Friday
Sep182015

It's Day by a mile after 36 holes

Writing from Lake Forest, Illinois

Friday, September 18, 2015

Day by day, it’s becoming clear: It’s going to be hard for someone to catch Jason Day.

He shot the Daylights out of Cupcake Farms Golf Club – it used to be called Conway Farms – on Friday afternoon, after, in his words, “everyone was disappointed” that he didn’t finish off an improbable 59 on Friday morning.

No, Day didn’t pitch in from 44 yards for eagle on the par-4 ninth to wrap up his first round. He settled for par, for 61, and for a four-stroke lead going into Round 2.

Now, after an 8-under-par 63 capped by a 43-foot eagle putt on the 18th green, he leads by five strokes at 18-under-par 124, and has a great chance to win the BMW Championship on Sunday.

Oh, wait, there’s a third round to play on Saturday. Moving Day, as Ken Venturi so dubbed it once upon a time.

Anyone can make a move on the morrow, but first, consider what Day has done in his first 36 holes:

• His opening-round 61 is the best in Western Open / BMW Championship history, knocking George Fazio’s 63 from 1951 at Davenport Country Club out of the box.

• His 36-hole aggregate of 124 is the best in tournament annals as well, a stroke better than the 125 posted by Morgan Hoffman in the final two rounds at Cherry Hills last year.

• The 124 is seven strokes better than the previous record opening 36, a stylish 65-66 for 131, scored by Camilo Villegas at Bellerive in 2008.

• The 124 ties the PGA Tour record set by Pat Perez in 2009 and matched by David Toms in 2011.

• His 18-under-par reading is also a 36-hole tournament mark. The previous mark was 13-under, Vijay Singh at Crooked Stick in 2012. Only once was a player 18-under through 54 holes. That was Tiger Woods at Cog Hill in 2003.

• His five-stroke lead, while not a Western / BMW mark, is the best in the tournament since Tom Watson led by four at the halfway mark in 1983, and matches the best this season, Jordan Spieth’s five-stroke bulge at the Masters.

Spieth donned a green jacket on that Sunday night in April. Day is the favorite to lift the J.K. Wadley Trophy. He’s won the Canadian Open, PGA Championship and the Barclays since falling just short of drinking from the Claret Jug at St. Andrews.

Day’s dazzling display took place on a day the 69-player field averaged 67.928 strokes, albeit on a day when the PGA Tour went to the “lift, clean and place” mode because of 1.5 inches of rain overnight. The average is another tournament record. Take the two-day average of 68.775, double it, compare it to Day’s score, and you find he’s 13.5 strokes ahead of the field average.

What causes this? It’s not just the TaylorMade M1 driver he’s switched to. That appears to be the Saturn V of drivers, capable of sending a ball to the moon, but others are using them too. It must be the Indian, not the arrow.

“You mix in good driving with some good iron play and good touch around the greens, it’s a good formula for success, and that’s what it’s kind of been like for me over the summer,” Day said. “I feel like I’m in the zone. ... I couldn’t even tell you what the zone feels like.”

He’s missed five fairways each day, and four greens each day, and still has nines of 32, 29, 32 and 31. He has two bogeys. So he’s not perfect. But whose swing and putting touch – 50 putts over 36 holes – would anyone else in the field rather have since the return from the Old Course?

“I feel like I should be paying to watch some of this,” said Jordan Spieth, grouped with Day and Rickie Fowler the first two days. “It was special. What he’s doing on the course is something I haven’t witnessed, watched in my life. If he continues this pace, then he won’t be caught.”

“He’s playing very, very well at the minute,” said Rory McIlroy, the world No. 1, tied for ninth after a 6-under 65 for 9-under 133.

Catching Day is possible, of course. Watson didn’t win that 1983 Western, Mark McCumber did. But considering Day’s consistency – he’s 97-under in his last 26 rounds – they’ll need help from him as well. And with the No. 1 ranking out there for him if he wins, why help?

Brendon Todd and Tour rookie Daniel Berger are tied for second at 13-under 129, Todd via a 63, Berger scoring 64.

Todd was just hoping his wife wouldn’t be mad, since he forgot to add her to the hotel reservation in advance of her Friday afternoon arrival.

“She’s been sitting at the bar waiting for me to finish,” Todd said. “She told me, ‘Good playing,’ so I assume she caught a little bit.”

Undoubtedly, she saw the coverage of his 83-yard eagle hole out on the 18th that cemented the 63.

“It was just the perfect lob wedge,” Todd said.

Berger merely birdied, but that meant a 64 and, with threesomes in order Saturday to dodge weather, a date with Todd and Day on the first tee at 12:01 p.m.

“I think the funnest part of about playing with Jason is the crowds,” Berger said, thinking back to his experience in Boston. “You’ve got thousands of people watching you.”

He needed a few more watching on Friday, when his snipe hook on the 14th hole went into the hay and was never seen again.

“At one point I offered the crows $500 if they could find it,” Berger said. “I don’t know, maybe they don’t like money.”

In Lake Forest? You can tell he’s a rookie.

Spieth and Kevin Na are tied for fourth to 11-under 131, with rookie Justin Thomas, George McNeill and Scott Piercy at 10-under 132. McIlroy, Harris English and Dustin Johnson, tied for ninth at 9-under 133, complete the top 10, with Johnson’s 30-32–62 the day’s best round.

That trio is nine strokes behind Day. Moving Day? They hope.

Day’s Round 1 romp

Jason Day settled for par to conclude the first round early on Friday morning, after a cumulating 1.5 inches of rain was absorbed by Conway Farms, but that par at the last earned him a 10-under-par 61, a career best score to go with three 62s earlier this year.

Day needed to pitch in from the rough, 44 yards out, to score 59. He knew it was a long shot, but gave it a try with his 60-degree wedge. The ball hit short and skidded 10 feet by. He nearly made the birdie putt.

“Selfishly, you just try to get it as close as possible and give yourself a birdie and shoot 11 under,” Day said. “No matter how many shots you hit out there practicing, you can’t really simulate what kind of lie you’re going to get.”

The final scoring average was 70.176, so Day beat the field by nine strokes, and his four-stroke lead after 18 holes matched Emmett French’s similar margin after the first round of the 1921 Western. As far as positive records go, that was the third-oldest in the Western Open / BMW record book, behind the best comebacks to win after the first and second rounds.

Behind Day was the sixsome of Jordan Spieth, Daniel Berger, Harris English, Kevin Na, Justin Thomas and Bubba Watson at 6-under 65, and the trio of Brendon Todd, Kevin Chappell and Brian Harman at 5-under 66. Thirty-nine of the 69 players broke par, and another 10 matched the par of 71.

Spieth, playing with Day, birdied his final hole and matched the inward (and front) 29s of Day and Berger. Spieth’s 29 was aided by the ace he made on the second hole on Thursday.

“That’s the only way I could win a hole,” Spieth quipped.

Around Conway Farms

Parking for everyone the rest of the weekend is at Great America, where a fleet of shuttle busses will ferry fans to the front entrance. The alternate entrance for fans arriving by Metra and shuttles from the Lake Forest train stations remains open. ... Former world No. 1 Jordan Spieth endeared himself to many volunteers and not a few reporters when he shipped pizzas and beer to the groups to commemorate his hole-in-one on Thursday. Former world No. 1 Tiger Woods, who underwent a second back surgery on Wednesday to remove a disc fragment pinching a nerve, would likely not have done so. Woods will miss the Frys tournament that opens the 2015-16 season as well as his own Hero World Challenge while recovering. ... Jim Furyk’s doctor reports Furyk’s left wrist injury is a bone contusion. A decision on whether or not Furyk will play in the Tour Championship will come on Tuesday.

Tim Cronin

Thursday
Sep172015

A stellar Day, even if incomplete

Writing from Lake Forest, Illinois

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Jim Furyk had to leave the building on Thursday afternoon, withdrawing with an extremely sore left wrist, but leaving the magic that created his 59 at Conway Farms Golf Club two years ago behind for the other 69 players in the BMW Championship.

So it seemed, at least, when surreal things started happening in the old Western Open, edition No. 112.

Like British Open champion Zach Johnson, who won here two years ago, dropping his approach on the par-3 11th two inches from that cup.

Minutes later, PGA champion Jason Day holed out from 79 yards away, scoring an eagle 2 on the first hole and from a fairway bunker, no less.

Minutes after that, Masters and U.S. Open winner Jordan Spieth, playing with Day and eager to get back into the spotlight, used a 7-iron to ace the 184-yard second hole.

About 12 minutes later, Spieth chipped in for a birdie on the par-4 third – with Day scoring his a birdie to go 5-under across his four holes.

Spieth with an ace and a chip-in bird and he loses ground? Welcome to Conway Farms, the golf course that was Twinkie-soft even before the thunderstorm that halted play early.

This spate of breathless golf came amidst the binge of birdies similar to that Conway yielded two years ago, and this time on a course that, while lengthened by construction, was arranged to play to only 6,953 yards. To this crowd, that’s the equivalent of miniature golf.

All that was before the thunderstorm that halted play at 4:22 p.m. with Day, Spieth and Rickie Fowler – who at 1-under had to feel as if he’s being lapped – on their last hole, the par-4 ninth.

Day, at 10-under through 17 even with a bogey on his eighth hole, needs to hole out his approach for eagle for a 59. He had bombed his tee shot 346 yards and had only 44 yards remaining, and will have that when the horn blows to resume play at 7:30 a.m. Friday.

No worries, mate. The affable Aussie is still the leader at 10-under, four strokes ahead of Daniel Berger, who played his last three holes in 4-under, including a 68-yard eagle holeout on the ninth to cap an inward 6-under 29 for 6-under 65. Brendon Todd, Kevin Chappell and Justin Thomas join Spieth at 5-under, with only Todd in the clubhouse. The quintet at 4-under includes Bubba Watson, albeit with five holes to play after opening his back nine with three birdies in four holes.

And to think that two years ago, in advance of the first BMW here, the consensus was that the course could hold its own against the Tour’s elite.

Now, it doesn’t even stand up to TPC Deere Run, the layout across the state in Silvis that hosts the John Deere Classic. Yes, the fields are mildly dissimilar, but each includes Spieth, who has won the Deere two of the last three years. Conway’s par-71 in-progress scoring average on Thursday was 69.977, lower than any complete round two years ago.

Furyk’s 59 was 11 strokes under that day’s average. If Day makes a mere birdie for 60, he’ll be about 10 strokes under. Conway Farms may be only 24 years old, but it’s a Lake Forest dowager with no teeth.

Oh, and the wind blew 15 miles-per-hour and more all day, with gusts to 28. Imagine if it was calm, like Day was.

“It feels like a practice round, like it doesn’t really matter. Even if I hit a bad shot, it’s all right,” Day explained. “I’m just playing golf.”

Is he ever. A tie for ninth in his vertigo-plagued U.S. Open. A shot out of the playoff at St. Andrews. Wins in the Canadian Open, the PGA and the Barclays. In his last seven starts, how worst scores are a pair of ties for 12th.

And while he’s not in a trance, he is focused.

“I thought it was a par 72,” he said of the course. “Jordan told me it was a par 71 on the ninth. I should have known that.”

Instead, he just went about his business, holing bunker shots, 30 footers, and driving it a gazillion yards with a new driver made of Kryptonite or something.

All of that, Spieth saw, and two bogeys, five birdies and an ace later, was still five strokes in arrears.

“It’s a very interesting day,” Spieth said.

And Day.

Around Conway Farms

When Spieth aced the second hole, his 11th of the day, he guaranteed an extra caddie scholarship for the Evans Scholar Foundation from BMW, worth $100,000. It’s the fourth such award since the carmaker agreed to it in 2010, and the first in two years. Quipped Spieth during the delay when asked when the bar tab would open, “After the round; might be 8:10 tomorrow morning.” ... Tee times for the 70-player field began at 11:20 a.m. That’s why 52 players were still on the course when the horn blew. Tee times were moved back compared to two years ago so fans would have more prime afternoon time to watch, both in person and on television. Golf Channel’s live coverage Friday now begins at 11 a.m. ... Among the day’s six eagles was one from Bill Haas on the 18th following a birdie on the 17th. Those two holes made him 3-under for the day. ... The estimated attendance was 25,000. ... Furyk does not know if he’ll be ready for the Tour Championship next week because of his ailing wrist, but with the severe pain he was feeling, didn’t want to chance further injury. ... All spectator parking has been moved to Great America for Friday, the nearest large blacktopped lots.

Tim Cronin

Wednesday
Sep162015

Let the birdie binge begin

Writing from Lake Forest, Illinois

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

 

Star-studded.

First-namers.

Rory. Jordan. Rickie. Jason. Bubba.

All the guys.

Well, all the guys playing well right now, at least.

So, not this first-namer.

Tiger.

The absence of Tiger Woods from the lineup of the BMW Championship for the second straight year won’t detract from the excitement of the four day-fandango that commences on Thursday morning. Some fans in Denver were no doubt disappointed, but the Chicago crowd that will descend on Conway Farms Golf Club through the weekend are sophisticated enough to realize that the old Western Open is a playoff tournament these days, and only the best get the fancy courtesy car for the week.

Thus, the favorites to hold the J.K. Wadley Trophy high are the favorites of the moment in men’s golf. Rory McIlroy, the top-ranked player in the world rankings by two-hundredths of a point. Jordan Spieth, the current Masters and U.S. Open champion, likely player of the year, and right on McIlroy’s rear bumper. Rickie Fowler, who won the last outing in Boston and would have a major if the Players Championship was considered one. Jason Day, who captured the PGA to go with a win at Firestone and more recently the Barclays, the first playoff tournament. Bubba Watson, who may be too long for the bandbox that is Conway Farms, but is certainly a threat.

Not a bad fivesome, eh?

Then throw in Zach Johnson, a.k.a. the Champion Golfer of the Year, plus Phil Mickelson, Jim Furyk, Dustin Johnson, Justin Rose, and Billy Horschel, who just happens to be the defending champion of both this derby and the playoff cash-grab, and the assembled multitude, as well as those tuning in on the magic lantern, are in for a golf treat.

These guys can play, as the PGA Tour’s slogan goes, and Conway Farms, certainly lengthened and said to be toughened, is a course these guys can play on.

Last time around here, Brandt Snedeker fired a 63 to open the proceedings, and tied for eighth.

Furyk scored a 59, with a bogey, in the second round, on a day when the average score was over par – and came in third.

Matt Kuchar put up a 61 in the third round – and finished tied for 24th.

Zach Johnson was the winner, going about the premises in 64-70-69-65 for a cool 16-under-par 268 aggregate, edging Nick Watney by two strokes in an affair that finished on Monday thanks to a Sunday monsoon.

There’s plenty to play for, from the heritage angle of joining Hagen and Hogan and Snead and Nicklaus and Watson – Tom, not Bubba – on the Wadley spittoon, to boodle, a record $1.485 million from the record $8.25 million purse, to the opportunity to lock in a top-five placing in the Tour’s playoff standings. Those five would win the FedEx Cup, and the $10 million bonus that goes with it, automatically if they win the Tour Championship next week at East Lake.

Since the Western Open was shoved into September and renamed the BMW in 2007, when the Tour’s often-tweaked playoff dance began, three players have won both this semifinal playoff test and the Tour Championship. When Woods did so in 2007 to inaugurate the affair, it was expected. When Camilo Villegas did the same in 2008, but Vijay Singh took the playoff title, apoplectic PGA Tour officials began to fiddle with the format. Horschel’s twin-killing last year brought him the big bonus as well.

Thus, a high finish just behind the winner this week could pay off even more handsomely in Atlanta next week than the champion’s take for four days work. Given that those in the chase for the pot o’gold are already rich beyond all comprehension, it may not matter to them. Perhaps they’re really playing for the honor and the glory.

Their accountants will probably tell you otherwise.

Around Conway Farms

 

Rory McIlroy and tee times in Chicago don’t always get along. He almost missed his Sunday singles assignment in the 2012 Ryder Cup at Medinah because he got out of bed late, and Wednesday, had to flip starting times with Webb Simpson in the pro-am because of a delayed flight. There were still about 60 fans following him when he came up the 8th fairway, his penultimate hole of the day, at 6:25 p.m. ... Bill Murray and his five brothers – collectively responsible for CaddyShack, the movie based on their experiences at Indian Hill Club, were inducted into the WGA’s Caddie Hall of Fame on Wednesday night. Murray, erratic off the tee on Wednesday, reported he won a dollar from Charley Hoffman. “I got $40 off each of my playing partners. I’m going to get myself a new BMW.” ... Tee times run from 11:20 a.m. to 1:21 p.m. on Thursday and Friday. Day, Spieth and Fowler go off No. 10 at 11:53 a.m. Thursday, while McIlroy plays with Hideki Matsuyama and Snedeker at 12:59 p.m. off No. 10. Horschel, now sporting a Lexus logo on his shirt – which may help explain his absence from pre-tournament publicity – starts with William McGirt in the last pairing at 1:21 p.m. off No. 1.

Tim Cronin

Tuesday
Sep152015

An honest sportsman: Jordan Spieth

Writing from Lake Forest, Illinois

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Jordan Spieth is the rare sports figure who is both nonpareil at what he does and speaks in complete paragraphs.

And honestly.

The current holder of the Masters title and U.S. Open championship does not dodge questions, does not dissemble, does not dismiss. This 22-year-old with a 30-year-old noggin thinks them through on the fly and presents to the questioner a real answer.

This is not something that most professional athletes – golf or otherwise – can accomplish. Bobby Orr was the greatest hockey player before Wayne Gretzky came along, and perhaps after, but couldn’t explain how his genius came about. Neither could Gretzky. Joe Montana was the master of the two-minute drill, but couldn’t put two sentences together about how he saw Jerry Rice open for that one instant.

Michael Jordan was brilliant, and said much, but revealed little.

Jack Nicklaus was the last golfer who knew he was the brightest man in the room and didn’t mind explaining why the cut 3-iron was a better option than the knockdown 2-iron, never mind that he would have made the putt from wherever the ball landed.

Speith tells all. He is friendly and smart and, delightfully for those with empty notebooks,  blunt.

This empty notebook holder was reminded of this during Spieth’s chat with scribes in advance of the BMW Championship, which has available a snootful of PGA Tour playoff perks, and not incidentally, $1.485 million from the $8.25 million purse for the winner. It commences on Thursday at Conway Farms Golf Club, that Tom Fazio creation squeezed into the middle of a posh housing development where even the ZIP code is unlisted.

Here is Spieth on the ever-changing identity of the world’s No. 1 player: “Rickie (Fowler) wins, and all of a sudden people are coming out of their igloos saying, man, that’s my guy. He’s

the best in the world. I think he is because he won the last tournament. That’s who the best player in the world is.” (If you’re keeping track, Rory McIlroy is No. 1 at 11.98 points, Spieth No. 2 at 11.96, Jason Day No. 3 at 10.94. Fowler is fifth, behind Bubba Watson.)

On changing irons and missing two straight cuts: “It wasn’t because I changed clubs. It’s never made a difference in the past, and I don’t think it was in the last tournament. Everything is normal, everything’s on point. I was just off a little bit.”

On confidence and the lack thereof: “I had self-doubt and it showed throughout 2014. I just let it affect me a bit more, had a little bit of lack of patience. Then, having the confidence in my own game to peak at the right time and not back off it that last round in Australia and then into Tiger’s event.” (Both of which he won, setting the stage for his outstanding current season.)

On 45-year-old Phil Mickelson as a Presidents Cup selection by captain Jay Haas: “I don’t think there’s anybody better in the locker room. He brings some adrenaline and excitement we don’t normally see in people his age to these team events.”

On the Tour’s Byzantine playoff system: “I’ve just got to get some points going into next week (and the Tour Championship). Because of the reset (in points), I don’t think the difference between No. 3 and No. 2 is big. It’s really just a free-rolling scenario. You want to win because you want to win a PGA Tour event. But it makes you feel you may as well go for broke here and play some shots under pressure that are more dangerous so you can almost have it ready for next week.”

Which makes his goal for this week: “To win the tournament. You’re still playing for a full purse. You still want to be No. 1 in the world. “

On getting criticized for missing those two cuts: “I’m that way with sports teams, so why can’t people be that way with me?”

On focusing within all the commentary: “You just need to keep your head down, stay focused, and try to be the guy people are talking about next week.”

There’s no reason to think he won’t be.

 Tim Cronin

Wednesday
Sep022015

Billiter wins Illinois PGA, 2nd major of year

Writing from Medinah, Illinois

Wednesday, September 2, 2015 

MEDINAH – Three holes into the round, and Jim Billiter’s three-stroke overnight lead in the 93rd Illinois PGA Championship was gone.

“Thank God I birdied No. 3 or it would have been a different story,” Billiter said after holding off Matt Slowinski by two strokes and fast-closing Travis Johns by three on Medinah Country Club’s Course One to capture his first section title and second state major of the year.

Billiter, from Libertyville’s Merit Club, scored 1-under-par 70 for a total of 9-under-par 204 to capture the Jim Kemper Cup and the $10,000 first prize. He played the last 11 holes in 3-under-par after going 2-over on the first seven holes.

That birdie on the par-4 third, created via a chip to one inch, broke the instant tie Slowinski forged with a pair of birdies and Billiter going out 5-5, the latter a bogey. And Slowinski bogeying the third, fourth and fifth provided separation as well.

It was anything but smooth sailing for Billiter, who survived a case of the hooks, including the tee shots on the 10th, 11th and 12th holes.

“I had no business making par,” Billiter said.

He did on all three occasions, twice thanks to remarkable recoveries from some of Medinah’s thousands of trees, and with both Slowinski – 4-under on the last six holes – and Johns, who like Slowinski closed in 3-under 32, putting pressure on, par saves were key. Billiter one-putted the first five holes on the back, including birdies on the 13th and 14th, and then parred in.

“I didn’t think I could ever win this one,” Billiter said. “I’m more a match-play guy.”

He won the Illinois PGA Match Play title at Kemper Lakes on a raw day in May. Capturing the Illinois PGA Championship in the same year puts him in company with eight other players, seven of whom are in the Illinois Golf Hall of Fame.

“I never thought I could win one major, much less two,” Billiter said.

As the only player to score under par all three days, Slowinski did his best to disrupt Billiter’s glory. For him the killer was a bogey created by a bad chip on the par-4 11th. He birdied the next three holes and the 17th to finish with 2-under 69 for 206, but Billiter wouldn’t crack.

“I was happy with the way I played today,” Slowinski said. “I tried to make it interesting. It was going to be hard to catch Jim. When he hit bad shots, he was making nice pars, and on his good holes, he made birdies. He didn’t really let anyone get close.

“On the 11th, Jim saved par and we (he and Steve Orrick) both made bogey.”

Orrick, the 2012 champion, started the day four strokes behind but never put a string of birdies together and scored 1-over 72 to finish fourth at 3-under 210.

Slowinski’s last chance to make a move came on the 14th, when he rolled in a curling 30-footer for birdie. Billiter rolled in an 8-footer on top of him.

Johns, one of Medinah’s teaching pros, started the day six strokes behind, and was still four back at the turn. Then he birdied the 10th, 11th, 13th and 15th holes to climb within two strokes. But just as quickly, a three-putt bogey at the 16th knocked him out of contention, and when Slowinski birdied the par-5 17th, Johns was shuffled back to third even with a 67 for 207.

Defending champion Mike Small’s 1-under-par 70 lifted him to a tie for seventh at 2-over 215.

Tim Cronin

Corrected to reflect that par on Medinah No. 1 is 71, not 70.