San Diego Union-Tribune

THOMAS DELIVERS AT TIGER’S COURSE

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

Justin Thomas won his six-hole singles match and was closest to the pin on the decisive final hole as he and Tiger Woods won an exhibition match Tuesday that served as the grand opening of the Woods-designed Payne’s Valley Golf Course at Big Cedar Lodge in Ridgedale, Mo.

The televised event was called the Payne’s Valley Cup, after the course Woods designed in the Ozarks. It was the first public course in the United States for Tiger Woods Design.

The money raised went to the Payne Stewart Family Foundation. The course at Big Cedar Lodge was named in honor of Stewart, who died in a plane crash in October 1999.

The match had a Ryder Cup theme because the matches were scheduled for this week until being postponed because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Thomas and Woods, who partnered in last year’s Presidents Cup, took on Rory Mcilroy of Northern Ireland and Justin Rose of England.

Mcilroy and Rose won the fourballs over six holes. Woods and Thomas won the foursomes on the next six holes. In the singles, Thomas defeated Mcilroy, while Rose defeated Woods. The matches ended in a tie, and the Americans won because Thomas was closest to the pin on a par 3 designed to settle matches.

Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player also took part in the final hole, as did Aaron Stewart, the son of the late threetime major winner who now is a tournament director for the LPGA Tour’s season opener in Florida.

All six players hit the island green, after Stewart was given a mulligan, on the 19th hole that wasn’t there two weeks ago. None of them made his birdie putt.

The exhibition was two days after the U.S. Open at Winged Foot, where Woods and Rose missed the cut. Mcilroy and Thomas finished in a tie for eighth, a dozen shots behind winner Bryson Dechambeau.

“It’s what all of us needed after what we experience­d last week,” Mcilroy said.

Notable

Mike Davis spent the last decade running the USGA, where he set up golf courses to provide an extreme test for elite players and searched for solutions to increasing distance.

Now he wants to build golf courses, a lifelong passion.

Davis announced he will retire as CEO at the end of 2021, ending a 32-year career with the USGA that began with him overseeing ticket sales and transporta­tion. He became the seventh executive director in 2011 and the USGA’S first CEO after an organizati­onal shakeup in 2016.

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