Edmonton Journal

Presidents Cup spot would delight DeLaet

Saskatchew­an native takes methodical approach to wins, writes Darren Zary.

- Dzary@postmedia.com twitter.com/@DZfromtheS­P

The beard is back.

Donning a new crop of facial hair once again, Graham DeLaet is back in Saskatoon this week for the Graham Slam charity golf event and the brand-new DeLaet Cup junior tournament at Riverside Country Club.

DeLaet — who has $1,138,945 in earnings thus far this season on the PGA Tour, including five top10 finishes — is currently No. 72 in the FedExCup standings.

The 35-year-old Saskatchew­an native now has $10,517,575 in career PGA Tour earnings.

DeLaet won’t be teeing it up in the U.S. Open this week at Erin Hills in Wisconsin. Next up for him is the Travelers Championsh­ip June 22-25 in Hartford. The week after that is the Quicken Loans National in D.C. (June 29July 2), followed by the Greenbrier Classic (July 6-9) in West Virginia. He’ll take a couple weeks off before playing in the Canadian Open from July 27-30 at Glen Abbey.

“It’s weird — it’s just kind of the golf season here (Saskatchew­an) and we’re nearing the end of our schedule,” says DeLaet. “So it’s kind of getting to crunch-time before the playoffs. The goal is to make it all the way to Atlanta for that Tour championsh­ip. It opens a lot of doors for the next year. You have to play really well to get there, but that’s my goal.”

Postmedia caught up with DeLaet at Saskatoon’s Riverside Country Club:

Q What do you think of your season so far?

A I’d say mostly good. It’s been solid. I feel like the times that I have been in contention, I have kind of slipped back and finished that eighth, ninth, 10th or whatever, but that’s also solid golf. I mean, you have to play well to finish in the top 25 out there. People don’t realize that all the time. Any time you start piling up top 10s, it’s always good. The main goal is to be right in the hunt those last few holes and I haven’t had a chance yet this year.

Q There may be a fine line between winning on the Tour and not winning. What do you have to do to get there? What’s been missing?

A I think it’s just getting the first one and getting that monkey off my back, as much as anything. You see it all the times, guys who get a win, all of a sudden, boom, boom, boom and they rattle off three in a year or something like that. I hope that I’m that guy.

Q Since you’re not playing in the U.S. Open, who do you see performing well this week?

A I like Chappy’s (Valero Texas Open winner Kevin Chappell’s) chances this week. Obviously, Dustin (Johnson) and Jordan (Spieth) and Jason Day and Rory (McIlroy) — all the regulars — are all going to be there. Justin Rose is such a good ball-striker. I think he can kind of separate himself from the field by how well he hits it. That’s pretty important out there.

Q You have climbed up the Presidents Cup internatio­nal team standings, but still have a ways to go. How important is it to you to once again play in the Presidents Cup?

A I would love to be on that team, no question. (Internatio­nal captain) Nick Price texts me every time I play well and I know he’s cheering for me, too. I have to have a lot more steady finishes for him to legitimate­ly think about picking me. I’m aware of that. I’m a realist, but I want to be on that team.

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