The Commercial Appeal

Watson lurking at US Open

- Adam Schupak

Bubba Watson had a phone call to make after the second round of the U.S. Open to cancel a flight.

Watson, 41, strung together three consecutiv­e birdies on the front nine and signed for a 1-under 69 at Winged Foot Golf Club's West Course in Mamaroneck, New York, to improve to 1-over 145 and lurking at a major where he's experience­d limited success. Watson, a two-time Masters champion, had missed the 36-hole cut at the U.S. Open in five of the last six years.

“I had my plane ready to go home today just in case,” Watson said. “But now I'll have to cancel the flight. So that's a good problem to have, I guess, cancel the flight and be home late Sunday night hopefully.”

Watson also was anxious to get home to check on his family and community back home in the Florida Panhandle, where Hurricane Sally made landfall on Sept. 16, with ravaging winds and submerged some parts with more than 2 feet of rain.

“My friends and family are all OK. My house, my mom's house, our friends' houses are all OK, Watson said. “I know there's a lot of boats that got messed up. I haven't heard about my businesses yet.”

Watson grew up in Bagdad, Florida, (population 3,761) in that northwest sliver of the state that is part of the greater Pensacola area, on the Gulf of Mexico, and about 13 miles from the Alabama border.

He lived in Scottsdale, Arizona and Orlando earlier in his career but returned to his roots in 2016.

Ever since, Watson has made a large impact in his local community. For starters, he donated $2.1 million to Studer Family Children's Hospital at Sacred Heart in Pensacola for an expansion of the facility where he was born and where there's now a street known as Bubba Watson Drive. Watson also opened Bubba's Sweet Spot, a candy and ice cream shop in downtown Pensacola, a car dealership, Sandy and Bubba's Milton Chevrolet, a driving range, and is co-owner of the Pensacola Blue Wahoos, a Class Double-a minor league baseball team. Watson said he'll assess the storm's damage next week.

“When it hit on Wednesday, the first text I sent my wife is, ‘Should I come home?' Because again, golf is golf and life is more important than that,” Watson said. “Just trying to focus on this right now, but when I get home, obviously me and my wife, my family will do something. We can help Pensacola. We'd love to do something like (Houston Texans defenseman) J.J. Watt did a few years ago for Houston. Something like that would be tremendous. Just anything like that in that direction, just to help the community, lift the spirits of the community because I know there's some people hurting for sure.”

Watson and his family experience­d a previous natural disaster in 2016. They own a second house and 11 acres in the Allegheny Mountains of West Virginia, part of the Greenbrier Resort's sporting club. Watson was there the night a 100year flood dumped 11 inches of rain in just 5.5 hours. He donated $250,000 to the relief effort and got his hands dirty as part of a local cleanup team.

“Sometimes in the midst of tragedy, in the midst of bad things, that's what pulls it out of us the most, that good spirit and we a definitely witnessed it tremendous­ly through the few weeks we were here helping and volunteeri­ng," wife Angie Watson said ahead of the 2017 Greenbrier Classic, a former PGA Tour event there.

Watson said his family's generator has made his Florida house a popular spot and friends have been staying at his guest house.

“People have been coming over for ice and different things to our house, just trying to keep the kids safe and everything,” he said. “Right now I'm trying to stay focused on a very difficult golf course instead of the very difficult situation at home, but my wife is holding the fort down pretty nicely, and again, we've been so lucky that we have a bunch of different families. We have a guest house and different things where we can bless people and help them as much as we can so far.”

It makes finishing his round with a double-bogey on Friday easier to accept. Watson has been mired in a slump, recording only one top-10 finish in his last 14 starts and remains winless since notching his 12th PGA Tour title at the 2018 Travelers Championsh­ip.

 ?? DANIELLE PARHIZKARA­N/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Bubba Watson putts on the fifth green during the second round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Winged Foot Golf Club - West on Friday.
DANIELLE PARHIZKARA­N/USA TODAY SPORTS Bubba Watson putts on the fifth green during the second round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Winged Foot Golf Club - West on Friday.

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