The Province

Prolonged learning curve

Kizzire’s Tour education includes a tough round with Tiger

- DOUG FERGUSON

HONOLULU — Patton

Kizzire took longer than expected to reach the PGA Tour, but he figures every step was a learning experience. That includes his first victory, which came at Mayakoba, his six-hole playoff win at the Sony Open last year and even one of the more embarrassi­ng moments last year.

He played with Tiger Woods for the first time. Kizzire was so nervous on the opening tee shot at the Honda Classic that he hooked it into a palmetto bush and had to go back to the tee. He had rounds of 74-78 to miss the cut.

“Right there at the top,” he said Tuesday. “At the time, I don’t realize how good it is for me, but things that get me so excited I can hardly even perform and what makes me better. That was one of them . ... As painful as they are, those help.”

He had been a fan of Woods for as long as he could remember, and appreciate­d that he was the biggest star in golf by some margin.

Watching on TV was one thing. Being announced to him on the tee was different.

“I’ll feel more comfortabl­e next time I play with him,” Kizzire said. “I had a funny Instagram post after I played with him. It was like a first date with Tiger. I was pretty nervous, but soon I’ll be farting in front of him.”

KAPALUA CHANGES

The Plantation course at Kapalua might look the same when Xander Schauffele returns next year to defend his title.

But it probably won’t play the same.

Kapalua is shutting down the course next month for Bill

Coore and Ben Crenshaw to begin a restoratio­n project that will include a new surface, new greens, bunkers, pretty much everything from tee-to-green.

“Every single item on the golf course will be touched,” said Alex Nakajima, general manager of golf and tennis at Kapalua.

Coore was delighted to hear the grass Kapalua chose is “Celebratio­n Bermuda,” which he said was key to making the Plantation course play how it’s intended — fast. The last several years, the course has played soft. Previously, the 4-iron Gary Woodland hit into the 18th green would not have stopped rolling until it was on the green. Coore recalls telling one resort guest years ago to hit a club he normally hits 150 yards to the seventh green, even though he had 250 yards. It rolled to the green.

Mark Rolfing, a TV golf analyst who has lived at Kapalua from the start, summed it up best.

“For the average player, the course has become much harder,” he said. “For the best players in the world, the course has become much easier.”

Work is expected to be finished about two months before the Sentry Tournament of Champions starts.

WORLD RANKING

Under the revamped scoring system at the Tour Championsh­ip this year, the top player in the FedEx Cup starts the tournament at 10-under par, with the second player at 8 under and on down until the last five players in the 30-man field starts at even.

So the winner of the Tour Championsh­ip — and the FedEx Cup — might not have the best score that week.

One problem is what to do about world ranking points because of the staggered start. PGA Tour Commission­er

Jay Monahan says he can imagine the Tour Championsh­ip getting ranking points. “If I imagine it in general, I think it will,” he said.

The tour already has presented a proposal to the Official World Golf Ranking board, and a decision could come as early as April.

One scenario that makes the most sense is to keep score where everyone starts even, like a regular tournament, and award points accordingl­y.

THE DROP

More than leaving the flagstick in for putts on the green, the one new rule that got plenty of chatter in the first tournament of the year was the knee-length drop. “A bit absurd,” Bryson

DeChambeau said.

The question is how much attention it gets in a month.

The reason for the change from shoulder length was to get the ball in play. The original proposal was to drop it an inch above the ground, which was changed to eliminate any questions whether the ball was dropped or placed. Some rules experts felt it was important to retain a randomness of the drop.

The trouble at Kapalua was how it looked, with players at times looking like ballerinas trying to make sure the drop was level to their knees.

“I think the optics will become more comfortabl­e over time,” said Thomas

Pagel, senior managing director of governance for the USGA. “Think about what it was like at first when we went to shoulder height instead of dropping it over the back.”

UPHILL WALK

For the first time since 1999 at Kapalua, players had to walk the steep hill to the fourth fairway at the Sentry Tournament of Champions. Previously, they were given rides in carts to the crest of the hill. Why the change?

For starters, it has to do with a tour policy of only one person in a cart for insurance reasons. That’s why the tour has four- and six-seat carts handy whenever there is a playoff. Mostly, however, it was because there were not enough carts to go around.

Most of the carts were used for the long shuttle between the ninth green and the 10th tee, not so much for players and caddies but the players’ friends and relatives who wanted rides, along with the walking scorer, standard-bearer and other support staff.

Amazingly, no one pulled a hamstring.

DIVOTS

The Web.com Tour added another event to its schedule with the Dormie Network Classic, to be held April 25-28 at Briggs Ranch Golf Club in San Antonio . ... The PGA Tour has expanded its agreement with Twitter to distribute 140 hours of live competitio­n from “PGA Tour Live.” The agreement allows the first 60 to 90 minutes of all four rounds on PGA Tour Live ... Shugo Imahira of Japan has been awarded a special invitation to play in the Masters. Imahira won the Bridgeston­e Open on the Japan Golf Tour and went on to capture the money title on his home tour. He currently is No. 53 in the world ranking. This is the second straight year Augusta National has given out a special invitation, which it typically reserves for internatio­nal players who do not have full PGA Tour status.

 ?? — AP ?? Patton Kizzire is the defending champion at this week’s Sony Open in Hawaii.
— AP Patton Kizzire is the defending champion at this week’s Sony Open in Hawaii.

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