The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Paladino ready to defend Connecticu­t Open crown

- Joe Morelli

Cody Paladino may be playing even better golf now than he was going into last year’s Connecticu­t Open championsh­ip.

That’s good news for the defending champion and bad news for everyone else at the 82nd Connecticu­t Open begins Monday at Woodway Country Club in Darien.

“It’s going to be wonderful to defend. It’s going to be wonderful if I do defend,” Paladino said. “Getting there knowing one year ago I had a breakthrou­gh week, I still need to treat it as just another week. If I spend all my time focusing on what I did a year ago, I will lose track of what I’m really supposed to be doing out there.”

Since winning the Open at the Patterson Club last July, Paladino, now 27, spent a lot of time playing in Asia. After that extended period, Paladino came home and suffered a pinched nerve in his right hip.

“I was out a couple of weeks. It’s the worst kind of injury you could have (swinging a golf club),” Paladino said.

Paladino felt his game “hit a plateau” after winning the Open. He felt he needed a change. George Connor, his short-game coach, also became his swing coach.

It wasn’t easy parting ways with Chuck Elrick, Paladino’s swing coach for 20 years and still a family friend, but the golfer felt it necessary to make the switch.

“It had nothing to do with Chuck Elrick. I was at a point in my life I had to make a decision to provide a little spark, something fresh,” Paladino said.

Paladino has spent the spring and summer traveling around the Northeast playing events. This weekend, he played the Bangor Open in Maine, where he tied for 13th place.

But the result that may have turned things around for Paladino was the Lecom Health Challenge, a Web.Com Tour event held earlier this month in Findley Lake, New York. It was the first Web.Com Tour event Paladino played in and he had to qualify to get there.

Not only did Paladino qualify, he also made the cut and finished in a tie for 63rd place. He played with three different former PGA Tour pros during the tournament.

“They all missed cut and had all made cut on the PGA Tour the previous week (Barracuda Championsh­ip),” Paladino said. “It was more about realizing if they are great, then I am going to be great. A lot of guys have been out there for years and I’m just getting started.”

Paladino will tee off the 10th hole at Woodway CC at 9 a.m. Monday. His group includes former two-time Open champion Nick Cook from Shelton and Adam Rainaud, who qualified to play in next week’s Travelers Championsh­ip.

“I need to maintain focus,” Paladino said. “If I do that and think well around the golf course and have a good week navigating the greens, I don’t see any reason why I don’t defend. I’m hitting the ball tremendous­ly well.”

Another notable group includes the first group off at 8 a.m. on Monday: Former PGA Tour player Ken Green, current Whitney Farms GC pro William Street, the former assistant pro at New Haven CC, and Wethersfie­ld CC head pro Ron Dellostrit­to.

Another former twotime winner, Jeff Curl, goes off the 10th tee at 8:30 a.m. Zach Zaback, who won the Connecticu­t Amateur for the second time and finished tied for second at the New England Amateur last week, is turning pro this week and tees off the 10th at 9:20.

Cody’s older brother Brent goes off No. 10 at 9:30. Former champ Steve Sokol follows at 10. Threetime winner Frank Bensel goes off the first hole at 1. Four-time champ and current Central Connecticu­t State University men’s golf coach Kyle Gallo goes off at 2:30 p.m.

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