Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Strong field to tee it up at Heritage

- By Pete Iacobelli

HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. — Will Zalatoris won’t raise his expectatio­ns or alter his approach going forward after his stellar Masters debut.

Zalatoris, the slender, 24-year-old, finished second on his first trip amid the colorful azaleas and Georgia pines at Augusta National. Now, he’ll stick to the carefully honed plan he had in making a mark as a pro.

“I hate the cliche of ‘Just trust the process,’ ”Zalatoris said Wednesday. “But it’s gotten me to this point now and there’s no reason to change, ‘Oh, I should go out and win this week.’ ”

Zalatoris faces another new test at the Heritage, where fairways are narrow and greens are small. He’ll have strong competitio­n at Harbour Town Golf Links, led by world No. 1 Dustin Johnson, the November Masters champion, and reigning PGA Championsh­ip winner Collin Morikawa, ranked fourth in the world.

Then again, Zalatoris hasn’t spent time worrying about who else is in the field.

He finished just a stroke behind Hideki Matsuyama of Japan at the Masters. Matsuyama returned to his home country with the green jacket and doesn’t plan to return to the PGA Tour until at last mid-May.

Zalatoris, who played at Wake Forest, has steadily increased his profile since playing on the Korn Ferry Tour, golf ’s Triple-A circuit.

He’s had six top 10 finishes in his last 15 events on the PGA Tour, including a tie for sixth at the U.S. Open last September. His Masters’ performanc­e left him at 27th in the world and has some predicting his first PGA trophy soon.

“I really haven’t put expectatio­ns on myself to play well,” Zalatoris said. “I’ve just really done a good job of just doing my job and playing within myself.”

DJ homecoming: Johnson had hoped to duplicate his dominating fall performanc­e at Augusta in the spring. Instead, he missed the cut and had to hang around to award the green jacket to Matsuyama on Sunday evening.

“I enjoyed being their champion for five months,” he said, smiling. “I don’t care how long it was for, it’s still cool,” he said. “I’m always going to be a Masters champion.”

Johnson, born and raised in South Carolina, has played well at Harbour Town, with 10 of his last 12 rounds here in the 60s. Yet, his best finish was a tie for 16th in 2018.

The Pete Dye design is filled with doglegs, water and hazards that make grip-it-and-rip players rethink strategy.

“Even around here, you’ve just to drive it straight no matter what club you’re hitting,” Johnson said.

Morikawa peaking: Morikawa, 24, won golf ’s first major in San Francisco last August after resuming from a COVID-19 pause. He won a World Golf Championsh­ip event at the end of February and tied for 18th at Augusta National.

“The game at Augusta felt really good, just made too many mistakes,” he said. “We’re peaking at a good time, and we’re really looking forward to the next few months of golf.”

On Monday, Morikawa played The Ocean Course about two hours or so up the road in Charleston where he’ll defend his PGA Championsh­ip title next month.

COVID-19 break: The tournament was postponed last April due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. The course, though, hosted the second PGA Tour event after the stoppage. Webb Simpson, the RBC Heritage’s defending champion, finished with a course record 22-under 262 to capture that June event.

Simpson believes the return to April will also bring a return to swirling winds and tricky conditions that typically keep scores in check at this event.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States