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Rodgers ready for first win on TOUR

SILVIS, Ill. – Notes and observations from Saturday’s third round of the John Deere Classic where Patrick Rodgers continues to control the tournament in search of his first win. After a patient 3-under 68, he sits at 16-under and two shots clear. Leading the chasing back are two-time PGA TOUR winner Daniel Berger and three-time TOUR winner Scott Stallings at 14-under. For more from TPC Deere Run check out the Daily Wrap. RODGERS READY TO WIN Patrick Rodgers says his record equaling 11 wins at Stanford (tied with Tiger Woods no less) seem like “yesterday and a lifetime all at the same time.â€� The feelings of how to win when in contention are still fresh for the now 25-year-old college prodigy. The fact he hasn’t yet leveraged his comfort level in the lead with a PGA TOUR win makes it feel like a distant memory. “I had a lot of experience winning in collegiate and amateur golf, and I expected to maybe come out here and win right away. Probably the biggest frustrations as a pro have been not getting it done yet,â€� Rodgers admits as he takes a two-shot lead into Sunday at the John Deere Classic. “When you’re used to having so much success and contending on a regular basis, you kind of thrive on that. Part of the frustrating part of professional golf for me so far has been not having as many chances as I would like.â€� It is just the second time in his three seasons on the PGA TOUR he has held the 54-hole lead. He did so earlier this season at the Farmers Insurance Open before finishing T4. “You have to do some serious soul searching, because the line is incredibly fine between great, great golf and going home on a Friday or just not playing the way that you want. “But this is exactly where I want to be. It’s why I show up every week, to win. I think Tiger started this mentality, or Mr. Jack Nicklaus before him. You play to win. I grew up playing all sports, and you don’t play to finish second. “It’s very rewarding to be up here right now. I know I have a long way to go, but I’m excited for the opportunity.â€� BERGER READY FOR THE CHASE Daniel Berger is arguably one of the hottest players in world golf right now and his confidence level matches the theory as he primes himself to chase a third PGA TOUR win. Berger recently defended his FedEx St. Jude Classic win and then sat and watched Jordan Spieth steal the Travelers Championship from his grasp with a holed out bunker shot in a sudden death playoff. At 9th in the FedExCup this season, he knows a win will shoot him into the top 5. While he starts two-shots back of leader Patrick Rodgers, he believes the outcome at TPC Deere Run comes down to one man. Himself. “I feel like if I play well, then I’m going to win the golf tournament. If I don’t, I probably won’t. That’s really kind of cut and dry there,â€� Berger said after his third round 8-under 63 left him at 14-under. “I’m going to have to play really good. Patrick is obviously playing at a really high level.â€� Berger was three back when he won in Memphis last month. He says he’s been further back and won junior and amateur events before. He thrives on the chase. “I love this position. I feel like if I can get off to a good start tomorrow I can put some pressure on Patrick,â€� he said. “Same kind of thing I did in Memphis and Travelers. I just got off to a decent start and made some birdies, and then kind of kept it going from there. “I think as long as I’m standing, then I’m going to have a shot.â€� CALL OF THE DAY STALLINGS SUPER PUTTER ADJUSTMENT Scott Stallings opened the John Deere Classic with an even-par 71 and sat eight shots back after cursing an ice-cold putter. Now, with a round to go, he finds himself tied for second place after back-to-back 7-under 64s leave him at 14-under and just two shots off the lead. Safe to say the putter got hot. After ranking 130th in the field in Strokes Gained: Putting in round one with 34 total putts Stallings needed just 25 putts Friday and 27 Saturday. He now sits eighth in the field through three rounds in Strokes Gained: Putting. “The last six holes on Thursday I made a little bit of a tweak in regards to my speed and kind of how I was seeing the putts,â€� Stallings revealed. “I missed a lot of short putts early in the round on Thursday and really struggled speed-wise as far as matching the line up and everything. “The last six holes my caddie and I just kind of talked about a few different things as far as getting comfortable. And I was able to transition in the last few days.â€� LAMB FEASTS ON DEERE RUN Rick Lamb had the galleries on 59 watch after getting to 9-under on his round through 13 holes, but unfortunately for the PGA TOUR rookie, he was unable to find the three birdies necessary over the last five holes for a sub-60 round. Instead, a bogey on his final hole left him with an impressive 8-under 63, pushing him towards a very important result in terms of his FedExCup status. Lamb admitted to thinking about becoming just the ninth player in PGA TOUR history to shoot a 59 as he came to the closing stretch. “After I made the birdie on the 4th hole, which is my 13th, at that point it kind of crept in my mind,â€� Lamb said. “Wasn’t something I was nervous or worried about. Just if I keep it going, it’s got a chance.â€� Starting the event in 206th spot in the FedExCup Lamb is battling just to get a spot in the Web.com Tour finals. A decent Sunday could take care of that. He starts the final round in a tie for 8th, five shots off the lead. “It’s big, but just another day on the golf course,â€� Lamb said. “It’s not like you’re grinding on the leaderboard saying, Oh, I need to make to putt to get to this position. I just need to focus on winning the golf tournament.â€� SHOT OF THE DAY ODDS AND ENDS • Bryson DeChambeau will search for his first win from four shots back after a 1-under 70. The former U.S. Amateur champion played the last six holes 2-over to stall his challenge. • Nicholas Lindheim has struggled in his rookie season on TOUR, sitting 183rd in the FedExCup. But he has a chance to change all that on Sunday as he sits in 4th place just three off the lead. • Zach Johnson had a roller coaster round with an eagle, three birdies, two bogeys and a double bogey adding up to a 1-under 70. It was just the third round in his last 35 at TPC Deere Run that was not in the 60s. The former champion sits 11-under, five off the pace. • Jamie Lovemark continues to knock on the door of a first PGA TOUR win. Now with nine top 10s in the last two seasons without a victory the former amateur prodigy once again sees himself in contention. His 66 on Sunday left him tied 5th at 12-under, four shots back. • Stuart Appleby shot 7-under 64, his best round since October 2014. The nine-time PGA TOUR winner sits tied 18th at 10-under chasing his first top-10 on TOUR since finishing runner up in the opening FedExCup Playoff event of 2014. His last win came in 2010 at the Greenbrier Classic where he came from seven behind, shooting 59, to win. • After making the cut on the number 2014, champion Brian Harman equaled Daniel Berger and Rick Lamb for round of the day with an 8-under 63. It lifted him 52 places into a tie for 18th, six shots back of the lead. • Another past champion making the cut on the number, Steve Stricker posted a 6-under 65, his best round at TPC Deere Run since opening with the same score in 2015. BEST OF SOCIAL MEDIA

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Captain Nick Price’s 2013 prediction helped spur Hideki Matsuyama to Masters dreamCaptain Nick Price’s 2013 prediction helped spur Hideki Matsuyama to Masters dream

DUBLIN, Ohio – International captain Nick Price could see the raw disappointment in the eyes of his 21-year-old rookie after Hideki Matsuyama lost his Singles match at the 2013 Presidents Cup to Hunter Mahan. The Japanese prodigy felt like he’d let the International team down but Price wanted to make sure the youngster knew he certainly didn’t feel that way and nor did any of his teammates as they passed at the clubhouse of Muirfield Village. Price knew Matsuyama would be a staple of the International team in the years to come and sensed it was a time to send a message. He turned to Bob Turner – Matsuyama’s confidant and interpreter – and was straight to the point. “His game is so good… he’s going to win majors,” Price said before thanking Matsuyama with a hearty handshake for his efforts. It was a line that would live with Matsuyama from that point on and ultimately come true almost eight years later at the Masters. “At that time it was only a dream to think of winning a major championship but what Captain Nick said really gave me motivation to try to live up to those expectations,” Matsuyama said this week ahead of the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide at the same venue he received the praise. “The 2013 Presidents Cup is a week I’ll always remember. I was so grateful for Captain Nick and Adam Scott as it was those two who really took me under their wings and helped me a lot in my first time on the team. “They were great because I had no clue what to do, or how to do it, and they really paid special attention to me and helped build my confidence. It was unfortunate the team didn’t play a little better but the week will always hold great memories for me and it was important for my confidence going forward.” History shows that the following June, Matsuyama would return to Muirfield Village and win the Memorial Tournament, the first of his now six PGA TOUR wins. He was the youngest champion in tournament history at 22 and the first winner from Japan. It was an incredible rise as when Price was named the 2013 captain in May of 2012, Matsuyama was ranked outside the top 200 players in the world but by the time the team was picked in September of 2013 he’d moved inside the top 30 despite having just six TOUR starts as a pro. But it was a rise Price says was always going to come. The Hall of Famer returned to Muirfield Village this week as the tournament honoree. He remembers the infamous moment well. “I could sense Hideki was starting to get a little down so I was trying to think what’s the best thing I can do or say to pick him up and the first thing that came to mind was I just knew he was going to win a major,” Price said. “If I said that to him I thought it might just break him out of any funk he was in so I said to his interpreter Bob – you tell him he’s one of the best young talents I’ve ever seen and tell him I know he is going to win a major. “And hey, eight years later the prophecy came true but it wasn’t really going out on a limb, we all knew it was going to happen.” Price said he’d formed that opinion prior to the week at Muirfield Village where Matsuyama would go 1-3-1 as a rookie during the US 18.5-15.5 win. He could sense it in tournaments leading up to the event where he walked a handful of practice rounds with prospective team members. “I had obviously stopped playing on the regular TOUR before Hideki surfaced but I remember watching him play when he first popped up as a youngster. It was immediately noticeable that he had a beautiful golf swing and his short game looked amazing,” Price remembered. “When they announced I was going to be captain I obviously started to watch him play in person and I was so impressed with his demeanor. He seemed unflappable. He’s a great young man and I was really happy to have him on all three of my Presidents Cup teams.” And he was cheering Matsuyama home last April, on the edge of his seat watching the finish of the Masters, knowing how big the moment would be in a historical sense. “It was probably the greatest thing to happen in golf for some time,” Price says. “The Japanese have long revered the Masters and to have their first male major champion win there is something very special indeed and great for the International exposure of the game.” Price isn’t done with predictions when it comes to Matsuyama. “I don’t think the Masters is his last major win either,” he says. “Once the dust settles he will be back on the horse and he’s going to be looking for the second one. It won’t surprise me if he wins three, four or even more of them.” Let’s hope Matsuyama also takes this prediction to heart.

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Cullan Brown’s memory lives on at Barbasol ChampionshipCullan Brown’s memory lives on at Barbasol Championship

Cullan Brown had zero expectations when he teed it up in the Barbasol Championship at Keene Trace Golf Club two years ago. “He had nothing to lose that week,” Emily Brown, Cullan’s mom, recalls. “He wasn’t like the other men trying to make their living at it. He considered it a free pass and he was going to make the best of it.” And that’s exactly what Cullan did. The affable 19-year-old, a rising sophomore at the University of Kentucky, was playing in the tournament on a sponsor’s exemption. Cullan proceeded to make the cut in his home state’s PGA TOUR event, shooting par or better in every round, and tied for 53rd. Among the highlights that week? Cullan reeled off five straight birdies on the front nine Saturday with his dad, Rodney, on the bag. Rodney – a last-minute fill-in when Cullan’s caddie got heatstroke – was so intent on his job he didn’t even realize that his son was on such a roll. “I don’t think that was by accident,” Kentucky coach Brian Craig says. “I think that was coordinated there by the man upstairs that his dad was going to be caddying for him in a TOUR event. It was pretty cool, pretty amazing.” “I’m so glad that those two had that,” Emily says, her voice catching, before she continued the thought in the present tense. “Rodney has that memory of doing that. That’s something he’ll always cherish.” The Barbasol Championship would be the last tournament Cullan Brown would ever play. On Aug. 17, 2019, barely a month after he made his TOUR debut, Cullan was diagnosed with osteosarcoma, a form of bone cancer, after doctors found a tumor in his right thigh. Sadly, he died 345 days later. In Cullan’s short life, though, he had a significant impact on his family, friends and teammates – and essentially everyone else he met. He was friendly and faithful, humble and kind, the guy with the biggest smile in the room and the heartiest laugh and the Pied Piper personality. That’s why the same people who extended that sponsor’s exemption to Cullan in 2019 wanted to honor him in a more permanent way. So, the winner of the Barbasol Junior Championship – this year’s inaugural champ was Preston Summerhays – will receive the Cullan Brown Trophy and a spot in the PGA TOUR event. And this week at the Barbasol Championship, Cullan’s sister Cathryn, an accomplished player in her own right, will hit the opening tee shot on Saturday. It will be a quick turnaround – she’ll rush home from an AJGA event in South Dakota that ends on Thursday, then drive to Lexington, Kentucky on Friday – but it’s something she doesn’t want to miss. “Someone asked her the other day, why does she play golf?” Emily says. “And she said, well, Cullan always told me that I could be better than he was if I just dedicated myself to the work and put in the time. So that’s why she says she plays.” The Brown family received some more exciting news recently. Cathryn had just shot a career-low 69 in an AJGA qualifier in Ashland, Kentucky, which is five-and-a-half hours from their home in Eddyville. She was ushered into a room, presumably for an interview, only to see her grandparents, uncles, aunts, cousins, friends and Coach Craig gathered around. On the phone was Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear who told the Browns that the golf course where Cullan grew up playing is being renamed in his honor. It will now be called “The Cullan at Mineral Mound State Park.” “His legacy literally is going to go on and on and on,” Craig says. “We’re all going to make sure of it, but just the things that have even happened so far, like, wow. That just tells you what kind of impact he had and what kind of person he was. “I mean, you just don’t see it at that age, I mean, people want to recognize him like this. They want to cement his legacy by doing all these really amazing things – and for a 20-year-old, you know what I mean? Like, that’s pretty awesome.” The family joke was that Cullan started playing golf because he hated to run. He could shoot the basketball, but he didn’t like to run up and down the court. He’d knock the cover off a baseball, but he didn’t want to run the bases. Football and soccer, now those were out of the question. But when he was 8 years old, Cullan started tagging along when his dad and his grandfathers and his uncles when they headed to the golf course. “He just kind of picked it up and he was like, hey, you don’t have to run in golf,” Emily says. “That’s kind of how it came about.” The natural ability was there, though, as was the work ethic. When Cullan was in the eighth grade, his instructor, Todd Trimble, called Craig to give him a head’s up. That summer, the Kentucky coach went to a junior tournament and the first two shots he saw Cullan hit were a driver, 3-wood – into the wind – to 25 feet on a lengthy par 5. “That got my attention really fast, really fast,” recalls Craig, who offered Cullan a scholarship four years later. A wrist injury kept Cullan out of the Wildcats’ lineup during the fall semester of his freshman year. But he managed eight starts that spring, posting a 72.42 scoring average with a career-low 64, and landed a spot on the All-SEC Freshman Team. The sponsor’s exemption into the Barbasol Championship that summer was a bonus. Cullan, who had caddied for his good friend Emma Talley at an LPGA event the previous week, called it an “opportunity unlike any other really – to get to be here and just to get to play, much less compete against these guys is just fantastic.” Craig was on a Greek island on a long-planned family vacation when Cullan and several of his former Kentucky players were competing at Keene Trace. But he had his smart phone and the PGA TOUR app to follow their progress. “I literally was just refresh, refresh, refresh, refresh,” Craig recalls. “… I was following it as closely as you can follow it without being there.” Cullan finished with rounds of 72-68-67-71. He called the week a “fantastic” opportunity for an amateur to “be able to see where their game is and where it needs to be and what they need to do to get from A to B.” “He got to experience his dream,’ Emily says. “He got to live his dream and that’s what I’ve told a lot of people. I’m so thankful he got to do that because as a mom, I got to see it.” Several weeks later, Cullan got up in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom. He hit his right leg on a piece of furniture. At first, doctors thought he had a deep bone bruise on his knee. When medicine didn’t alleviate the pain, an MRI was ordered. Cullan, who loved classic country music, had to give up tickets to the Grand Old Opry to go to Lexington for the procedure. The news was not good. The chemotherapy was aggressive, and Cullan spent between 150-200 of his remaining 345 days in the hospital. He died on Aug. 4, 2020. “I’ll never understand that — why, why, why he couldn’t stay with us longer, but I guess God needed him more than I did,” she says. “But maybe I’ll get my answer one day when I get up there.” “I still feel like I’m in a bad dream,” Craig says. “I just can’t even grasp it. I just, I really can’t. It’s just so, so unfair.” Cullan knew how serious the diagnosis was. He was treated in the pediatric oncology unit at the University of Kentucky but at 19 he was considered an adult. He was a part of every meeting with the doctors – “there was nothing really we kept from him or sugar-coated up until the very end,” Emily says. “He never complained,” she continues. “People would come to the hospital to visit — how are you? (He’d say) there’s nothing I have to complain about. He was more worried about us. He was more worried about how everybody else was doing. “And that was just Cullan. He was like that from an early age.” Craig and the team visited Cullan often in the hospital. It was an awful battle, Craig says, but Cullan handled it like a “superhero.” The Kentucky men’s and women’s golf teams wore B4B – “Birdies 4 Brownie” – stitched on their uniforms last year. “He went through it valiantly and he was a champion all the way through it,” the UK coach says. “He was an inspiration to so many people, not just our team, but I mean, the people in the hospital — like he touched everybody, like everybody that came in contact with Cullan, whether it was a nurse or the doctors or whoever. “They felt his influence in such a powerful way.” Craig feels his team gained perspective from the way Cullan lived his life. He understood golf was just a game, and his demeanor never changed whether he shot 67 or 76. He always tried to do his best, but he knew his family, teammates and friends would love him regardless. “He was very laid back,” Emily agrees. “… He just kind of took the world as it came. I wished I had his demeanor on a lot of things like that. “He loved life and he did a whole lot of living in the 19-and-a-half years that he had before his diagnosis.” In nearly two decades at Kentucky, Craig has coached PGA TOUR players like Josh Teater and J.B. Holmes. He feels certain that Cullan had the talent to join them although he wonders whether he would have liked the lifestyle. Many people describe Cullan as an “old soul.” He loved to read, particularly novels about the old West, and was an A-student. He also was an avid hunter and fisherman — in fact, he’d already seen a ranch in Montana on-line that he wanted to buy. “So, my guess is he would have tried to have made the TOUR and make as much money as he could, as quick as he could, and then said, boys, I’ll see, y’all later, I’m retired to my ranch in Montana,” Craig says, “That’s probably what he would have done to be honest with you, and then just made an appearance every now and then. “That’s exactly what he would have been like. He would not have been one of these guys that would have sacrificed everything to be a TOUR player. … He would have figured out a way to, to balance both of them.” Cullan also loved to watch cooking shows and try new recipes. On an offseason golf trip to Florida with some current and former UK players and some of their fathers, he cooked every night. His grandparents gave him a Blackstone grill last Christmas so he could cook his specialty – hibachi chicken or steak with fried rice and homemade yum-yum sauce. In fact, cooking was one of the topics of conversation when Cullan met John Daly at the Barbasol Championship. Cullan told him about a dry rub called “Flavor Dust” that he and a high school buddy created when they were tasked with cooking for the FFA banquet. It was so successful, the two bottled and sold it. “He really enjoyed talking to John,” Emily says. “I think there’s a shared love of food there, as well.” Emily says the last promise she made to Cullan was to try to live her life the way she thinks he would have lived his. She wants to keep his memory alive and share his faith and the hope that everyone has a chance of seeing him again one day. “I have a picture of him when he was like less than two and he has a diaper on and he’s swinging one of those big plastic golf clubs that all kids have in the house,” she says. “And I always say that when he was in contention on Sunday at the Masters, that was the photo I was going to give CBS because that was our dream. That was his dream. “It was our dream and I believe that he could have achieved that if cancer hadn’t taken him from us. So, you know, the Barbasol was a gift from God. And it’s only in God’s timing that he got to experience that, just before his diagnosis, we all got to live it.’

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