Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting The Honda Classic to award sponsor's exemption to winner of the APGA Tour Farmers Insurance Invitational

The Honda Classic to award sponsor's exemption to winner of the APGA Tour Farmers Insurance Invitational

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Florida – The winner of the APGA Tour Farmers Insurance Invitational will receive an exemption to play alongside the best players in the world when the PGA TOUR visits PGA National Resort & Spa for the Honda Classic, February 23-26, it was announced today by officials with the Advocates Professional Golf Association (APGA) Tour, and the PGA TOUR's Honda Classic. The fourth annual APGA Tour Farmers Insurance Invitational will again be held at Torrey Pines Golf Course in conjunction with the PGA TOUR's Farmers Insurance Open. The two-day event includes 18 of the top minority golfers playing the first rounds on Saturday, Jan. 29, on the North Course and the final round on Sunday, Jan. 30, on the South Course, which will be televised on the Golf Channel. The APGA Tour is a non-profit organization with the mission to prepare African Americans and other minority golfers to compete and win at the highest level of professional golf. The exemption continues a history of the Honda Classic finding ways to create opportunities for diverse players and grow the game following an exemption in 2021 for APGA Tour player Kamaiu Johnson. "We are proud to once again provide a high-profile platform to support the dreams of minority players competing on the PGA TOUR," said Jessika Laudermilk, assistant vice president of marketing at American Honda. "The Honda Classic frequently has been an event where new and lesser-known players have broken through to capture their first PGA TOUR win or work toward their tour card and we look forward to providing this opportunity to an APGA player this year." Johnson, the 2022 APGA Tour Lexus Cup Champion Kamaiu Johnson who won three times in 2022 is in the field for the APGA Tour Farmers Insurance Invitational as well as APGA Farmers Insurance Fall Series winner Marcus Byrd. “We're incredibly honored to be able to provide the winner of the APGA Tour Farmers Insurance Invitational with an exemption into the 2023 Honda Classic,” Executive Director Andrew George said. “The level of competition on the APGA Tour continues to rise and it's critical for us to support efforts to grow the game and to provide opportunities to participate and to gain experience against the PGA TOUR's best." Click here to view bios of all players in the 2023 APGA Tour Farmers Insurance Invitational field "Not only is it important for our players to be able to experience the competition of playing on the PGA TOUR, but they learn so much from being around the best in the world, seeing how they prepare, getting to understand the commitment to practice, fitness, diet and the mental side of the game," said APGA Tour CEO Ken Bentley. "It's equally important to have minority players at the highest level. For youth to turn on the television and see a representation of golf better resembling the country and the world where we live. We are so thankful that Farmers has helped create a platform that opens the doors for Honda America and the Honda Classic to provide this incredible opportunity for the Farmers Insurance Invitational champion." Johnson won his third event of the season at the APGA Charlie Sifford Centennial at the Clubs of Kingwood just two months after winning the APGA Mastercard Tour Championship and the season-long Lexus Cup Points race. The Tour Championship win also earned Johnson full-time status on the PGA TOUR LatinoAmérica series where he made the cut in two of the first three events of the season in December. Johnson now has five APGA Tour wins in the last three years having also won the Tour Championship in 2020 and the APGA Tour's Las Vegas stop each of the past two years. Byrd won the second Fall Series event at the APGA Tour Valley Forge for his first win of the season and followed with a runner-up finish at the APGA Charlie Sifford Centennial. After finishing 5th in the 2022 Lexus Cup Standings, went on to win the Fall Series standings. He also finished T2 at the Butterfield Bermuda APGA Championship. On the year, Byrd played in 14 APGA Tour events and had 11 top-10 finishes including 8 top-3s and five runner-up finishes to go along with his victory in August. In his last seven starts on the APGA Tour, he had finishes that included T2, T2, T5, 1st, T2 and 2nd. Daniel Augustus, who finished 6th in the Lexus Cup standings has 8 top-10 finishes and two runner-up finishes on the APGA Tour this year. Earlier this year, Augustus conducted an interview with Golf Digest and the Fire Pit Collective revealing a childhood of tragedy and abuse. Quinn Riley came to the APGA Tour mid-season after finishing No. 1 in the 2021-22 APGA Collegiate Ranking. Since joining the APGA Tour this summer after a strong college career at Duke University, he had three top-10 finishes. Wyatt Worthington II enters the event having qualified for the 2022 PGA Championship as a PGA professional and winning the John Shippen Invitational, which granted him an exemption to play in the PGA TOUR's Rocket Mortgage Classic earlier this year. Andrew Walker is in his first full season on the APGA Tour and captured his first APGA Tour win at the APGA Cisco Invitational at Baltusrol in August. Ryan Alford teed it up at the 2022 Farmers Insurance Open on the PGA TOUR and stuck around to caddie for Byrd, his good friend, in the APGA Farmers Insurance Invitational. A two-time APGA Tour winner in 2021, Alford struggled through health-related COVID-19 complications and looks to rebound in 2023. Thanks in part to victories this fall at the River Run Collegiate and USF-Howard Intercollegiate, Greg Odom, Jr., overtook Michigan State's Troy Taylor III for the top position in the most recent APGA Collegiate Rankings, putting Odom in the field standings. Odom's Howard University teammate Everett Whiten Jr. sits in third place. Following last year's broadcast of the Farmers Insurance Invitational, which was the first-ever APGA Tour event to be broadcast on live television, the final round will again be broadcast on GOLF Channel on Sunday, January 29 from 4:30-7 PM ET. The broadcast will once again feature a diverse group of on-air talent with Damon Hack calling play-by-play and Will Lowery providing commentary and swing analysis from the broadcast booth while Doug Smith will serve as the on-course reporter. Both Lowery and Smith have a history of playing on the APGA Tour in addition to their careers and efforts in golf media.

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Swing us a song, Sebastian Cappelen’s the piano manSwing us a song, Sebastian Cappelen’s the piano man

Like so many of us, Sebastian Cappelen has seen the videos of people singing “Imagine,â€� one of the late John Lennon’s signature melodies, shared repeatedly on social media in an attempt to lift our spirits in these tenuous and troubling times. Celebrities such as Gal Gadot, Will Farrell and Maya Rudolph appear in one. A pianist wearing a surgical mask, disinfecting the keyboard before he sits down to play in an empty London train station, in another. The plaintive rendition of an orthopedic surgery resident, Dr. Elvis Francois, in the lobby of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, in a third. Related: Golf during previous global crises | Rahm makes plea to young fans | PGA TOUR Latinoamérica’s Lange’s experience with coronavirus “Of course, I sat down and started playing that on the piano,â€� Cappelen says almost matter-of-factly. “It’s not a hard song to play but it’s probably a fairly relevant song to play for people right now.â€� Cappelen has been sitting in front of the digital baby grand piano in his Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, home quite a bit these days now that the PGA TOUR has been shuttered during the COVID-19 pandemic. He plays the piano daily, sometimes for hours on end, just like he might find himself putting in time on the practice range had those eight tournaments not been cancelled and three others postponed. “When I get on and sit by the piano, I always lose track of time,â€� says Cappelen, who has one top-10 finish and eight made cuts in 13 starts as a TOUR rookie this season. “And, I think my wife can attest to that — all of a sudden there’s two hours gone, you’re like, ‘Oh, time for dinner.’ … “I mean, when I’m there it’s not really much else to think about because I’m usually very focused when I’m at the piano. So, it’s nice to be able to do in these times, just sit down and relax and not think about much.â€� Cappelen has been playing the piano since he was 11 years old. It wasn’t his first musical instrument, though. He was in third grade and attending an arts academy in his native Denmark when he learned the violin. Two years later, he began to concentrate on the flute. But as he grew older, Cappelen really came to appreciate the complexity of the piano with its ability to make such a variety of robust and complete music in and of itself. “I just think (it’s) the variety of genres that you can express and the full company of sounds that you can express at once,â€� he says. “It just seemed like an instrument that was very enjoyable and full-bodied without any other instruments alongside it. Where some instruments, you feel like you really require other musicians around you to create a full-bodied sound. “So, I just think piano was the most interesting and the most complex, dynamic, most options, if you would say so.â€� Beethoven’s “Fur Elise,â€� Claude Debussy’s “Clair de Luneâ€� and Scott Joplin’s 1899 classic, “Maple Leaf Ragâ€� – quite the mixed bag of compositions — were among the first really complicated pieces that Cappelen remembers mastering as a youngster. “I can still play some of all of them, but I couldn’t remember them all, note for note now,â€� says the 29-year-old, who also is a talented guitar player. Cappelen can sit down at his piano and play everything from classical compositions to the energetic riffs of Jerry Lee Lewis and Elton John, though. He loves classic rock – he went through an Eagles phase a couple of years ago, while Night Ranger (“Sister Christianâ€� in particular) and Journey are other favorites. But he also likes the Italian opera singer Andrea Bocelli, and his My Soundtrack station on Amazon reflects his eclectic tastes. “I’ll come home and maybe I discovered a new song that I really liked that we started listening to a lot,â€� Cappelen says. “And, I’ll be like, ‘Oh, I’m going to try to play this,’ if it’s a good song to play on piano. So then, I spend some time looking at that song, trying to figure out how to play it.â€� About the same time Cappelen started playing Beethoven and Bach, he gave up soccer – his father Ulrik was on the Danish national pro team – and began to focus on golf. He remembers making his first birdie when he was 10 years old, holing a 7-iron from 110 yards. So, which was harder to learn? He doesn’t really know. “It depends on how good you want to be,â€� Cappelen says. “How do you define playing golf and how do you define playing the piano? Because anyone who picks up a club and tries to swing at the ball on the golf course, are they playing golf? Or, anyone that sits at the piano and hits the keys, are they playing piano? “I honestly couldn’t answer that question because I feel like I’ve spent a lot of time doing both, so to me that baseline is going to be very high. But (if) I was honestly saying, for someone to enjoy, it would take less time for someone to start enjoying golf than it would to really get into piano and being able to put a piece together on a piano.â€� Music, though, was always going to be a hobby for Cappelen, a sanctuary, if you will. He rates himself a low single-digit handicapper on the piano if the best musicians are a plus-5 or a plus-6. He’s not going to compete or be giving any concerts, but he enjoys playing for friends. “Music was never my intent to pursue it hardcore, like I ended up doing with golf,â€� he says. “It was always my hobby on the side that kind of gave me relief if I was frustrated or just gave me something else to focus on while you recover from something or whatever it is. “Because you can’t spend 24 hours on a golf course, you’re going to drive yourself crazy.â€� Playing the piano, though, can help keep you sane. Especially in times like these.

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