San Diego Union-Tribune

SCHAUFFELE READY TO GO AFTER VIRUS

- BY DOUG FERGUSON Ferguson writes for The Associated Press.

KAPALUA, Hawaii

Xander Schauffele played the front nine of the Plantation Course when he arrived at Kapalua for the Sentry Tournament of Champions, and then he couldn’t help himself.

Just beyond the ninth green was the 18th green, so the Scripps Ranch High and SDSU alum turned to caddie Austin Kaiser and said, “Let’s go hit that putt.”

Schauffele is good at moving forward, which is not to suggest he never forgets. A year ago, he was on the 18th green in two and needed two putts to win. He knocked his first putt 7 feet by the hole in 30 mph gusts and three-putted for par to fall into a playoff with Justin Thomas and Patrick Reed.

Schauffele was eliminated after the first extra hole and Thomas went on to win.

“I two-putted,” Schauffele said. “No, I didn’t hit it past the hole. It wasn’t as windy. My mind was in a much better place. Like I said, beginning of the year, no demons.”

Schauffele is just happy to be here. His girlfriend came down with COVID-19 in the middle of December, and a few days later, Schauffele tested positive and eventually had minor symptoms. His self-isolation ended in time to get out to Maui, and he feels healthy. The real test will be walking the Plantation Course when the tournament starts Thursday.

Schauffele is among 16 players at Kapalua who failed to win an official event, though he did have the lowest 72-hole score at the Tour Championsh­ip. The winners-only field is including players who reached the Tour Championsh­ip because golf was shut down for three months due to the pandemic.

Schauffele already has played four times in the new season, which began in September, and that includes two majors. Still, there’s something about January.

“The beginning of the year is more blue-eyed, more openminded,” he said. “The middle of the year you have a pulse on what’s going on and where your game is at, how you’ve played and what you’ve accomplish­ed. Everyone is excited at the beginning of the year, whether it goes well or not. And then you reassess in the middle.”

Cink and son

Stewart Cink is having as much fun as ever. He won the Safeway Open in September for his first title since he won the British Open at Turnberry in 2009. That brings him back to Kapalua for the first time in 11 years.

More than that, however, is having son Reagan as his caddie. They were together when he won the Safeway Open, and his son will stay on the bag.

But that means more work, and a little more walking.

“He’s never seen any of these courses,” Cink said. “He’s walked around a lot of them and he knows a lot about them, but he’s never seen them from a strategy and playabilit­y type of a standpoint. So my year is going to include more practice rounds than it did because of that.”

Rahm changes

Jon Rahm starts his fifth full year on the PGA Tour with new equipment and apparel.

Rahm, the No. 2 player in the world behind Dustin Johnson, has signed with Callaway Golf, the biggest name to switch equipment during the short offseason. He said he shot a 59 at Silverleaf Country Club in Scottsdale, Ariz., in his first round using his new clubs.

“I can’t wait to start the year,” Rahm said.

Rahm previously had an endorsemen­t deal with TaylorMade. He used Callaway and Odyssey equipment when he played at Arizona State.

The Spaniard also is changing his clothing from adidas to TravisMath­ew.

Farmers commitment­s

Rahm was one of three commitment­s announced for the Farmers Insurance Open on Jan. 28-31 at Torrey Pines, along with four-time major winner Brooks Koepka and defending champion Marc Leishman. Rahm won the Farmers in 2017. Those three increase to 15 the number of top-50 players to commit.

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