Remembering Jimmy Powell: PGA Tour Champions winner and a fighter for his fellow players

Remembering Jimmy Powell: PGA Tour Champions winner and a fighter for his fellow players

Remembering Jimmy Powell: PGA Tour Champions winner and a fighter for his fellow players https://ift.tt/2YvQGsy

When the Senior PGA Tour began as an actual sanctioned tour in 1980, it was seen by most golf fans as a chance to watch old favorites play against each other. And it was a chance for players who might have drifted away from competitiveness in their later 40s to feel like rookies again the minute they turned 50. It happened for players like Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player and Lee Trevino.

But the Senior PGA Tour, now called the PGA Tour Champions, was also a chance for strong golfers who never did much on the PGA Tour to get a second chance at being winners in big-time professional events. Such a player was California’s Jimmy Powell.

Powell, who died Jan. 16 in La Quinta, California — the day before his 86th birthday — of what the PGA Tour said was kidney failure, never won on the PGA Tour. While playing in a few PGA Tour events and even two full years on the tour, Powell spent most of the 1960s and 1970s as a talented club professional and teacher at courses like Indian Hills Golf Club in Riverside, Via Verde Country Club in San Dimas and Stevens Park  Golf Course in Dallas. And he was still an accomplished player, winning the Southern California PGA Championship three times.

Powell eventually joined the senior tour in 1985 and impressed fellow players with his game and his knowledge of the swing.

“He was always working on his swing,” said long-time Powell friend Al Geiberger. “He really knew the golf swing, We’ve lost a lot of knowledge of the golf swing.”

Geiberger played against Powell on the senior tour and with Powell in senior divisions of the Legends of Golf tournament. Powell won the senior division of that event twice, his two unofficial wins on the tour. But he also had four official wins, the first in 1990 and the last in 1996.

“He hung around that group from Dallas, Hogan and Nelson and a lot of names like that,” Geiberger said of Powell’s background. “A lot of teaching came out of Dallas.”

By 2000, Powell was playing fewer than a dozen tournaments on the tour, and just a few years after that he was playing only a handful of tournaments. His last official start on the PGA Tour Champions was in 2008. But he had taken advantage of his second chance at tour success and done well. And he did it all with rugged good looks that Geiberger would joke that Powell should have been a television cowboy star instead of a golf pro.

In recent years, Powell was fighting not for another trophy but for himself and a handful of players who he believed had fallen through the cracks in the PGA Tour’s pension system. While the PGA Tour had pension plans for players who started on the senior tour in the early 1980s and in the mid-1990s and later, Powell, Geiberger and a group of players like Powell friend Gibby Gilbert felt they had been left out.

“Jimmy was a big fighter for fairness,” Geiberger said. “We talked a lot about that. Jimmy knew how much money the PGA Tour had for a non-profit and where the money was. I think he was a thorn in the tour’s side.”

Jimmy Powell, left, and partner Al Geiberger hold their trophies after winning first place in the Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf Demaret Division at The Club at Savannah Harbor.

Jimmy Powell, left, and partner Al Geiberger hold their trophies after winning first place in the Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf Demaret Division at The Club at Savannah Harbor.

It was just a few months ago that Geiberger last saw Powell at The Palms Golf Club in La Quinta, where Geiberger’s son was hosting an annual tournament. Neither Powell nor Geiberger played because of the aches and pains 80-year-old golfers feel. But Geiberger was impressed that Powell was still talking about golf and the swing.

“We sat and talked for about an hour,’ Geiberger said. “He was still talking about, well, we’re getting older, we get weaker shafts. He was really technically about the weaker senior shaft.”

Golf is a game of a lifetime, and for Jimmy Powell, it was a game that he never left.

Larry Bohannan is the golf writer for the Palm Springs Desert Sun. He can be reached at (760) 778-4633 or [email protected]. Follow him on Facebook or on Twitter at @Larry_Bohannan. 

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Paul Casey storms atop the leaderboard at Omega Dubai Desert Classic

Paul Casey storms atop the leaderboard at Omega Dubai Desert Classic

Paul Casey storms atop the leaderboard at Omega Dubai Desert Classic https://ift.tt/3nmXDpv

Paul Casey used an eagle on the final hole of the day to move to 15 under and vault into the lead after the third round of the Omega Dubai Desert Classic in the United Arab Emirates.

Casey didn’t drop a shot on Saturday while posting six birdies along with the eagle. His 64 tied the lowest round of the tournament and pushed him a shot ahead of Robert MacIntyre and two ahead of Brandon Stone.

To his credit, Casey used a booming driver to find advantageous positions throughout the day in gaining the lead.

Omega Dubai Desert Classic: Leaderboard

“To finish off with an eagle was pretty cool. You can never say flawless … it was very controlled, challenging at the same time with a little bit of wind here and there,” said Casey, an Arizona State product. “The strong asset I have in this game is the way I drive it, the length. The game has gone more and more towards length and I’m fortunate that I’m still able to lean on that strength and compete out here.”

Sergio Garcia, who bolted out on Thursday with a 66 but followed with a pedestrian 73 on Friday, jumped back within range of the leaders with a third-round 67, which puts him five strokes behind Casey heading into the final round.

Other notables near the top are Justin Rose (-8), and a strong group at 7 under that includes Tommy Fleetwood, Lee Westwood, Padraig Harrington and Shane Lowry.

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Farmers Insurance Open: Saturday tee times, TV and streaming info

Farmers Insurance Open: Saturday tee times, TV and streaming info

Farmers Insurance Open: Saturday tee times, TV and streaming info https://ift.tt/3iWR7Fu

The PGA Tour’s West Coast swing moves from the desert to the San Diego coast for this week’s 2021 Farmers Insurance Open, where famed Torrey Pines plays host once again to a loaded field.

Viktor Hovland leads through 36 holes after carding a birdie on his final hole of the day (No. 9) to finish the round 7-under 65 on the South Course. Hovland, at 9 under, sits one shot ahead of Jon Rahm, Adam Scott, Tony Finau, Lanto Griffin, Ryan Palmer and Patrick Reed in second. Three players sit T-8 at 7 under.

Among the most notable to miss the cut are Brooks Koepka, Jason Day and Bubba Watson. Koepka has missed three consecutive cuts, the longest stretch of his career.

Check out Saturday’s tee times, TV and streaming info for the third round of the Farmers Insurance Open below.

All times are listed in Eastern.

Farmers: Leaderboard | Photos

Tee times

Hole 1 – South Course

Tee Time Players
10:40 a.m. Hideki Matsuyama, K.J. Choi, Denny McCarthy
10:50 a.m. Pat Perez, Danny Lee, Roger Sloan
11 a.m. Cameron Davis, John Huh, Gary Woodland
11:10 p.m. Bo Hoag, Brandon Hagy, Doug Ghim
11:20 a.m. Chase Seiffert, Cameron Tringale, Marc Leishman
11:30 a.m. Wyndham Clark, Lucas Glover, Ted Potter, Jr.
11:40 a.m. Harry Higgs, Carlos Ortiz, Talor Gooch
11:50 a.m. Brandt Snedeker, Max Homa, Sam Ryder
12 p.m. Rory McIlroy, Adam Hadwin, Rory Sabbatini
12:10 p.m. Richy Werenski, Will Zalatoris, Jason Kokrak
12:20 p.m. Peter Malnati, Alex Noren, Sam Burns
12:30 p.m. Patrick Reed, Will Gordon, Robby Shelton
12:40 p.m. Tony Finau, Lanto Griffin, Ryan Palmer
12:50 p.m. Viktor Hovland, Jon Rahm, Adam Scott

Hole 10 – South Course

Tee Time Players
10:40 a.m. Charl Schwartzel, Joseph Bramlett, Kyle Mendoza
10:50 a.m. Kyle Stanley, Kelly Kraft, Grayson Murray
11 a.m. Xander Schauffele, Steve Stricker, Bill Haas
11:10 p.m. Henrik Norlander, Rhein Gibson, Tim Wilkinson
11:20 a.m. Matt Jones, Sepp Straka, Kevin Streelman
11:30 a.m. Dylan Frittelli, Sungjae Im, Justin Suh
11:40 a.m. Cameron Percy, Xinjun Zhang, Bronson Burgoon
11:50 a.m. Luke List, Matthew NeSmith, J.T. Poston
12 p.m. Kevin Stadler, Jason Dufner, Phil Mickelson
12:10 p.m. Michael Kim, Corey Conners, Troy Merritt
12:20 p.m. Rickie Fowler, Tom Lewis, Francesco Molinari
12:30 p.m. Louis Oosthuizen, Byeong Hun An
12:40 p.m. Tain Lee, Tyler McCumber


TV, radio info

Saturday, Jan. 30

TV

Golf Channel (watch for free on fuboTV): 1-3 p.m.
NBC: 3-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 10:30 a.m.-6 p.m.
Twitter: 10:30-11:45 a.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6 p.m.

Sunday, Jan. 31

TV

Golf Channel (watch for free on fuboTV): 1-3 p.m.
NBC: 3-6 p.m.

STREAMING

PGA Tour Live: 11:15 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
Twitter: 11:15-12:30 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 1-6:30 p.m.

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Farmers Insurance Open: Finau is position to win again, Hovland's spectacular 65 grabs lead

Farmers Insurance Open: Finau is position to win again, Hovland's spectacular 65 grabs lead

Farmers Insurance Open: Finau is position to win again, Hovland's spectacular 65 grabs lead https://ift.tt/3iWR7Fu

SAN DIEGO – Tony Finau is in position to win.

Again.

With a 5-under-par 67 on the North Course in Friday’s second round of the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines, a round that featured brutal conditions including spells of rain, hail – yes, hail – high winds and icy temperatures, Finau moved to 8 under and in a familiar spot – on the first page of the leaderboard.

But what has become unfamiliar to Finau is the winner’s circle.

Despite his abundance of power and talent, despite playing in a Ryder Cup and Presidents Cup, and despite finishing in the top-10 34 times around the world since the start of 2017 – six of those being of the runner-up variety – Finau is still sitting on one PGA Tour title – the 2016 Puerto Rico Open, an opposite field event.

Farmers Insurance OpenLeaderboard | Photos

It’s been a puzzling stretch of strong play that’s only lacked a victory. Many in golf circle’s have scratched their heads while saying Finau should have won his second title by now, let alone a third and a fourth and beyond. Others have questioned whether or not one of the nicest players you will ever meet lacks a killer instinct. A few have wondered if inner demons arrive on Sundays and haunt him psychologically.

His latest close call came in last week’s American Express in the southern California desert, where he shared the 54-hole lead, birdied the first two holes in the final round but got passed by Si Woo Kim and finished fourth.

All Finau said he can do is keep putting himself in position to win No. 2. If he’s having sleepless nights during this winless stretch, he hasn’t shown it.

“Not very long,” Finau said when asked how long it took him to get the American Express. “I was pretty enthusiastic. I wasn’t playing some great golf I feel like before, the couple weeks leading up, practice sessions and things, but I was pleased after last week and think it’s showing this week.

“There’s some mistakes I for sure made on Sunday, but there’s mistakes I made throughout the week so I can’t single out Sunday as being the reason why (I didn’t win). I wasn’t able to play and finish a few shots better to win the golf tournament, but I was very encouraged after I left last week on some of the things I’ve been working on. It’s been nice to put together 36 holes, a good 36 to start this week.

“At the end of the day sports is about winning. I’m at that point in my career where it is about winning and every week I tee it up I challenge myself to put myself in contention to do that and I’ve done that nicely here with 36 holes to go.”

Viktor Hovland during the second round of the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines – South Course. (Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports)

Finau has plenty of company at the top of the leaderboard. Viktor Hovland shot a terrific 7-under-par 65 on the difficult South Course – the best score on the South this week – to gain a one-shot lead. The round included a 4-under-par 32 on the back nine (his first nine) and a finishing birdie on the front nine. To make just one bogey on a day like Friday, on a course like the South, says something about the talent possessed by Hovland.

On his tail at 8 under are Finau, 2017 Farmers champion Jon Rahm (67 on the North), Adam Scott (69 on the South), Lanto Griffin (70 on the South), Ryan Palmer (70 on the North), and first-round leader Patrick Reed (72 on the South).

Three others players are at 7 under, three more at 6 under.

“The last couple weeks I’ve been in Oklahoma and it’s been really cold, so I’ve had probably three, four layers on practicing and I think that’s helped me for this week,” Hovland said. “It got really cold and obviously raining and hail, so being Norwegian, I think that also helps. Just played really solid and made some putts.

“I think especially playing a tough course like the South Course, you can’t really fake it, especially in these conditions. Playing a hard golf course and then playing well, that I think is what gives me the ultimate kind of belief that I played really well today. You just can’t really fake it. But it’s another day tomorrow and we’ve got two more rounds left, so it’s definitely not going to roll over and give anything to you.”

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Farmers Insurance Open: Adam Scott in ideal position despite searching for best form

Farmers Insurance Open: Adam Scott in ideal position despite searching for best form

Farmers Insurance Open: Adam Scott in ideal position despite searching for best form https://ift.tt/3iWR7Fu

SAN DIEGO – Adam Scott is just short of clicking on all cylinders.

That’s not good news for the rest of the field.

Despite feeling he’s still got work to do to be in ideal form, Scott is on the first page of the leaderboard through two rounds of the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines. With a 3-under-par 69 Friday on the South Course in wicked conditions featuring spots of hail and rain, strong winds and icy temps, the Aussie and 2013 Masters champion moved to 8 under and a share of the lead before play was suspended at 3:23 p.m. local time, 6:23 p.m. ET. Both the South and North courses were playing extremely long due to overnight storms dumping 0.9 inches of rain.

“I’m probably slightly underprepared for where I want to be, but I’m working on that,” Scott said. “Hopefully I can get to spend enough time practicing and playing and seeing the coach and doing the training and stuff, but it’s a little tricky at the moment to get it all done. But I’m trying not to force it.

Farmers Insurance OpenLeaderboard | Photos

“I feel like things are in a good spot. Obviously I’m playing OK. I play fairly solid every week I play, it’s just those small margins I think that have been missing and they take some consistency to accumulate and push you up to that top level.

“I feel like getting it in the clubhouse has been the hardest thing. The swing, although there’s been lots of good ones, there’s just a couple loose ones coming in. Almost every round I’ve played this year it’s been like that. I think I’m nearly getting there. I’d like to finish it off nicely on the weekend.

“If I do that, I think I’ll be in with a shot.”

Scott, ranked No. 23 in the Official World Golf Rankings, tied for 21st in the Sentry Tournament of Champions and tied for 41st in the Sony Open in Hawaii to begin his 2021. Scott moved to 9 under with an eagle on the sixth hole – his 15th hole of the day – but bogeyed his next two holes. He finished with a seven-footer for birdie.

“The wind wasn’t violent, but the temperature going down just makes that wind so heavy and the ball goes so short,” Scott said. “It’s really hard to adjust perfectly to that on the fly. You’ve already played nine holes, then the temperature drops and to all of a sudden gauge that a 9‑iron’s only going to go 125 is a hard call to make.

“I think probably everyone out there is in that situation; you’re just doing your best and trying not to make a big error, but it’s hard to all of a sudden see that the ball’s going 30 yards shorter than normal.”

Scott made his tournament debut in 2019 and shot 19 under to finish second, two shots shy of winner Justin Rose. Scott’s year-end schedule in past years, when he plays out a string of tournaments in his homeland, has kept him from playing the Farmers Insurance Open more often.

Still, in his limited chances here, and his game just not 100 percent sharp, he’s confident heading into the weekend.

“I’d like to take advantage of the next two days given the position I’ve put myself in,” Scott said. “It’s been a little while since I’ve kind of been right up there heading into weekends, so looking forward to what’s to come the next couple days.”

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Pro golfer Lonnie Nielsen dies after battle with dementia

Pro golfer Lonnie Nielsen dies after battle with dementia

Pro golfer Lonnie Nielsen dies after battle with dementia https://ift.tt/3cmD8Ye

Professional golfer Lonnie Nielsen, a longtime South Florida resident, died last week after a battle with dementia. He was 67.

Nielsen learned golf on sand green courses in Iowa and was an All-American golfer at the University of Iowa. Despite his success, he wasn’t sure if he wanted to play golf for a living or use his business degree.

“I’d like to turn pro,” Nielsen said at the time, “but I don’t want to do it if I don’t think I can do it well.”

Nielson turned professional and played the PGA Tour full time from 1978-84. His big moment was tying for fifth at the nearby 1979 Ed McMahon-Jaycees Quad Cities Open.

But there weren’t enough of those big moments, so Nielsen became a PGA Professional and spent 20 years as the director of golf at Crag Burn Golf Club in East Aurora, New York. He qualified for the 1986 PGA at Inverness and finished tied for 11th, which still ranks as the highest finish by a club professional in the PGA.

He kept competing and won more than 100 Western New York Section titles and was named the PGA Professional Player of the Year three times. He won so often, the WNYPGA eventually named its Player of the Year Award in his honor.

Upon nearing 50, Nielsen had another difficult decision: Remain at his secure club job or take a shot at the PGA Tour Champions, knowing he would have to earn his way onto the 50-and-older circuit.

“When Lonnie first told the club he wanted to play on the Champions Tour, they were like ‘Go ahead. You’ll always have a job here,’ ” said Steve Barber, a PGA Professional and one of Nielsen’s close friends.

“But once he left, it was more like ‘good luck.’ The pressure for him to play well and support his family was gigantic, but he did it.”

Nielsen not only earned a spot on the PGA Tour Champions, but he won a pair of titles: the 2007 Commerce Bank Championship and the 2008 Dick’s Sporting Good Open. Nielsen played in 191 PGA Tour Champions events, compiling 33 top-10s while earning more than $5.2 million.

“The PGA of America is deeply saddened by the passing of three-time PGA Professional Player of the Year Lonnie Nielsen, who left an indelible mark upon his peers while competing at the highest level and with countless amateurs he inspired in the Western New York PGA Section,” said PGA President Jim Richerson. “But perhaps Lonnie’s greatest gift was his humble approach to success and being a premier ambassador for the game of golf.”

Nielsen had a sneaky sense of humor. Once, when he was playing at Pebble Beach, some fans asked him if he was Jack Nicklaus because he resembled the Golden Bear. Nielsen quickly said he was “Jack’s son,” and the fans followed him along, asking him questions about his famous “dad.”

Nielsen, who was 14 years younger, was close to Nicklaus in the locker room, which was almost always done alphabetically.

“Lonnie was a very humble guy,” said PGA of America historian Bob Denney, who also attended the University of Iowa. “I remember watching him live at one event where you could see him mouthing the words ‘Got to close.’ Lonnie had trouble closing out tournaments. But what a great guy.”

Nielsen moved to Palm Beach Gardens during his PGA Tour Champions career, living at PGA National. He moved to Port St. Lucie about a decade ago and played in the PGA Winter Championships as recently as two years ago and played Treasure Coast golf courses with a group called the “PGA Dogs.” He died in New York.

He is survived by his wife, Mary Jo, daughters Sarah and Mollie and son Andy, as well as four grandchildren and three sisters.

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Dartmouth College reinstates golf programs, but Hanover Country Club to remain closed

Dartmouth College reinstates golf programs, but Hanover Country Club to remain closed

Dartmouth College reinstates golf programs, but Hanover Country Club to remain closed https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Less than seven months after it announced that a series of sports teams — including the men’s and women’s golf teams — would be eliminated, the school announced on Friday that all five sports will be reinstated and the Ivy League school will begin “a comprehensive, external review of the athletic department’s policies, practices, and governance model.”

The decision came after talk of a possible class action sex discrimination lawsuit against the university surfaced. In July, the college cited the pandemic and resulting financial challenges in making its decision. The school, located in Hanover, N.H., also announced the closing of the university-run Hanover Country Club at the time, although Friday’s news is not expected to overturn that decision.

Those decisions were expected to save the university about $2 million. The college-owned golf course had reportedly operated in the red for many years.

But with a potential Title IX infraction looming and a potential lawsuit stirring, the college decided to bring the golf programs back, along with women’s swimming and diving and men’s lightweight rowing.

“To determine which teams would be eliminated, director of athletics Harry Sheehy and his team established a series of factors and considerations to be used in their assessment,” Dartmouth President Phil Hanlon wrote in a letter released on Friday. “We have recently learned that elements of the data that athletics used to confirm continued Title IX compliance may not have been complete. In light of this discovery, Dartmouth will immediately reinstate all five teams.”

“We are delighted that Dartmouth has agreed to reinstate the women’s golf and swimming and diving teams, conduct a gender equity review, and ensure that all aspects of its intercollegiate athletic program comply with Title IX,” said Arthur H. Bryant of Bailey & Glasser, LLP, the lead attorney for a group of female student-athletes preparing to file a lawsuit. “Our clients, who stood up for their rights, are incredibly proud. They sincerely hope that Dartmouth will use this opportunity to become a model for gender equity in athletics nationwide.”

According to the Dartmouth website:

The agreement states that Dartmouth will begin the search for coaches for the women’s teams by Feb. 1 and that the teams, once formed and trained, will begin to compete as soon as practicable, in accordance with Dartmouth’s COVID-19 guidelines and Ivy League decisions on competition. The teams must remain in place at least through the 2024-2025 academic year, the agreement says.

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Guy who made first albatross at Bandon Dunes' Sheep Ranch: 'It's brilliant.'

Guy who made first albatross at Bandon Dunes' Sheep Ranch: 'It's brilliant.'

Guy who made first albatross at Bandon Dunes' Sheep Ranch: 'It's brilliant.' https://ift.tt/2MA60BJ

The breeze was firm on Wednesday, Willi Sheller remembers. Probably coming in at about a 20 mile-per-hour clip. He had pull-hooked his drive halfway onto an adjacent fairway, one of his first poor tee shots of the afternoon.

Still, with just over 200 yards between him and the 18th green on the sparkling new Sheep Ranch at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort, Sheller couldn’t help but soak in the moment. The Olympia, Washington, native was wrapping up his fifth round on the complex, and stood a solid 3-wood away from a crack at eagle. Whether it came to pass or not, Sheller realized he was almost done with his yearly visit to one of his favorite places on the planet.

And why be upset about one errant tee shot? Sheller and his buddies had stalled and maneuvered through rough weather, even witnessing a rare Bandon lightning strike — “the chances of me getting struck by lightning are probably better than getting an albatross,” he later joked — and now he was about to hit his final approach of the trip.

The ball was below his feet, but he had a clear line to the green. He lined up the shot and let it rip.

Left to right, Jeremy Byrd, Matthew Perry (his wife lent Sheller the pants), Willi Sheller, Ben Dymecki. (Picture by caddie Jason Warble.)

“I gave it swing and caught it so pure,” he said. “Watching that ball fly was glorious.”

It bounced on the green and Sheller heard it hit the stick, as did one of his buddies.

“Did that … ?” his friend said.

“I think so …” Sheller responded.

Since the final hole at Sheep Ranch, a Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw design, has an elevated green, Sheller had to wait until the foursome got up to the putting surface. When they did, he realized the group was one ball shy.

“Lo and behold, it was in,” he said.

After dancing, jumping and rejoicing, the group got a little bonus tidbit from caddie Jason Warble, who informed them Sheller had just dropped the first albatross in the history of the new course.

“It’s brilliant,” he told Golfweek on Friday, after returning to his home outside Portland, Oregon, where he recently accepted a job at a winery as a cellar master. “I feel like I was so humbled by the course, but I got one of the best rewards you could get. I feel really honored.”

Sheller said he started with the game when his grandmother introduced him at age 5. He played in high school and remembers winning an award for something novel — “I think it was for being the guy most likely to drive it 300 yards and still not make par.” He didn’t play often through college, but has renewed his passion for the game in recent years, playing as many as 100 rounds a year. He plays to an 8.7 handicap and his home course is Michelbook Country Club in McMinnville, just outside Portland.

The scorecard of Willi Sheller, who had the first albatross in the history of Sheep Ranch.

And what about the pants, the ones that have been all the rage on golf Twitter? He borrowed them from a buddy’s wife after days of traipsing around Bandon Dunes in the cold. They’re women’s ski pants, and Sheller feels no shame, even though his photo has brought numerous hilarious responses, dubbing him “Oregon Man” and other nicknames, all while harassing his choice of clothing.

“Hey, whatever,” he said. “I was the toastiest one in the group.”

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2021 Junior Invitational at Sage Valley canceled due to coronavirus precautions

2021 Junior Invitational at Sage Valley canceled due to coronavirus precautions

2021 Junior Invitational at Sage Valley canceled due to coronavirus precautions https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

The 2021 Junior Invitational at Sage Valley Golf Club has been canceled due to COVID-19 concerns.

Pete Davis, chairman of the SVJI Sports Foundation said the decision to cancel the tournament came after exhausting all other options, but that the health of everyone involved was the top priority.

“While we’re disappointed to cancel the Junior Invitational, it’s imperative that we prioritize the health of all participants, families, golf course staff and others needed to stage a world-class event like this,” he said in a news release. “The Foundation Board, the Tournament Committee and the Club at Sage Valley examined every possible alternative, and we ultimately determined it was not feasible to host the tournament this year due to the ongoing issues with COVID-19, new travel restrictions and unknowns surrounding the vaccine rollout.”

Last year’s tournament also felt effects from the coronavirus. Spectator and media access was restricted following the first round in hopes of completing the event on schedule.

This year, was also supposed to be the inaugural girls’ event, was to be held alongside the Junior Invitational.

“This was going to be a historic year with the addition of the world’s top junior girl golfers, which makes this even more disappointing,” Davis said. “Eligibility for the 2022 Junior Invitational will begin anew. We’re saddened for the boys and girls aging out of the event, and we wish them the best in their bright futures in college golf and beyond. We look forward to a safe and strong return next March.”

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