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Zurich Classic of New Orleans to be first PGA TOUR event with walk-up music

NEW ORLEANS, La. — The Zurich Classic of New Orleans, working in conjunction with the PGA TOUR, announced today it will be the first PGA TOUR event to feature walk-up music. Each two-man team will have an opportunity to select their walk-up song to be played on the first tee at TPC Louisiana as they are introduced for the final two rounds of play on Saturday, April 28 and Sunday, April 29. Last year, the Zurich Classic of New Orleans introduced the two-man team format, which features two rounds each of Foursome and Four-Ball competition. The pairing of Cameron Smith and Jonas Blixt won with a birdie on the fourth hole of sudden death against Kevin Kisner and Scott Brown, winning the TOUR’s first official team event since 1981. “Our fans and the players have enthusiastically embraced our team format,â€� said Steve Worthy, CEO of the Fore!Kids Foundation, producer of the Zurich Classic. “This innovation will try to further enhance the concept and the team atmosphere,â€� Worthy added. “We are continuously looking for fun and innovative ways for our players to connect with fans,â€� said Tyler Dennis, Chief of Operations, PGA TOUR. “Zurich and the Fore!Kids Foundation have been great leaders in bringing new elements to the game of golf. Given the team format and the location being New Orleans, I can’t think of a better event to introduce this on the PGA TOUR,â€� he added. The Zurich Classic of New Orleans is the only team tournament on the PGA TOUR. The 72-hole stroke team-play format features Four-Ball (best ball) during the first and third rounds and Foursomes (alternate shot) during the second and fourth rounds. The starting field will consist of 80 teams. Following the conclusion of the second round, the field will be cut to the low 35 teams and ties. In case of a tie after 72 holes, there will be a sudden-death playoff using Foursomes (alternate shot) for the first extra hole and Four-ball (best ball) for the second extra hole and alternate each hole thereafter. Already committed to the tournament are: new Masters champion Patrick Reed; FedExCup leader Justin Thomas; Jon Rahm, ranked fourth in the world; Sergio Garcia, the 2017 Masters champion;  Bubba Watson, who has won twice this season and will be playing with Matt Kuchar; U.S. Ryder Cup captain Jim Furyk and 2016 Olympic medalists Justin Rose and Henrik Stenson.

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Monday Finish: Andrew Landry comes up clutch to stop slideMonday Finish: Andrew Landry comes up clutch to stop slide

Golf never ceases to remind us that things are never over till they’re over. You can never count your chickens – or birdies if you like – because one minute you can lead by six and are seemingly on your way to an easy win and then you find yourself tied for the lead in the middle of what appears to be an irreversible meltdown. The cool thing about this week’s drama-filled installment on the PGA TOUR at The American Express is that Andrew Landry was able to do something that is usually very tough to do. He turned a momentum shift around when it counted. Welcome to the Monday Finish. THREE KEYS TO SUCCESS 1. Landry is a “bulldog.â€� This is how his caddie described him after the win. And it is hard to argue when you look at the evidence. We are used to birdie barrages in the desert at The American Express so when Landry buried his sixth birdie through 12 holes and pushed his lead out to six shots on Sunday you could be forgiven if you figured the tournament was over. The Texan was looking great and his buffer was clearly one that appeared to be more than enough. But then … well … golf. Three successive bogeys and a charging Abraham Ancer meant that – in what must have felt like the blink of an eye to Landry – the buffer was gone and he sat tied for the lead with three to play. Turning momentum in any sport is very tough – but in golf it can be brutal. Especially when the Stadium Course at PGA West in La Quinta saves you some special nervous moments to finish and you’ve missed seven of eight cuts previously in the season. An island green and a daunting final hole with plenty of water still stood in a collapsing Landry’s way. But he collected himself, returned to his best and finished birdie-birdie to claim PGA TOUR win No. 2. “Let’s go get this job done, like, quit messing around,â€� Landry revealed he told his caddie after the collapse. Easy to say, tough to do. But he made it look easy in the end. Get the low down here. 2. Slight man and small town syndrome. Coming in at 5 feet, 7 inches and weighing just 150 pounds, Landry has long looked up at the majority of his competitors. But being the small guy gave him a chip on his shoulder from a young age. Growing up in the town of Groves in east Texas meant most worshipped football. Not really the sport for a small kid. It just added fuel to his fire. Landry’s path in golf has continued to add weight to the chip on his shoulder. He was brilliant in college, but admittedly could have won a lot more. He had a great shot to win a U.S. Open in 2016 but faltered. He took Jon Rahm down the stretch at The American Express in 2018, forcing a playoff, but ended up losing there also. It all helped him towards his first win at the 2018 Valero Texas Open and helped again to find his game this week when it had seemingly deserted him coming in. He shot 77-76 at the Sony Open in Hawaii but found his mongrel again. His 66-64-65-67 this week is proof that when you try to keep an underdog down, he will claw his way above you by whatever means necessary. 3. Putting lights out. Landry only needed 99 total putts for the entire tournament this week (so too did Sebastian Munoz). They joined Justin Harding, Christian Bezuidenhout and Patrick Reed as players with less than 100 putts this season, but Landry is the first to do so while winning. He had 27 in round one, 24 in round two, an incredible 21 in the third round before finishing with 27 in the final round. OBSERVATIONS Abraham Ancer and Scottie Scheffler will win on the PGA TOUR soon. Ancer finished with a course-record 63 on the Stadium Course to challenge Landry while Scheffler shared the 54-hole lead and after early-Sunday falters gave himself a chance late with a fightback of his own. They finished second and third, respectively, but clearly are headed for bigger things. 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