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U.S Team wins Presidents Cup: Sunday Singles match recaps

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – The U.S. Team has won the 14th Presidents Cup, defeating the International Team by a 17.5-12.5 margin at Quail Hollow Club. PRESIDENTS CUP: Scoring The U.S. improves to 12-1-1 all-time in the biennial competition, remaining undefeated on American soil at 8-0-0. The U.S. Team entered Sunday Singles with an 11-7 advantage over the International Team, and the United States weathered an early opposing surge with consistent play across the lineup. Here’s a match-by-match breakdown of Sunday’s 12 Singles matches at Quail Hollow Club. SUNDAY SINGLES MATCH 19 Si Woo Kim (Intl.) def. Justin Thomas (U.S.), 1-up This first match got tense on the back nine, with the normally stoic Kim showing some fire as he won the 14th (par) and 16th (birdie) holes and “shushed” the partisan crowd with a nice par putt at 15. Thomas, who led most of the match, hit his approach close for birdie at 17 to tie; both players had good birdie looks at 18. Kim putted first and made from 10 feet. Thomas, just inside, missed his putt left. Thomas had a strong week (4-1-0) but fell to 0-3 in Presidents Cup Singles. QUOTES: “I’ve never (felt) like pressure, even when I won THE PLAYERS Championship. It was a really hard match. … My goal was playing 18 holes. I kept the pressure on him.” – Si Woo Kim Score at match’s conclusion: U.S. Team 12, International Team 8 Player records this week: Thomas (4-1-0), Si Woo Kim (3-1-0) MATCH 20 Jordan Spieth (U.S.) def. Cameron Davis (Intl.), 4 and 3 Spieth, the most seasoned U.S. player, came into Sunday having never won in Presidents Cup/Ryder Cup Singles play, holding a record of 0-6-1. He lost his first two holes, but he got going with the putter, birdied Nos. 4 and 5 and was tied after nine. Spieth would run away by winning six of the last seven holes. Not only did he get his Singles victory, but Spieth became only the sixth player in Presidents Cup history to finish 5-0-0. QUOTES: “I had a great back nine … I rattled off three straight birdies (starting at 11) and then just kept trying to hit greens. It feels really good. I was more nervous than I probably should have been today, just because I wanted to get that monkey off my back.” – Jordan Spieth Score at match’s conclusion: U.S. Team 12, International Team 7 Player records this week: Spieth (5-0-0), Davis (2-3-0). MATCH 21 Sam Burns (U.S.) tied Hideki Matsuyama (Intl.) Another close match near the top of the lineup, with Burns, a rookie on the U.S. Team, and Matsuyama, an International Team veteran, heading to the 18th hole tied. Matsuyama hit a drive down the left side that struck a marshal and caromed left into the rough, a terrible break. From 182 yards, he hit his approach just over the green. Burns piped a drive, and hit his approach to 24 feet. Matsuyama’s long curling chip hit the flagstick and stayed out. Burns, playing the 18th hole for the fourth time, watched his birdie putt to win drift off right. Burns played much better on the week than his record would show. QUOTES: “He just blew the lid off this place.” NBC’s Paul Azinger after Burns made birdie from 48 feet at the 10th hole Score at match’s conclusion: U.S. Team 13.5, International Team 8.5 Player records this week: Burns (0-3-2), Matsuyama (1-3-1) MATCH 22 Patrick Cantlay (U.S.) def. Adam Scott (Intl.), 3 and 2 Cantlay came out a determined man after he and partner Xander Schauffele lost their afternoon Four-ball match on Saturday. He birdied the second, third and won the fourth with a par when Scott putted off the green. There was some beautiful golf in this match at times. Scott, the oldest man of the match at 42, stiffed his approach at the ninth with Cantlay’s ball sitting just 2 feet from the hole. Cantlay simply left Scott with few openings in a tactical victory. Score at match’s conclusion: U.S. Team 13, International Team 8 Player records this week: Cantlay (3-1-0), Scott (2-3-0) MATCH 23 Sebastian Munoz (Intl.) def. Scottie Scheffler (U.S.) 2 and 1 Scheffler, the world No. 1, came in fired up after going winless (0-2-1) in three team matches, but he faced a formidable foe. Munoz, from Colombia, was 2-down through seven, but kept punching. He won holes 8-10, then holed a bunker shot for eagle at the short 11th. Scheffler would answer, holing a curling downhill putt from 62 feet to keep from going 2-down. Munoz had a 1-up lead when the players traded birdies at 15 and 16. A poor tee shot by Scheffler at 17 cost him, his bogey clinching the match for Munoz. QUOTES: “It was tough. I really had to focus. It’s probably one of the best things I’ve ever achieved in my life, playing this week, holding him off two times this week. I threw everything at him, and luckily we got the win.” – Sebastian Munoz Score at match’s conclusion: U.S. Team 13.5, International Team 9.5 Player records this week: Scheffler 0-3-1, Munoz 2-0-1 MATCH 24 Tony Finau (U.S.) def. Taylor Pendrith (Intl.), 3 and 1 Finau clinched at least a half-point for the U.S. side when he birdied the 16th hole against the long-hitting Canadian rookie, then secured a full point at the par-4 17th when he made his seventh birdie of the round. Pendrith, winless on the week, led from the sixth hole through the 11th, but did not win a hole after 11. Finau won five of the final nine holes of the match. QUOTE: “I fought as hard as I think I’ve ever fought in a match. We know what’s on the line here this week, and it just adds that little intensity. I needed every bit of it. I played really nicely. I had to if I was going to beat Taylor today.” – Tony Finau Score at match’s conclusion: U.S. Team 14.5, International Team 9.5 Player records this week: Finau (3-1-0), Pendrith (0-4-0). MATCH 25 Xander Schauffele (U.S.) def. Corey Conners (Intl.), 1-up The man who won gold at the 2020 Olympics now owns a clinching point at the Presidents Cup, too. Schauffele was struggling mightily on the back nine, tugging his tee shot into the water at the par-3 14th and then driving his ball into the left-side creek at 15, but he showed lots of fight. He hit an incredible third shot from 218 yards after his drop and saved his 4 at 15 to regain a 1-up lead. Schauffele was 1-up with two to play and cold-shanked his approach at the par-4 17th with Conners sitting on the green in two. Conners, who had a rough week, three-putted to allow Schauffele to tie the hole with bogey. A scrambling par at 18 sealed his 1-up victory and the cup for the U.S.. QUOTES: “This is a really strange feeling. Man, we were struggling out there, and I’m really happy there are no pictures on the scorecard. I had all the boys pulling for me. I knew it was going to be close. Corey just let me in, and I was able to take advantage of it.” – Xander Schauffele Score at match’s conclusion: U.S. Team 15.5, International Team 9.5 Player records this week: Schauffele (3-1-0), Conners (0-4-0) MATCH 26 Sungjae Im (Intl.) def. Cameron Young (U.S.), 1-up Young had a nightmare start. Im came out with three pars and was 3-up on the fourth tee. But Young, one of six U.S. rookies, can go on some incredible stretches of golf, and he worked his way back into the match. When he birdied the par-4 15th, Young owned the lead. Im, an incredible ballstriker, was tough all week, and he would birdie the last two holes – making from 22 feet at 18 – to turn around the deficit and pull out a hard-earned point. Score at match’s conclusion: U.S. Team 15.5, International Team 11.5 Player records this week: Young (1-2-1), Im (2-2-1) MATCH 27 K.H. Lee (Intl.) def. Billy Horschel (U.S.), 3 and 1 In a battle of two Presidents Cup first-timers, the South Korean Lee steadily built a 3-up advantage through 11 holes, and he held off the fiery Florida Gator with just one hole surrendered the rest of the way – Horschel’s birdie at No. 13. Lee two-putted for birdie at the par-5 16th to match Horschel’s up-and-down from a greenside bunker, and the reigning back-to-back AT&T Byron Nelson champion was conceded the match while facing a 21-foot birdie try on No. 17, as Horschel faced 43 feet for par. Score at match’s conclusion: U.S. Team 15.5, International Team 10.5 Player records this week: Lee (2-1-0), Horschel (1-2-0) MATCH 28 Max Homa (U.S.) def. Tom Kim (Intl.), 1-up No player at Quail Hollow has been on a hotter run than Homa, who, one week after winning the Fortinet Championship, capped off an undefeated week (4-0-0) at the Presidents Cup by beating Kim. Homa did not start well – he was 3-down through 11 to the 20-year-old – but won holes at 12, 13, 14 and 15 to flip the match. Kim missed an 8-foot birdie putt at the last to tie the match. Homa’s birdie at the 15th, the end of Quail Hollow’s daunting Green Mile, produced an incredible roar that echoed across the course. Kim was one of the real standouts from the week, winning two points on Saturday. Score at match’s conclusion: U.S. Team 17.5, International Team 11.5 MATCH 29 Collin Morikawa (U.S.) def. Mito Pereira (Intl.), 3 and 2 Morikawa set the tone for the match on No. 1; after Pereira hit his approach on the long par-4 to within inches, the Cal Bear drained a 17-foot birdie to tie the hole. Pereira never led the match at any point. Morikawa matched his U.S. Team compatriot Spieth for largest advantage at any point Sunday (4-up), which he held through 10 holes on the strength of four birdies and an eagle. Pereira won the par-4 11th with a birdie but could draw no closer, and the two-time major winner drained a 24-foot curling birdie at the par-5 16th to conclude the proceedings, lightly flipping his putter and delivering a stout fist pump to the fans. Score at match’s conclusion: U.S. Team 16.5, International Team 11.5 Player records this week: Morikawa (2-1-0), Pereira (0-2-1) MATCH 30 Christiaan Bezuidenhout def. Kevin Kisner (U.S.) vs. (Intl.), 2 and 1 Birdies were difficult to come by in the day’s anchor match. Bezuidenhout, who was on the golf course for only the second time all week, played solidly and never trailed, though Kisner never let him far out of his sight. Bezuidenhout went 2-up with two to play with a deft up-and-down from a greenside bunker at the par-5 16th. When Kisner’s par putt at 17 spun out of the hole, victory was Bezuidenhout’s, and the Presidents Cup had ended in a five-point U.S. victory. Score at match’s conclusion: U.S. Team 17.5, International Team 12.5 Player records this week: Kisner (0-2-1), Bezuidenhout (1-0-1)

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‘Emotional. Inspiring. Uplifting.’‘Emotional. Inspiring. Uplifting.’

Anna Earl likes to say her father will cry even while watching a tire commercial, but maybe he’s just had a lot of practice. And rest assured his won’t be the only tears as Anna is given the Nicklaus Spirit Award at this week’s Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide. It’s that kind of story. Barbara Nicklaus, who with 73-time PGA TOUR winner Jack is the driving force of the award, calls it “an annual highlight” for them both. “We always look forward to hearing the stories behind the smiling faces of these children,” she says. “Some are tragic, but through the efforts of Nationwide Children’s Hospital, the perseverance of that boy or girl, and the unwavering support of their families, we get to share stories with happy endings.” Adds Jack, who with Barbara started the Nicklaus Children’s Health Care Foundation and the Play Yellow campaign to support children and children’s hospitals: “I can be a sentimental guy at times, a softie, but when you meet these Patient Champions or hear the stories of what our Nicklaus Youth Spirit Award winners have battled and overcome, well, if it doesn’t get to you, there is something wrong with you. When we see the impact the Foundation and these other efforts are having on children, it’s far more important than any 4-foot putt.” Each year at the Memorial, Jack and Barbara, along with the Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, and tournament officials at Muirfield Village, celebrate a roster of Patient Champions. They are kids who through perseverance and premier pediatric medical care have overcome long odds just to live their lives, but in many cases have done much more. Among them, Jack and Barbara choose one whose story is so remarkable that it simply must be celebrated. That’s the Nicklaus Spirit Award, and Anna Earl will be the 10th annual recipient. Golf as a refuge She was born prematurely at just 29 weeks, and parents Micheal and Michelle were told she had cerebral palsy. Any type of physical activity was going to be hard, so much so that as a young child, Anna — before any sort of competition — would preface it with, “It’s OK, Dad, I know I’m going to finish last.” She wore braces on her legs like Forrest Gump. “I got a lot of, ‘Run, Anna, run!’” she says in a recent phone interview that also included her dad. When she was 7, golf became a refuge even though her coach says she was so tiny and weak that she could barely pick up the club, much less advance the ball. “You always saw the big smile – she wasn’t going to let anything get in her way,” says Scott Davidson, the head pro at Carkersburg Country Club in Carkersburg, West Virginia, about two hours from Columbus. “They got her involved in the First Tee program, and sometimes she’d have to throw the ball to get it to move. But she kept going and kept going and kept going.” At age 8 she entered the Drive, Chip & Putt Championship, and dad Micheal said he wasn’t sure how it was going to go. As it turned out, there were no other contestants in the first round, but she still wore her first-place ribbon with pride, never having won anything before. Before long she was beating some of the older, bigger girls, and then some of the older, bigger boys. (West Virginia prep golf is coed.) Davidson kept thinking he and Anna’s parents would have to write a letter to petition for her to take a cart. Anna kept walking. “When she sets her mind to something,” Davidson says, “Anna Earl is going to get it done.” Her body almost didn’t let her. By 2017 the pain was such that she would come from middle school – its campus a regrettable welter of steps – and cry. Spasticity, a condition that causes stiff, tight muscles, was creating misalignments in her feet, knees, hips and back, and soon she had no choice but to be confined to a wheelchair. No more golf. Surgery was scheduled for a Monday – May 7, 2018 – and the name of the procedure was a mouthful: Selective Dorsal Rhizotomy. Nationwide Children’s is one of the few hospitals that offers it. Dr. Jeffrey Leonard, who has vast experience performing the operation, would be her surgeon. Anna, then 13, was hesitant. “I wasn’t really a huge fan of it,” she says. “We had an appointment where we talked about it, and I’m not going to lie, I was pretty closed-minded.” Then again, perhaps you would be, too, if someone proposed cutting into your spinal cord and selectively snipping 60-75 percent of the nerves to your lower extremities. “If it was associated with her legs and her lower body,” dad Micheal says, “then they would snip it. If it didn’t get a reaction, then they moved onto the next one.” If successful, the operation would improve mobility, reduce pain, and relieve lower-limb muscle spasticity. With rehab, Anna might be standing in time to try out for her eighth grade golf team. A few days before the operation, Micheal took Anna to the club to hit a few practice putts. After being out of her wheelchair for only a few minutes, she was too tired to continue. As much as he tried to be positive, he wondered if it was the last time he would see her standing. Remarkable success stories You could fill a book with what it means to win the Nicklaus Spirit Award, but it’s basically wind in the sails for a kid who has been through a lot. And it changes slightly year to year. Matthew McClish of Galloway, Ohio, was honored last year after overcoming seizures, a brain tumor, and a stroke during one of his surgeries. He’d been the No. 1 player on his high school team with an average nine-hole score of 40, but now he had to learn to play one-handed. Jack and Barbara and the Nationwide Children’s team celebrated him at Muirfield Village. “It was amazing,” Matthew says of his VIP treatment. “It showed me how hard I tried to overcome everything that I’ve gone through. It was something I never thought I’d be given.” On Sunday of the tournament, Nicklaus was doing his usual clinic. He called Matthew up to hit a shot in front of the crowd, and suddenly 2018 Memorial winner Bryson DeChambeau came out of nowhere to present Matthew with a brand-new bag full of custom, single-length clubs. “We had met him the previous year on a whim,” says Matthew’s mom Angi. “He remembered Matthew and heard his story and surprised him at the end with a set of clubs and a bag and one-on-one lesson. I cried through the whole thing.” She and Matthew are now DeChambeau fans for life. Matthew, who graduated high school and now takes classes at Columbus State Community College while working for Amazon, is working toward a degree in Sports Management. He planned to intern at this year’s Memorial. Perhaps not surprisingly, Matthew became friends with 2018 NSA winner Maddi Webb at last year’s tournament. Webb is nothing if not gregarious, and they have similar stories. Maddi was diagnosed with a benign tumor in 2016; that it was intertwined with her brain stem was what accounted for her vision problems. The first operation took 11 hours, but complications – spinal fluid coming out of her nose – led to a second surgery in January 2017. Terrible headaches led to yet a third brain surgery. She fought through it all. “Meeting Peyton Manning and Tiger Woods on pro-am day,” Webb says of her 2018 Memorial highlight. “Just getting to spend the day with them was the experience of a lifetime. Tiger was throwing jokes around and he and Peyton were starting to talk about the day, and then Rickie Fowler and Phil Mickelson and Jordan Spieth kind of joined in as well. “It was so interesting to see a different side of them,” she adds. Another highlight? Celebrating the doctors at Nationwide Children’s. A junior majoring in Communications at Ohio University, Webb is focused on giving back. She advocates for pediatric cancer patients, and after so much staring out her hospital-room window at the gray, gloomy Columbus sky, she launched a project to improve the view. “I was watching the holiday shows on the Hallmark Channel,” she says, “and I saw paper snowflakes and it came to me that that was how I was going to brighten the views for patients.” With the help of schools, sports teams, churches, and community groups, in the first two years they made 13,500 snowflakes, which go in baggies with an inspirational note from Webb and then are affixed to hospital-room windows. “It’s just taken off,” she says. As for her harrowing medical journey, she says, “In those situations it’s all about the mindset.” Griffin Hayden, 20, won the 2014 NSA but wasn’t well enough to attend. (His dad took his place.) He was diagnosed with leukemia in 2013 and went to Nationwide Children’s Hospital for stays of 20-30 days. He improved, then relapsed. He had a bone-marrow transplant, then another. High doses of prednisone to fight graft-versus-host disease caused avascular necrosis – blood supply is cut off to the bones – and he had both hips replaced. He suffered renal failure after high school and received a kidney donation from his older brother. Now in remission for almost six years, Hayden is a rising junior and plays golf for Denison University in Granville, Ohio. He follows 2016 NSA winner and Marshall University golfer Kyle Mitchell on Instagram and counts Jack and Barbara among his fiercest champions. “I’ve been able to go back to the luncheon every year,” Hayden says, “and Barbara and Jack have been great, getting me tickets every year, which won’t happen this year [due to the no-fan safety measures]. I was into contact sports, but then golf became my safe haven, something I could do to take my mind off what I was going through for a couple hours. I had a central line in my chest, and I figured out how to swing with that. I figured out a new swing because of loss of power with my hip replacements. “Billy Casper sent me a letter, and Jack wrote me a letter, and it meant a lot to me,” he continues. “It was very personal and drove me to keep going and get more involved in the game and improve and compete at a higher level. Winning the award grew my love for the game.” The operation that changed everything Anna Earl always punched above her weight. When she was named a starter on her middle school golf team, she was just 70 pounds and barely 4-1/2 feet tall. Once she was in a wheelchair, though, grit could take her only so far. She needed an operation. The Earls decided to go forward with Selective Dorsal Rhizotomy on April 31, 2018, which presented a troubling timeline. Unless things moved fast, Anna, who would be entering eighth grade, wouldn’t be able to start playing for her school’s golf team in August. Beth Deley, Dr. Leonard’s assistant, found a cancellation on May 7 and slotted them in. “We will always remember her doing this for us,” Micheal says. As for the operation, he adds, “Obviously this is not a routine surgery. People come from all over the world to have it there.” He remembers the helpless feeling of watching his daughter get wheeled away to the operating room. He remembers the doctor coming out to say it was a success, that Anna had to lay flat on her back for four days, and the comfort in knowing his wife could comfortably stay with her, in a couch that turned into a bed. Anna had to relearn how to stand, how to walk. For the 19 days that she was in rehab, mom Michelle never left her side except to go to the nearby Panera Bread restaurant. She thought about school, and playing on the golf team, and it would motivate her during 45-minute physical and occupational therapy sessions, followed by an hour or two break. “I had to relearn how to do pretty much everything,” she says. She was released two days before the tryouts in early August. She not only made the team as an eighth-grader, she made it again as a ninth-grader at Carkersburg High. Last year she finished 12th (out of 69 players) in the West Virginia State High School Girls Championship while walking – not taking a cart – on extremely hilly terrain. And that was the part she was most proud of. “They did an amazing job,” she says of the doctors and staff at Nationwide Children’s. No longer trying to walk on her toes, she can bring her heels to the ground. This attribute, which most of us take for granted, was so big that a picture of her feet wound up on the family Christmas card. “To see where she was and where she is now is remarkable,” says Davidson. “You can barely tell she had an issue right now. She’s got some pretty cool things in her future.” Now a rising sophomore at Carkersburg High, Anna enjoys the life of a normal teen-ager. Well, normal other than Jack and Barbara Zoom-bombing one of the golf team’s meetings last month to say Anna would be receiving the Nicklaus Spirit Award. Watching the meeting from coach Davidson’s office, Micheal smiled through his tears. “Emotional. Inspiring. Uplifting,” said Jim McCoy, Nationwide’s Vice President of Sponsorships, Meetings & Events. “That is how I would describe my reaction when hearing the stories of the Nicklaus Youth Spirit Award winners and seeing the kids on stage with Jack and Barbara Nicklaus. Each journey is unique but the common themes are always courage and determination. These incredible kids and their families are why Nationwide is so proud to join the Nicklauses and our tournament partners in supporting Nationwide Children’s Hospital and showcasing the truly life-changing outcomes they make possible.” Adds Steve Testa, President of Nationwide Children’s Hospital Foundation: “Nationwide Children’s serves families from every state in the nation, each one courageous and inspirational in their own way. When Jack and Barbara announce the Nicklaus Youth Spirit Award winner, it is a really powerful moment. That child represents the resiliency and bravery of all our patients. I’m always overjoyed for the winner, and it’s so heartwarming to see Jack and Barbara welcome this young person. We are so fortunate to have supporters like the Nicklauses, the Memorial Tournament, and Nationwide to propel forward our mission of helping kids everywhere.” When not practicing, Anna teaches the game to younger kids, paying it forward. She has picked out the place on her wall where she’s going the picture of her and Jack and Barbara, and looks forward to her second year at Carkersburg. Davidson expects her to start all the matches on what he calls “a pretty competitive coed team.” Anna thinks that sounds fine and keeps practicing. She had a tournament the other day, 18 holes. It was pretty hot. She walked.

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How to watch THE NORTHERN TRUST, Round 2: Featured Groups, live scores, tee times, TV timesHow to watch THE NORTHERN TRUST, Round 2: Featured Groups, live scores, tee times, TV times

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Winner’s Bag: Bryson DeChambeau, Shriners Hospitals for Children OpenWinner’s Bag: Bryson DeChambeau, Shriners Hospitals for Children Open

Bryson DeChambeau opened his 2018-19 PGA TOUR season with a win at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. The victory came with a new Cobra King F9 Speedback driver in the bag that made the cut in Las Vegas following an extensive testing session. Last season, DeChambeau spent a majority of the time using Cobra’s Ltd Pro before making the switch to F8+ Nardo at THE NORTHERN TRUST. DeChambeau wasted little time moving from F8+ into F9 Speedback after noticing an improved launch and decrease in spin during testing. “The spin is a lot lower, even than the F8,” DeChambeau told PGATOUR.COM during a recent one-on-one interview. “I’m a high-spin player who needs the least amount of spin possible on the driver and even the longer irons. For me, them moving the CG lower and having better aerodynamics made this driver easier to test. Feel like I’m able to really embrace the design and already have the confidence to pull off certain shot shapes.” DeChambeau, who ranked sixth in Strokes Gained: Off-the tee, went up one-degree in loft but retained the same TPT Model 14 MKP LT shaft at 45.5 inches. While he didn’t have a memorable week with the putter — 45th in Strokes Gained: Putting — DeChambeau’s Sik Pro C-Series produced the biggest shot of the tournament on the par-5 16th hole — a 58-foot eagle from just off the green that gave him a one-shot cushion. The DLT (Descending loft technology) planar face descends in loft by one-degree to achieve a consistent shaft angle at impact. The end result is a putter that optimizes launch for a consistent roll. Here’s a look at DeChambeau’s entire bag setup: Driver: Cobra King F9 Speedback (TPT Model 14 MKP LT shaft at 45.5 inches), 9 degrees 3-wood: Cobra King LTD 3/4 (Project X HZRDUS Black 85X shaft at 43 inches), 14.5 degrees 5-wood: Cobra King F8+ Baffler (Project X HZRDUS Black 85X shaft at 41 inches), 17.5 degrees   Irons: Cobra King One Length Utility (4-5; True Temper Dynamic Gold X7 shafts at 37.5 inches), Cobra Forged One Length (6-PW; True Temper Dynamic Gold X7 shafts at 37.5 inches) Wedges: Cobra King V Grind (50 degrees; True Temper Dynamic Gold X7 shaft at 37.5 inches), Cobra King WideLow Grind (55 and 60 degrees; True Temper Dynamic Gold X7 shafts at 37.5 inches) Putter: SIK Pro C-Series Ball: Bridgestone Tour B X PGA TOUR SUPERSTORE: Buy equipment here

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