Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Viktor Hovland makes hole-in-one on TPC Sawgrass’ eighth hole

Viktor Hovland makes hole-in-one on TPC Sawgrass’ eighth hole

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – TPC Sawgrass’ eighth hole isn’t as famous as its sibling on the course’s other nine, but it presents its own challenges. There’s no water on No. 8, the longest par-3 on the course, but its scorecard yardage of 237 yards is 100 more than its more-famous sibling. Viktor Hovland played the hole to perfection Monday morning, making an ace there with a 4-iron on his second-to-last hole of the third round. It was the eighth ace on No. 8 since 1983 and Hovland’s second on TOUR. He also made a 1 on Monterey Peninsula Country Club’s 14th hole in the second round of the 2020 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. The hole-in-one was Hovland’s second eagle on that side, as well. He also eagled the par-5 second, making a 22-foot for eagle on his final hole of Sunday. He made two eagles and seven pars on TPC Sawgrass’ front nine, his final nine of the round, to shoot 68 and get to 4 under par. “I’ve been playing really well the whole week. I just haven’t really been able to capitalize on any putts,” said Hovland. “Maybe if I get a few putts going early and maybe start blowing in the afternoon and gets a little shaky, then maybe, but got a lot of work to do.” He hit 17 greens in the third round after hitting 14 in each of the first two rounds. He’s gained more than four strokes with his approach play while losing more than four strokes on the greens. Hovland’s hole-in-one came a day after his Ryder Cup teammates, Shane Lowry, made an ace on TPC Sawgrass’ most famous hole. Both 1s occurred in the third round, however, which began Sunday afternoon after weather delays throughout the week. This is the fifth time since 1983 that there have been multiple holes-in-one in one round at THE PLAYERS.

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Unrattled: The Florida A&M Rattlers are proud of their groundbreaking legacyUnrattled: The Florida A&M Rattlers are proud of their groundbreaking legacy

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – An unknown world awaited at the end of his cross-country train ride, but first, a trusted voice imparted words of caution. “I will never forget my mother, just shaking her finger at me,â€� said Ron Tate. “She told me, ‘Do not go down there and get involved in all those protests.’â€� He presents the persona of a man who has experienced so much in his lifetime – from social injustice to hard-earned success – but Tate offers deep respect to those words spoken by his mother more than 50 years ago. “Of course,â€� he laughs, “five days later I was in jail.â€� Born and raised in Minnesota, Tate arrived in Tallahassee, Florida, to attend Florida A&M at a time when the Civil Rights movement, already more than decade old, was building toward what would be the March on Washington in August of 1963. All of it – the segregation, discrimination and disenfranchisement – remains a shameful era in our country’s history, and so, yes, it all felt so wrong to this young man from Minnesota when he arrived at FAMU on a golf scholarship and discovered that the downtown theaters were segregated. Apologies, mother, but I’m joining the picketing. Tate was among the 225 arrested, only to have the charges dropped when a judge reached an agreement to new picketing guidelines. Bottom line, his college career was off to a disjointed, though righteous, start. There is a soft smile, and an unmistakable sense of pride, as Tate recalls the story. But mostly, it’s his way of saying that he has a perspective that helps him measure a nation’s growth. It has a way to go, he said, but as he stood on the putting green at Capital City Country Club, he was warmed by what he saw, a sight that told him things have changed exponentially for the better. Six African-American young man – Mulbe Dillard, Ethan Mangum, Cameron Riley, Prince Cunningham, Chase Killette and Isaiah Shaw – resplendent in their orange team pullovers and shirts, and punctual for a practice session, strolled to the back of the clubhouse to meet their coach, Preston Rice, and be introduced to this man who proudly wore the FAMU uniform more than 50 years ago. “He’s a great man and a loyal supporter of our program,â€� Rice said of Tate, who shook hands with each of the six young men. There were pleasantries and a few questions, but there was also a practice to get to, so Tate bid the players a good day and watched them move onward. “I would love to have lunch with them, though, to talk with them, but I guess I couldn’t pay for it or it would be an NCAA violation,â€� said Tate, who has supported the golf team in a quiet fashion at his alma mater for years. His reason is simple, rooted deep into what ignited his golf passion as a kid and still pushes him at his age – “I’m in my mid-70s,â€� he said – to be a mentor. “Kids today aren’t any different; they want role models and they need role models. All of us want to see others doing something we want to do; they may not be as efficient as others, but we can be inspired by the fact that they are doing it.â€� In the beginning, there was a love of golf – a game with stick and ball – and when you’re a kid it is no more complicated than that. “I think I was too young to think about (being the only African-American) in junior golf. I was just going out there to have fun,â€� said Dillard, who is from Chicago. “It didn’t faze me.â€� “When I played, I got a lot of looks,â€� said Mangum, who was born and raised in Jackson, Mississippi. “And you got even more when you kept winning everything?â€� laughed Riley. Mangum nodded. An accomplished junior who got recruited to play golf at Jackson Academy (current University of Alabama standout Wilson Furr was a classmate), Mangum conceded he stood out as the only African-American competitor in many of his junior tournaments in Mississippi and Louisiana, a situation that only attracted more notice as the wins piled up. “But all the looks made me even more determined to keep playing.â€� The looks never bothered Shaw, who grew up in Orlando and remembers the landscape at the 2015 Florida State Golf Association Junior Amateur. “Literally, I think there were two blacks in the tournament,â€� he said. “But I never worried about being a minority.â€� Said Dillard of those days when he looked around junior tournaments in Illinois and didn’t see any other African-Americans: “It was difficult, but I learned to be by myself. Being independent, I feel it helped me grow as a person.â€� Cunningham and Killette, both juniors, never would have met without golf and never would have found golf without The First Tee of North Florida in Jacksonville. “I first hit plastic clubs and got hooked and told my father I wanted a set of clubs,â€� said Cunningham. The dilemma of where to play was solved by The First Tee, which has been integral to each young man’s life. Cunningham still goes back as a volunteer, while Killette circles as a highlight to his golf career his participation in the PGA TOUR Champions’ PURE Insurance Championship at Pebble Beach where the pros pair with youngsters from the First Tee Program. (Killette played with Larry Mize.) Like their teammates, Cunningham and Killette found a joy in playing golf and chose to follow that compass. That there wasn’t an abundance of other African-American kids in golf, as there would have been in football or basketball, wasn’t a deterrent, though it clearly is an issue they do not shy away from discussing. “Not many minorities will have access to golf, (because) it’s too expensive,â€� said Mangum. “It’s real. I know a lot of children don’t have the opportunity that I had.â€� Each young man embraces this topic; in fact, it is part of what galvanizes them as Florida A&M teammates. These are not kids who constantly bumped into one another at AJGA tournaments and planned their golf futures to run through the University of Georgia or Oklahoma State or Alabama or Texas. No, they came from Illinois (Dillard) and Mississippi (Mangum), from Jacksonville (Cunningham and Killette) and Orlando (Shaw) and even from the islands (Riley), and when they chose Florida A&M, by happenstance it was as if an instant brotherhood was formed. African-American golfers at Florida A&M, the fifth-largest historically black university in the country, united by the challenges they all faced just to find their way into golf. “It’s almost like we’re representing not only yourself, but your group of (African-American) friends,â€� said Cunningham. “We take a lot of pride in that.â€� Together, their goal is to win the PGA Minority Collegiate Golf Championship (May 10-12 in Port St. Lucie, Fla.), something that has happened just once in Florida A&M’s history, that being 2000 when Rice was a member of the team. The first-year coach takes pride in that, but even greater pride in the mission at Florida A&M to emphasize African-American golfers. Curious as it may sound, but to compete at a team level in the PGA Minority Collegiate Golf Championship, you must be a historically black university, but you are not obligated to field a team of minority golfers. Rice grudgingly accepts that landscape but chooses not to follow suit. He is proactive in recruiting African-American golfers and takes pride in a roster that demonstrates that commitment. Six of the 10 players on his roster are African-Americans. That they are diligent students as well as serious competitive golfers provides Rice with a sense of success. Like many other collegiate golf programs, at FAMU there are players who dream of professional careers. But unlike many other collegiate programs, at FAMU these players with pro dreams also envision making golf more accessible to young African-Americans. Shaw talks of having his own foundation “that would fund a minority golf programâ€� and Killette would bring golf into neighborhood schools. “We have to show the kids in the city that golf is not boring, that it’s not a stereotype,â€� he said. Big goals, daunting tasks, but these are young men who appreciate trailblazers such as Ron Tate and accept that they must now do their part. “My entire life,â€� said Mangum, “I’ve tried to lead by example and I definitely would like to be a role model (to other African-American golfers).â€� Turbulent and unjust as the times may have been when he arrived in Tallahassee, Tate can savor a sense of appreciation for what was also present on the Florida A&M campus while he was a student: The incomparable presence of African-Americans named Jake Gaither and Robert “Bullet Bobâ€� Hayes. Gaither was getting toward the end of his illustrious 25-year career as FAMU’s head football coach (six Black College National Championships; overall record 204-36-4; a mentor, of sorts, to young coaches of the time named Paul “Bearâ€� Bryant, Woody Hayes, and Frank Broyles), while Hayes was a glorious streak of lightning on the track field and football gridiron. Oh, how Hayes could run, and Tate still smiles at Gaither announcing “a new world recordâ€� for an 8.93 timing in the 100-yard dash during a spring carnival, a time that left everyone speechless. But the euphoria was short-lived. “Jake measured wrong,â€� laughs Tate. “The course was only 93 yards.â€� Of course, Hayes proved his brilliance on correctly-measured tracks and he remains the only athlete to earn both an Olympic Gold Medal (1964, in both the 100-meter and 4×100 relay) and a Super Bowl ring (1971 Cowboys) and he and Jim Thorpe are the only Olympic champions in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. An iconic athlete in special company, Hayes competed at a time when mainstream universities would not invite him to track meets and when he couldn’t stroll into the downtown theater in Tallahassee. “So much,â€� said Tate, “was stacked against us.â€� He allows that to be digested, then turns his attention back to the young African-Americans pounding drivers and hybrids on the range and challenging one another to short-game shots at the practice green. “But we lived for a purpose and these kids today,â€� he said, casting a gaze at the young men in the practice area, “are standing on our shoulders, whether they know it or not. And down the road, others will stand on their shoulders. “It shouldn’t be that way, but it is.â€� Tate would be pleased to know that the African-Americans on the FAMU roster appreciate the history and understand his sentiments. Said Killette: “If other African-Americans see us in this position (competing at FAMU), they can grab some motivation from that – and that’s a good thing.â€� It doesn’t compare to the social injustices piled against Tate and other African-Americans decades ago, but Killette and his teammates are currently getting a taste of what it’s like to deal with the residual effects of past transgressions beyond your control. Citing a poor Academic Progress Rate at FAMU, the NCAA recently imposed one-year postseason bans on four men’s programs, including golf. “It’s disappointing,â€� said Rice, who wasn’t the head coach in the years (2013-14 through 2016-17) detailed in the report, nor were his current players involved, “and there’s a real flaw in the system when kids who didn’t do anything wrong are penalized. But I reminded my players, this has nothing to do with them.â€� They have heard Rice and they have focused on the matters they do have control of. No, FAMU is not eligible for the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Championships nor the NCAAs, but truthfully, neither of those would be brushed as realistic goals. Instead, their true focus – the PGA Minority Collegiate Golf Championship – remains in play, because the sanctions do not include that annual tournament where the Rattlers finished fourth a year ago and sixth in 2017. In their push to gain momentum toward their goal, results of late have been promising. At the Black College Golf Coaches Association Legends Invitational Jan. 23-24 in Kissimmee, Florida, Florida A&M posted a team victory with Dillard second overall on the strength of 74-76. Then, at the William & Mary Invitational Feb. 16 in Savannah, Georgia, the Rattlers were sixth of 18 teams with Dillard T-7, Riley T-26 and Mangum T-57. OK, we’re not talking blue-chip college results here, but to brush them aside for that reason is to miss the significant flavor of this FAMU story. These six African-Americans who share roster spots with Rice’s other four players – Mahindra Lutchman, Logan Bryant, Alejandro Toro, and redshirt freshman Stephen Davis – came to fall in love in golf, even though it wasn’t an easy courtship. These are not kids for whom doors were opened and affordability and accessibility were staples. Still, their passions are real, and their resumes prove it. Mangum, a redshirt sophomore, went from Jackson Academy to Mt. Vernon, a private school in the Atlanta area, then earned a scholarship to Drexel. It was the engineering school he wanted, but “the chance to play golf year-roundâ€� at FAMU was too good to pass up. Mangum transferred, and of his push to excel in golf, he said: “I didn’t come from a wealthy family, but we did the best we could, and my father and mother were always pushing me to be the best I can be.â€� In Chicago, Dillard had a 45-minute commute to the nearest golf course – no country-club membership for his family – and often satisfied his golf fix with trips to the driving range with his mother. One benefit to those? “I used to give lessons,â€� laughed Dillard, who made himself CEO of the “Mulbe Dillard Golf Coaching Academy.â€� Riley, who was born in the Bahamas, fell in love with golf after moving to the U.S. Virgin Islands and going out to play with his father. Later, he moved to Florida “and the reason I’m at FAMU is because of Dr. (Thomas) Dorsy,â€� he said of the man whose Orlando Minority Youth Golf Association has been offering kids a chance to play the game for years. That program paved the way for Riley to play in the Hero World Challenge pro-am few years ago, and the pairing with Billy Hurley III and a chance to hit balls in front of Tiger Woods only reinforced his love for the arena. A redshirt sophomore transfer, Shaw also came out of Dr. Dorsy’s program. Son of former NFL linebacker Ricky Shaw (1988-89 Giants, 1989-90 Eagles), he originally was recruited to play golf at Fayetteville State, but embraces his new landscape at Florida A&M. So, too, does he envision a day when he’s continuing to bring golf to African-American youths. “Youth golf opportunities have to be more supported,â€� he said. “A system has to be round for a minority golf program.â€� Dillard, Cunningham and Killette are still motivated to teach kids at The First Tee. Meanwhile, while the college golf landscape is very competitive, even at FAMU, and not everyone can get in the lineup, the enthusiasm for this game grows stronger by the day. “I will always play golf and I will always love golf,â€� said Riley, who has professional dreams, but is also interested in working in the game. He served an internship for the USGA at the 2018 U.S. Open and this summer will work for the LPGA Tour. In other words, there is a determined short-term goal – to win the PGA Minority Golf Championship. But there’s an even more ambitious endeavor – to make golf a vehicle for positive impact. Explained Killette: “I want to do something to help. I’ve got the drive.â€� He is not alone. His teammates and friends share his passion and commitment to knocking down barriers and opening doors in golf for this and future generations of African-Americans. Killette knows he can’t make the past right. But he can try and make the future bright.

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Tiger Woods testing session for TaylorMadeTiger Woods testing session for TaylorMade

HOBE SOUND, Fla. – One swing is all it takes for Tiger Woods to notice something is amiss with the new 6-iron placed in his hands just a few minutes earlier. Posted up on the back end of the double-sided range at Medalist Golf Club, the 14-time major champion is going through his first official testing session with TaylorMade since joining the equipment manufacturer’s Tour staff last January. On this particular day, Woods has been tasked with giving his thoughts on some of TaylorMade’s newest gear, including a single muscleback prototype 6-iron that was recently ground and built to Woods’ exact specs by Mike Taylor, a former master craftsman at Nike Golf who spent years creating Woods’ irons and wedges and was recently brought into the fold by TaylorMade. COMING TUESDAY ON PGATOUR.COM Jonathan Wall’s extensive interview with Tiger Woods, who discusses his testing process, equipment specs, working with other TaylorMade staffers — and how he would play golf if there were no equipment regulations.  The shape, look and feel tick all the necessary boxes for Woods, but there’s a piece of the equation that doesn’t check out. “That’s a lot higher,” Woods points out after taking a smooth cut with the iron. “[The iron] looks sweet, but the window is different.” Despite hitting shots that routinely go 192-195 yards with roughly 6,700 rpms of spin, Woods knows a tweak is needed to lower the launch angle. Keith Sbarbaro, TaylorMade’s VP of Tour Operation, suggests checking the center of gravity location against one of Woods’ old sets to ensure they match up. “This is why we test,” Woods says with a grin. Finding a new set of irons for one of the greatest ball-strikers in the history of the sport is akin to putting together a puzzle with 10,000 pieces. Eventually, it will all come together, but it takes significant time and effort to get there. Woods recalls knowing it was time to find a new iron set when he wore through the plating on three clubs in particular – the 8-, 9- and 7-iron (in that order). It was at that point he started the unenviable task of cherry-picking clubs from eight or nine sets to get the CGs to match. With the rise in iron technology and design, Woods knows he doesn’t have to go to those lengths to find a new set. Asked what separates Woods from other high-level professionals when it comes to his testing habits, Sbarbaro points to his unwillingness to adapt to the equipment he’s testing. “He doesn’t adjust,” Sbarbaro said. “He swings the club. The only other guy I’ve worked with a bunch, as a friend, who does that is Phil [Mickelson]. They don’t adjust. So many guys will hit an iron high like Tiger did on the first ball and then they’ll hit it lower the next time. He’s a tough critic. Tiger doesn’t adjust to the equipment; he makes it adjust to him.” Welcome to testing with Tiger Woods, an old-school gearhead who provides brutally honest feedback when he’s working through new product – even when the cameras are rolling, as they were on this particular day as Woods worked through a myriad of TaylorMade gear during the 90-minute session. When it comes to pinpointing the differences between his current sticks and a potential contender, Woods is wired to recognize even the most subtle change when he picks up a new club, beginning with the way it feels during the initial waggle. A number of times during the session, Woods verbalized to Sbarbaro and Brian Bazzel, TaylorMade’s VP of Product Creation, if a club passed the waggle test before ever taking a swing. “This club feels great going through the ground, especially when I waggle,” Woods said early on as he was getting acquainted to the prototype 6-iron. Woods told PGATOUR.COM during a one-on-one interview at Medalist that the waggle has been a part of his game going back to when he initially began playing golf, and was instilled by his father, Earl Woods, who believed in trusting the hands and letting them guide the golf swing. “For as long as I can remember, I’ve always waggled the club and tried to get a feel for it,” Woods says. The prototype 6-iron passes the waggle test but still doesn’t match up to the launch window Woods is accustomed to seeing with the re-badged set of Nike VR Pro irons currently in the bag. The good news for TaylorMade? It’s close. With Woods’ irons, not much has changed from a spec perspective since he was a junior golfer playing irons made by Confidence and Cougar that eventually turned into Mizuno MP-29s when he saved up enough money to buy a set. With the exception of the lie angle, which changed occasionally depending on the instructor he was working with, his specs have remained frozen in time since he was 16 years old – all the way down to the 50-degree pitching wedge. “I’ve never seen the need to change,” Woods says. “I know others have but when you’re comfortable with your iron specs like I am, doing that means I’d need to go through the fitting process all over again, and there really was never a need to adjust.” Woods quickly transitions from hitting 6-irons to conducting head-to-head testing between his graphite-shafted TaylorMade Tour Preferred UDI 2-iron and a P790 long iron with steel and graphite shafts. He picks up roughly 1 mph ball speed and carries the club 270 yards, but it’s clear after several shots that he’s likely going to stick with his current UDI that seems to be working. One thing that stands out during the session is how much Woods talks to other players about their gear and has a pulse on current TOUR equipment trends. Simply put, he’s a sponge, soaking up any potential intel that could give him an edge. In between shots, he comments on the number of players currently using four-wedge setups on TOUR – “So many are going to that four-wedge system, man” – asks for Jason Day’s swing speed numbers and drops an interesting nugget about a recent conversation he had with Rory McIlroy regarding the 28-year-old’s trick to getting the most out of his TaylorMade driver. “Rory said the harder he hits it, the further it flies,” Woods notes. “Just hit it off the heel and let the gear effect take it. He said it’s crazy how far he can hit it when he does that.” With iron testing in the rearview, Woods switches gears to drivers and the search to find something that can unseat “Snowflake,” the nickname bestowed upon his ’16 M2 driver due to its one-of-a-kind qualities. Woods, who asks that the TrackMan numbers not be normalized during the range session, jokingly picks out a guy in a yellow shirt on the far right end of the double-sided range as the target, then begins to pump balls with an 8.5-degree M4 driver outfitted with a Mitsubishi Chemical Tensei CK Pro White 70TX shaft. (Note: Woods tested multiple drivers but all of them had the same CK Pro White 70TX shaft.) “The [M4] looks great,” Woods says. “But it’s just a touch open to me. It’s floating out there a bit.” When the driver produces a higher launch than what he’s accustomed to, he moves the loft sleeve down one click and gets a flight that’s “definitely flatter.” For a guy who played his first competitive tournament in 10 months at the Hero World Challenge in December and just got back into the groove of practicing on a regular basis, Woods doesn’t show any signs of rust. Save for the occasional mis-hit, Woods brought his A-game to the range. That’s evident from the 125-126 mph head speed and 181 mph ball speed that’s producing 12-plus degrees of launch and upwards of 316 yards of carry on a regular basis. Woods is then handed a 9.5-degree M3 460 that looks a bit upright to him at first glance, so a 8.5-degree head is brought in in hopes of solving the issue. Asked during the session if he notices TaylorMade’s new Twist Face design at address – the driver face is slightly curved in the high toe and low heel to improve mis-hit performance – Woods said, “I don’t see it at all. … Just need to test and get a feel for how it performs.” It only takes a few minutes for Woods to notice the 8.5-degree driver is still too upright. He goes back to his current M2 and takes a solid rip at the ball, producing a soft fade that goes 340 yards. “Best drive I’ve hit all day,” Tiger notes.Still searching for a suitable replacement, Sbarbaro suggests Woods try a 9-degree M3 440 that has a similar head shape to the smaller-headed drivers he’s played for much of his career. “I like it a lot,” Woods says after the first few waggles with the club. The results are equally impressive as he produces 310 yards of carry, 12 degrees launch, 2,500 spin right off the bat. Hoping to knock some spin off and showcase the adjustability the driver offers, Sbarbaro pushes the weights forward to the front of the track and has Woods hit another. Moving the weights forward causes Woods to lose a bit of forgiveness, but Sbarbaro notes it will help him gain speed and workability – two things he’s always looking for in a new driver. The results with the tweaked 440cc head are quite possibly the best of the day: 322 yards of carry, 15 degrees launch, 2,100 spin. “All right, that’s a perfect tournament ball,” Woods says of the shot that fades slightly before finding the imaginary fairway. With the session wrapping up, Woods seems upbeat about his prospects of finding a new driver. “I’m excited,” he tells Sbarbaro and Bazzel, “but I still need to do a lot more work on the range and course.” The session concludes with Woods being asked to hit a M3 that’s a half-inch longer than his current setup – known as “Dustin Johnson’s length” – for the sake of testing, but Woods immediately notices an air bubble in the grip that doesn’t feel right. Chances are almost any recreational golfer on the planet wouldn’t have picked up on the defective grip, but then again, Woods isn’t any golfer. It’s just one of the many quirks that make Woods so unique when it comes to his equipment and testing process.

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Jarrod Lyle gets positive news in cancer fightJarrod Lyle gets positive news in cancer fight

HONOLULU, Hawaii – Former PGA TOUR player Jarrod Lyle has received positive news in his recovery effort against leukemia with doctors saying his recent haploidentical transplant has grafted at 100 percent. Fighting acute myeloid leukemia for a third time in his life, Lyle took the decision to use stem cell therapy to attempt to rid his life of the disease once and for all. Having been unable to find a full bone marrow match for a transplant he went down the path of a 50percent match with his brother Leighton – a move that was given a 25-percent chance of success. Lyle’s doctors had warned it’s basically his last hope of a “cureâ€�. And while the news overnight does not constitute a full recovery, it has him on the right path towards one. “Got the best news today since finding out Briony was pregnant both times. I found out that the transplant I had has grafted 100%. Another big step forward in my journey back to a normal life again. #happylylefamily,â€� Lyle posted on his Instagram account. The PGA TOUR has dedicated this month as ‘January for Jarrod’ – a fundraising effort to help Lyle and his family meet the significant costs he faces throughout his recovery. “It’s of utmost importance for the PGA TOUR family and the golf community to come together and help Jarrod and his family both spiritually and financially during ‘January for Jarrod’ month,â€� PGA TOUR EVP and Chief Tournaments and Competitions Officer Andy Pazder said earlier this month. “Jarrod would be the first player to support others in their time of need, and now it’s our turn to help he and his wife Briony and their two young children, Lusi and Jemma.â€� To make a non-tax-deductible gift to the Lyle family, do so directly at www.youcaring.com/januaryforjarrod. All proceeds will go directly to the family to offset day-to-day living, family and medical expenses. Lyle has five top-10 finishes in 121 career PGA TOUR starts, with a best finish of T4 at the 2012 Genesis Open. On the Web.com Tour, Lyle has two wins, both coming in 2008, a season in which he finished fourth on the season-long money list. There is no timetable for returning to golf, with Lyle focusing exclusively on his rehabilitation at this time.

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