China Daily

Love’s labor won’t be lost in filling out Ryder squad

- By ASSOCIATED PRESS

Darren Clarke got an extra week to start mulling over his three captain’s picks for Europe in the Ryder Cup because the top nine already are set. Matthew Fitzpatric­k finished fifth in the Czech Masters and locked up no worse than the final spot.

Davis Love III has a little more time to fill out the US team, and likely will need it.

Brandt Snedeker’s tie for third in the Wyndham Championsh­ip moved him up three spots to No 6, and it would take a peculiar set of circumstan­ces to bump him out of the top eight. The Barclays this week at Bethpage Black is the final qualifying event.

The top five already have clinched a spot on the US team — Dustin Johnson, Jordan Spieth, Phil Mickelson, Jimmy Walker and Brooks Koepka. Snedeker is followed by Zach Johnson, who leads Patrick Reed at No 8 by $157,602.

The Barclays has an $8.5 million purse, so players still can make up ground.

Even so, the start of the FedEx Cup playoffs effectivel­y serves as a Ryder Cup qualifier for 14 players.

The winner of the Barclays pockets $1.53 million. Every $1,000 counts as a Ryder Cup point, so that’s 1,530 points. That means Charley Hoffman at No 22 is the lowest player in the standings with a mathematic­al chance at qualifying.

Kevin Kisner and Justin Thomas, who won tournament­s last fall that did not count, are among those who can’t qualify.

Reed, meanwhile, is the equivalent of $30,655 ahead of J.B. Holmes, who missed the cut last week at the Wyndham Championsh­ip.

Right behind Holmes are Bubba Watson, Olympic bronze medalist Matt Kuchar and Rickie Fowler.

Fowler flew from the Olympics in Rio to North Carolina to try to boost his Ryder Cup points. He tied for 22nd and now is just over $365,000 behind Reed, meaning Fowler would have to finish no worse than a two-way tie for fourth to have a mathematic­al chance — and that’s assuming Reed misses the cut.

Love won’t have to make his three picks until after the third playoff event at the BMW Championsh­ip, and his fourth pick will be made immediatel­y after the Tour Championsh­ip. So there’s still time for him, and for the players.

That could make it easy for Love — or more complicate­d.

Late surge

Shawn Stefani was reminded how much time can fly, and how quickly fortunes can change.

He went 20 tournament­s to start the new season before he cracked the top 20 — a tie for ninth at the St. Jude Classic — and kept reminding himself that he had plenty of time to turn his game around.

And then it was almost too late.

“I’m usually a glass half-full guy,” Stefani said. “Didn’t get off to the start I wanted. I kept telling myself, ‘We still got events left.’ But you say in March there’s 17 events left, and you look in July and there’s four events left. You’re like, ‘I don’t have a lot of time.’ And I really felt I was close.”

He came through at just the right time.

Stefani tied for 11th at the Travelers Championsh­ip two weeks ago. He was No 133 in the FedEx Cup standings until the Wyndham Championsh­ip, where he shot 66-66 on the weekend, making a birdie on the last hole to tie for 14th.

That was enough to move him to No 123 to qualify for The Barclays — and to keep his card for next year.

“I started to get a little emotional on 18,” Stefani said.

Matt Jones wasn’t as fortunate. He missed the cut and dropped out of the top 125, as did Korean Whee Kim. Jones missed by nine points.

Olympic training

Between playing and planning a wedding, Stacy Lewis didn’t spend much time at home much this summer.

But the Houston native had the perfect place to prepare for the Olympics. She’s among tour players who now are members at Bluejack National, the first US course by Tiger Woods Design.

Lewis said she became a member through relationsh­ips with Steve Elkington, and her husband Gerrod Caldwell knew the developers.

“I’ve been out there quite a few times when I’ve been home,” Lewis said.

“The grass is the same as here — the same zoysia, putting greens, everything. I think that helped a little bit, just from hitting pitch shots.”

Lewis tied for fourth in Rio, missing a playoff for the bronze by one shot.

She figures the experience will help going forward, which is why she prefers to practice at Bluejack even though it’s a 45-minute drive from her house.

“It’s worth it,” she said. “You can spend all day there. They have a back practice greens and if you want it super fast for a tournament, they’ll do that for you. They’ve been very accommodat­ing.”

Beat the pro

The KLM Open is taking fan involvemen­t to a new level this year.

The Sept 8-11 tournament is hosting a “Beat the Pro” competitio­n, offering amateurs a chance to hit a tee shot on the par-3 14th at The Dutch course. The hole will be turned into an amphitheat­er.

The KLM Open will have one amateur player tee off on the 14th with each group during the first and third rounds.

Prizes will be given to those who hit their tee shots closer to the pin than the pros.

“This will be an absolute highlight for the players and fans,” organizer Joost Luiten said. “I think it’s great to have something going on around the hole. I don’t think players will be distracted. On the contrary, I think they will love it. In the end we all want to play for as many fans as possible.”

FedEx Cup finale

The final three hours of the Tour Championsh­ip will feature more Johnny Miller and less TV commercial­s.

Actually, there will be no commercial­s at all.

The PGA Tour has reached an enhanced sponsorshi­p deal with Southern Company and Coca-Cola, which will allow for the final three hours of the broadcast on NBC to be commercial-free, giving star commentato­r Miller more opportunit­y for analysis.

The new sponsorshi­p deals are through 2020. The Tour Championsh­ip, the final event of the FedEx Cup, is Sept 22-25.

You can drink out of the claret jug. And I guess the Olympic gold would be a nice coaster for the glass of wine.” Justin Rose, Olympic champion

Divots

Jordan Spieth has the longest active streak — four years — of starting the FedEx Cup playoffs in the top 10. That includes his rookie year in 2013 when he started the year without a card ... Paul Simson won his eighth title at Pinehurst last week with his one-shot victory in the Senior North & South Amateur. He captured the North & South championsh­ip twice, and the senior version six times.

Justin Rose will make his first appearance on home soil since winning the Olympic gold medal on Oct 13-16 at the British Masters ... Leona Maguire has won the Mark H. McCormack Medal for the second straight year as the leading player in the women’s amateur rankings. Maguire, one of three amateurs who played in the Olympics, is going into her junior season at Duke University, but she plans to go through LPGA Tour qualifying and said she will turn pro if she makes it.

The PGA Tour will be in Malaysia for four more years after announcing that CIMB Group has extended its sponsorshi­p through 2020.

 ??  ?? Stacy Lewis
Stacy Lewis
 ??  ?? Jordan Spieth
Jordan Spieth
 ??  ?? Shawn Stefani
Shawn Stefani
 ??  ?? Davis Love III
Davis Love III

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