Phil Mickelson commits to Champions tour event in Tucson with eye on history

Phil Mickelson won the first two PGA Tour Champions events he entered. He’ll try to make history next week when the tour visits Tucson.

Phil Mickelson won the first two PGA Tour Champions events he entered.

He’ll try to make history next week when the tour visits Tucson: no golfer has ever won the first three tournaments he entered on any of the PGA Tour-sanctioned tours.

On Friday, Mickelson beat the entry deadline and will tee it up in the Cologuard Classic at Omni Tucson National. Mickelson confirmed to Golfweek via text that he will be playing in the event.

In many regards, he’ll be on familiar turf, as the former Arizona State standout has made many visits to Tucson over the years.

In 1991, Mickelson won the Northern Telecom Open in Tucson as an amateur. He remains the last amateur to win a PGA Tour event. In November, he teamed up with Charles Barkley at Stone Canyon Club to defeat Peyton Manning and Steph Curry in the Match III.

In college Mickelson’s ASU team had several battles with in-state rival Arizona, a team with Jim Furyk on its roster. Furyk has also committed to the Cologuard and will be playing it for the first time, having turned 50 after the 2020 version took place.

In 1992, Furyk and his Wildcats won the program’s first team national title at the University of New Mexico golf course, and had to deal with ASU a few times along the way.

“That year, the two best teams in college golf were Arizona and Arizona State,” Furyk said on Wednesday after a practice round at the Genesis Invitational near Los Angeles. “We battled them out in Regionals and then battled them in the NC-2-As, so to beat your rival, a team that had Phil Mickelson, at the time the best college player in the country … to battle them and win the national championship. … yea a lot of good memories.”

Furyk also won his first two times out on the Champions tour but Mickelson will look to one-up him.

“He won at three individual (NCAA) titles and they (ASU) also won a team title while he was in school, so I think he’s kinda upped me a little there,” said Fuyrk. “It’s tough to dig in and needle on that one.”

Former major league pitcher John Smoltz is also in the field. He’ll play the event for the third year in a row on a sponsor exemption. Bernhard Langer is the defending champion.

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Remembering Jimmy Powell: PGA Tour Champions winner and a fighter for his fellow players

Powell eventually joined the senior tour in 1985 and impressed fellow players with his game and his knowledge of the swing.

When the Senior PGA Tour began as an actual sanctioned tour in 1980, it was seen by most golf fans as a chance to watch old favorites play against each other. And it was a chance for players who might have drifted away from competitiveness in their later 40s to feel like rookies again the minute they turned 50. It happened for players like Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player and Lee Trevino.

But the Senior PGA Tour, now called the PGA Tour Champions, was also a chance for strong golfers who never did much on the PGA Tour to get a second chance at being winners in big-time professional events. Such a player was California’s Jimmy Powell.

Powell, who died Jan. 16 in La Quinta, California — the day before his 86th birthday — of what the PGA Tour said was kidney failure, never won on the PGA Tour. While playing in a few PGA Tour events and even two full years on the tour, Powell spent most of the 1960s and 1970s as a talented club professional and teacher at courses like Indian Hills Golf Club in Riverside, Via Verde Country Club in San Dimas and Stevens Park  Golf Course in Dallas. And he was still an accomplished player, winning the Southern California PGA Championship three times.

Powell eventually joined the senior tour in 1985 and impressed fellow players with his game and his knowledge of the swing.

“He was always working on his swing,” said long-time Powell friend Al Geiberger. “He really knew the golf swing, We’ve lost a lot of knowledge of the golf swing.”

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Geiberger played against Powell on the senior tour and with Powell in senior divisions of the Legends of Golf tournament. Powell won the senior division of that event twice, his two unofficial wins on the tour. But he also had four official wins, the first in 1990 and the last in 1996.

“He hung around that group from Dallas, Hogan and Nelson and a lot of names like that,” Geiberger said of Powell’s background. “A lot of teaching came out of Dallas.”

By 2000, Powell was playing fewer than a dozen tournaments on the tour, and just a few years after that he was playing only a handful of tournaments. His last official start on the PGA Tour Champions was in 2008. But he had taken advantage of his second chance at tour success and done well. And he did it all with rugged good looks that Geiberger would joke that Powell should have been a television cowboy star instead of a golf pro.

In recent years, Powell was fighting not for another trophy but for himself and a handful of players who he believed had fallen through the cracks in the PGA Tour’s pension system. While the PGA Tour had pension plans for players who started on the senior tour in the early 1980s and in the mid-1990s and later, Powell, Geiberger and a group of players like Powell friend Gibby Gilbert felt they had been left out.

“Jimmy was a big fighter for fairness,” Geiberger said. “We talked a lot about that. Jimmy knew how much money the PGA Tour had for a non-profit and where the money was. I think he was a thorn in the tour’s side.”

Jimmy Powell, left, and partner Al Geiberger hold their trophies after winning first place in the Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf Demaret Division at The Club at Savannah Harbor.
Jimmy Powell, left, and partner Al Geiberger hold their trophies after winning first place in the Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf Demaret Division at The Club at Savannah Harbor.

It was just a few months ago that Geiberger last saw Powell at The Palms Golf Club in La Quinta, where Geiberger’s son was hosting an annual tournament. Neither Powell nor Geiberger played because of the aches and pains 80-year-old golfers feel. But Geiberger was impressed that Powell was still talking about golf and the swing.

“We sat and talked for about an hour,’ Geiberger said. “He was still talking about, well, we’re getting older, we get weaker shafts. He was really technically about the weaker senior shaft.”

Golf is a game of a lifetime, and for Jimmy Powell, it was a game that he never left.

Larry Bohannan is the golf writer for the Palm Springs Desert Sun. He can be reached at (760) 778-4633 or larry.bohannan@desertsun.com. Follow him on Facebook or on Twitter at @Larry_Bohannan. 

Pro golfer Lonnie Nielsen dies after battle with dementia

He qualified for the 1986 PGA at Inverness and finished T-11, which still ranks as the highest finish by a club professional in the PGA.

Professional golfer Lonnie Nielsen, a longtime South Florida resident, died last week after a battle with dementia. He was 67.

Nielsen learned golf on sand green courses in Iowa and was an All-American golfer at the University of Iowa. Despite his success, he wasn’t sure if he wanted to play golf for a living or use his business degree.

“I’d like to turn pro,” Nielsen said at the time, “but I don’t want to do it if I don’t think I can do it well.”

Nielson turned professional and played the PGA Tour full time from 1978-84. His big moment was tying for fifth at the nearby 1979 Ed McMahon-Jaycees Quad Cities Open.

But there weren’t enough of those big moments, so Nielsen became a PGA Professional and spent 20 years as the director of golf at Crag Burn Golf Club in East Aurora, New York. He qualified for the 1986 PGA at Inverness and finished tied for 11th, which still ranks as the highest finish by a club professional in the PGA.

He kept competing and won more than 100 Western New York Section titles and was named the PGA Professional Player of the Year three times. He won so often, the WNYPGA eventually named its Player of the Year Award in his honor.

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Upon nearing 50, Nielsen had another difficult decision: Remain at his secure club job or take a shot at the PGA Tour Champions, knowing he would have to earn his way onto the 50-and-older circuit.

“When Lonnie first told the club he wanted to play on the Champions Tour, they were like ‘Go ahead. You’ll always have a job here,’ ” said Steve Barber, a PGA Professional and one of Nielsen’s close friends.

“But once he left, it was more like ‘good luck.’ The pressure for him to play well and support his family was gigantic, but he did it.”

Nielsen not only earned a spot on the PGA Tour Champions, but he won a pair of titles: the 2007 Commerce Bank Championship and the 2008 Dick’s Sporting Good Open. Nielsen played in 191 PGA Tour Champions events, compiling 33 top-10s while earning more than $5.2 million.

“The PGA of America is deeply saddened by the passing of three-time PGA Professional Player of the Year Lonnie Nielsen, who left an indelible mark upon his peers while competing at the highest level and with countless amateurs he inspired in the Western New York PGA Section,” said PGA President Jim Richerson. “But perhaps Lonnie’s greatest gift was his humble approach to success and being a premier ambassador for the game of golf.”

Nielsen had a sneaky sense of humor. Once, when he was playing at Pebble Beach, some fans asked him if he was Jack Nicklaus because he resembled the Golden Bear. Nielsen quickly said he was “Jack’s son,” and the fans followed him along, asking him questions about his famous “dad.”

Nielsen, who was 14 years younger, was close to Nicklaus in the locker room, which was almost always done alphabetically.

“Lonnie was a very humble guy,” said PGA of America historian Bob Denney, who also attended the University of Iowa. “I remember watching him live at one event where you could see him mouthing the words ‘Got to close.’ Lonnie had trouble closing out tournaments. But what a great guy.”

Nielsen moved to Palm Beach Gardens during his PGA Tour Champions career, living at PGA National. He moved to Port St. Lucie about a decade ago and played in the PGA Winter Championships as recently as two years ago and played Treasure Coast golf courses with a group called the “PGA Dogs.” He died in New York.

He is survived by his wife, Mary Jo, daughters Sarah and Mollie and son Andy, as well as four grandchildren and three sisters.

Nick Saban once got Alabama’s team doctor on phone with Bernhard Langer during pro-am

I’s a particular round that the two-time Masters champ had with the now-seven-time national champion college football coach that stands out.

It pays to be well connected. It also helps to have a little luck.

In Bernhard Langer’s case, he got both when he was once grouped with Alabama football coach Nick Saban during a PGA Tour Champions event pro-am.

“I’ve created some wonderful friendships over the years with some of the people I’ve met in pro-ams. I’m always excited to see who I’m playing with and just the conversations we might have,” Langer said.

It was a particular round that the two-time Masters champ had with the now seven-time championship-winning college football coach that stands out.

“I had plantar fasciitis last year, and I was paired with Nick Saban in Birmingham in the pro-am and I told him about my foot problem,” Langer said during a conference call to promote the Cologuard Classic in Tucson in February. Langer is the defending champ. “And I asked him if any of his players have a problem with plantar fasciitis and he goes ‘Yea, they do but I don’t know what the cure is. Here, why don’t you talk to our doctor,’ and he pulls out his cell phone and dials the number and goes, ‘Here, talk to our team doctor.’

“Sure enough, I’m talking to the team doctor for five minutes, he gave me some pointers and a couple weeks later my plantar fasciitis was gone.

“Those are just things you don’t get on a regular basis.”

Not for most of us, that is.

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Darren Clarke wins in Hawaii in first event of 2021 on PGA Tour Champions

Darren Clarke ended a nine-year victory drought last November. Now, he’s won two straight on the PGA Tour Champions.

Darren Clarke made his debut in the Mitsubishi Electric Championship on the PGA Tour Champions this year and took to the course right away, posting a 63 in Thursday’s opening round at Hualalai Golf Course in Hawaii.

He was really good in Saturday’s final round, too, torching the back nine with six birdies en route to a 64. He stuffed his approach on 16 to about two feet, setting up a birdie, and then drained a 50-foot putt on 17 for another birdie which opened up a two-shot lead over Retief Goosen.

When Goosen later parred the 18th hole, Clarke could cruise home. He tapped in for par on the last to win by two shots.

Mitsubishi Electric Championship: Leaderboard

Clarke’s win last November in the TimberTech Championship in Boca Raton, Florida, was his first anywhere since the 2011 Open Championship. But visa issues meant he had to be out the U.S. three days later so was unable to travel to the Phoenix Country Club for the final event of 2020, the Charles Schwab Cup Championship.

So Clarke went home for the holidays for an extended break and now, after that nine-year victory drought, has two wins in his last two starts.

Bernhard Langer finished tied for 17th and maintains his lead in the Charles Schwab Cup points race. Miguel Angel Jimenez, the event’s defending champion, finished tied for 17th. Hale Irwin, who made his 25th start at Hualalai, finished last in the 42-man field.

The PGA Tour Champions kicked off the 2021 portion of its schedule at the Four Seasons Resort along the Kona-Kohala coast. The 24-year-old Jack Nicklaus-designed course recently underwent a significant renovation but the venue kept a streak alive: Hualalai became the first course to host a Champions event 25 consecutive years.

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Where does competitive golf start in 2021? Answers are here

The PGA Tour kicks off Jan. 7-10 in Hawaii. Three weeks later, the LPGA, PGA Tour Champions and European Tour get their 2021 seasons going.

It’s time. We have finally put 2020 in our rearview mirrors and turned the calendar to 2021.

After a few weeks off, golf returns to action this week.

For the PGA Tour, it’s the continuation of its super season of 50 events, which will include six major championships. For the PGA Tour Champions, it’s the second half of a combined season. There was no 2020 Charles Schwab Cup champion after the tour decided to merge ’20 and ’21 into one season. For the LPGA, a brand new season will start in 2021.

Over the next few months, many college golf programs are likely to return to action after a hit-and-miss fall where some teams played and some teams – and even some whole conferences, like the ACC, Big 10 and Pac-12 – didn’t.

The American Junior Golf Association managed to stage more than 100 events in 2020 and has already released its 2021 schedule (though COVID protocols remain in place for the time being).

Here’s a closer look at when tournament play, on all levels, will return in 2021.

Euro Captain Padraig Harrington gearing up for extra year at the helm and PGA Tour Champions in his future

Padraig Harrington becomes eligible for PGA Tour Champions when he turns 50 on Aug. 31, but his focus is on retaining the Ryder Cup.

ORLANDO – Not long ago, Ireland’s Padraig Harrington sat down with his business manager to discuss a busy year ahead. In the past, his schedule always included three columns – one for PGA Tour events, one for European Tour events and one for personal appearances and charitable events. This year, there was a fourth column – PGA Tour Champions.

Harrington, who turns 50 on August 31, less than a month before he leads Team Europe’s effort to retain the Ryder Cup in the 43rd playing of the biennial competition against the United States, September 24-26.

“If you want to be successful on the Champions Tour, you have to do it when you’re young and once you go, you can’t go back,” he said.

But in the lead up to turning the big 5-0, Harrington’s focus is squarely on the Ryder Cup. He plans to play a full schedule, bouncing between the European Tour, where he expects to start the season in the Middle East, and the PGA Tour, where he was announced as the first sponsor invite to play the Waste Management Phoenix Open, February 4-7.

Steve Stricker, 2020 Ryder Cup U.S. team captain, and Padraig Harrington, 2020 Ryder Cup European team captain, share a laugh as they hold the Ryder Cup trophy at Whistling Straits on Oct. 1, 2019. Photo: Mike De Sisti/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel via USA TODAY Sports

“Early year I’m going to play some golf myself. I need to build relationships with my players, not so much the senior players that I know,” he said. “Try to show my face and build relationships so I have the trust of the players, especially the young players.”

Harrington, who won a total of three majors in 2007 and 2008 and collected six PGA Tour titles and another 15 on the European Tour, isn’t quite ready to sail off into the sunset. He said he’ll evaluate his game over the next eight months before making a decision about where to play the bulk of his golf.

“If I think I can only finish 15th in a regular event, I’m not turning up. I want to compete and to win,” he said.

But Harrington didn’t sound confident he could follow in the footsteps of major winners Jim Furyk and Phil Mickelson, who made a seamless transition this year winning in their senior circuit debut. “I don’t think my strengths are that well suited for the Champions Tour,” Harrington said. “You’ve got to be 20 under par for three rounds.”

As for the Ryder Cup, Harrington is convinced that the right decision was made to postpone the competition for a year, giving him an extra year at the helm of Team Europe.

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“Back in March-April we put in place the best estimates of trying to get ready for the Ryder Cup and we put a lot of work into it behind the scenes,” he said. “By the end of April, start of May you could see that it really wasn’t a possibility. It was impossible. In hindsight, it has shown to be the right decision. We’re all happy to wait for a year. I’m looking for some rookies to have an extra year. I think it will be a benefit for my team.”

Harrington has spoken often that he believes Whistling Straits, site of the 43rd Ryder Cup in Wisconsin, is a links-style venue that the European side may feel right at home playing as he attempts to become just the fifth European captain to lead his squad to victory on American soil.

If the Official World Golf Ranking is any indication, the U.S. squad should field the more talented team – Americans currently count 12 of the top 20, compared to just six Europeans. But the Ryder Cup has proven time and again to be much like a matchup of bitter arch-rivals where records are thrown out the door and anything can happen.

“It would be incredibly disadvantageous to play at Hazeltine (2016 site) or Valhalla (2008 host),” Harrington said. It is a big advantage for Americans to play a traditional U.S. golf course – big, fast, wider – Hazeltine you have to make eight-nine birdies a round. We’d struggle to win in those conditions. That’s why it was called ‘the Miracle at Medinah (2012).’ I think Whistling Straits is a more neutral site.”

Time will tell if Harrington can assemble a winning side and if he can make one more run at his first PGA Tour win in more than five years. He still believes he has the game to do so.

“I’m hitting it farther and straighter than I ever have,” Harrington said.

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Matt Kuchar teams with son Cameron to lead at PNC Championship

Team Kuchar combined for 10 birdies over the first 11 holes en route to shooting 14-under 58 and lead by two strokes.

ORLANDO – Peter Kuchar joked that he earned a top-10 finish in his one appearance at the PNC Championship with son Matt, and his grandson is looking to eclipse him in his rookie debut.

Matt Kuchar and son Cameron fired 14-under 58 in the scramble format to build a two-stroke lead over Vijay Singh and son Qass after the first round at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club at Grande Lakes.

Making his second start in the PNC Championship (T-9 in 2018 with Peter), Kuchar and his 13-year-old son combined for birdies on 10 of their first 11 holes and 14 overall during a bogey-free round: Nos. 1-6, 8-11, 13, 15, 17 and 18.

“As a father you look forward to seeing how your son is going to cope in certain situations and it’s fun to see how they respond,” Kuchar said. “The day could not have gone better. Cameron played some spectacular golf and it was a blast for me to sit back and watch.”

Kuchar, who won the QBE Shootout with Cameron as his caddie last week, qualified for the PNC Championship’s 36-hole exhibition by virtue of his 2012 Players Championship title, one of nine career Tour victories. (A member of each of the 20 teams holds at least one major championship or the Players.)

Team Singh, which has finished runner-up twice before, is in position for its first title after opening with 60.

It is a very bunched leaderboard with the trio of Greg Norman and son Greg Jr., Tom and Sean Lehman, David and Brady Duval at 11-under 61 and six teams a shot further back including Tiger and Charlie Woods.

Bernhard Langer, who won the 2019 event with son, Jason, opened with 9-under 63 with daughter, Jackie.

PNC ChampionshipThe field, tee times, TV times, format

Tee times were moved up to 8 a.m. due to potential inclement weather. It’s setting up to be another Sunday shootout.

“Whatever happens tomorrow, it’s an amazing experience,” Matt Kuchar said. “What a cool thing to be able to share with people you care about.”

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Charlie Woods shines, carries his dad Tiger Woods in PNC Championship debut

Charlie Woods carried his dad Tiger Woods in the first round of the PNC Championship. Team Woods shot 10 under in the scramble format.

ORLANDO – Charlie Woods is having the time of his life this week at the PNC Championship.

He’s just 11 years old, making his tournament debut as the youngest ever competitor in this 36-hole exhibition featuring winners of prestigious tournaments and their family members.

On Saturday, Charlie carried his famous father, the 15-time major champion.

“He did,” Tiger said with a big smile on his face. The proud papa added that his only son hit “some of the most incredible shots,” and that he had “the best time.”

Father and son teamed for a score of 10-under 62 in the scramble format, offsetting a bogey at the par-4 15th with nine birdies and an eagle at the par-5 third hole. Team Woods trails first-round leaders Matt Kuchar and son Cameron by four strokes heading into Sunday’s final round.

Until this week, Charlie’s golf exploits had mostly been guarded like state secrets. Occasionally, video of his swing would surface on social media from one of his appearances at a junior tournament and dissected as if it was the Zapruder Film.

Justin Thomas and father Mike, who has helped Charlie with his swing, were paired with Charlie and Tiger in the first round and neither were surprised with his poise and clutch play.

“I’ve seen it,” Justin Thomas said. “He’s special. He’s a gamer. He’s a grinder. He’s competitive. But he’s just so young.”

Mike Thomas touted Charlie as “focused and driven” before sharing a colorful anecdote of an 11-year-old with his father’s competitive spirit.

“I lost a dollar to him on the practice green,” he said. “The first thing he did when he got here was come running up to me. I guess he knew where the easy money was. We were about 10 minutes from heading to the tee and I said, ‘Charlie, do you still have that dollar with you? One putt, closest to the pin.’ He said, ‘I like my dollar. I think I’ll just hold on to it.’ ”

And that wasn’t the last time Charlie showed he got more than just the golf genes from his dad. Apparently, he also got his long needle. At the 13th hole, he poked fun at Thomas after he drove into a bunker, as Justin Thomas detailed.

“It started in the pro-am. Charlie hit his drive through the fairway on 13 and my dad was playing in front of him and took a piece of paper and wrote, ‘draw hole’ on it and put it underneath his ball,” he said. “In typical Woods fashion, he kept the piece of paper and when my dad hit it in the bunker he took that same exact piece of paper and put it behind his ball. Little bit of karma.”

Team Woods got off to a quick shot, keyed by a spectacular second shot at the par-5 third hole from Charlie from 175 yards away. Charlie was in between a 3-wood and a 5-wood, and Tiger told him to just hit it. He belted the shot to 3 feet, and Tiger could be heard exclaiming, “Awesome shot!”

Charlie cleaned up from there for the only eagle of the day at the hole.

At the fifth hole, Tiger fanned his tee shot to the right and after Charlie cranked a draw that split the fairway, Thomas could be heard telling Charlie, “You’re so much better than your dad it hurts.”

Other highlights included seeing Charlie walk in a birdie putt at the ninth hole and hit a gorgeous approach to set up birdie at 16. On three occasions – Nos. 13, 14, and 18 – Tiger didn’t bother to hit a tee shot because he knew he couldn’t do any better than Tiger. As noted on the NBC telecast, Tiger’s tee shot at the 15th hole was the first time Team Woods had used his drive on a par 4 or 5 since the opening hole, a span of 10 holes.

“There are kids 11, 12, 13 years old sitting on their couch at home that can’t hit those shots on the range and he’s doing it in front of crowds and on national television,” Justin Thomas said.

When asked to explain how Charlie managed to treat playing in front of hundreds of spectators and millions more watching on TV, Tiger simply explained, “The shots don’t change. That’s the thing he’s learning.”

Part of the beauty of this week has been seeing Tiger in ‘dad mode,’ a side of him that we’ve witnessed only in rare snippets such as their celebratory hug when Tiger won the 2019 Masters.

“I don’t really care about my game,” Tiger said. “I just want to make sure that Charlie has the time of his life and he’s doing that.”

As is Woods, apparently. Asked if it was the most fun he’s had this year, he smiled and said, “Oh, without a doubt. Yes.”

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Tom Weiskopf diagnosed with pancreatic cancer

The former British Open champion began chemotherapy treatment this week.

Former British Open champion Tom Weiskopf was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer on Monday and began his first chemotherapy treatment on Thursday.

“My stomach is a little queasy but I don’t feel nauseous and haven’t thrown up or anything,” he said via phone. “I did see a few guys who did.”

Weiskopf, 78, the winner of 16 PGA Tour titles and another four on PGA Tour Champions, was in Scottsdale, Arizona in late November for the re-opening of Troon Country Club, just days after participating in a two-part Q&A with Golfweek (Part II here). While walking the course with members, he said he experienced sharp pain in his stomach and underwent a CT Scan back home in Montana as soon as he returned there, which revealed a legion in his pancreas.

“If I hadn’t been in enough pain, I might have brushed it off and wasted a bunch of important time without coming to Miami,” he said.

Tom Weiskopf
Tom Weiskopf has designed 73 golf courses around the world. (File Photo)

Weiskopf flew there on Thanksgiving Day and underwent a battery of tests over the course of the next week at Miami Baptist Cancer Institute, which included MRIs, CT and Pet Scans, a genetic scan, blood work, and a biopsy of his pancreas, an organ in the abdomen that lies behind the lower part of the stomach. On Monday, he received his diagnosis and had a port put into his right shoulder to administer what he called “the cocktail.”

“I’ve got a rough 4-6 months ahead of me,” he said. “I had my first chemo today and the treatment lasted seven hours. I get the rest of the cocktail through my portable pump for 46 hours and then I get to rest up for 10-12 days before the next round.”

Weiskopf said the news was “quite a blow,” but he remains in good spirits and already had talked to friends in the golf world including, Jack Nicklaus, Tony Jacklin, Andy North, Ed Sneed and Lanny Wadkins. Weiskopf expressed enthusiasm that he was receiving the best possible care and would beat the disease.

“My doctor said, ‘I need three very important things from you.’ I said, ‘What’s that? I want to deliver,’ ” Weiskopf recounted.

“He said, ‘Let’s start with your attitude. You need to compete against this cancer. You’re going to have some difficult days. You can’t let this chemo get you down. You have to keep fighting. I’ve seen it in some cases where I didn’t know if the person was going to survive but they had such a positive attitude that they prevailed.’ I said, ‘I think I can do that.’

“The second thing I need from you is communication. You need to call your loved ones, call your friendships because they are good people to talk to when you’re down and out and someone will say something that resonates with you and changes your thinking in that moment and gets you through those tough days. You can’t shelter yourself away from this situation. You’ve got to be open and you need help.’

“The last and most important thing he said is, ‘Do you believe in God?’

“I said, ‘Of course, I do.’ He said, ‘Well, give Him a ring every once in a while.’ ”

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