San Diego Union-Tribune

HOMA GOOD AT GOLF, GOOD TALKING IT UP

- BY DOUG FERGUSON Ferguson writes for The Associated Press.

“Max, can you hear me?” Lead analyst Trevor Immelman was in the broadcast booth talking to Max Homa, who had just hit his drive on the par-5 13th at Torrey Pines. Homa was listening through an earbud.

And with that, the PGA Tour and CBS embarked on a new wrinkle in their telecast Friday.

Just don’t get the idea this happened on the fly.

Homa said he had been talking about the plan with CBS and with Andy Pazder, the tour’s chief of operations. And while it may not be for everybody, Homa proved to be the perfect fit.

“I’m very excited about the idea,” Homa said after his twoshot victory. “I thought it was great for the fans to look into, push that envelope for the fans. Not just myself, but the tour — CBS, NBC, all these broadcasti­ng streams — seem to be wanting to add something to the viewing experience.”

For years, some players have balked at the idea of wearing microphone­s, and the networks have boom mics on the course, anyway. On other tours, the conversati­on has come across as stilted.

Not every tour has the benefit of Homa, who delivers refreshing insight without really trying.

The question was how he chose to shape the shot off the tee. Homa typically plays a cut, and the par 5 moves from right to left.

“My coach and caddie let me draw one maybe once a day, maybe once a week,” Homa said. “This was not the one.”

From there, he went on to explain his approach to going for the green on a par 5, mainly about the ideal position for the third shot.

Homa has heard chatter, like everyone else, that networks could never get someone as intense as Tiger Woods or Jon Rahm to go along. So it might not work for everyone. But it did for him, regardless of the outcome.

“It was 20 minutes. It was not invasive,” he said. “I’m hoping other players would want to do it. I’m sure there’s some interest in this whether I won or didn’t. Hopefully we can kind of keep pushing that or tweak it, just anything to help golf kind of gain some attraction to all the viewers hopefully a little bit younger than our typical audience.”

Pebble payback

Jason Dufner is in the field at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, making him the first — and so far, the only — player to make good on his pledge for getting a conflictin­g event release to play the Saudi Internatio­nal last year.

PGA Tour Commission­er Jay Monahan granted some two dozen releases for the Saudi Internatio­nal (held the same week as Pebble), provided they agree to play Pebble Beach at least once over the next two years.

Nineteen players who sought releases now are part of LIV Golf.

According to the PGA Tour, Tony Finau, Tommy Fleetwood, Shane Lowry, Xander Schauffele and Jhonattan Vegas each received releases provided they played Pebble once over the next two years. That means they are required to play in 2024.

Tyrrell Hatton and Lucas Herbert would be required to play in 2024 and 2025. Herbert is in the Saudi Internatio­nal field again this year.

Monahan said in January the same arrangemen­t was in place for this year’s releases, which include Cameron Young and Cameron Champ. The tour has not said what penalty would apply if players did not live up to the arrangemen­t.

Next up for LIV

The Daily Telegraph is reporting that Sebastian Muñoz of Colombia is the latest player to join Saudi-backed LIV Golf, after previously reporting Mito Pereira of Chile was joining.

Both are in the Saudi Internatio­nal field this week, even though neither PGA Tour member requested a conflictin­g event release to play (as was the case for the likes of Young and Champ.

More evidence on Pereira — he is listed in the field next week for the Asian Tour’s Internatio­nal Series stop in Oman, electing to pass on the $20 million purse at the WM Phoenix Open.

LIV Golf has not officially announced new additions to its league, which starts next month at Mayakoba in Mexico.

Hoge’s decision

Tom Hoge was not on the Saudis’ radar screen until he won at Pebble Beach last year for his first career title. While the offer to join LIV Golf was not what Hoge described as generation­al wealth, it was enough for him to consider it.

Ultimately, he chose to stay, with no regrets. Hoge now is No. 29 in the world, eligible for all the majors for the second straight year. The deciding factor was places he hadn’t been and had access to through his win at Pebble.

“There were so many tournament­s I’ve wanted to play in the first time,” he said, citing the Tour Championsh­ip and the Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua as examples. “When I went to bed at night, I wasn’t ready to give those up.”

But money is money, especially when it’s guaranteed. Hoge has spent a career trying to make sure he made it to the next year, and securing a financial future was tempting.

“It was a hard decision to make, but I’m very happy with where I’m at,” Hoge said.

Notable

Sepp Straka spent two weeks in the Middle East with hopes of earning Ryder Cup points. But he missed the cut in Abu Dhabi and Dubai. Straka is No. 27 in the world.

• Marcus Byrd, who won the APGA Tour event at Torrey Pines and received the Charlie Sifford exemption for Riviera, has been given an exemption to play in the Honda Classic.

• Geoff Ogilvy, the 2006 U.S. Open champion, plans to play a few more PGA Tour events this year. He’s in the field at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

 ?? MEG MCLAUGHLIN U-T ?? Farmers Insurance Open winner Max Homa is hoping is appearance on CBS will encourage others do to so.
MEG MCLAUGHLIN U-T Farmers Insurance Open winner Max Homa is hoping is appearance on CBS will encourage others do to so.

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