Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Why the bonds of golf are so vital

Why the bonds of golf are so vital

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – If I were to play golf with Rory McIlroy and hit my drive 260 yards before he hit his 395, would that adhere to “social distancing� protocols?  As I sat home during the long, strange weekend of not covering THE PLAYERS Championship, I had this and other thoughts about the meaning of golf in all of this.   For the record, I was working on a story about how stars such as Webb Simpson and Phil Mickelson and Adam Scott celebrated winning THE PLAYERS on the decidedly un-festive occasion of coronavirus canceling the tournament. How ironic. For the record, Simpson swung by Wendy’s for a double cheeseburger on his way home, just as he had after winning the U.S. Open. Mickelson and his lawyer popped over to Dwight’s in Jax Beach for lobster ravioli. Scott spent Sunday night at Stuart Appleby’s house in Orlando and, he admitted with a bemused smile, attended a Britney Spears concert the next day.    “Hey, it was 2004,� Scott said with a laugh. And that all adds up to – what? I don’t know. And I’m not sure what it says that for me golf has connected some grim historical plot points: the 1989 Bay Area earthquake (I was playing), the terrorist attacks of 9/11 (playing) and the coronavirus cancellation (working, until not working). Coronavirus canceled a friend’s wedding, too. Or postponed it. Golf was on the itinerary the day before the ceremony. On Facebook, I read about the anguish he’d felt in making the decision to cancel after all that planning and anticipation. Relatable, if you watched in real time as PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan decided to cancel THE PLAYERS, Valspar Championship, World Golf Championship-Dell Technologies Match Play, and Valero Texas Open. The Corales Punta Cana Resort Championship: postponed. The same goes for the Masters, the Boston Marathon, and too many other sporting events that occupied too many squares on the calendar. March Madness? Gone, along with every other NCAA spring sport. The NBA, NHL, MLB – on hold, all of it. Youth sports: also gone. Then on Tuesday, four more PGA TOUR events canceled – RBC Heritage, Zurich Classic of New Orleans, Wells Fargo Championship and AT&T Byron Nelson. And another major postponed (PGA Championship). And that all adds up to – what? I don’t know. What I do know is that I play golf and cover the TOUR because it is the opposite of social distancing, in the figurative sense. Socially, it is the animating force of my life. I won’t forget that I was playing golf with my roommate at Cal during the 1989 earthquake, or that I thought he was going to have to call an ambulance because suddenly Cameron couldn’t walk straight. I will always remember 9/11 and how I was supposed to be playing golf with friends from Sports Illustrated in a staff tournament called the Christmas City Classic in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. We tried to play a few holes, some of us, then huddled around the TV in our host’s living room. Today, golf gives me occasion to talk to my across-the-street neighbor (no PLAYERS tickets needed this year), and our next-door neighbor (yes, please, although never used), and various friends and relatives whom I barely talk to unless it’s TPC week. It gave me occasion to talk to Rickie Fowler (tacos in the TPC clubhouse) and McIlroy (Silver Oak wine back at the Ponte Vedra Inn & Club) last week about their PLAYERS celebrations.  And what is golf for them? More or less the same as it is for all of us. A way to make a living, yes, but also the connective thread, the glue in the scrapbook of their memories.  It’s Gary and Amy at TPC Scottsdale, and their bond that somehow brought us all a little closer. It’s $3 billion worth of charitable contributions, and humanity, and touch points. It’s PLAYERS winners remembering what they did, but more so who they were with. “I remember having a beer up in the old clubhouse,� Adam Scott said, “with Butch Harmon and Thomas Bjorn and Marie (Kojzar, his wife) was there, and that was fun.� Then: back to Appleby’s house. Next day: Britney Spears concert, with Kojzar. “I don’t think Apples went to the concert,� Scott added. Si Woo Kim recalled missing his flight home but having dinner with his father after winning THE PLAYERS in 2017. Those types of moments, those stories, are the ones I remember. Cameron Champ winning the Safeway Open while his grandfather, who got him into the game, lay in hospice nearby. J.T. Poston winning the Wyndham Championship as his grandfather, who got him into the game, followed him around Sedgefield Country Club. Tiger as the Pied Piper on the occasion of his 80th win at the TOUR Championship at East Lake, and Tiger winning his 15th major at the Masters, and everyone remembering where they were and with whom, especially those of us who were there. That’s golf, and TOUR golf, at its best – connecting us to each other, and strengthening those connections. Without that, absent golf as the organizing principle of our lives, who would we be? With luck, we’ll never know. We’ll get through this, and golf will be there waiting on the other side, timeless and unchanging, ready to help us navigate the world once again.

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Webb Simpson ‘relieved’ to be named Presidents Cup assistantWebb Simpson ‘relieved’ to be named Presidents Cup assistant

GREENSBORO, N.C. – It was Webb Simpson’s turn to order hot dogs for his energetic and hungry brood when the phone rang last Tuesday. “Tiger, I’ll have to call you back,” the harried father of five told the 15-time major champion. When he did, Simpson received some unexpected – and welcome – news. Woods told him he was going to be an assistant captain at the Presidents Cup in September at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, where Simpson makes his home. “It meant a lot, but honestly, I got done with the phone call and I’m like, I don’t know if that was official or not,” Simpson said. “I don’t know if he meant like he’s rooting for me to be an assistant or if I am an assistant.” After all, Davis Love III is the captain, not Woods, and Love wasn’t the one who made the call. But he and Simpson finally talked – yes, Tiger “spilled the beans,” Love later said with a grin – and Simpson couldn’t be happier to join Zach Johnson, Steve Stricker and Fred Couples on the staff. Simpson has played in three Presidents Cups and three Ryder Cups, and has always had this one circled on his calendar. He lives beside the seventh tee at Quail Hollow – he joked Tuesday that maybe someone could leave an opening in the fencing so he could drive his cart home each night – and is a North Carolina native. This will be the first Presidents Cup played in his home state. Problem is, Simpson ranks a distant 29th in the U.S. Team standings, so his chances of being picked are relatively slim, barring a couple of wins in the next four weeks. “Not that I feared not being a part of it, but there was a part of me that’s like, if I don’t make the team and Davis goes a different direction, that’s fine, but it’s going to be hard to see the Presidents Cup happen there and not be a part of it in some way,” Simpson said. “So, I was really, really relieved to get a chance to be a part of it.” Love, who is a two-time Ryder Cup captain and was Simpson’s favorite player growing up, said the goal is to add new players to the mix as potential captains for all U.S. Teams going forward. At the Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits last year, Matt Kuchar filled that role. “We said in those Ryder Cup meetings … (that) instead of Davis bringing his four pals and hanging out for a week, we’re going to have two former captains and two future captains here for the assistants,” Love said. “We set kind of a criteria. So, we’re letting that spill into Presidents Cup, too. “It’s like Team USA basketball,” he continued. “We’re not just going to show up as a bunch of superstars and just shoot the ball around. We’re going to have a program year-round to get ready to play international competition.” Love said he definitely sees the 37-year-old Simpson as a future captain. He doesn’t know if he’ll lead a U.S. Team at a Presidents Cup or Ryder Cup “but he needs to be in the system.” He’s a natural leader and he has a servant’s heart, Love explained. When he captained the 2012 Ryder Cup, Love remembers watching Simpson with great interest. He and Bubba Watson partnered three times, winning two of those matches, but after each one, the two players and their caddies would gather on the green and pray. “He’s always the leader or the calming influence, or the guy to do the right thing at the right time,” Love said. “And we would stand on the side of the green and just go look, we don’t have to tell him what to do. He’s a Ryder Cup rookie but he’s a team leader. So that doesn’t just influence his caddies but the players around him. Everybody sits back and goes look, holy cow. This guy’s different. “He’s always been like that, but that was when it really hit me,” he added. “The things he just does for people, you know? I said, ‘This is perfect for you because you like to serve. No matter what it is you want to do for other people.’ He’s excited about the golf and he is excited about Charlotte, but he’s excited to give back.” Simpson, who said he plans to be a sponge during the matches at Quail Hollow, hasn’t abandoned the idea of making an international team – maybe even this year, should he get hot over the next four weeks. But as he approaches his 37th birthday on Monday, he knows his opportunities are growing more limited. Over the last three years, Simpson worked hard to add length, and he feels his 2020 wins at the Waste Management Phoenix Open and RBC Heritage were a byproduct of those efforts. But so were some bad swing habits that really manifested themselves this year as he collected just one top-10 finish, a T8 at The RSM Classic, in 18 starts heading into this week’s Wyndham Championship. “So I feel like the last four, five months we’ve been playing catch up, trying to neutralize everything,” Simpson said. “We’ve been pulling up a lot of video from ’17, ’18, ’19 before I started getting longer. The good news is I’ve retained the distance, but I’m starting to hit more fairways.” He has held fast to his confidence, he said, despite lackluster results that have left him at No. 117 on the FedExCup eligibility list. (He’s never finished lower than 87th and has appeared the Playoffs 13 straight seasons.) And more good news, he loves this week’s TOUR stop, the Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club, having posted one win, four finishes in the top 3 and nine top-10s in 12 starts there. “I believe in myself,” Simpson said. “I’ve just got to be a little smarter, I’ve got to think a little better. And this golf course, even though the scores are good every year, it is a golf course where you cannot make mistakes, otherwise it’s so penal. The rough is up this year, so I’m looking forward to that challenge. I’ve just got to limit my mistakes. The last few weeks I’ve just been saying I just want to get to Memphis, I want to make the Playoffs. I haven’t been in this position for a while where I needed to make a push.” One thing he doesn’t have to worry about is whether or not that push will be enough to propel him onto Love’s team that will defend its title at Quail Hollow. Simpson is already relishing the home game as only a local can, and it’s nice to know he’ll be there, one way or another.

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2019-20 PGA TOUR Medical Extensions2019-20 PGA TOUR Medical Extensions

Medical extensions in order of the 2019-20 PGA TOUR Eligibility Ranking ^ – Qualified for conditional status if he fails to meet the terms on his medical. & – Grayson Murray and Brandon Hagy are fully exempt as Korn Ferry Tour Finals graduates, so both will play out of no worse than Category No. 26 in the Eligibility Ranking. However, if either meets the terms of his medical, he’ll remain in Category No. 22. # – In the field at A Military Tribute at the Greenbrier as of Sept. 8. * – Because the FedExCup points structure was modified for the 2016-17 season, when golfers on medicals granted to time missed before the conversion earn FedExCup points in a tournament in 2019-20, they will be credited with the values distributed through the 2015-16 season. Thus, both “FedExCup points earned” and “FedExCup points remaining” for these golfers reflect the distribution through 2015-16 and not actual points earned that apply to their FedExCup ranking in the 2019-20 season.

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