Trump to attend U.S. Women’s Open in N.J.
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Trump to attend U.S. Women’s Open in N.J.
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Seven players went home empty-handed after finishing second in Monday’s qualifier for the Sanderson Farms Championship. Such is the life of those trying to earn PGA TOUR starts the hard way. Tim Wilkinson won the qualifier with a 64 at Deerfield Golf Club in Canton, Mississippi. Ten players tied for second place, two strokes behind Wilkinson. Matt Atkins, Justin Lower, J.T. Griffin, Rob Oppenheim, Grant Leaver, Jack Newman and Zach Zaback were the unlucky ones. The three who did make the Sanderson Farms field include a player with past success at the Country Club of Jackson, an up-and-coming prospect and an in-state product. Garrett Osborn also Monday qualified for the 2014 Sanderson Farms Championship. He went on to finish T9. Dawson Armstrong’s strong amateur career included a win at the 2015 Western Amateur, where he beat future PGA TOUR winner Aaron Wise in the championship match. Chad Ramey, a Mississippi State product, is making his debut in his home-state TOUR stop. This season’s crop of qualifiers is off to a strong start. The Sanderson Farms Championship is the second event of the season with an open qualifier. PGA TOUR veteran Aaron Baddeley finished fourth at the Safeway, while Australia’s Brett Drewitt finished T25. TIM WILKINSON (64) Age: 40 Hometown: Jacksonville Beach, Florida Alma mater: None PGA TOUR starts: 161 Cuts made: 83 Best PGA TOUR finish: T2, 2008 Valero Texas Open Notes: Wilkinson finished 91st on the Web.com Tour this year after playing 20 or more PGA TOUR events in each of the last four seasons. He finished a career-best 119th in the FedExCup in 2014 after collecting three top-10s. He has eight top-10s in his TOUR career, most recently at the 2016 AT&T Byron Nelson where he finished fourth, two shots out of a playoff won by Sergio Garcia. Wilkinson represented his native New Zealand in the 2013 World Cup. GARRETT OSBORN (66) Age: 33 Hometown: Birmingham, Alabama Alma mater: Alabama-Birmingham PGA TOUR starts: 9 Cuts made: 1 Best PGA TOUR finish: T9, 2014 Sanderson Farms Championship Notes: Osborn played the Web.com Tour in 2018, making just three of 17 cuts. It was the fourth time he made more than 10 starts in a Web.com Tour season. He also played from 2008-2010, posting two third-place finishes. He finished a career-best 38th on the money list in 2008. His T9 at the 2014 Sanderson Farms remains his lone made cut on the PGA TOUR. DAWSON ARMSTRONG (66) Age: 23 Hometown: Brentwood, Tennessee Alma mater: Lipscomb PGA TOUR starts: 1 Cuts made: 0 Best PGA TOUR finish: MC, 2018 FedEx St. Jude Classic Notes: Armstrong turned pro last year after a standout career at Lipscomb. He won the 2015 Western Amateur after defeating future PGA TOUR winner Aaron Wise in the championship match. Armstrong also advanced to the quarterfinals of the 2017 U.S. Amateur. In March, he won the Mackenzie Tour-PGA TOUR Canada Q-School in Florida. He finished 34th on the money list after posting three top-10s in 10 starts. CHAD RAMEY (66) Age: 26 Hometown: Fulton, Mississippi Alma mater: Mississippi State PGA TOUR starts: 1 Cuts made: 0 Best PGA TOUR finish: MC, 2015 FedEx St. Jude Classic Notes: Ramey, the son of a course superintendent, adds to the local flavor of Mississippi’s only PGA TOUR event. He finished 80th on the 2018 Web.com Tour money list — barely missing a spot in the Web.com Tour Finals — after finishing in the top 20 in three of his final four starts. In 2017, he finished 16th on the Mackenzie Tour-PGA TOUR Canada money list after posting a runner-up and third-place finish. THIS SEASON’S QUALIFIERS Qualifiers: 4 Made cut: 2 Best finish: T4, Aaron Baddeley (Safeway Open) Top-10s: 1 Top-25s: 2 T4. Aaron Baddeley, 70-67-69-69 T25. Brett Drewitt, 70-71-69-71 MC. Andres Gonzales, 74-68 MC. Mark Anguiano, 72-71
Matthew Wolff made a 26-foot putt from the fringe for an eagle on the final hole to win the 3M Open at 21-under par on Sunday, beating fellow rookie Collin Morikawa and Bryson DeChambeau by one stroke in a tense finish to the first-time PGA Tour event. The 20-year-old Wolff struck his second shot on
In just five years, Jon Rahm’s performances at Torrey Pines have reverberated in the record books, indelibly tying the world’s No. 1 player to this southern California layout. In 2017, Rahm concluded his inaugural Torrey Pines appearance with a powerful exclamation mark, making eagle on the 72nd hole to seal victory. Rahm was the first player to win the event with a closing eagle since Tiger Woods in 1999, and the first to win in his Farmers Insurance Open debut since Arnold Palmer in 1957. Four years later, Rahm closed his first major championship victory in a similar fashion: with a red-hot Torrey Pines finish. Rahm closed birdie-birdie, becoming the first U.S. Open champion to birdie the final two holes of regulation since Tom Watson in 1982. His victory made him not only the first U.S. Open winner from Spain, but the first Spaniard to win any United States Golf Association championship. Rahm is a cumulative 51-under at the Farmers Insurance Open since 2017, the best cumulative score by any player in that span by five strokes. But what specifically has set Rahm apart from his peers in his 20 career rounds at this event? Twenty First Group dove into the numbers to explain. North Course Dominance Over the last five years, the North Course at Torrey Pines has played about two strokes easier than the South has. No player has taken more advantage of that disparity than Rahm, who in five career rounds on the North Course has a grand total of five bogeys. Rahm’s career scoring average of 66.4 on the North Course is the best of any player since 1990 with at least four competitive rounds there. His remarkable 6.20 birdies-or-better per round on the North Course ranks third-best in that span, trailing only Ryan Palmer (6.63) and Tom Kite (6.25). Rahm has hit less than 50 percent of his career fairways on the North Course (48.6 percent, to be exact), but it hasn’t impacted his ability to score on that layout. Thirty-three percent of the time Rahm has missed the fairway on a par-4 or par-5 on the North Course, he’s still gone on to make birdie or better. That is a significant advantage over the field average historically (20 percent). Rahm has been stellar on the par-4s at the North Course in his career, regardless of tee shot outcome: his 3.72 scoring average ranks third-best among players with four or more rounds played since 1990. Elite drives on the South Course While missing the fairway hasn’t penalized Rahm much on the North Course, that can’t usually be said for the South. Traditionally, only about 14 percent of players who miss a fairway on Torrey South go on to make birdie or eagle. That’s been no issue for Rahm – his driving accuracy leaps to 63 percent when playing the more difficult Torrey Pines South layout in this event. Since Rahm’s debut in 2017, there are 122 players with six or more Farmers Insurance Open rounds at Torrey Pines South. Of that group, Rahm is the only player to average a full stroke gained per round off the tee. Since Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee became available in 2004, Rahm’s average of +1.07 per round is the second highest of any player with a dozen or more rounds. Fellow tournament winner Bubba Watson (2011) is the only player in Rahm’s league in that regard, gaining 1.33 strokes off-the-tee per round in that span. More than 55 percent of Rahm’s Strokes Gained: Total on the South Course have come from tee shots, the third-highest rate of any player with 10 or more SG: Total on this course in the last five years. His ability off the tee has been especially beneficial on par-4s, where Rahm has gained, on average, half-a-stroke on the field with his drives per round. That is the third-highest rate on the South Course in that stretch, trailing only Cameron Champ (+0.77) and Luke List (+0.55). Different recipes to get it done Over the last 30 years, the players to average the most birdies-or-better per round at the Farmers Insurance Open are Woods (4.88) and Rahm (4.60). Not coincidentally, those are also the two players to win U.S. Open titles at the venue, with Woods’ unforgettable performance on a broken leg coming in 2008. But the two champions have used different formulas to separate themselves from the field on the South Course. While we mentioned Rahm using his driver to a distinct advantage, Woods has averaged just +0.34 Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee per round at Torrey South since ShotLink data became available in 2004. That’s less than one-third of the strokes Rahm gains from the tee box. Woods, however, has been peerless with his iron play on the South Course, averaging a stellar +1.24 Strokes Gained: Approach per round in that span. Of players with 12 or more rounds since 2004, Woods is one of just five players to average a full stroke gained per round in that statistic, and he ranks one-tenth of a stroke per round better than any other player. Much like how he has performed on the PGA TOUR in the last seven months, Rahm has found success through his bag in his career at this event. Since 2017, Rahm ranks well above average in every Strokes Gained statistic at this event – leading off-the-tee, and ranking 43rd in approach, 29th around the green and 48th in putting (out of 122 players with a minimum of six rounds). That’s a microcosm of the balanced excellence Rahm has been displaying week-in and week-out on TOUR: since July 1 of last year, Rahm leads all players in Strokes Gained ball-striking (off-the-tee + approach) and ranks No. 6 in Strokes Gained: Putting. The reigning world No. 1 is the justifiable betting favorite this week at the Farmers Insurance Open.