The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sudden rise to top

After climbing back in rankings, Stanley an unlikely leader by two at East Lake, with Spieth in prime spot for Cup title.

- Cvivlamore@ajc.com By Chris Vivlamore

Kyle Stanley is not sure what he was doing one year ago. Maybe sitting at home. He sure wasn’t playing in the Tour Championsh­ip and FedEx Cup playoff finale with more than $11 million at stake.

Stanley once was the nation’s best college golfer and an early success on the PGA Tour. Times changed. The past three years have been a struggle. Stanley was ranked 47th in the world after a win in the 2012 Phoenix Open. He declined — rather steadily — and bottomed out at 683rd in 2015.

Stanley’s career has taken a dra-

matic turn upward, especially this year. He won the 2017 Quicken Loans National, breaking a winless drought of five years and five months. He qualified for the FedEx Cup playoffs, advanced through the three playoff rounds and made it to East Lake Golf Club for the finale at the Tour Championsh­ip.

Now he stands alone atop the leaderboar­d after the opening round. Stanley shot a 6-under 64 Thursday and is two shots clear of Webb Simpson, Daniel Berger, Brooks Koepka and Paul Casey.

“It emotionall­y can be a bit of a roller coaster at times,” Stanley said. “Golf ’s unique in a sense to

where if you’re struggling, it may take quite a while to kind of get back into form. When things are going well, you can kind of put a year or two, several years, a few weeks together, and the opposite of that.

“So overall just try not to get too high or too low and yeah, but I mean, it’s sports, it’s golf.”

Stanley, 29, entered the Tour Championsh­ip 22nd in the point standings. He’ll need a victory and a lot of help to capture the FedEx Cup title and the $10 million prize. He currently projects to finish second in the playoffs behind points leader Jordan Spieth, who is part of a group of five tied for sixth at 3 under.

Stanley was 158th in 2014 (one top-10 finish, three top25s), 181 in 2015 (three top25s) and 116 in 2016 (five top-25s). Stanley turned his career around and it culminated, at least for now, with the victory in the Quicken Loans National in July. Now, he’s part of a group of the top 30 golfers in the world competing for a jackpot.

At Clemson, Stanley was the ACC Player of the Year in 2007. He was first-team All-American in 2007 and 2009, both years that he finished runner-up in the NCAA Individual Championsh­ips. In 2009, he was the winner of the Ben Hogan Award, given to the best college golfer. He turned pro and would get that first PGA Tour win three years later, missing the Tour Championsh­ip by one spot in 2012. The wait for the second win felt like an eternity.

“My ball-striking’s been pretty solid all year long, so it’s really been nice to not have to mess with that a ton,” Stanley said. “My putting gets hot and cold from time to time, but I guess we’ve kept it somewhat warm this year, which is good.”

Of the top five players who entered the Tour Championsh­ip in control of their own fate, Spieth still projects in the top spot. Friend and playing partner (Thursday and again today) Justin Thomas and Jon Rahm also shot at 3 under par and are tied for sixth. Dustin Johnson finished at 2 under par and is tied for 11th.

“I felt like it was really a grind out there, and it’s just because the first four, five holes of the round I was all over the place tee to green,” Spieth said. “And then my whole back nine I had a chance to birdie all but one of the holes and only made one of them.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Former Clemson star Kyle Stanley hits from a bunker to the 18th green on his way to a 64 for the lead in the opening round of the Tour Championsh­ip at East Lake Golf Club.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Former Clemson star Kyle Stanley hits from a bunker to the 18th green on his way to a 64 for the lead in the opening round of the Tour Championsh­ip at East Lake Golf Club.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States