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Write on: Thomas earns PGA Tour’s top honor

Justin Thomas wrote down a dozen goals at the start of 2017, but becoming PGA Tour player of the year wasn’t among them.

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Talor Gooch cards 65 in windy conditions to take lead at The RSM ClassicTalor Gooch cards 65 in windy conditions to take lead at The RSM Classic

ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. — A strong wind off the Atlantic Ocean swept over Sea Island on Friday, and it was no problem for Talor Gooch of Oklahoma as he handled the exposed Seaside course for a 5-under 65 to take a one-shot lead in The RSM Classic. As expected, the balmy conditions of the opening round that led to record scoring gave way to 25 mph wind and temperatures that were 10 degrees cooler. RELATED: Full leaderboard | Tee times “The only commonality between yesterday and today is that we played 18 holes,” said Zach Johnson, who lives at Sea Island and toiled for a 1-under 71 on the Plantation course to finish three shots behind. Gooch matched the low score of the round — Taylor Moore had a hole-in-one on the 17th hole at Seaside for a 65 — and was at 13-under 129. He was one shot ahead of John Huh, who had a 67 at Plantation, and Sebastian Munoz, who went from a 60 at Seaside to a 70 in the second round at Plantation. Moore and Mackenzie Hughes of Canada (68 at Seaside) were two shots behind. Gooch has been trending up. He’s 14th in the FedExCup and has a pair of top-five finishes at the Fortinet Championship to start the season and THE CJ CUP @ SUMMIT in Las Vegas. Still seeking his first win, Gooch hasn’t missed a cut in six starts this fall and has finished 11th or better four times. “It’s just comfortable,” he said. “Obviously I’m playing well, but I think my game has made a turn for some good stuff in some ways. And I’ve been working my butt off for years, but especially the last six, eight months with driving the ball and working my butt off with putting. For my game, if I can get in the fairway … it’s just a matter of how many putts I’m going to make. Hopefully we can keep making putts and see if we can do some good this weekend.” Gooch highlighted his round with an eagle putt of just over 65 feet on the par-5 seventh, the longest putt he has made in his PGA TOUR career. “Any 66-footer, you’re just trying to two-putt, right?” he said. “But my speed’s been pretty good this week and I actually made about a 50-footer yesterday, so I’ve been comfortable on these greens from long distance. You’re always stealing one when you get those to drop though.” Gooch made only one bogey, no small feat under the conditions, and four of his five birdie putts came from 6 feet or less. Munoz, who matched the tournament record with a 60 in the first round at Seaside, birdied his last hole to share second with Huh. A day after half the field at the Seaside Course broke the scoring record with an average of 66.31 — the second-lowest on the PGA TOUR since 1983 — the other half averaged more than four stokes higher at 70.96. The average score on the Plantation almost increased by four shots, going from 68.70 to 72.68. The cut was at 4-under 138. Among those making it to the weekend was 57-year-old tournament host Davis Love III with birdies at Nos. 13 and 15 for an even-par 70 at Seaside. Also making the cut on the number was Adam Scott, who needed birdies on three of four holes on the Plantation back nine for a 71. Among those missing the cut were major champions Jason Day, Lucas Glover and Graeme McDowell, as well as defending champion Robert Streb. He beat Kevin Kisner in a playoff last year. Neither will be around for the weekend. Johnson, meanwhile, is trying to break the “Sea Island curse.” None of the players who live in the area have been able to win The RSM Classic in its first 11 years. That group includes Matt Kuchar, Harris English, Brian Harman and Hudson Swafford, all PGA TOUR winners. “Well, it’s hard, it’s hard to win,” said Johnson, who was in the final group in the final round last year, but finished three shots outside the playoff between Streb and Kisner. “Maybe there’s a little bit of added pressure because of who you’re playing in front of and that kind of thing. I think it’s going to happen. … I think the odds are in our favor.”

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Fantasy Insider: RBC HeritageFantasy Insider: RBC Heritage

The RBC Heritage bills as a quintessential position week for private leaguers. With the absence of a clear-cut favorite, or at least a bounty of several who you wouldn’t rule out to be the target, sprinkling in intriguing talent among the chalk is recommended for all, including front-runners. You can get away with it in this field. If anything, you’re encouraged to get cute so as not to be a sitting duck with nothing but chalk when those in pursuit select from all kinds of firepower on the board. As the second tournament in Segment 3 of PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO, this strategy carries even more value. We have a long way to go to ration three starts each among the likes of Dustin Johnson, Matt Kuchar, Kevin Kisner, Brian Harman and Paul Casey, to name only five at everyone’s disposal at Harbour Town, so creativity and patience will be rewarded. Meanwhile, with the Masters in the books, qualification for THE PLAYERS is up next. The top 10 in the FedExCup standings at the conclusion of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans and the top 50 in the Official World Golf Ranking at the end of all action that weekend will gain entry. Once the PGA TOUR’s flagship event is in the rearview mirror on May 13, the fields for the U.S. Open and Open Championship will grow in earnest. For qualifying criteria for these events, the PGA Championship and the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational, as well as all currently exempt into any or all five, bookmark Qualifiers. Visit regularly because I update it weekly. PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO My roster for the RBC Heritage (in alphabetical order): Brian Harman Kevin Kisner Russell Knox Matt Kuchar Webb Simpson Cameron Smith You’ll find my starters in Expert Picks. Others to consider for each category (in alphabetical order): Scoring: Paul Casey; Brian Gay; Chesson Hadley; Dustin Johnson; Patton Kizzire; Marc Leishman; Ollie Schniederjans Driving: Patrick Cantlay; Paul Casey; Emiliano Grillo; Tyrrell Hatton; Dustin Johnson; Ian Poulter Approach: Jason Dufner; Brian Gay; Emiliano Grillo; Chesson Hadley; Zach Johnson; Patton Kizzire; Andrew Landry; Ian Poulter Short: Bud Cauley; Luke Donald; Emiliano Grillo; Tyrrell Hatton; Beau Hossler; Dustin Johnson; Patton Kizzire; Kevin Na Power Rankings Wild Card Xander Schauffele … A shout-out to loyal readers who stick by their guys. I often hear from apologists, er, diehard fans – you know who you are – of the likes of Charley Hoffman and Brandt Snedeker among others. From my vantage point as a fantasy analyst, I have an elevated appreciation for that devotion. Furthermore, it’s never my intent to slight your guy because he’s not in the Power Rankings or endorsed in this column. You know all about my purity and independence. Still, this applies to one particular reader who once told me that Schauffele should appear in every Power Rankings, which is actually a solid argument despite the bias. The 2016-17 Rookie of the Year is certainly headed in that direction rapidly, but he gets the next best thing for the RBC Heritage where he’s making his debut and where experience has mattered (although Branden Grace and Wesley Bryan may have extinguished that narrative with victories in the second and first appearances in the last two editions, respectively). Schauffele’s putting is the X-factor this week and he’s shown little signs that his surge since the U.S. Open last year won’t continue. Draws Beau Hossler … The silver lining of his playoff loss to Ian Poulter in Houston is that the Englishman went out and forced sudden death. Sure, how Hossler failed to execute once there was unfortunate, but he was tackled from behind. The first-time PGA TOUR member was firing on all cylinders. Jason Dufner … Furnishing a mixed bag of the decent with the forgettable this season, but he hasn’t has any trouble connecting at Harbour Town where he’s 8-for-8 since 2009. And now it’s time for redemption. His personal-best finish occurred just last year when he entered the final round as the outright leader before backpedaling to T11 with a 76. Patrick Cantlay … It was going to happen at some point. His consecutive cuts made streak since returning to competition 14 months ago came to an end at the Masters. However, that funnels directly into my philosophy that negative results on the biggest stages for emergent talents can be ignored due to the fact that a major really isn’t just another golf tournament. So, expect a rebound to the mean at Harbour Town where he finished T3 as a first-timer last year. Emiliano Grillo … He’s been tearing up tracks since wrapping 2017 with a T9 at El Camaleón. He’s 8-for-8 worldwide in 2018 with a T3 in his last start two weeks ago in Houston. Certainly could’ve been slotted in the Power Rankings as a result, but he’s making his tournament debut. Still, it’s a challenge to find another in this field who stacks up as statistically strong for Harbour Town. Ryan Moore … Given his propensity to play well on courses that scream and even whiff of classic design, it’s surprising that he hasn’t made the trip to Harbour Town since 2008. Don’t let that prevent you from investing. He keeps his ball in play and goes about his business with an underrated short game. Placed T5 at Bay Hill and T28 at Augusta National in his last two starts. Ollie Schniederjans … Tiptoe into him. The 24-year-old is a dynamic talent and even though he’s in the middle of just his second season on the PGA TOUR, he’s easily one of the most intriguing who hasn’t broken through for victory. He can be inconsistent with his irons, but he solved Harbour Town in his debut last year. Or maybe he’s just that comfortable here. En route to a T3 with four rounds in the 60s, he ranked T2 in greens in regulation and led the field in both proximity to the hole and strokes gained: approach-the-green. Bud Cauley … All kinds of yes. Six top 20s scattered about his 9-for-12 record this season, including in his last two starts. Also sparked a T9 here last year with a field-low 63 in the opening round. Tyrrell Hatton … The Brit is a perfect fit in PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO for gamers who are keen to perhaps steal points from opponents who haven’t been paying attention. In this regard, he lines up similarly to how Branden Grace was projected to perform when the South African prevailed two years ago. Hatton has been on cruise control for the last seven months. He’s a terrific putter who contended through 54 holes here last year before settling for a T29. Aaron Baddeley (DFS) Bryson DeChambeau (DFS) Jim Furyk (DFS) Brian Gay (SERVPRO) Si Woo Kim (DFS) Patton Kizzire (SERVPRO) Francesco Molinari (SERVPRO) Kevin Na (all) Scott Piercy (DFS) Kevin Streelman (DFS) Fades Wesley Bryan … In a nutshell, he’s still finding his way. His victory here last year was a bonus that punctuated a year’s worth of leaderboard appearances dating back to the Web.com Tour in 2016. Since, he’s picked off only two top 25s worldwide and arrives having missed four consecutive cuts. Simply allow him to experience the thrill of being a defending champion for the first time. Brandt Snedeker … Maybe this is the week when it jells post-injury, but the tease of consecutive top 25s on the West Coast Swing two months ago has been just that. He won at Harbour Town in 2011 and has gone on to add five paydays in the last six editions, but let the course history buffs in your loop take the bait. Kevin Chappell … As consistently strong as he’s been for a while now, there are still times when we need to respect his relative weakness with the putter. Yet, tracks with small greens tend to favor average to below-average putters, so his T9 here in 2016 wasn’t a surprise. In sum, he’s a boon for full-season gamers and a mild risk for the weekly crowd. Charl Schwartzel … Suddenly 61st in the Official World Golf Ranking and poised to miss his first U.S. Open in 10 years. He hasn’t been positioned outside the top 60 since the first week of 2010, long before the USGA expanded the bubble for entry into the season’s second major via the OWGR. Just one top-45 finish in stroke-play competition on the PGA TOUR this season, and that was but a T28 at the limited-field CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES nearly six months ago. Luke List … This is relative as poor course history probably no longer applies to the 33-year-old for whom it’s all coming together. Rather, this is a nod that his primary weapon off the tee is neutralized at Harbour Town and the design caters to the contingent who can’t move it like he can where it matters more. Byeong Hun An Scott Brown Ross Fisher Matthew Fitzpatrick Bill Haas Martin Kaymer Ryan Palmer Returning to Competition Sung Kang … Walked off the Golf Club of Houston during the second round. An explanation wasn’t released. He’s managed only one top-55 finish in eight starts in 2018, so there’s no need to force him. Last year’s T11 at Harbour Town occurred amid a torrid April. J.J. Spaun … Since withdrawing during the Waste Management Phoenix Open, he’s missed two cuts in as many tries, yet he hasn’t appeared since The Honda Classic seven weeks ago. No news has surfaced to explain his time off, but at 43rd in the FedExCup standings, he can afford it. If you’re a risk-taker, you’ll attach to his terrific approach game on a track where it paid dividends in the form of a T6 in his debut last year. John Senden … Shed some competitive rust while missing the cut at the Web.com Tour’s Chitimacha Louisiana Open two weeks ago. Now has plans to remain on the PGA TOUR via a Major Medical Extension that grants him 13 starts. After the RBC Heritage, the Aussie has circled next week’s Valero Texas Open, the Wells Fargo Championship (May 3-6) and AT&T Byron Nelson (May 17-20) as probables. If you weren’t aware, he sat out 11 months as his son began to battle brain cancer. For an in-depth update on that story, click here. Notable WDs Branden Grace … The 2016 champ is stepping aside for the birth of his first child. It probably would be impossible to determine if the Nappy Factor influenced his execution leading up to it because he’s one of the more reliable pieces on the board just about every time he competes, especially on par 70s and 71s. He’s 9-for-9 this season with five top 25s. Steve Stricker … Enjoying a second consecutive week off because he’s likely headed for a busy summer. Currently atop the money list on the PGA TOUR Champions and continues to moonlight on the PGA TOUR where he’s 146th in the FedExCup standings. He and fellow Cheesehead, Jerry Kelly, who is No. 2 in earnings on the 50-and-older circuit, are getting set to ambush the Zurich Classic of New Orleans in two weeks. They teamed up to finish T14 in last year’s debut of the format. Vijay Singh … His comments to Golf Channel last week referencing that he’s thought about hanging it up at the Masters due to a regression in his ability to contend align with what he said immediately after he prevailed at the Toshiba Classic on March 11. The 55-year-old Life Member of the PGA TOUR is coming to terms with the reality of how the state of his game stacks up against the younger generations. He expressed a plan to dedicate more time on the PGA TOUR Champions. Lo and behold, you’ll find him at this week’s Mitsubishi Electric Classic later this week. Power Rankings Recap – Masters Power Ranking Golfer Result 1 Justin Thomas T17 2 Phil Mickelson T36 3 Justin Rose T12 4 Jordan Spieth 3rd 5 Tiger Woods T32 6 Rory McIlroy T5 7 Jason Day T20 8 Dustin Johnson T10 9 Bubba Watson T5 10 Paul Casey T15 11 Alex Noren MC 12 Sergio Garcia MC 13 Matt Kuchar T28 14 Henrik Stenson T5 15 Jon Rahm 4th 16 Rickie Fowler 2nd 17 Ian Poulter T44 18 Hideki Matsuyama 19th 19 Kevin Chappell MC 20 Zach Johnson T36 Wild Card Kiradech Aphibarnrat T44 Sleepers Recap – Masters Power Ranking Golfer Result Patrick Cantlay MC Bryson DeChambeau T38 Matthew Fitzpatrick T38 Pat Perez MC Cameron Smith T5 Kyle Stanley 52nd Brendan Steele MC Jimmy Walker T20 Birthdays among active golfers on the PGA TOUR April 10 … none April 11 … none April 12 … Matt Bettencourt (43); Russell Henley (29) April 13 … Davis Love III (54) April 14 … none April 15 … Chris Smith (49) April 16 … Michael Thompson (33)

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Koepka finds stride as he seeks FedExCup triumphKoepka finds stride as he seeks FedExCup triumph

ATLANTA – Brooks Koepka has the confidence to pose for nude photos. He has the composure to withstand the final-round pressure in golf’s biggest events. There may not be a more intimidating figure in the game today. But Koepka admitted that he was “freaking outâ€� about his game on Tuesday. He was in “full-panic modeâ€� on Thursday after sailing a tee shot 75 yards right of the 10th fairway. And yet, Koepka is the leader at the halfway point of the TOUR Championship. He was trailing Justin Thomas by three shots when play got underway at East Lake. Now Koepka is one stroke ahead of Thomas and Rory McIlroy with 36 holes remaining in the season finale. Xander Schauffele is two back. Related: Leaderboard | Casey pulls wrong club on 18 | Koepka discusses Body Issue After winning three times this season, including a major and World Golf Championship, Koepka has all but clinched a second consecutive Player of the Year Award. He’s two days from authoring the perfect ending to another dominant season. Koepka said late Friday his game is headed in the right direction heading into the weekend. He made that statement with his words and two 5-irons he hit on East Lake’s closing holes. The first came on the 229-yard 15th, where he laced his tee shot to the middle of the island green to set up a two-putt par on the day’s most difficult hole. Three holes later, he scared the hole with his 239-yard second shot, leaving himself just 9 feet for eagle. He missed the putt, but the birdie was enough to take the solo lead. Koepka shot 67 in each of the first two rounds at East Lake. “I feel better. I don’t feel like I’m clicking 100%, but it’s definitely close,â€� Koepka said. “There are shots where it’s like, ‘How did I just do that?’ And there are some shots where I’m like, ‘Man, why can’t I do that every time,’ like on 18.â€� He’ll play alongside Thomas in Saturday’s final group. The pairing will feature the past two PGA TOUR Players of the Year. Two years ago, Thomas’ capped a five-win campaign with a FedExCup triumph. He didn’t win the TOUR Championship, finishing second to Schauffele, but still claimed the season-long prize. That scenario doesn’t exist anymore. Under this year’s new format, the man atop the leaderboard Sunday afternoon will win both the FedExCup and TOUR Championship. Thomas shot 70-68 on Thursday and Friday, but is just one back thanks to the starting strokes he was awarded as the leader of the FedExCup. He won last week’s BMW Championship to take the top spot in the FedExCup standings. That earned him a two-stroke lead over the field at the start of the week. “I thought it was going to be easy for me to just play a tournament. It wasn’t. At least for me it wasn’t,â€� Thomas said about playing Thursday with a pre-tournament lead. “I thought it was difficult to stay aggressive, but then again, I wasn’t driving it very well, so I couldn’t be aggressive. “I don’t know, it was odd, but today definitely felt more normal.â€� He drove the ball better Friday, but his momentum was interrupted by a weather delay that hit just as the final groups were making the turn. Thomas and Koepka were both 13 under, and three shots clear of the field, when play was halted. Thomas missed just one fairway on the front nine while focusing on shortening his backswing. He only hit one on the back nine, though, and failed to make a birdie. He had to scramble just to shoot 1-over 36 on the last nine. There was a flop shot to save par on the 15th, and then a good bogey save at the 17th, where he bladed a fairway-bunker shot over the green. He missed a 6-foot birdie putt on the last hole after a good wedge shot. “It would be hard for me to say that (the delay) didn’t kind of stop my momentum because I was playing really flawlessly, I felt like, that front nine,â€� Thomas said. He has hit less than half his fairways this week (13 of 28) to rank 25th in the 30-man field in driving accuracy. He insists he’s driving it better than the statistics indicate, but the rough is so penal at East Lake that one foot can make a big difference. He had to lay up on 18 after his tee shot just trickled into the rough. “That’s the difference between me being able to hit a 4-iron and trying to make a 3 and then I’m just trying to get it over the water,â€� Thomas said. “That’s a big difference at East Lake.â€� Thomas and McIlroy are trying to join Tiger Woods as the only two-time champions in the FedExCup’s 12-year history. McIlroy won the TOUR Championship and FedExCup in 2016. He started the week five off the lead but shot 66-67 in the first two rounds. McIlroy finished Friday’s round by saving par from a greenside bunker on 16, sinking a 15-foot birdie putt on 17 and hitting a 25-yard chip to 3 feet for a closing birdie. “When they cleared the course. I was even par, sort of neutral, a nice thing for me to reset, and I thought, ‘OK, let’s give myself a goal here. Let’s play the last nine holes at 3 under par,’ and I was able to do that. It worked nicely for me.â€� McIlroy has 13 top-10s this season, including wins at THE PLAYERS and RBC Canadian Open. He leads the TOUR in Strokes Gained: Total, as well. He said before the tournament started that he believes a FedExCup victory could give him a case for the Player of the Year Award. He’ll have to earn it, though. Three of the game’s top players sit atop the leaderboard as the TOUR Championship heads to the weekend.

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