Get a look at Grayhawk Golf Club, site of the NCAA Championship

Get a look at Grayhawk Golf Club, site of the NCAA Championship

Get a look at Grayhawk Golf Club, site of the NCAA Championship https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

The NCAA Championship was supposed to land at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Arizona, in 2020 for the beginning of a three-year run at the desert course. The coronavirus pandemic only succeeded in delaying that run. Grayhawk instead will begin its hosting duties at the end of the 2020-21 season and will still host for the next three seasons.

Many teams have already started reconnaissance missions ahead of this year’s national finals. The Golfweek crew has done the same.

Want a look at some of the key holes and scenic views? Take a scroll. We don’t know about you, but we can’t wait for May.

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Phoenix Open: Like clockwork, Xander Schauffele's name is high on leaderboard

Phoenix Open: Like clockwork, Xander Schauffele's name is high on leaderboard

Phoenix Open: Like clockwork, Xander Schauffele's name is high on leaderboard https://ift.tt/3cGyxjT

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – The 16th hole at TPC Scottsdale is infamous for its 16,000 rowdy fans making the fully-enclosed hole a Colosseum of sorts. But not this year. When Matthew NeSmith chipped an 8-iron to six inches at the par 3 hole, he heard all of six claps.

“I made the quietest almost hole-in-one ever at 16,” he said.

Due to COVID-19 restrictions and social distancing requirements, only about 5,000 fans per day are being permitted to attend the Waste Management Phoenix Open, where crowds topping 250,000 for Saturday’s third round has become the norm. The tournament affectionately known as “the people’s open,” is missing its masses.

“When there’s a lot of people it almost becomes white noise,” said Xander Schauffele. “Out here I chunked my chip and some guys was like, ‘Dang, he duffed it.’ I’m like, ‘Yeah, you’re right, I just duffed the crap out of that chip.’ You can kind of hear certain small comments more, which when you show up here you know exactly what you’re walking into, but it is weird the overall sort of quietness here. It is strange to me.”

Waste Management Phoenix Open: Photos | Leaderboard

What is becoming clockwork is seeing Schauffele’s name on the first page of the leaderboard. He carded seven birdies en route to a 5-under 66 and sits three strokes behind NeSmith, who fired a bogey-free 63, and Mark Hubbard, who matched him by making birdies on five fo his last six holes.

Schauffele’s become the Tour’s “Mr. Consistency,” recording 16 top-25 finishes in 18 starts last season and hasn’t finished worse than T-17 in six starts this season, with two seconds among them, including last week at the Farmers Insurance Open, which helped him improve to a career-best of No. 4 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

“I want to be like Xander,” said Tour pro Joel Dahmen. “Thursday to Sunday he’s the same guy. It’s very impressive. He has a plan and he sticks to it.”

All that’s missing for Schauffele, 27, is a trophy to hoist. He’s been stuck on four career victories since the Sentry Tournament of Champions more than two years ago. With each passing close call, Schauffele’s level of frustration grows.

“The ultimate goal is winning and it kind of just dangles right in front of you every tournament, and you just try your best,” he said. “I’ve knocked on the door a few times and kind of messed up and choked, I guess, if you want to call it that. But just try to learn from every moment.”

When asked if he thinks he’s choked, Schauffele didn’t mince words.

“I have at certain times,” he said. “I’m trying to just get to a level where when I know I’m playing really well, I can win. I don’t know if my game is quite there yet to where I can show up to a course and really feel like I’m 100 percent that I’m going to win this tournament. There’s a lot of variables that come into play.”

On a sun-splashed opening round, Schauffele’s putter was on fire. He canned five birdies in a six-hole stretch beginning at No. 17 and one-putted each hole in that span on his way to making over 100 feet of putts for the day. That included a beautiful 28-foot right-to-left birdie putt at No. 4 that broke back to the cup at the end and dropped.

NeSmith tied his career low with 63. He took a short-game lesson on Monday and it paid quick dividends. He holed a bunker shot on 13 for eagle and chipped in from over the sixth green for birdie.

“I don’t know what’s going on the last couple of days, but I’m very grateful for it,” he said.

NeSmith, 27, and Hubbard, 31, are both winless on Tour. They lead Nate Lashley, a 38-year-old University of Arizona product who calls Scottsdale home, and Sam Burns by one stroke.

Former champions Brooks Koepka made seven birdies in shooting 68, while Rickie Fowler carded four consecutive bogeys and will have his work cut out to make the 36-hole cut after 3-over 74. Rory McIlroy was 3-over par after his first two holes but rallied to shoot 1-under 70 in his Phoenix Open debut.

“It was a good battle back,” he said.

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Will Holcomb V is teeing it up at the Jones Cup with one big goal in mind

Will Holcomb V is teeing it up at the Jones Cup with one big goal in mind

Will Holcomb V is teeing it up at the Jones Cup with one big goal in mind https://ift.tt/36DQ0FV

The driving range at Spring Creek Country Club, a nine-hole facility in Crockett, Texas, was practically at the end of Will Holcomb V’s driveway as a kid. Holcomb can’t tell you how many times he found himself in an intense game at Spring Creek – often one in which he wouldn’t be allowed to use his driver, but would still have to give up strokes anyway. He was always welcome, and he was always challenged.

“Doesn’t matter if you’re 100 with one lung and one leg … or if you’re 14 or 15, just a good group of guys who play together and compete and anybody is invited,” Holcomb said. “There’s trash talk and I can’t tell you how many times somebody has said something while I was over a putt.”

It’s no wonder Holcomb craves that setting. As a fifth-year senior on the Sam Houston State roster, Holcomb recently found himself less than excited about going to golf practice as he helped a friend with a home project. But when he got to the golf course, he discovered head coach Brandt Kieschnick had planned an up-and-down competition.

Holcomb’s switch flipped – instant engagement.

“I love it – that’s what I want to do,” he said. “I want to just beat somebody. I don’t know where I got that from.”

The switch will flip again on Friday as Holcomb tees it up among the world’s best amateurs at the Jones Cup, a 54-hole event at Ocean Forest Golf Club in Sea Island, Georgia. The objective is simple: Holcomb wants to play his way onto the U.S. Walker Cup team.

No one else like him

As Kieschnick likes to say, there’s a Navy SEAL-style discipline to the way Holcomb goes about business, and the killer instinct figures in. Holcomb thinks he’s such a good match-play player because he hates to lose more than he likes to win.

“He wants to win more than anyone out there,” Kieschnick said.

Discipline is maybe the unseen layer to Holcomb’s success – or at the least the one that gets overlooked. Holcomb is a quick talker and a cut-up, and those qualities come through first. Personality was arguably the biggest takeaway from Holcomb’s break-out performance at the 2019 U.S. Amateur, when he played his way to the semifinals after entering the week ranked No. 328 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking.

“He proved to himself that his good golf is as good as anybody’s good golf in the country,” Kieshnick said of that week. “He’s continued to prove that.”

Will Holcomb and Brandt Kieschnick

Will Holcomb with Sam Houston State coach Brandt Kieschnick. (Photo: Sam Houston State Athletics)

Kieschnick saw a kid with the whole package on the recruiting trail in the summer of 2015. Sam Houston State had finished the previous season as a top-50 team in the nation, and Kieschnick really wanted the fast-talking player from Crockett with serious game. Keischnick secured the commitment over dinner at the Holcomb family’s table.

There are no boring moments with Holcomb on the roster.

“He would hit shots – he’d be trying to hook this 3-iron, he’d yell hook and he would spin on his feet three three times round for that ball to hook,” Kieschnick said. “That’s how much he talked to the ball. He’s spinning his body three full circles for that thing to hook.”

“When he hits a shot and he gets a good bounce he says, ‘The good lord takes care of the needy boy,” and he just keeps going.”

The Holcomb file is equal parts one-liners and statistics. It speaks of faith and character. Holcomb has steadily improved on the golf course because of a single-minded commitment, but Keischnick also remembers Holcomb coming to his office the summer after his freshman year to talk about proposing to his girlfriend. Holcomb and Graycie were ultimately married in August. Holcomb broke his foot at the wedding, but told his coach he’d play through it – and did.

“He played the whole semester in a boot, was our No. 1 player, almost won a couple times,” Kieschnick said. “… It was just the most amazing thing you ever saw.”

One box left to check

With a transition approaching, Holcomb would like to close this chapter as a Walker Cupper.

“I wouldn’t have gone to the South Beach (International Amateur) and I wouldn’t be here if it weren’t for the Walker Cup,” Holcomb said flatly. “I’ll get to play plenty of golf in this life, I didn’t really necessarily have to play any more.”

Realistically, Holcomb, as a U.S. Amateur semifinalist, was one match away from serious consideration for the last U.S. Walker Cup team. Ultimately, however, it took two more years and a head-turning stroke-play performance at the inaugural Maridoe Amateur in December to lift him into the conversation for the squad that will compete at Seminole Golf Club in Juno Beach, Florida, on May 8-9.

“I’ve wanted to be on the team,” said Holcomb. “I want to play against the Europeans. I want to compete in match play with the best amateurs in the country and so I’ve always wanted to play it.”

Only one position on the 10-man team is spoken for – it went to Tyler Strafaci as winner of the 2020 U.S. Amateur. The USGA’s International Team Selection Committee will select three more players (the top three players in the WAGR) at the conclusion of the Jones Cup. Holcomb currently is ranked No. 71.

Will Holcomb, Maridoe Amateur medalist

Will Holcomb with his trophy as Maridoe Amateur medalist.

It’s safe to assume the winner of the Jones Cup, if he is American, will get serious consideration. Holcomb knows what he has to do.

A 16-man practice squad invited was selected the week before Holcomb’s run at the Maridoe Amateur or he would conceivably have been in that elite group. After he wrapped up the stroke-play medal, Holcomb was introduced to Walker Cup captain Nathanial Crosby. He relished the face time.

“It’s kind of like, you’re not going to want to go on a date with somebody unless you’ve probably met them, even if everybody says great things about them, you don’t know them,” Holcomb reasoned.

The Maridoe medal amounted to a major feather in Holcomb’s cap. It goes along with a runner-up at the North & South Amateur, the Trinity Forest Amateur title and a top-10 finish at the Azalea Invitational.

“He truly believes he’s one of the best in the country and he’s not afraid to play anybody,” Kieschnick said. “He definitely respects his competition, he knows he has to play well. He wants the moment and he’s kind of the guy who wants the ball. I think the bigger the scenario, the better he is.”

This moment is big, and as he always does before major amateur events, Holcomb has spent three days at Ocean Forest getting lines and committing to spots. He’s already noted the small greens there, which will work in his favor. After all, some of his crowning achievements have come at Pinehurst No. 2, where he deftly navigated tricky green complexes. That’s not to say it’s the only place he’s a factor.

As Holcomb noted, “Cup’s the same width at Pinehurst as it is here, I think.”

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Rory McIlroy gets early-morning surprise in Waste Management Phoenix Open debut

Rory McIlroy gets early-morning surprise in Waste Management Phoenix Open debut

Rory McIlroy gets early-morning surprise in Waste Management Phoenix Open debut https://ift.tt/3cGyxjT

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Rory McIlroy’s first tee shot in his first visit to the Arizona desert delivered an early-morning eye-opener.

“I was really surprised how far my tee shot went on 10 to get into the desert there,” he said a few hours after starting his first round on the back nine at 8 a.m. local time with the temperature about 50 degrees. “It was like a 340 run-out. I had no idea I could hit 340 in that temperature.”

McIlroy went on to post a 1-under 70 in his first trip to the Waste Management Phoenix Open but not before running into some early trouble.

“From there, didn’t really have shot, hit it into the front bunker and then I just made a mess of it from there, thinned the bunker shot into the next bunker and didn’t get that one up-and-down.

“On the next hit it behind a couple of trees and had to chip out and hit a really good wedge shot in and just missed the putt.”

McIlroy got it going after that double-bogey, bogey start.

“It was a good battle back. Being 3-over through 2 isn’t ideal, especially on this golf course where you sort of need to make birdies,” he said.

McIlroy made some of those birdies on 13, 15 and 16. After making the turn, he birdied two more holes, the second and third, then strung together four straight pars before a bogey on 8. A par on 9 closed out his round.

There was only a smattering of fans on 16 to witness his chip-in from 32 feet for a two. Nonetheless, McIlroy said he was glad to see some fans back on the PGA Tour.

“Yeah, it was nice to play in front of people today. Just to get clapped for some good shots and good putts and get encouragement from some greens to tees, it was really nice to see people out here.”

McIlroy, along with playing partners Daniel Berger and Xander Schauffele, should have perfect weather for Friday’s second round when they tee off No. 1 at 12:20 p.m. local time.

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Golf Instruction with Steve Scott: How to hit out of a fairway bunker

Golf Instruction with Steve Scott: How to hit out of a fairway bunker

Golf Instruction with Steve Scott: How to hit out of a fairway bunker https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

If you want to hit it solid out of fairway bunkers, approach it shallow and avoid the chunkers.

In this week’s episode of “Golf Instruction with Steve Scott,” learn how to properly hit out of a fairway bunker.

Scott, the PGA head golf professional at the Outpost Club, founder of the Silver Club Golfing Society and a PGA Tour Live analyst, has taken his thorough knowledge of the game and broken it down into digestible lessons from which anyone can benefit in Golfweek‘s series, “Golf Instruction with Steve Scott.”

Check out these step-by-step instructions and tips in the video above and share your before and after videos and photos with us on Twitter with #GolfweekInstruction.

Click here to watch previous episodes of “Golf Instruction with Steve Scott” including Gator-clamp putting, iron play and flop shots.

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Bubba Watson revs up fans with driver on par-3 16th hole at Waste Management Phoenix Open pro-am

Bubba Watson revs up fans with driver on par-3 16th hole at Waste Management Phoenix Open pro-am

Bubba Watson revs up fans with driver on par-3 16th hole at Waste Management Phoenix Open pro-am https://ift.tt/3muUKmc

Bubba Watson has long been one of the bombers on the PGA Tour. He can also be one heck of a showman.

During Wednesday’s pro-am at the Waste Management Phoenix Open, Watson busted out his pink Ping driver — yes, driver — on the famous par-3 16th hole at TPC Scottsdale.

With an open stance and about a ¾-swing, Watson makes contact and sends the ball flying. Figures he would stick his shot on the green.

A smattering of fans were on hand in the arena to witness the feat, which is pretty remarkable considering from the tips that hole plays not much longer than about 160 yards.

 

During his first round on Thursday, Watson made par on No. 16 after his tee shot landed on the left fringe, about hole high to the back-pin location.

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Jon Rahm said he’ll leave any tournament, even the Masters, to be present for son’s birth

Jon Rahm said he’ll leave any tournament, even the Masters, to be present for son’s birth

Jon Rahm said he’ll leave any tournament, even the Masters, to be present for son’s birth https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Phil Mickelson once famously competed in the 1999 U.S. Open with his mind on home, as his wife Amy was close to delivering the couple’s first baby.

Fellow Sun Devil Jon Rahm could be facing a similar situation in April at the Masters, as his wife Kelley is pregnant with their first child.

For now, Rahm says he’s sticking to his playing schedule but is making backup plans.

“I think it’s second week of March is going to be week 36, and as my mom has told me, because she’s a midwife many times, starting that week it can come any day,” he said on Wednesday ahead of the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

“I’ve talked about it before and we’ve talked about it with her. No matter where I am and what I’m doing, if the phone rings I’m flying back, and I’m going back home to be there for the birth of my son. Before anybody asks, yes, if I’m at Augusta and I’m playing well and she starts getting, you know, starts, I’m flying back. I would never miss the birth of my first-born in a million years, or any born for that matter.”

The couple got married a little over a year ago. They met at Arizona State where he was the standout golfer and she was a track & field athlete.

Rahm’s already thinking ahead, so much so that he’s hoping to be allowed to bend one of the primary rules at Augusta National.

“I don’t know how we’re going to do it at Augusta because we can’t have our phones in. I might need to ask for an exception.”

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Letter: Lynch is OB on Patrick Reed and the gambling connection

Letter: Lynch is OB on Patrick Reed and the gambling connection

Letter: Lynch is OB on Patrick Reed and the gambling connection https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

(Editor’s note: This letter to the editor was submitted in response to a column posted on Golfweek. Got an opinion? Sent it to us at [email protected].)

Golfweek columnist Eamon Lynch is prone to inflammatory pieces that often land in the deep rough.

His most recent jab on the Patrick Reed rules dustup at the Farmers Insurance Open airmailed the out-of-bounds stakes by a wide margin.

How Lynch somehow ties gambling in on this episode is a head-scratcher that will leave your scalp bleeding. He inexplicably tries to portray gambling — one of man’s more seedy pursuits — as something honorable and above reproach, or it should be or something.

“But there are no ShotLink metrics for integrity, and just one seed of doubt can be corrosive in sports gambling. Folks who lose bets often cry foul, as an hour spent at any table in Vegas will illustrate, but the bedrock upon which betting in golf must stand is transparency, a firm belief among punters that everything is above board, that scores have standing, that rules are equitably applied.”

Has Lynch watched an NFL game in the last 20 years? How about the NBA? Does he think the rules are equitably applied in those contests? When was the last time LeBron James was called for traveling even though he routinely tucks the ball and rushes like a running back going for a first down?

A lot of fans thought the Green Bay defensive back shouldn’t have been called for interference on a Tampa Bay receiver in the recent NFC Championship game even if he had a firm grip on the guy’s jersey and was obviously impeding his route. It was a call so obvious Stevie Wonder could have made it. $154 million was legally bet on the Super Bowl last year. Shaky officiating doesn’t seem to be hurting the take on the NFL

Possibly a bigger question is why the PGA Tour — with its near-constant push to promote the squeaky clean image of the game and its players — has chosen to get involved in gambling. Do they not realize that problem gambling is a disease that has ruined millions of men and women and destroyed the lives of countless families?

To Lynch and the PR flaks, it’s all good,

“Like most major sports leagues, the PGA Tour has announced several partnerships in the betting space, eager to secure its share of a lucrative revenue stream. It’s smart business. The scope for gambling on golf is almost limitless — on winners, on hole scores, on shot results.”

What’s next …. “Gambling, the official addiction of the PGA Tour?”

Wayne Mills is a member of the Golf Writers Association of America and a Senior Course Rater for Golfweek Magazine.

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Srixon Z-Star, Z-Star XV golf balls

Srixon Z-Star, Z-Star XV golf balls

Srixon Z-Star, Z-Star XV golf balls https://ift.tt/2O7nfLm

Gear: Srixon Z-Star, Z-Star XV golf balls
Price: $42.99 per dozen
Specs: Three-piece, urethane-covered ball (Z-Star); Four-piece, urethane-covered ball (Z-Star XV). Available in white and yellow.
Available: Feb. 26

For elite golfers, sacrifice when it comes to selecting a golf ball is not an option. They want distance off the tee, demand feel on approach shots and won’t compromise spin around the greens. For 2021, with the release of the seventh generation of the Srixon Z-Star and Z-Star XV, the Japanese company believes it has a pair of options that can give accomplished golfers precisely what they want.

The three-piece Z-Star features a large core that is very soft in the center and gradually gets firmer near its edges. Srixon refers to it as a FastLayer core, and it is designed to provide more ball speed off the tee with a softer feel.

Srixon Z-Star (2021)

Srixon Z-Star. (David Dusek/Golfweek)

The core is encased in a mid-layer, which has been made firmer, then covered by an updated urethane cover. Srixon gave the ball a new 338-dimple pattern that the company said will make it more aerodynamic and better able to bore through the wind. The cover itself also is slightly thicker, so the grooves in short irons and wedges should be able to grab it more effectively to generate spin on approach shots, chips and pitch shots.

To further enhance spin, Srixon added a coating to the ball called Spin Skin. Srixon has used Spin Skin coatings in the past to improve performance on short-game shots. This version has an additive the company calls Slide-Ring Material (SeRM), which is designed to distribute the force of wedge shots more evenly to increase durability.

Srixon Z-Star XV (2021)

Srixon Z-Star XV. (David Dusek/Golfweek)

With the four-piece Z-Star XV, Srixon put a greater emphasis on increasing distance. The ball has a soft, fast inner core that was updated for 2021 to be “more springy” for enhanced ball speed. By encasing it in a firmer core, then a mid-layer that is firmer still, Srixon can reduce spin off the tee and with longer clubs while still maintaining speed.

The Z-Star XV has the same 338-dimple pattern now found on the Z-Star.

Srixon said both balls will fly slightly lower than the previous generation, but the Z-Star XV will still fly higher than the Z-Star.

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