing pretty good golf. So when the pressure is on, you’re probably handling it just fine. But in something like the Presidents Cup, the pressure is as great or even greater than a major, but you may not have your best game because you’ve been put on this team from play that may have happened earlier in the year. And so what tends to happen is the pressure really makes a difference. … You can’t hide. And so for us, it’s not about dissecting a golf swing or something like that. It’s about capturing the emotion because the emotions are so great. The emotion of the player himself, the emotion of the fans around, the emotion of the captains and the rest of the teammates. So our coverage is designed to do that as opposed to what you would typically do on a stroke-play event. PGATOUR.COM: So how do you do that? You’ve got all these people inside the ropes. How do you capture that team aspect of it? ROY: Well, the way we frame our shots. You’ll notice if somebody’s putting for birdie in a stroke-play event, it’ll just be that guy and the (hole). In match play, we frame to include the opponent as well. So, it’s the guy who’s putting and his opponent or it could be the guy who’s putting and his teammate. We frame to include that in the shot. And then the other thing is when we cut to a reaction shot, we typically, especially if it’s a player from the home team who’s done something, we include the fans in the background. It’s not just a tight shot of the guy. It’s all the fans in the background reacting. It’s different the way it’s directed to include the fans and the players and their teammates, so that the people at home can understand what’s going on. PGATOUR.COM: How long did it take you to learn all of this? You’ve done the Ryder Cup since 1993 and the Presidents Cup since 2000. How have you learned over the years? ROY: The first Ryder Cup we did in 1993 was over there and we learned a lot. We learned how to cover it, but also the technical aspect of how everything works and we’ve grown every year. I’d say by ‘95, we had our act together on how to cover the team, match play and capture everything, but there are nuances and you do learn all the time how to improve. It is clearly about capturing the emotion, period. To have an (extreme slow-mo camera) where we show contact of the ball and the club face is not really necessary in something like this, but to have a super slow-mo to capture the guy’s reaction shot after he has done something incredible is more important. PGATOUR.COM: Was there a moment that you go back to in a team event, especially the Presidents Cup, that you walked away from feeling like we got it, we got the perfect moment right here? ROY: Yeah, I think when it was in San Francisco and Tiger (Woods) and (Steve) Stricker were teammates and they’re on a par 5 and Tiger hit this incredible shot in there and he twirled the club right after impact. It was a bullet right at the flag. We had a camera on Fred Couples, who was the boss of the team and he’s imitating him with the club twirl. So we added all those replays and it was really well done. PGATOUR.COM: The club twirl has survived the test of time. With that said, are there any moments… ROY: One other thing I would say that’s different than covering stroke play is in stroke play, you can jump around, hole-to-hole, player-to-player, and keep track of the story. Whereas in match play, because it’s mano a mano, we can’t take one shot from one guy in his group and then go to another hole, take a shot from that guy and then go to another hole and take a putt from somebody else. You have to cover both guys hitting, so that you go back-to-back within the same match. Sometimes that slows things down a little bit, but it’s crucial for the people at home to understand what’s happening here because there’s a lot of non-golf fans who are watching and you need to produce it so they understand what’s happening. PGATOUR.COM: How does the speed change going from the team days to the individual singles matches on Sunday? ROY: It really ratchets up because then you’ve got 12 matches out there. And of course, all basically at the same time. Once they all get out there and it’s rocking and rolling, it is the most frenetic that our truck is the entire year – Sunday of the Presidents Cup or Sunday of the Ryder Cup. PGATOUR.COM: Is frenetic a good thing or a bad thing? ROY: It’s pretty good TV because there’s great stuff happening all the time on the screen. What’s going to be so cool about Charlotte is that supposedly they’ve sold 50,000 tickets a day. To have that many fans on the course at one time, around just a few matches, it’s going to be electric and the energy, the cheers, the roars, it’ll be great TV. “It’s the most frenetic that our truck is the entire year – Sunday of the Presidents Cup.” – Tommy Roy, NBC Sports lead golf producer PGATOUR.COM: There are a lot of unique things going into this Presidents Cup that have been highlighted, such as the Green Mile being moved up to 13-15. How does the routing affect what you do? ROY: I applaud what the PGA TOUR has done in changing the routing so that we get these great holes on the air for sure. As we know in match play, it may end early. You definitely wouldn’t want to have the coolest hole on the entire golf course be the 18th in a match-play situation. They’ve done a great job changing the routing so that we’ll be able to get these iconic holes on the air. PGATOUR.COM: How do you want to show these specific holes, in particular with the lake, the aesthetics of that? How can you show the uniqueness of the course on this type of broadcast? ROY: We have a drone and an airplane. I think we’ll get some very unique angles of this course, which will be great. I really love this golf course and it will be great for match play because there’s risk-reward holes, drivable par 4s and where the water comes into play, anything can happen. There’s not a boring hole on this entire golf course. Every single one of them is unique and exciting, which will really be accentuated under match-play conditions. PGATOUR.COM: What might be new to the broadcast for this Presidents Cup? ROY: The one thing we got new is we’ve got Captain’s cams. In both of the golf carts, for Davis Love III and Trevor Immelman, we will be mounting (point-of-view) cameras pointing at their seats. What typically happens is we will do an interview on the first tee after the first match tees off with both captains. And then we want to do an interview at the very end of the day. In between, there are a lot of times where one of the sides will get off to a fast start and you want to get a shot of that captain, who’s done such a good job with the selection of the picks that day and the pairings. And then it’s like, where is he? Then you’re trying to find them because he’s in a golf cart racing around the golf course and it’s not easy to spot these guys from our fixed camera location. By having these captain cams, I’ll know where they are at all times. PGATOUR.COM: What have been some of the innovations that have enhanced your coverage of these international team events? ROY: Technology wise, the miniaturization of all the equipment allows us to have more of it. More cameras, more angles, more replays of exciting moments. In the old days, a camera cable was a full inch around. That’s how big it was when I first started. It would take them four days, five days to just put the cables out on six holes. Nowadays, we can cable an entire golf course in basically a day. We have many more cameras and many more microphones . And audio is a huge part of this, particularly on holes where the water’s in play. To be able to hear the splash sound just accentuates a moment all that much more, so I’m grateful that experts in the technological side of our business have been able to do what they’ve done. PGATOUR.COM: Is there a player in your history of covering these team events that got your heart pumping or that you were always focused on making sure that was captured? ROY: Well, obviously Tiger. Every time he played, he brought such passion and I see that now, by the way, in Justin Thomas, the way he played up in New Jersey. He’s one of those guys that doesn’t just hit good shots. He hits great shots in these team atmospheres for whatever reason. That just seems to be in his DNA. We’re all over that and obviously Spieth, what he’s done, getting in trouble and then hitting these miraculous shots out of trouble. That’s all great stuff. Sangmoon Bae, when we were in Korea (for the 2015 Presidents Cup) and it all came down to him and it was a lot of pressure and he stepped up and performed down the stretch and then ultimately got beat. He was carrying his team while in his home country and it was pretty incredible to watch. The best of all though, was (Ernie) Els in South Africa. When it came down to that playoff (with Tiger Woods to break a tie in the 2003 Presidents Cup), I don’t think there has ever been as much pressure on a player in golf in any event as when the whole thing was riding on him. And he’s making these putts that were incredible, very difficult breaking putts, sloping, breaking putts, and he was making them and Tiger was answering them. You kind of felt like Tiger was going to answer those. It was Els having to make these things with the entire Presidents Cup in his home country on him. And he came through, shot after shot, putt after putt until finally, it was declared a tie. That was by far the most incredible golf I’ve seen played in one of these events. It came down to just the two of them in the playoff to determine it because that was the rule, but the great thing was not just capturing their exploits, but capturing all their teammates and the fans’ reactions to what was going on because that’s part of it, that’s part of what ratchets up the drama on this is watching their teammates, who’ve completed their matches and they’re now following the final couple of matches out on the golf course, capturing their emotions before and after each one of these shots is struck. That’s another part of it.

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