Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Spieth’s caddie knocked out on the TOUR’s hottest day

Spieth’s caddie knocked out on the TOUR’s hottest day

FORT WORTH, Texas – Jordan Spieth was walking down the 11th fairway Saturday when his caddie Michael Greller broke the news: The stifling heat had made it impossible for him to finish out the third round at the DEAN & DELUCA Invitational. “This is my last hole,â€� Greller said. So after completing the 11th, Greller left the course to receive medical treatment while Spieth’s trainer Damon Goddard took up the bag. Spieth eventually finished with a 2-under 68 that leaves him at 4 under for the tournament and tied for eighth. He’ll start Sunday’s final round five shots behind leader Webb Simpson, and he said Greller will be back on the bag for the slightly cooler (mid-80s) day. “Mike said he’ll be plenty fine by tomorrow,â€� Spieth said. “[He] just needed to pack it in, otherwise something really bad could have happened. It was a no-brainer situation.â€� Temperatures climbed to 96 degrees – with a heat index of 108 – Saturday on the hottest day of the PGA TOUR season. “Everybody is talking about it,â€� said Stewart Cink, who had the second best round of the day, a 4-under 66 (Emiliano Grillo shot a 65). “It’s like Topic No. 1 in the locker room and on the range. It’s hot. I think the main thing is it’s really the first heat of the year we’ve experienced.â€� Added Simpson: “It’s 100 degrees out there. Knowing that caddies are going down, we were just trying to stay upright.â€� Greller, already feeling ill, knew before Saturday’s round that he might not last, so he confidentially told Goddard – who was already planning to be at the course — to be prepared to take over. Once the round started, Greller made several restroom trips; Spieth thinks it was to find shade and pour water over his head. At one point, Greller said he had stopped sweating, and realized that was a problem that needed to be solved. But not until the 11th fairway did Spieth realize the full extent of the problem. “I was kind of surprised,â€� Spieth said. “I guess he had told Kelly (Kraft, Spieth’s playing partner) at some point during the round. Kelly asked if he was OK. I thought he was acting a little strange, a little quiet. I guess it just got him early on today.â€� Said Goddard: “I saw [Greller} fading a little bit earlier, even in warmups. He’s a trooper. On 12, I got tapped in and we said let’s go.â€� It’s not the first time Goddard has carried Spieth’s bag in an emergency situation. At the 2014 Shell Houston Open, Greller became ill, and Goddard filled in for the first round – with Spieth shooting a bogey-free 2 under. The streak didn’t continue Saturday, as Spieth three-putted the 14th for a bogey. But he bounced back with two birdies on his last three holes. “We actually had a blast towards the end there,â€� Spieth said. “Both of us kind of got a little off for the first few holes in the middle of the back nine there, and then we were able to grind it out and finish strong. “Yeah, it’s a little awkward, but I ended up setting off stuff and doing everything, so kind of slows the pace down a little bit.â€� Besides training Spieth, Goddard trains Kraft, who also lives in Dallas. That gave Goddard a chance to see both players up close in the same pairing. “It was actually good timing for Greller to go down,â€� Goddard. “Now I can see them in game-time scenarios. It was good. It was fun.â€� And it was hot.  

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How Martin Trainer converted zero status into first PGA TOUR cardHow Martin Trainer converted zero status into first PGA TOUR card

So, Martin, just making sure we’ve got your story straight: You were a month shy of your 27th birthday last March, a definite “fledgling pro� who just a few weeks earlier had traveled to Mazatlan, Mexico, for a qualifying tournament to earn back playing privileges on PGA TOUR Latinoamerica, when on your way to that circuit’s opening event, the Guatemala Stella Artois Open, you decide, just for chuckles and a challenge, to try a Sunday qualifier in Leon, Guanajuato, Mexico, for that week’s Web.com Tour El Bosque Mexico Championship by INNOVA. All good, so far? Big smile. Martin Trainer indicates we can move on. It’s all good. And then, you not only survive a 3-for-1 playoff for the last spot into the El Bosque, you post rounds of 67-70-68-69 to finish 14-under and win the bloody tournament, just the second time you’ve even made a cut in eight Web.com Tour tournaments. Wild and improbable, all of that, but there’s more, right? 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Yet, with all due respect, being born in Marseille, France, wouldn’t seem to be a gateway to the PGA TOUR. Paris, Texas, maybe, but not the south of France. It explains why you speak fluent French to your French-born mother, Isabelle, and English to your California-born father, Paul, and why you can make a terrific blanquette de veau – which I would love to savor, should the opportunity present itself – but, listen, let’s be honest, it doesn’t explain how you got to the PGA TOUR, especially without much junior golf stardom, then a collegiate career that was, well, unique. I mean, many kids quit college after their junior year to play golf. You quit golf after your junior year to stay in college. “I’ve always been sort of unusual in the way I’ve passed through the golf world,� laughed Trainer. Duly noted. But that begs the question: What do your cousins in France, the folks back home in Palo Alto, California, and your old teammates at the University of Southern California think about you having a PGA TOUR card? No hesitation, just another big laugh and smile. “I’m sure,� said Trainer, “that they’re as surprised as I am.� Against a backdrop of cookie-cutter swings and gold-plated junior/amateur/collegiate resumes, there are those who arrive at the PGA TOUR having forged a solitary path as if mentored by the Dalai Lama. They are players who possess “it,� according to Chris Zambri, the University of Southern California golf coach who recruited Trainer for his incoming class of 2009-10. “In golf, the intangibles are hard to come by,� Zambri said. “But Martin had them.�                                                          Stewart Hagestad, who has since won the U.S. Mid-Amateur Championship, was a heralded member of that class. He knew of two of the other USC recruits that summer, T.J. 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Having opened with 75 and sitting 2-over with five holes to play in Round 2, Trainer hit it to 12 feet at the 14th, 3 feet at 15, 6 feet at 16, 3 feet at 17, and 3 feet at 18 – five straight birdies to shoot 66 and make the cut on the number. “That,� laughed Hagestad, “is such a Martin thing to do. It’s classic Martin.� Like the scintillating 64 he had shot in that USC qualifier and how he turned a qualifying spot into an El Bosque win and PGA TOUR card? “Exactly,� said Hagestad. “It’s a Martin thing.� Like getting into position to win and doing it? “Martin is wired that way,� said Zambri. An engineer, even a retired one who now makes his own electric bikes, could possibly explain, but the best Paul Trainer can do is offer this: “He’s streaky. He’s been like that all his career, so it didn’t surprise us that he won twice (to get his PGA TOUR card). 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