USA TODAY US Edition

Ex-Georgia Dawg Straka takes early lead

- Chris Bumbaca

KAWAGOE, Japan – It was a day Sepp Straka won’t soon forget.

The next step is making it a weekend that will live in the history books.

The former University of Georgia golfer, representi­ng Austria during the men’s golf tournament at the Tokyo Olympics, carded an 8-under-par 63 to pace the 60-person field at Kasumigase­ki Country Club on Thursday.

Straka played bogey-free golf and made 16 of 18 greens to propel him to the top of the leaderboar­d, which featured 53 golfers at or under par 71.

Straka, the son of an Austrian father and American mother who moved to Valdosta, Georgia, in high school, has twin brother Sam – also a former Bulldogs golfer – on the bag as his caddie at the Olympics.

“It was awesome. It was a dream come true for us to be out there together,” Straka said. “We had a blast out there. It was a day that will be in my memory forever.”

Sam Straka has caddied for his brother on the PGA Tour, as well as for former Bulldogs golfer Chris Kirk.

Three consecutiv­e birdies on the back nine propelled Sepp Straka to the lead, an unfamiliar position for him. The 28-year-old qualified in late June, reaching 44th in the Olympic Golf Ranking.

“I haven’t played great on the PGA Tour last few weeks,” he said. “Putting was really the reason.”

He switched up his routine to emphasize feel and make it less technical, while also eliminatin­g practice strokes on the green. Other parts of his game were the strengths Thursday, he felt.

“If you just put it on the fairway on this course, you can really take advantage,” he said. “I got hot with my irons, especially with my short irons and my wedges.”

The videoboard­s near the tee boxes of each hole displayed the longest drives of the day to that point, and Xander Schauffele said after his 3-under round that Straka’s name was up there on nearly every hole.

“He’s a big boy, hits it a long way,” Schauffele said. “He put a number out there for us to chase.”

Wearing a red polo that could have meshed perfectly at an Athens tailgate had a “G” been embroidere­d on it, Straka has previously represente­d Austria on the European Team Junior Championsh­ip when he was 16 and later the Men’s Amateur European Championsh­ip.

The Strakas’ mother had lived in Austria for 24 years and ran golf pro shops. Her desire to be closer to her own parents spurred the family’s move to the States, and Sepp Straka tries to return to Austria once a year. His father, an architect, regularly travels and spends time in the home country for work.

“I feel very connected to Austria,” he said. “It’s home. I used to say that I was 50% Austrian and 50% American. A friend of mine corrected me and said I’m a hundred percent Austrian and a hundred percent American.”

The idea of playing in the Olympics first percolated five years ago while watching golf’s return to the program during the 2016 Rio Games. Matt Kuchar, who won bronze for the U.S. in Rio, was one of the golfers who raved about the experience.

“It’s really special, (even) without the spectators,” Straka said. “If we didn’t have any restrictio­ns, this would be one heck of an event. I noticed flying in, you’re flying over one golf course then the next. It’s pretty incredible.”

On the PGA Tour, Straka said, a missed cut doesn’t matter much. The “once every four years” aspect of the tournament adds an air of importance.

“Just knowing that it’s a one-of-akind event,” he said. “Out here, this week, it’s just special.”

Straka’s performanc­e came after one practice round Wednesday. He’d been in Minnesota at the 3M Open and took a Delta flight Tuesday through Detroit.

Despite the recent world travels, he slept fine – in bed by 8:30 a.m. with 11 hours of rest – on his first night.

“Except for this morning,” said Straka, who teed off at 7:30 a.m. in the first group. “A little bit of an earlier wake-up call.”

That meant the rest of the field followed him on the course. Heading into the second round, they’re also following him on the leaderboar­d.

Lackluster showing from Americans

Under Internatio­nal Golf Federation qualifying rules for the Olympics, the top 15 players in the world automatica­lly qualify for the Games, with a maximum of four per country.

Therefore, the U.S. sent four players, with Patrick Reed a late replacemen­t for Bryson DeChambeau, who tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

Despite sending the largest contingent in the field, it was a lackluster showing from the Americans; Reed and Schauffele fared the best of the U.S. delegation with 68s.

Reed was in the scoring tent at the 3M Open when he found out he’d be heading to Japan. He said he slept 35 minutes Monday into Tuesday, coordinati­ng the necessary paperwork with an early flight. The near-all-nighter might have helped, Reed said, since he slept on the plane and adjusted to the time zone quicker.

He didn’t have time for a practice round but managed to take a golf cart tour of the final four holes at the course before sunset Wednesday night.

Adrenaline still pumping, Reed started hot before a 1-hour, 20-minute thundersto­rm delay sapped his energy.

“You got the air conditioni­ng, you’re sitting around,” Reed said, noting he managed to birdie the par-5 14th afterward.

Justin Thomas used one word to describe his first Olympic round. “Par,” he replied.

There might not be a better answer, as he made par on all 18 holes.

“I would love to have some old, useless club I could break over my knee right now, I gotta be honest,” Thomas said.

For Thomas and Collin Morikawa (2-under 69), fresh off his second major victory at the British Open, representi­ng the United States and hearing their names called at the first box marked special moments.

But once they teed it up, those emotions subsided, and the focus became lows scores.

“I’ve got a couple things to figure out, how to play a little better in the middle of the fairway,” Morikawa said.

The 24-year-old is half-Japanese and said the atmosphere, or lack thereof minus spectators, left him wondering what could have been – especially after the environmen­t at Royal St. George’s during his Open win.

“We miss the fans ... they’re amazing (in Japan),” said Morikawa, who has played twice profession­ally in his father’s ancestral home. “They love the game. They bring so much of that energy.

“Unfortunat­ely, even today with a couple claps (from volunteers ), it brought you back to that restart of COVID. Sometimes it’s hard to get that spark.”

 ?? KYLE TERADA/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Sepp Straka of Austria tees off on the first hole during the first round of the men’s competitio­n.
KYLE TERADA/USA TODAY SPORTS Sepp Straka of Austria tees off on the first hole during the first round of the men’s competitio­n.

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