Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting The First Look: Open Championship

The First Look: Open Championship

Golf’s oldest championship ventures outside Scotland and England for just the second time in its 160-year history, returning to Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland as Francesco Molinari defends the Claret Jug he captured in masterful fashion last year at Carnoustie. Rory McIlroy, the 2014 champion at Hoylake and twice a winner this year (THE PLAYERS Championship, RBC Canadian Open), realizes a dream of playing on native soil along with countrymen Graeme McDowell and 2011 champion Darren Clarke. Meantime, Brooks Koepka seeks a second 2019 major to add to his victory at the PGA Championship after finishing second at the Masters and U.S. Open. FIELD NOTES: Newly crowned U.S. Open champion Gary Woodland and Masters winner Tiger Woods also headline the field for what’s now the final major of the year under the revamped golf calendar. … FedExCup points leader Matt Kuchar heads a list featuring 47 of the top 50 in the latest points standings. … In the world rankings, only No. 34 Kevin Na (neck) is missing among the top 85. … Slots remain for the John Deere Classic’s highest top-5 finisher yet to qualify, plus the Scottish Open’s three highest top-10 finishers still without berths. … John Daly, the 1995 Open winner at St. Andrews, will sit out this year after being denied a cart for his arthritic knee. He’ll tee it up in Kentucky instead at the Barbasol Championship. … Among the 12 survivors of local qualifying is amateur Brandon Wu, who helped Stanford to the NCAA team title last month. FEDEXCUP: Winner receives 600 points. STORYLINES: The spotlight shines on Royal Portrush, a striking layout which hosted the 1951 Open but waited 68 years for another chance. Built on heaving linksland overlooking the Irish Sea, the course is widely ranked among the world’s top dozen layouts. … Koepka looks to extend his run of excellence in majors, where he hasn’t been outside the top two since last year’s Open at Carnoustie. He also has a valuable asset in caddie Ricky Elliott, who grew up a half-mile from Royal Portrush and learned the game there. … Though McIlroy has THE PLAYERS Championship and RBC Canadian Open trophies on his shelf this year, neither would compare to winning the Claret Jug in his native Northern Ireland. He already holds the course record with a 61 – posted at age 16. … It’s even more of a home game for Clarke, who grew up an hour away and is a Royal Portrush member, and Portrush native McDowell. … Woods arrives without hitting a competitive shot since the U.S. Open. It’s the second time this year he’s gone from one major to the next without a tuneup stop in between – he missed the PGA Championship cut at Bethpage Black … Molinari’s victory last year made it nine of the Open’s past 12 champions to be crowned at age 35 or older. COURSE: Royal Portrush Golf Club (Dunluce), 7,317 yards, par 72. The only Open venue outside Scotland and England gets its second bite of the apple, albeit with a slightly altered configuration to accommodate a modern major. Two holes from the club’s adjacent Valley course have been melded into the front nine, with the original 17th and 18th holes taken out to house corporate chalets. The rest of the layout is largely untouched from Harry Colt’s brilliant 1932 design that takes full advantage of dramatic elevation changes. The famed “Calamity Corner� – an uphill par-3 measuring 230 yards – will play as No. 16 for the Open. Royal Portrush dates back to 1888, with Old Tom Morris being credited with the original layout. 72-HOLE RECORD: 264, Henrik Stenson (2016 at Royal Troon). 18-HOLE RECORD: 62, Branden Grace (3rd round, 2017 at Royal Birkdale). LAST YEAR: Molinari rose from a crowded pack – including the revitalized Woods – to give Italy its first major champion, navigating the dastardly Carnoustie without a bogey on the final day to triumph by two. Seven players held at least a share of the lead during the final round, and six were tied for the top spot at one point on the back nine. That included Woods, who surged to the front until a double bogey at No.11. That opened the door for the chase pack – including the patient Molinari, who opened with 13 pars until a birdie at No. 14. Three more pars ensued until a bold play at No. 18, when his drive flirted with a pot bunker but set up a wedge to 5 feet for the clinching birdie and a 2-under-par 69. He was the only man in the final four groups to break par. McIlroy (70), Justin Rose (69), Xander Schauffele (74) and Kevin Kisner (74) shared second, with Schauffele’s bogey at No. 17 effectively ending the final threat. Woods (71) tied for sixth. HOW TO FOLLOW TELEVISION: Thursday-Friday, 1:30 a.m.-4 p.m. ET (Golf Channel). Saturday, 4:30-7 a.m. (GC); 7 a.m.-2:30 p.m. (NBC). Sunday, 4:30-7 a.m. (GC); 7 a.m.-2 p.m. (NBC). PGA TOUR LIVE: None. RADIO: Thursday-Friday, 2 a.m.-4 p.m. ET; Saturday-Sunday, 4 a.m.-2:30 p.m. (SiriusXM).

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Strong foundation key to success on PGA TOURStrong foundation key to success on PGA TOUR

KAPALUA, Hawaii – Rory McIlroy sat back in the chair, took a deep breath, and smiled when asked. He smiled because he recognized a chance to give public credit to some special people in his life. His parents. The 14-time PGA TOUR winner was giving a press conference for his first appearance at this week’s Sentry Tournament of Champions and the question about who he felt was the foundation of his success was a welcome one. Now almost 30, McIlroy has found a greater appreciation for the sacrifices his parents Gerry and Rosie provided for him. “I couldn’t single out one over the other, because my dad worked three jobs at one time and my mom worked night shifts and so they made a lot of sacrifices,â€� McIlroy praised. “All their extra money and time off was put into me to go and play golf tournaments.â€� It’s true. Gerry split time between cleaning and bar work. Rosie would work nights at a factory. It allowed young Rory to follow his passion for golf. It set the base that would lead to a FedExCup title and four majors to this point. It is a theme you can find all over the PGA TOUR. The trip to greatness is not a solo one. It takes help. It takes belief from others. For Jason Day, a joint course record holder at the Plantation Course in Kapalua, the reflection was to his mother, his wife, his agent and his coach. Without these people on his journey Day says he would never have made it to the PGA TOUR. “Everyone on the PGA TOUR has someone or some people who have put us first on multiple occasions,â€� Day says. “While we work hard and sacrifice our time to practice and get in shape it is those behind the scenes who keep things running smoothly. “It started with my mum, then Colin Swatton came into my life as a coach and father figure, then my agent Bud and my wife Ellie … they all do more than I can ever thank them for. They’ve always done right by me. It allows me to be the best golfer I can be.â€� Up and coming star Cameron Champ threw praise on his family, particularly his grandfather, and also renowned coach Sean Foley for taking a chance on a kid with raw talent but little means. Champ is at the beginning of his PGA TOUR journey. He is acutely aware of the assistance needed from others for him to be living out this dream. Foley, who has coached Tiger Woods among others over the years, was happy to take him on board. People would pay huge money for his instruction. Champ obviously could not do so at the time coming from a humble background. “I met Sean at about 15. He was generous enough to teach me even though means was tough for us,â€� Champ says. “And the connection, the relationship, has gone from there until now which has been amazing.â€� The 23-year-old is already a PGA TOUR winner and touted as the next big thing, something that may or may not have happened as quickly without this foundation. Golf Channel analyst Mark Rolfing, who forged his own golf career in the 1970s before becoming a long-time Maui resident and member of the Kapalua golf family, believes these foundations are critical for not only professional athletes, but for all of us. He has seen the cultural idea of Ohana work on the Hawaiian islands for decades – one based on a wider community or “familyâ€� where everyone works together and supports each other. And he is very keen to push the idea onto the general population. “Part of living on Maui and the whole Ohana aspect of what we do has permeated into my soul and I take it everywhere I go around the world with me,â€� Rolfing explains. “It’s maybe easier for me because I’m constantly reminded about how important people were to me and how I had so many people do right by me. “But the average person has just as many people in their lives provide this foundation. People who share advice. People who unselfishly donate time to help others. “It would be good if every person could stop every once in a while and reflect who has been right by them and reflect on who got them to where they are.â€� This is something McIlroy for one can certainly agree on. He admitted it took time for him to truly appreciate what his parents have done for him and continue to do to help him be the person he is. “I didn’t truly realize until maybe when I was out of my teenage years, when I was on my own two feet, and I realized that my childhood wasn’t the norm and that’s not what a lot of parents do for their kids,â€� McIlroy said. “And so it took me a while to realize just the sacrifice and the hard work that they put in to just give me a chance to do what I do. “I always said I can never repay them for what they have done for me … just make sure they’re happy and comfortable for the rest of their days.â€�

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U.S. Open roundtable: Looking towards the weekendU.S. Open roundtable: Looking towards the weekend

SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. — PGATOUR.COM’s staff will dive into the big issues each evening after play concludes at Shinnecock Hills. Dustin Johnson has built a four-shot lead at the halfway point, but there’s still a lot of golf remaining on a difficult track. Here are our predictions for the weekend. There is only one man under par. Is the U.S. Open over?  Cameron Morfit, Staff Writer: Absolutely not, especially in light of what happened at the 2010 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, the 2010 PGA Championship, and the World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions last fall. That last one was probably the most shocking, mathematically, given that DJ had a six-shot lead over his nearest pursuer but shot 77 to lose. And it’s easier to have a meltdown at Shinnecock than any of those places. Just look at Ian Poulter’s triple-bogey, bogey finish Friday. Ben Everill, Staff Writer: Not yet, but it is close. Dustin Johnson has given up leads before but he just looks like he is in that mood where he is going to blitz them. If he shoots 1 under over the next two rounds I don’t think anyone can catch him. Sean Martin, Senior Editor: Hardly. As Brooks Koepka said, “This is the U.S. Open. There’s disaster lurking around every corner.â€� I feel like every time the media prematurely hands a player a trophy, the golf gods yank it out of his hands. Dustin Johnson is definitely the favorite but there is still a lot of golf to be played. History does favor Johnson, though. This is the seventh time someone has led by four or more shots after 36 holes. Only Tom McNamara in 1909 failed to convert such a large lead into victory. Jonathan Wall, Equipment Insider: I think so. DJ isn’t anywhere close to the player he was in 2010 when he collapsed over the weekend at the U.S. Open. He won’t run away and hide, but he’s not giving up this lead the way he’s playing at the moment. Four shots feels like eight the way Shinnecock is playing. There’s no rain in the weekend forecast and the winds are supposed to be relatively calm. What do you think will be the winning score? Morfit: Having seen Tommy Fleetwood and Brooks Koepka each put a 66 on the board today, I’d say the winner will have to get to 4 under, which means DJ merely has to tread water. Easy, right? Everill: I think 5 under is enough to win outright. If they set it up super hard then as low as 1 under could still win. Martin: Johnson holds the answer in his oversized palms, but I think 5 under is a safe bet. Shinnecock Hills drains easily so, even with two days of rain, Shinnecock Hills can still play firm and fast this weekend. And that is a scary proposition for the field because of the steep slopes of closely-mown grass that surround these poa annua putting surfaces. Wall: My guess is 5 under. I think DJ posts another red number tomorrow and strolls to victory.  How far down the leaderboard can you realistically look for a potential champion? Morfit: I would say anyone at 4 over is still within shouting distance, but obviously in need of a terrific weekend. Alex Noren is on that number and has the chops to make a big move like that. Everill: I don’t think you can go past the guys at 3 over. That’s already giving the world’s best player a seven-shot head start. If those guys can manage a 5-under weekend and get some help from Johnson, they have a slim chance. Martin: The 10-shot rule is no longer used in determining the cut, but I’m going to apply it here. Players at 6 over par should have the benefit of playing in good scoring conditions Saturday morning. We saw a couple 66s on Friday. If someone at 6 over can shoot 65 on Saturday, they’ll likely start Sunday in contention. Wall: I think anyone at 3 over has a chance, but someone is going to need to throw out a 65 or 66 to have a realistic shot on Sunday.  Who do you expect will make the biggest move into contention on Moving Day? Morfit: I like the fire that Rickie Fowler is showing right now. He’s been asked a lot this week about not having won a major, and he hasn’t shied away from saying he’s got the game to get it done. He’s showing as much so far and is right there without shouting distance. He’ll start Saturday in ninth place, six shots behind Johnson. Everill: Defending champion Brooks Koepka. A very nice 66 today continues his form of late. Since his return from injury he has gone low multiple times and having already won the event the nerves shouldn’t be a factor. Plus he loves DJ, and loves beating him more. Martin: My heart says Phil Mickelson. And I can talk my head into agreeing. He is 6 over par but hitting the ball really well. He’s missed just two fairways this week and hit 15 of 18 greens Friday. He knows how to play Shinnecock Hills. I could see him taking advantage of some good scoring conditions early Saturday. Wall: I love Rickie Fowler’s position. He looked under control today and has a realistic chance to take down DJ if he posts 66 or 67 on Saturday. Sooner or later he’s going to shed the major-less title. This feels like another great opportunity.  Halfway through the U.S. Open, how do you feel about Shinnecock Hills’ performance? Morfit: The golden sunlight that fell over the course Friday afternoon was absolutely stunning, and with the wind down I really think it was Shinnecock at its best. I’m glad some of the ones who were caught in the strongest winds Thursday morning got to play in those absolutely primo conditions Friday night. Everill: It is a gorgeous part of the world and a wonderful golf course. I feel nostalgic for the sand belt courses of Melbourne with every step. I think it has proven itself a worthy part of the championship rotation. Martin: We saw completely contrasting conditions over the first two days at Shinnecock Hills and it was a challenge in both of them. It isn’t hard to find an unhappy player at a U.S. Open, but even Ian Poulter, who admitted that he hated this tournament for 14 years, said that he was pleased with the course setup. Johnson, Tommy Fleetwood and Brooks Koepka showed us that good scores are out there but Shinnecock Hills is a bear even in the best conditions. Wall: Tough but fair. This is exactly what the USGA was hoping for at the beginning of the week. Even without the wind over the weekend, players are still going to get all they can handle. In my opinion, Shinnecock helped the U.S. Open reclaim its identity as the toughest test in golf.

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Charles Howell III reflects on 600 PGA TOUR startsCharles Howell III reflects on 600 PGA TOUR starts

At this week’s WM Phoenix Open, Charles Howell III will become the 69th player to make at least 600 starts on the PGA TOUR. Howell, 42, is the third-youngest to reach this milestone. Even to him, it sounds like a lot. How has he seen the game evolve? “Guys are so good now it’s scary,” Howell said in an expansive phone interview that touched on his triumphs and regrets, plus a wide variety of other golfing ephemera. In his first 599 PGA TOUR starts starts, he has 461 made cuts (77%), 227 top-25 finishes (38%), 97 top-10s (16%), and three wins (0.5%). His lone misgiving, he said, has been all the close calls: 16 runners-up and 10 third-place finishes. And if there’s one thing he did right, it was timing. He has Tiger Woods to thank for that, and his erstwhile coach, David Leadbetter, who told him to strike while the iron was hot and leave Oklahoma State early after winning the NCAA Championship by eight shots. Oh, and Howell’s dad played a big role, too, as dads almost always do. Now Howell himself is a golf dad. Herewith, his thoughts on the last 22 years as he approaches his history-making start at TPC Scottsdale, plus a few random musings on Viktor Hovland, his supernova ‘little brother’ from Oklahoma State; why he’s grateful to have been young and dumb; and the vagaries of purchasing left-handed golf clubs. PGATOUR.COM: How have you lasted so long on TOUR? HOWELL: No. 1, love of the game. I know that statement probably gets overused a bit, but what I mean is loving the good with the bad. Anytime people are having success and doing well, it’s easy to like it, but you also need to love the bad, and know it’s going to lead to the good. PGATOUR.COM: They say timing is everything; could you have picked a better era? HOWELL: No. Absolutely not. I was in my apartment in Stillwater, Oklahoma, toward the end of my junior year in college, and David Leadbetter, who I was working with at the time, we spoke often, he said, ‘Are you ready to turn pro?’ And my heart stopped because I hadn’t even considered it. And David said, ‘Well, you’re a golfer, and golf has never been hotter and booming, and this is what you’re going to do. I think it’s time you turn pro and move on.’ I still remember that phone call like it was yesterday. PGATOUR.COM: When he said the game was hot, he was referencing a certain iconic player? HOWELL: Looking back now, having played golf in the Tiger Woods, and I’m going to call it the Phil Mickelson era, too, was incredible. I’m quite sure that the Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson, Gary Player era was also special, but to play in the Tiger era with what he did for television and the exposure of it, I mean he gave me a job. I couldn’t have picked a better time. PGATOUR.COM: What have you done with all the equipment you’ve gone through? HOWELL: The vast majority I donate to either the First Tee program or other junior programs in the area. We’ve reached out, ‘Hey, do you guys need equipment? What do you need? What are you interested in?’ Now, my son, Chase, who is starting to get very interested in the game, sadly, he’s lefthanded. So, I have all these righthanded clubs, and now here I am buying golf clubs again. I tried my best to turn him righthanded, it just never worked. PGATOUR.COM: You could ask for help from Mike Weir (2003 Nissan Open) and Phil Mickelson (’07 Nissan Open), whom you’ve lost to and beaten, respectively, in sudden-death playoffs. HOWELL: Exactly. He’s 10 years old, which is crazy because that’s the age I was when I started working with David Leadbetter. Now to kind of see it go full circle; I remember around his age I wanted to play professional golf. It’s absolutely crazy that time has gone that fast. PGATOUR.COM: And what about your daughter? HOWELL: My daughter is Ansley and she’s 11. She’s not a golfer; she’s more interested in the gymnastics side of things, so clearly she’s more athletic than me. PGATOUR.COM: I believe you gave your mom a funny quote when you were a teen-ager – ‘Girls cause bogeys’ – which spoke to your singlemindedness to be a TOUR pro. Was it what you expected? HOWELL: Yes and no. I wanted to play on the PGA TOUR; I never wanted to be the best. But I didn’t realize it was going to be my life, in as much as all the playing competitors, coaches, trainers, staff, we’re a traveling circus, and we see each other every single week, we all have each other’s cell phone numbers and we’re friends. That’s the part I never would have thought about until now; the people I’ve met and the friendships I’ve made through golf is something I just would have never thought. PGATOUR.COM: Who became your besties? HOWELL: Bo Van Pelt and Carl Pettersson. We’ve had the phone calls of ‘Good playing,’ and also the phone calls of, ‘What’s going on? What’s happening?’ The game humbles all of us, balancing a family and a career, the travel. Also, Steve Stricker and David Toms have been great to me. PGATOUR.COM: When did you feel especially humbled by the game? HOWELL: In 2006, I missed, I believe it was five or six cuts in a row. That was one of the first times I had really struggled. It was the reality of, Oh, my gosh, I need to step back a bit and figure out what’s going on. And I won Riviera at the start of the next season. We all do things we think are going to make us better, whether it’s a swing change, or something in the gym, and when you look back it might’ve made us worse. You learn these lessons. We do crazy things trying to shoot lower scores. PGATOUR.COM: What turned it around? HOWELL: I had completely forgotten that I started playing golf as a kid – I was 7 when I first picked up a club – because I like it. That’s been the constant lesson I’ve had to remind myself of over the years. You get really hung up on results and things can spiral out of control at times. PGATOUR.COM: Did you have freakish hand-eye coordination? Did your first instructor insist on a perfect grip? What are you most thankful for that got you going down the right path? HOWELL: No. 1 is family support. Without that, I would’ve had absolutely nothing. No. 2 is my dad always knew the importance of instruction. I was very lucky in that I always had a golf teacher, all the way through, from the time I was very young. I learned something from every one of them. I tell parents to find your kid a teacher from a young age, because that eliminates a lot of bad habits that they’ll have to fix down the road. That part is so important. You see it today; these kids are so well-coached. They know what they’re doing with technique, they know what they’re doing in the gym. PGATOUR.COM: Who is your coach these days? HOWELL: I work with Andy Plummer now, he’s in Miami. We’ve been together a couple years. I owe each and every instructor a thank you. Like I said, I’ve learned something from all of them. PGATOUR.COM: What are you guys working on? Because last season you finished 139th in the FedExCup, which is the first time you’d ever missed the Playoffs in the FedExCup era. HOWELL: I played fewer tournaments last year than ever. A lot of that had to do with wanting to spend more time with my family, my kids. So, our goal is to get more out of fewer tournaments. We’ve spent most of our time on the course working on shots that make me a little uncomfortable, thinking about scoring, situations. I’ve done more on-course work than I’ve done in the past. Admittedly I love the driving range; I love hitting balls. At times I’ve gotten over-obsessed with mechanics and never thought through, OK, how am I going to transfer this to shooting a lower score? That’s one thing about the younger generation, is they don’t get bogged down in mechanics. PGATOUR.COM: You mentioned your son is starting to get very interested in the game. Would you recommend this life to him if he wanted to follow in your footsteps? HOWELL: I would if he loves it. I would never, ever force it on him or push him in that direction. Because in golf there are a lot more days of failure than success. It can beat you up and make you question everything, and it can be really lonely, but if he loves it, then I’ll do every single thing in my power to help him play as well as he possibly can. I do get motivation from the younger players. Viktor Hovland, he played at Oklahoma State, and at times he’s felt like a little brother to me. Being around the younger guys, with their energy and passion for it, has been quite motivational. PGATOUR.COM: Have you talked to Viktor since he won the Dubai Desert Classic and rose to world No. 3? HOWELL: Only text. He was on an Emirates flight back to America. It’s absolutely phenomenal. PGATOUR.COM: You taught him everything he knows, right? HOWELL: Hopefully he listened to nothing I told him. As long as he didn’t listen to me, he’s good. PGATOUR.COM: What’s overrated, what’s underrated on TOUR? HOWELL: The answer for both is travel. When you get on a long stretch and you’re going to the places that aren’t your favorite, it’s overrated. But it’s also underrated in a sense that I’ve gotten a chance to travel, literally the world, the last 22 years. I remember in 2019 I took my family to Asia. I played in the events over there, but before and after the events we went to Tiananmen Square, the Great Wall of China, Thailand, Hong Kong, Japan, Tokyo. Those are the memories I look back on as being so awesome, and I think, man, I would have never been able to do something that were it not for golf. PGATOUR.COM: Any regrets? HOWELL: Looking back, I wish I would have won more. I have a whole lot of second- and third-place finishes. And obviously I still have some years left in me, hopefully, and can find a way to win some more. That’d be the one little regret I have, for sure. PGATOUR.COM: That’s a lot of close calls. However, there’s a flip side to it, because your 227 top-25 finishes, against the very best golfers on the planet, also speaks to your consistency. HOWELL: Well, yes. That’s always the other side of the coin. No one is going to stand up in line sooner than me, wishing he would have won more. I think, holy cow, I have 26 seconds and thirds. If I’d have won even half of those, it would have been a phenomenal career. Also, though, playing in the Tiger era, he made it look so easy. Vijay Singh won nine times in a season in 2004. I remember thinking, Oh, my gosh. That’s incredible. I look back at some of these guys, I truly admire what they did. I’m just as much a fan of golf as I am a player. I wish I would have found a way to win more. Hopefully I still can. PGATOUR.COM: What course should fit your game that somehow didn’t? HOWELL: Ooh, that’s a great question. I had a pattern: I tended to play nice on the West Coast, not great in the summer, and then I played nice in the fall. That was my pattern for a long time. I would have thought I’d have played better in the summer months. You know my answer? Muirfield Village, the Memorial, I love everything about the place from the driving range to the course, and I just never played well there. I never really cracked the code on not playing that well in the summer. PGATOUR.COM: Most unforgettable moment? HOWELL: Without a doubt the first Masters I played in, in 2002. Growing up in Augusta, going to the tournament as a kid every year, and actually playing my way into the tournament – the first tee was the most nervous I’ve ever been in my life, without question. PGATOUR.COM: What stands out to you regarding the way the game has evolved at the highest level? HOWELL: Guys are so good now it’s scary. The big thing of note is what the cuts are. Tournaments where the cut used to be even or 1 under, it’s now 4 and 5 under. Tiger put the blueprint out there on how to be successful, and now you have all these kids that did it and are successful. Scoring in general, pick a tournament, and it will take your breath away how good scoring is. PGATOUR.COM: And how has Charles Howell III evolved? HOWELL: The realization that golf is played in 18 holes in a tournament, and all my work has to be focused on how I can shoot lower. At times my practice would be a little bit reactionary, bouncing around to work on driving or short game or whatever I didn’t do well that day. I’ve become more focused on score, with a lot of focus on short irons, wedges and short game. PGATOUR.COM: Here’s a trip back in the time capsule: You’re a junior golfer, and as the best player from the East you’re playing against the top guy from the West, Boyd Summerhays, at the Canon Cup in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. That was the first time I saw you play. HOWELL: Isn’t it awesome to see Boyd out on TOUR coaching Tony Finau? PGATOUR.COM: Don’t Boyd’s kids both play for Arizona State? HOWELL: They do, and his daughter, Grace, I don’t know if you’ve seen her at all, but, Oh, my gosh. She is awesome. His son Preston gets a lot of the attention, and he deserves it, he got a spot in (this week’s WM Phoenix Open) and is going to play, but Grace, his daughter, I’m telling you – what she’s going to do in the women’s game is going to be something, because she is special. PGATOUR.COM: Unluckiest break of your career? HOWELL: The last hole at Torrey Pines, Farmers Insurance Open, 2005, I believe I was one or two back of Tiger, my third shot flew in the hole and bounced out and went in the water. Now, an asterisk to that: I’d have wanted the ball to stay in the hole to watch Tiger eagle the last hole to win. [Laughs] I knew I wasn’t going to win the tournament, but I wanted to see how he was going to beat me. (Editor’s note: Howell bogeyed the hole to tie for second, three back. Had the ball stayed in the hole, Howell would have finished regulation at 16 under, forcing a playoff with Woods.) PGATOUR.COM: Luckiest break? HOWELL: My luckiest break is when I turned pro, I had no idea how difficult this life was going to be. I had no idea how hard it was going to be to play on the PGA TOUR. My luckiest break was being young and dumb. Had I thought what it would take to support a family out here for twenty-plus years, I might have talked myself right out of it and into a finance career on Wall Street. I was a bit naïve.

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