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Wesley and Elizabeth Bryan ..

Wesley Bryan didn’t want to be Joseph in the Christmas play at his pre-school. He wanted to be the donkey. So when Wesley walked down the aisle to the manger he decided to get on his hands and knees and crawl like his four-legged friend. “His mom was mortified,â€� Elizabeth Bryan recalls. At least Wesley didn’t bray, though. Of course, Elizabeth, who was perfectly content to play one of the angels in the production, was there. But she doesn’t really remember what happened. Or him, for that matter. After all, she and her future husband were just 4 years old at the time. The couple grew up 10 minutes apart in the Columbia, South Carolina suburb of Irmo. Although they didn’t go to the same elementary or middle school, Wesley and Elizabeth had a lot of friends in common. “We would frequently end up in the same place, (like at) birthday parties, so we have random pictures throughout the years that we found,â€� she said. Wesley finally called over spring break during their junior year in high school. He was at a Sonic Drive-In, which was the local hangout, with some friends and wondered if she wanted to join them. Elizabeth recruited one of her friends and headed to the burger joint. “She said you’d better be careful, they say that Wesley is a big flirt,â€� she recalled. Within days, though, Wesley broke up with the girl he was seeing. And while Elizabeth went with someone else to the prom at Wesley’s high school, her heart wasn’t in it. “We have a picture together from that prom — when we weren’t going together,â€� Elizabeth said. “He stole me away from the guy that I was with and we pretty much went out and started dating a few weeks afterwards.â€� By the end of the summer, things had started to get serious. The two were sitting on the couch at Elizabeth’s house and Wesley made a comment that surprised her. “It was basically implying like I think I found the right one, and here we are 17 years old and we had been dating three months,â€� Elizabeth said. She felt similarly “but I don’t think I would have voiced it that early,â€� Elizabeth said. The two got closer as seniors, and she even decided to follow him to South Carolina where Wesley planned to play golf. Elizabeth, though, didn’t know anything about her husband’s favorite sport. Her father tried to help, drawing out a par 3, par 4 and par 5 to help teach her the fundamentals of the game. “I remember in college (Wesley) telling me, oh, this is the career path I’m choosing, and if you want to be a part of that, that’s great, but if you don’t, this isn’t going to work out,â€� Elizabeth said. “And clearly I loved Wesley, so I knew that we were just going to have to find a way to make it work.â€� Wesley proposed the Sunday after Thanksgiving during their senior year. He had taken her to lunch at Firehouse Subs – “I thought we were going to go somewhere a little bit nicer,â€� Elizabeth said with a laugh – and the two went hiking on a dam on nearby Lake Murray. “He gets down on one knee and he says, Elizabeth, will you marry me, and he pulled out the ring, and my first response was ‘Shut up,’â€� Elizabeth recalled. “I had no idea this was going to happen. Of course, I was super excited, I just thought he was going to be waiting longer.â€� Minutes before Wesley proposed, Elizabeth had been talking about how she wanted to go on a medical mission to Africa after she graduated. She had decided to study to be a physician’s assistant and needed experience before starting graduate school. “He told me after he proposed, all your friends that have gone to Africa, they were dating one guy when they went and they came back and they were engaged to another one,â€� Elizabeth remembered. “So I’m not letting you go to Africa.â€� The couple was married in August the following year, the week after she graduated from South Carolina. Wesley’s older brother, George, his trick-shot partner, was the best man. The teachers who taught Wesley and Elizabeth in preschool were among the wedding guests. For the next two years, Wesley played the mini-tours while Elizabeth worked. She’d join him on weekends whenever possible. She started school to get her PA degree in 2014 and graduated in 2016, the same year Wesley made it to the Web.com Tour. Turns out, it was a short stay there. Wesley won three times in 13 starts to earn a promotion to the PGA TOUR and lock up his card for 2016-17. He was also named Web.com Tour Player of the Year. And in April, Wesley edged Luke Donald by a single stroke to become the first South Carolina native to win the RBC Heritage in its 49-year history. It was just his 18th PGA TOUR start, and both their families, with the exception of George and his wife, were there to see it happen. “I think it’s pretty unbelievable,â€� Elizabeth said. “Just even two years ago or three years ago, whatever it was, just still kind of in shock and in awe of everything that we’ve watched unfold. “I think one of the coolest parts about it is a lot of it is things that Wesley and I prayed for for months or years that we have now seen God answer.â€� And there is undoubtedly more to come. Of course, no one knows a TOUR player better than his wife. So, now that you know a little more about the couple, Elizabeth gives us 18 things you might not know about her husband below. 1. He starts each morning with quiet time with his Bible. 2. He didn’t have a sip of coffee until 2 years ago. Now he drinks it daily. 3. Get him on the dance floor with his closest friends, and he won’t leave. If you keep your eyes above his feet while we do the South Carolina Shag, you will be wowed by his dance moves. 4. If he could spend a day with any celebrity, it would definitely be Justin Bieber. 5. He loves card and board games. We always travel with a deck of cards, and our current favorite is gin rummy. 6. He’s in the gym at least five days per week, but rarely breaks a sweat. 7. Edisto Beach is his favorite place to vacation, probably because it’s also my favorite. 8. He is easy going and disconnects from golf about 5 minutes after he gets off the course. 9. He cooks dinner almost every night we are in town. I don’t get home from work until 7:30 and he has dinner “hot and readyâ€� on the table. He rarely uses recipes, and he is a fantastic cook! 10. If he ever wins the Masters, I wouldn’t put it past him to have a Taco Bell Crunch Wrap Supreme on the Champions Dinner Menu. 11. It’s not easy to embarrass Wesley, but don’t be surprised if he embarrasses you, especially in public. 12. He falls asleep within seconds and never sleeps past 7 AM. 13. His favorite sports teams are the South Carolina Gamecocks, Carolina Panthers, Atlanta Braves, and whoever Lebron is playing for. 14. He is a child at heart, and he is great with kids. He will be an awesome dad one day! 15. This may come as a surprise if you saw the video where Wesley rattled off his top 10-plus desserts, but he doesn’t eat sweets as much as you think. He typically has dessert once a week and anything chocolate is his favorite! 16. He knows the lyrics to almost every rap song from our high school days. 17. His final round outfit is pink pants and a blue shirt. It started out as blue pants and a pink shirt, but he changed it up about a year ago. 18. He is a candle connoisseur, and Yankee Candle’s “Whoopie Pieâ€� speaks his love language.

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Power Rankings: Sony Open in HawaiiPower Rankings: Sony Open in Hawaii

There’s not going to be a sweep of the Aloha Swing this year. Dustin Johnson did not commit to this week’s Sony Open in Hawaii. For those who did, this fact is more than fine after DJ lapped the field at the Sentry Tournament of Champions over in Maui. This also gives Justin Thomas a clearer path to defending his title, but he transitions from the relatively open road of just 34 at Kapalua to 144 at Waialae Country Club for this is the first full-field event of the calendar year. More on the course and a telling trend in the 50th state beneath the ranking.  POWER RANKINGS: Sony Open in Hawaii RANK PLAYER COMMENT Showcasing what it’s like to hit one’s prime. Solo third at Kapalua was his fourth top 10 in as many starts this season. He’s 5-for-6 at Waialae with top 20s in the last three editions. Solo third here last year. Led the field in strokes gained: approach-the green and ranked fifth in proximity. Battled back from an opening 75 at Kapalua last week to finish ninth. Establish all kinds of scoring records en route to last year’s romp. Also placed T6 here in 2015. Silver lining to last week’s T22 was a closing 6-under 67 with a walk-off eagle. As often as the wind blows at Waialae, it’s no surprise that he’s 8-for-8 with two top 10s and another three top 20s. Disappointing T7 at Kapalua where he shared the 36-hole lead. With top fives in last two Sony Opens, he’s an automatic target. Hasn’t contended since a T4 at The RSM Classic in November, but he’s stayed warm. T17 last week at Kapalua. Recovered from an opening 73 at Kapalua to finish T11. Ranked T3 in GIR for the tournament. Fourth straight appearance at Waialae where he debuted with a T13 in 2015. The 2009 champ has been a horse for the course especially of late with three top 10s in his last four trips. Top 25s in all three starts in the fall, wrapping with a T8 at Sea Island. Made noise at Kapalua before fading to a T11 with a 74. Key takeaway is that he ranked fifth in strokes gained: putting for the week. Three top 20s at Waialae, including a T9 in 2016. Making his 17th consecutive appearance and ranks third in all-time earnings at Waialae, but he’s yet to win. Four top 10s and a T13 in his last six trips. Three top 20s in the fall. Predictably off the pace (T17) as a debutant at Kapalua. Now making his third start at Waialae; T27 last year. Concluded 2017 with a T12-T5-3rd-4th-Win burst. Fifth appearance; personal-best T20 last year. Despite reputation as a bomber, there isn’t a test he hasn’t passed. Seventeen consecutive paydays upon arrival, nine of which for a top 20. Doesn’t hurt that he got back inside the ropes at Kapalua (T17). Since his remarkable triumph here in 2013, he’s added two top 20s. Thirteen consecutive cuts made since June. He hasn’t had a top 15 since late July, but he’s 3-for-3 with no worse than a T13 and a scoring average of 66.50 at Waialae since 2015. Currently 16th on TOUR in greens hit. Profiles as a short-knocking, tee-to-green tactician, but he was solid just about everywhere over the last seven months of 2017. Last year’s T8 at Waialae was his best in seven trips. The only first-time participant on this page chased a T10-T5 sprint through Malaysia and China in October with a T14 in Turkey and T10 in Dubai, so he’s a form fit. Two-time Sony champion Jimmy Walker, Webb Simpson, Bill Haas and Kevin Na will be among the notables to appear in Tuesday’s Fantasy Insider. When Thomas prevailed at Waialae last year, he joined Ernie Els (2003) as the only winners of both of the tournaments in Hawaii since they conjoined to open the calendar year in 1999. Only two other champions at Kapalua recorded top 10s at Waialae the following week, but Thomas extended the oft-discussed trend of Sony champions who opened their seasons at Kapalua. He became the 13th of 19 winners of the Sony Open who tuned up at the Sentry TOC. Therefore, it’s no coincidence that nine of the golfers in the ranking above opened 2018 on Maui. While Kapalua and Waialae will never be confused for each other, they share a similarity in terms of experience required to win. Johnson extended the drought for winners among first-time participants to 10 straight editions last week, while Russell Henley (2013) is the only first-time winner at Waialae since the inaugural edition in 1965. Henley, Fabian Gomez (2016) and Thomas have reversed the long-standing expectation for veteran ball-strikers to emerge victorious, so there’s evidence that the tide is shifting along the southern coast of Oahu. However, the focus of the sea change falls squarely on the ease of the course, which is directly proportional with the wind. It’s a fact that affects most tracks, especially those hard on any coastline. As it did last year when Thomas opened with 11-under 59 en route to a PGA TOUR record-low aggregate of 27-under 253, the wind is going to lay down again this week. Last year’s field averaged 12.72 greens in regulation, good for the highest clip since the course was converted to a par 70 in 1999. Its scrambling rate of 62.52 percent was the best the tournament has yielded since that data was first maintained in 1992. And the pair of par 5s (Nos. 9 and 18) averaged just 4.31, lowest of any course in recorded history (1983-present). All of that occurred as golfers were seeing new greens at Nos. 1, 11 and 13. This year’s modifications include overhauls of the greens on the par-4 sixth hole and par-3 17th. All are perennially among the hardest holes on the 7,044-yard test. Oh, there’s one other connection in the islands worth mentioning. After Sentry was introduced as the new title sponsor of the Tournament of Championship through 2022, Sony extended its agreement through the same season. This week marks the company’s 20th anniversary as host. ROB BOLTON’S WRITING SCHEDULE PGATOUR.COM’s Fantasy Columnist Rob Bolton will be filing his usual staples leading up to this week’s event. Look for the following columns this week. MONDAY: Rookie Ranking, Qualifiers, Reshuffle, Medical Extensions, Power Rankings TUESDAY*: Sleepers, Fantasy Insider WEDNESDAY: One & Done * – Rob is a member of the panel for PGATOUR.COM’s Expert Picks for PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO, which also publishes on Tuesdays.

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