Weight of a nation

 AUGUSTA, Georgia – The famous Masters scoreboard halfway down the first hole at Augusta National has the flags of 20 nations proudly flying above it. It is a nod to the global reach of the tournament that began with just four international players in the inaugural 1934 tournament (a Canadian and three Englishmen) and will this week see 23 different countries represented. That’s right, they now don’t have enough flag poles to even fit the 23 countries whose players will vie for the coveted green jacket, such is the global boon. The Masters has been very active in reaching corners of the globe not traditionally enamored with golf – pushing their amateur championships through Asia and Latin America. Of the 87 players in the field this year, 47 of them are from outside the USA. Of the 23 countries, 12 of them have never won the Masters. Nine of those have never won a major championship. Six of them have never won a PGA TOUR event. It wasn’t until the 25th playing of the Masters that Gary Player broke the American stranglehold on the event. In 1980 at the 44th Masters Seve Ballesteros pushed the winning countries to three and by the turn of the millennium Germany, Scotland, England, Wales and Fiji had joined the party. Mike Weir broke the drought for Canada 15 years ago and Angel Cabrera gave Argentina a thrill in 2009. And it was five years ago that Adam Scott smashed an Australian curse at Augusta National. With eight previous runner-up results by Australians – Greg Norman personally having three heartbreaking losses – the weight of a nation was bearing down on the Aussies every year. When Scott made his famous birdie on the 72nd hole, he instinctively yelled “C’mon Aussieâ€� in celebration – a cry born in years of frustrations for his nation. “It got annoying and frustrating knowing the same questions were going to come every year,â€� Scott once said. “Without fail all of us would be asked when it would happen, how would it happen, what needed to be done. “So to be the guy to finally do it was pretty special.â€� The history for the 12 nations chasing a first green jacket certainly shape the level of pressure. Australia felt it through past failures and a strong history in golf. It is getting to that point for the Irish who will only be represented by Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy this year. McIlroy has single-handedly ensured Northern Ireland is just a Masters away from a career slam. With the personal pressure dwarfing that coming from his nation, he doesn’t yet see it as the Australians did. McIlroy winning would be huge, but it might not shift the global landscape of golf like some other potential winners. And to this point, given their freshness to golf at the highest level, expectations are not yet high. But as every year passes… the want grows. Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama most certainly does feel the intensity from outside. Barely a tournament goes by without him being asked about being the first player from his nation to break through. He smiles when asked and tries to deflect the so-called pressure. But relief will certainly factor in his emotions if and when he does claim major glory. Joining Matsuyama are Yuta Ikeda, Satoshi Kodaira and Yusaka Miyazato all hoping to create history for Japan. But perhaps an even bigger dent would come if Haotong Li, Yuxin Lin or Shubhankar Sharma could prevail. “China or India – that’s almost three billion people combined. That would be massive,â€� Marc Leishman mused. “That could be insane for the future of golf.â€� Lin, the winner of the Asia-Pacific amateur, is just 17. But he has already seen a marked difference in how golf is in his home country. Olympic participation kick-started things, and now there are two players (Zecheng Dou and Xinjun Zhang) playing on the PGA TOUR. A major winner could push things into overdrive and produce an avalanche of talent. “Back when I started, the facilities and stuff were kind of bad. We were hitting like off mats, and it’s really hard to find a property where you can actually hit off grass, so it’s going to be like really expensive,â€� Lin explained. “But nowadays, the China Golf Association, they’re starting to build some practice bases. Wonderful facilities, it’s just easier for the kids right now to practice. “To win would definitely have a major impact on the sport back in my country.â€� For Sharma, who was given a special invite thanks to his impressive form so far in 2018, becoming India’s first major champion would be epic. But he doesn’t see it as a burden – rather an opportunity. “There’s no pressure at all. I think everyone back home is happy I’m competing at this level, and hopefully I’ll keep coming back here for many years to come,â€� Sharma said. “I’m actually very happy that I’m getting a lot of attention. A lot of people back home are following me, and if I can get a good finish this weekend, maybe even win a green jacket, it will be great for the game.â€� COUNTRIES FIGHTING FOR FIRST MASTERS Thailand – Kiradech Aphibarnrat Japan – Yuta Ikeda, Satoshi Kodaira, Hideki Matsuyama, Yusaka Miyazato Korea – Si Woo Kim China – Haotong Li, Yuxin Lin Northern Ireland – Rory McIlroy Italy – Francesco Molinari Sweden – Alex Noren, Henrik Stenson Chile – Joaquin Niemann Belgium – Thomas Pieters India – Shubhankar Sharma Venezuela – Jhonattan Vegas Austria – Bernd Wiesberger

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Rory McIlroy+450
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Alex Noren-145
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Keith Mitchell
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Thorbjorn Olesen
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Make-225
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Top 5 Finish+900
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Top 40 Finish-115
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Top 40 Finish-115
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Make-225
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Wyndham Clark - Make Cut / Miss Cut
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Make-225
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Alex Smalley
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Viktor Hovland shoots 62 to lead by two at World Wide Technology Championship at MayakobaViktor Hovland shoots 62 to lead by two at World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba

PLAYA DEL CARMEN, Mexico — Viktor Hovland was hitting it so well he had no trouble taking on a big risk, and it paid off Saturday with a big finish for a 9-under 62 and a two-shot lead in the World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba. RELATED: Leaderboard | Viktor Hovland contending with borrowed driver in Mayakoba Hovland, the defending champion at this Mexican resort, hit driver just over the green on the par-4 17th and hit a dart into the closing hole at El Cameleon for the lowest score of his PGA TOUR career. That gave him a two-shot lead over fellow Oklahoma State alum Talor Gooch (63), and he was three clear of Justin Thomas (64). “That was fun today,” Hovland said. “Obviously, got off to a nice start and it was nice to have one of those rounds where you can kind of keep it going throughout the day instead of maybe slowing down towards the end there where, frankly, there’s some tough holes.” Matthew Wolff, who started the weekend with a two-shot lead, made a pair of bogeys early in his round to fall out of the lead and managed only one birdie in his round of 73 that dropped him out of contention. Scottie Scheffler had a good start and little else, and a double bogey on the 14th hole when he drove into a hazard led to a 70 that put him seven shots behind. Hovland was at 19 under as he goes for his third PGA TOUR title. The Norwegian star already had made up a three-shot deficit with seven birdies, along with tough pars on some of the holes into the steady breeze. The TOUR moved up the tees about 100 yards on the 17th hole, with mangroves right of the green and a small lagoon to the left. Gooch was in the group ahead of him and hit iron off the tee and wedge to tap-in range for birdie that gave him a share of the lead. Hovland went with driver and it landed about 15 feet beyond the pin and rolled just off the edge. He pitched beautifully to 6 inches for birdie. “I’ve hit it great and I thought it was the play,” Hovland said. “So if it’s the play, you pull outt the big dog and you try to hit it.” Then, Hovland peeled a low driver into the fairway and stuffed that one about 4 feet away for another birdie to widen his lead. Gooch had a birdie putt that spun out of the cup on the 18th. Even so, he will be in the final group on Sunday as he goes after his first PGA TOUR victory. He did his best work earlier on the back nine, rolling in a 30-foot birdie putt on No. 12, an eagle putt from about 35 feet on the par-5 13th and then chipping in for birdie from just off the green at No. 14. “You never know when your time is going to come,” Gooch said, speaking specifically to his burst of scoring, and possibly to finally hoisting a trophy. This is his 102nd start. “The game came easy today,” he said. “I hit a bunch of fairways, hit a bunch of greens. Nice when you get a chip-in, you make a 30-footer and those are the type of things you need to have happen to turn it from a 67 to 63.” Thomas had a 62 in the third round last year at Mayakoba to at least give himself a chance. This time, he started much closer to the leaders and his 63 left him only three back. He began the tournament at 3 over for his opening nine. Thomas couldn’t help but think of his pairing with Patrick Cantlay at the BMW Championship, when Cantlay started slowly and wound up winning in a playoff. “And I know this is a course you can get on crazy kinds of runs out here,” Thomas. “It feels good to know I haven’t really done anything special, but I’ve just kind of checked the boxes and done a lot of things I need to do and put ourselves in a good spot.” Carlos Ortiz of Mexico had a 67 and was five shots behind.

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2017-18 Rookie Rankings2017-18 Rookie Rankings

There are 23 rookies on the PGA TOUR in 2017-18. This feature provides a subjective ranking updated weekly. The Rookie of the Year is voted by PGA TOUR members who make at least 15 starts. SNAPSHOT: There was only one week off in between PGA TOUR seasons, but it wasn’t without significant news. To no one’s surprise, Xander Schauffele was crowned the Rookie of the Year for 2016-17. He was the class’ only two-time winner. He captured his second title occurring at the season-ending TOUR Championship to finish third in the FedExCup standings behind Justin Thomas and 2013 Rookie of the Year Jordan Spieth, respectively. The other development was first covered in last week’s turnover of this page. Six rookies secured PGA TOUR cards at the Web.com Tour Finals, the other 17 via the regular season on the 2017 Web.com Tour. Only Austin Cook elected not to debut at the Safeway Open where only eight of 22 made the cut. Tyler Duncan made the biggest splash with a two-way tie for fifth place. After sharing the 18-hole lead (with Tom Hoge and eventual champion Brendan Steele), Duncan led outright after both 36 and 54 holes. As impressive as Duncan’s performance was, it was just the third-best finish by a rookie in the Safeway Open since the wraparound season was introduced in 2013. Brooks Koepka tied for third at CordeValle in 2013 and Emiliano Grillo prevailed in a playoff at Silverado in 2015. LOW ROOKIE: Tyler Duncan, T5. First time. CAREER-BEST FINISHES (AND TIES): Tyler Duncan (T5); Brandon Harkins (T9); Corey Conners (T30); Stephan Jaeger (T30); Tom Lovelady (T43); Ben Silverman (T43); Talor Gooch (T54) * – In the field at the CIMB Classic as of Oct. 8. Through the Safeway Open NOTE: A player’s rookie season (“Rookie Year”) is defined as the season in which he becomes a PGA TOUR member (including Special Temporary Members) and plays in 10 or more events as a member or finishes in the Top 125 on the Official FedExCup Points List, the Top 125 on the Official PGA TOUR Money List or qualifies as a Top 125 – Nonmember, whichever occurs first. Further, for purposes of this definition, a new member (including Special Temporary Members) shall not be eligible for the PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year if he has previously played in more than seven (7) Official PGA TOUR Money events as a professional in any prior season.

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Justin Thomas lights up Kapalua with course-record 61Justin Thomas lights up Kapalua with course-record 61

KAPALUA, Hawaii – Two-time winner Justin Thomas added another accolade to his Kapalua kit bag after a blistering course-record 12-under 61 in the third round of the Sentry Tournament of Champions. Pre-tournament favorite Thomas sat dead last after the opening round thanks to a pedestrian 1-over 74 and while he bounced back with a 67 on Friday, he was still miles behind pace-setter Cameron Smith. But on Saturday in perfect conditions, the 2017 and 2020 Sentry Tournament of Champions winner notched up two eagles and eight birdies in a scintillating effort. The 28-year-old played the last seven holes in seven under and barely missed a 22-foot eagle try on the final hole for a 60. “I didn’t do anything crazy, just took advantage of all the easy opportunities and chances that I had and hit a lot of really good drives, quality iron shots and wedges in there to, again, if there’s such a thing as an easy 12-under, I definitely felt like it was,” Thomas said afterwards. “I wasn’t crazy aggressive today. When you have wedges in your hand with soft greens, you attack. It doesn’t matter if you’re in last or first. You’re just trying to make birdies and I felt like that’s what I did.” Thomas beat the previous record of 62, held by Xander Schauffele, Jason Day, Chris Kirk, Graeme McDowell and K.J. Choi. It was his fifth round of 61 or less since 2015, the most of any player on TOUR. While he found just 11 of 15 fairways off the tee, Thomas hit all 18 greens in regulation and made 113-feet, 3-inches worth of putts. The Kentucky native will likely need to replicate his heroics on Sunday if he is to add a third title at the Plantation Course given the overnight leaders continued to go low. But while victory might be beyond his grasp, it was still important to him to surge as high as possible. “When I looked up and was in last, I felt like that was pretty humbling,” Thomas said. “But I felt like yesterday closing that round out at least gave myself a chance to get a respectable week, respectable finish out of it, and if I did something berserk this weekend, I might have a chance to win.” He now holds the course record at both Hawaii stops on the PGA TOUR having also shot a 59 at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu during his 2017 victory in the Sony Open. “It’s fun. Every golf course you go to there’s a scorecard in the locker room… whether the people know me or not or whether they know whoever shot the course record or not, it seems like that’s kind of a part of the club at that time. So, it definitely means something,” he said of course records. “I still remember my first. It was a Junior World practice round. I can’t remember the name of the golf course. I was like probably nine years old. It was like an executive course. I just remember because Tiger had the course record, and I remember beating him and it was like the coolest thing obviously I had ever done at that time. “Something tells me it’s not still standing. But that was the first one I had ever broken and I was pretty pumped about that.”

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