‘It was 100 percent the right play’: Collin Morikawa’s 2020 PGA Championship title hinged on his drive at No. 16

When Collin Morikawa took out drive at TPC Harding Park’s 16th tee, he separated himself from the pack and wrapped up his first major.

Here’s the deal.

Collin Morikawa is not of the mindset that a plaque should be planted on the tee box of the shortish par-4 16th hole at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco to memorialize his ‘Shot Heard ’Round the World’ in the 2020 PGA Championship.

This despite the drive on the hole that read 294 yards on the scorecard coming to rest just 7 feet from the flagstick. Despite the pressure considering he hit the drive when he was tied for the lead on an August Sunday in the first major championship played in the silence of a COVID-19 world. Despite the subsequent successful eagle putt all but cementing ownership of the Wanamaker Trophy and giving the Kid from Cal, a pup of 23 years at the time, his first major triumph and third PGA Tour title in just 29 starts.

And despite many in golf’s biosphere hailing the drive as one of the best shots ever hit not only in the history of the PGA Championship but in the lengthy record of all major championships.

It’s not that the extremely intelligent Morikawa, who has a degree in business administration, is belittling the magnitude of the drive. For one thing, he isn’t the bragging type, nor does he thirst for idolization. For another, he just thinks it shouldn’t be excessively saluted seeing as there were other shots during the round that proved as pivotal.

And as he said, “I didn’t have to do anything special.”

In other words, Morikawa made the ordinary look and feel extraordinary.

“It was 100 percent the right play,” Morikawa said. “We had practiced not going for it. But we never thought the tees would be up that far, that the pin would be that accessible. Normally on drivable par 4s you have to cut something in, or hit it really high, or bust a 3-wood.

“This was absolutely a stock driver for me. I teed it up and hit a great drive.”

PGA: PGA Championship - Final Round
Collin Morikawa reacts after putting on the 16th green during the final round of the 2020 PGA Championship golf tournament at TPC Harding Park. (Photo: Kelvin Kuo-USA TODAY Sports)

Downplayed or not, the drive will forever be the defining moment of the 102nd edition of the PGA Championship, a tense contest that saw 10 players hold at least a share of the lead at one time or another in the final round. A group that included the star power of Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka, Jason Day, Paul Casey, Tony Finau and Bryson DeChambeau.

And the play on 16 proved the difference. Morikawa won his first major in just his second try, finishing two shots clear of Casey and Johnson. He signed for rounds of 69-69-65-64 to finish at 13 under; his 129 on the weekend a PGA Championship record previously held by Tiger Woods.

But neither the 8-degree TaylorMade SIM driver with a Mitsubishi Diamana D+ LTD 70 TX shaft nor the TaylorMade TP Collection Juno putter are part of a display in the World Golf Hall of Fame or the PGA of America headquarters.

“The clubs are at my house with a bunch of other clubs,” said Morikawa, who added that each isn’t anywhere near the Wanamaker Trophy that is prominently displayed in his Las Vegas abode. “Definitely not framed.”

Framed or not, the two clubs – and Morikawa – delivered a moment that will live on in the chronicles of golf. And Morikawa will forever remember every little detail about the 70th hole he played that week.

For instance, he was running hot as he headed to the tee, fuming that he had not converted for birdie on the 69th hole despite a superb drive, solid iron shot and fine putt. But as he took a few more steps, he saw the tees were way up.

That’s when he shifted gears inside his brain.

“I was so focused on what type of shot I needed to hit,” he said.

As was his caddie, J.J. Jakovac. He walked off the yardage – the tees were 28 yards from the back edge of the tee box – and became one with Morikawa.

“How far is it?” Morikawa asked.

“278 front, 292 hole,” Jakovac responded.

“And the wind’s off the left, a little hurt?”

“Yep.”

“It’s a perfect driver, isn’t it?”

“Yep.”

“And he just grabbed driver,” Jakovac said. “It literally could not have been a better distance for him. It’s cool, he’s jacked up, and he carries driver 275. He hit it. I ran out on the tee box to watch the first bounce and just started hoping for one straight bounce. I saw the ball come down and kick dead straight and then I said, ‘Go in the hole.’”

It did a few minutes later.

“At the tee box I couldn’t tell how close it was. As I walked up, I saw it was 7 feet and the pressure started to heat up,” Morikawa said. “But all I was focused on was the putt. I had to make the putt. A two-shot lead is so much bigger than a one-shot lead late on Sunday in a major.

“It didn’t look like it was breaking much. I brought J.J. in for a read. I wasn’t nervous about missing the putt. I just really wanted to make the putt. I knew the putt would change a lot of things, and the drive wouldn’t be the same if I didn’t make it. I will always remember our read. We played it 1/3 of the ball outside of the hole on the left edge. And I buried it.

“The putt is etched in my brain.”

PGA Championship
Collin Morikawa poses with the Wanamaker Trophy after winning the 2020 PGA Championship golf tournament at TPC Harding Park. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

Taking in the drama-filled final round step for step with Morikawa were Rick Sessinghaus, Morikawa’s long-time swing and mental coach and mentor; Andrew Kipper, his agent; Katherine Zhu, his girlfriend; and a few members of the media and a few volunteers.

“It was an out-of-body experience, where you almost don’t realize what you just watched,” Kipper said. “(Swing coach) Sean Foley, who works with Cameron Champ who was paired with Collin, was with us. He turned to Rick and said, ‘He just hit one the best shots in major championship history.’ And to me, I think the shot is sort of underrated. Maybe if there would have been fans there it would be celebrated even more.”

Sessinghaus agreed, that the lack of spectators and the roars that would have ensued tempers the drive and putt. But Sessinghaus will never forget it.

“It’s the top moment of my career as a coach, watching my student do what he did on the 16th hole and win,” he said. “Top-10 moment of my life.”

For Morikawa, however, it was just one top-10 moment of the final round. Also on his list are the 25-foot putt he made for par on the first hole, the 35-footer he made for par on the sixth, and the 50-foot chip for birdie he made on the 14th hole.

“In my head, all I think about the drive was it was a good shot,” he said. “I’ve heard people say it’s one of the best in major championship history. But to me, the putt on the 16th was more important, the chip on 14 was more important, the two par putts I made on 1 and 6 were more important.

“Those shots will play in my head a lot more.”

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Pete Dye aside, Jordan Spieth on solid footing chasing career Grand Slam at PGA Championship

Jordan Spieth’s reputation on Pete Dye layouts is less than stellar. Still, he feels he’s on solid footing entering the PGA Championship.

KIAWAH ISLAND, S.C. – Jordan Spieth’s history on Pete Dye golf courses suggests his chances of winning the Wanamaker Trophy this week to complete the career Grand Slam are slim at best.

As he said, he hasn’t performed particularly well on tracks designed by Dye, whose signature traits abound on The Ocean Course at Kiawah Island, home to the 103rd PGA Championship.

Of Spieth’s 15 career victories worldwide – 12 on the PGA Tour, which include the 2015 Masters, 2015 U.S. Open and 2017 Open Championship – just one came on a course Dye had a hand in. Spieth won the 2017 Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands in Connecticut, which was designed by Robert Ross and Maurice Kearney in 1928 and then worked on by Dye in 1982 and Bobby Weed in 1989.

Spieth’s Dye record is most dire at the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass in northeast Florida, where, after tying for fourth in his first Players Championship in 2014, he’s missed four cuts and finished in ties for 40something twice in six starts.

Heat Index: Why Spieth is a smart PGA Championship pick

Despite all this, Spieth likes Dye courses, so at least that bodes well.

“I do. I really like Pete Dye golf courses. I don’t think I’ve fared extremely well on them because they have to be played with such patience,” Spieth said Tuesday.

But here’s the catch. The former world No. 1 is all about patience when he gets to majors, knowing full well the game’s four biggest tournaments are grinding marathons instead of high-octane sprints. So Dye or not, he’ll be patient this week.

HOW TO WATCHTV, streaming info for PGA Championship

“I just find a better way of being patient,” Spieth said. “On Pete Dye golf courses you’ve just got to wait for your distances. You think something is a good look, but then if you miss it by a couple yards on the wrong side you’re really in trouble.

“He does a good job of kind of making you kind of think you’re in the ‘A’ spot and then all of a sudden you just barely miss it and you end up in a tough location and make par or worse. This week I think it’ll be more about hitting middle of greens and then taking advantage of par 5s.”

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Also in Spieth’s favor this week is, well, everything else. He’s healthy again after a bout with COVID-19 about a month ago. And after a surprisingly long winless stretch that tested his patience and resolve – he went 82 starts without a victory – his resume is getting updated with entries on the good side of par. In his last nine starts, he has seven top 10s, including victory in the Valero Texas Open, his first triumph since the 2017 Open.

After falling to 92nd in the official world rankings, his worst rank since 2012, he’s up to 26th with a bullet.

“I’m kind of at this point measuring myself off feels and freedom, playing golf from a position of where I feel comfortable stepping over this shot,” Spieth said. “I’m embracing this long iron into a green under pressure versus, oh, shoot, where is this thing going to go.

“So it’s just more like playing with freedom for me regardless of results because I know if I’m playing with freedom that I have the confidence level and the skill set to be able to compete in the biggest tournaments.

“That’s where I can draw back on previous times.”

Spieth has often talked about the grind of working his way out of his winless stretch. Despite his return to form, the grind continues.

“I’m still quite a bit a ways away from where I want to be in my golf swing and in the performance and in the feels, but it’s getting closer,” he said. “And the closer it gets, the more I’m able to trust those shots and the more it not only gets rid of the scar tissue but can actually kind of prove advantageous under pressure.”

As for pressure, Spieth doesn’t feel any when it comes to grasping the Wanamaker and completing the career Grand Slam. He’s treating this major like any other.

“I think as we get into the weekend, if I’m able to work my way into contention, I think it’s something that’ll obviously be asked and come up, and it’s something that I certainly want,” he said. “But you go to a major, and for me at this point, I want to win the Masters as badly as I ever have this year. Didn’t happen. I want to win this one as badly as I ever have. Once you move on to the U.S. Open, the same.

“I feel like I’ll have a lot of chances at this tournament, and if I just focus on trying to take advantage of this golf course, play it the best I can and kind of stay in the same form tree to green I’ve been in, all I can ask for is a chance.”

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Bryson DeChambeau on his belief in UFOs and one crazy sighting in his backyard

Bryson DeChambeau went from science to science fiction during a SiriusXM PGA Tour Network appearance when he talked UFOs.

Bryson DeChambeau has said some outlandish things and attempted some gravity-defying shots, but The Mad Scientist recently went next-level in a jump from science to science fiction. DeChambeau was on the SiriusXM PGA Tour Network’s show hosted by Gary McCord and Drew Stoltz last night for a conversation that focused on UFOs and unexplained aerial phenomena (UAPs). Yes, you read that correctly.

DeChambeau talks in detail about an experience he (and instructor Chris Como and his friend Adam Hurley) had during the pandemic last year in his backyard in Texas, when he saw “three little silver metallic discs” moving in the distance.

“They were all moving in a triangle shape,” DeChambeau said. “We were out there for literally just under an hour thinking, ‘What the heck is this?’ ”

DeChambeau captured a photo of it and says he went on Instagram Live talking about it. After watching them float there, he said they briefly went inside the house.

“Five minutes later they were gone,” he said.

That wasn’t the only experience the DeChambeau family has had. He recounted a close encounter experienced by his brother and a cousin years ago, and experiences his dad had growing up in Nevada, and he sees no conflict between his religious beliefs and UFOs.

“I am a religious man and I don’t think it conflicts with any views from being a Christian,” he said. “God talks about pretty much [what is in] the Bible and Jesus coming down and saving us as humans and I think it’s not excluding all life out there elsewhere. I think He (God) came down and created this book (the Bible) for us, for the humans on Earth. There’s no reason why He couldn’t make other beings everywhere else. … So being a religious man I think that if anything it is just us, from science or religion, trying to explain what God did. I don’t think there are any issues with that. I didn’t think I was getting too deep into it but I really believe there is other stuff out there and it doesn’t affect my faith or anything.”

He’s not convinced that there is existing technology today that can explain some of these phenomena.

“There’s either one person, like a Tony Stark individual, that is doing things that we can’t explain, which is definitely in the realm of possibilities,” DeChambeau said. “I would say the probabilities of that are less than potentially us being future time travelers that are able to come back with technology that we’ve never seen. I mean, that’s definitely a possibility, too. But personally I think that it’s some other life that we don’t understand or know as of right now. I personally don’t think it is other technology that we currently in this dimension understand. Maybe a parallel universe, somebody flipping over and jumping through a worm hole or something and showing us what we got.”

Laughter ensued. Ultimately, DeChambeau turned philosophical.

“I think more and more people want to know about this and what it could potentially do for our world,” he said. “I mean, shoot, if anything it could bring us world peace, really honestly bring us all together, unite us together and just realize that we are a human race. I think it’d be the greatest thing that could ever happen.”

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PGA Championship odds, predictions and picks

We take a look at the 2021 PGA Championship odds and make our PGA Tour picks and predictions to win.

The PGA Championship returns to The Ocean Course at Kiawah Island for the first time since Rory McIlroy’s eight-stroke victory in 2012. The second major of 2021 is the fourth of the 2020-21 season. Collin Morikawa looks to defend his first major win from last summer at TPC Harding Park. Below, we look at the 2021 PGA Championship odds and make our PGA Tour picks and predictions to win.

McIlroy’s returning to the site of his second career major victory. After a poor stretch of play earlier this year which included missed cuts at The Players Championship and the Masters, he returned to form with victory at the Wells Fargo Championship.

The Ocean Course is a par 72 measuring 7,849 yards with large Paspalum greens.

HOW TO WATCHTV, streaming info for PGA Championship

2021 PGA Championship picks – Favorite

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Monday at 6:20 a.m. ET.

Rory McIlroy (+1100)

McIlroy was the only player to finish double digits under par amid poor weather conditions in 2012. As such, he was long priced as one of the favorites to win the 2021 PGA Championship by the PGA Tour futures odds, but he peaked at +1600 following his missed cut at the Masters.

Those who missed out on those odds are getting a lower return on investment, but are certainly getting the better version of the former world No. 1.

McIlroy was top 10 in the field in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green and SG: Approach at the Wells Fargo. He was third in SG: Putting and had several key sand saves over the weekend.

Place your legal, online 2021 PGA Championship bets in CO, IA, IN, MI, NJ, PA, TN, VA and WV at BetMGM. Risk-free first bet! Terms and conditions apply. Bet now!

2021 PGA Championship picks – Contender

Joaquin Niemann (+6600)

Niemann enters the week at No. 8 in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings but shares just the 26th-best odds to win. The 22-year-old missed the cut in each of the last two playings of the PGA Championship, but he tied for 23rd at last fall’s US Open. He posted back-to-back runner-up finishes in Hawaii to begin the calendar year and tied for 40th at April’s Masters.

The Chilean is an excellent iron player who’s also averaging 0.76 SG: Off-the-Tee per round through 51 measured rounds this season.

Play our new free daily Pick’em Challenge and win! Play now!

2021 PGA Championship picks – Long shot

Dylan Frittelli (+25000)

The PGA Championship has produced many long-shot winners over the years and Frittelli is worthy of a small wager with a $10 bet returning a profit of $2,500.

The toughest tests posed by The Ocean Course (other than weather) are the sand bunkers and dunes surrounding nearly every putting surface. The South African is 56th on Tour in sand save percentage and third in SG: Around-the-Green.

He tied for 33rd at last year’s PGA Championship ahead of a surprising T-5 finish at the November Masters.

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Collin Morikawa’s longtime teacher Rick Sessinghaus saw the ‘it’ factor early in a curious 12-year-old

Rick Sessinghaus and his longtime student Collin Morikawa have a kinship when it comes to knowledge. They always want more.

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A dozen years have passed, but the conversation remains vivid in the scholarly mind of Rick Sessinghaus.

The noted golf instructor in Southern California who was giving 50-60 lessons per week back then, especially to those in the junior ranks, sat down next to his wife, Kathy, in their Burbank home. After talking about how each’s day went, Sessinghaus began chatting about one of his star pupils.

Not an 18-year-old stud, mind you. Or a 16-year-old prodigy.

Dial down the years.

“I told my wife I had this kid who had the ‘it’ factor,” said Sessinghaus, a PGA Golf Professional who earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Speech Communications and a Masters and Doctorate in Applied Sports Psychology. “I told her I really believe he is going to succeed at the highest level.

“And he was 12 at the time.”

His name? Collin Morikawa.

Collin Morikawa AJGA
A 16-year-old Collin Morikawa competing on the AJGA in July 2013. (AJGA photo)

Add another Masters in Prophesy to Sessinghaus’ list of degrees, for the youngster grew up to be a monster in the junior, collegiate and professional ranks.

HOW TO WATCH: TV, streaming info for PGA Championship

Sessinghaus was right there at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco in August 2020 when Morikawa won the PGA Championship, his first major triumph in just his second try, which is his biggest victory of four on the PGA Tour in just 45 starts.

“I didn’t say that flippantly,” Sessinghaus said. “There are plenty of kids who can hit the ball. That’s the baseline stuff. I just told her I had a 12-year-old who askes a lot of great questions, is super competitive, has a great attitude, is curious, whose parents were supportive but not getting in the way. His parents and Collin weren’t obsessed with winning at the time.”

Instead, Morikawa was passionate about learning how the mind works and how to check a chip shot and move the ball both ways. Sessinghaus realized that when they met for the first time shortly after Morikawa blew out eight candles on his birthday cake. Yes, Morikawa was 8 and Sessinghaus was 33 when they shook hands for the first time.

An Odd Couple? Only in age. Their kinship quickly took hold as much for each other’s love for the game as for their thirst for knowledge.

“I was on the right side of the driving range at Scholl Canyon Golf Course when his dad walked over to me and asked if I’d work with his son,” Sessinghaus said. “Collin was with him and he had this big smile on his face and his cute little golf bag. And after two swings, I said, ‘You bet I will work with him.’

“I could tell right away his engagement for his lessons. He was attentive, somebody who was very coachable, and would think things out. He wasn’t a huge talker, by any means, but when he talked, he had very good questions.

“He was very attentive, he wanted to learn, and he had that at a very early age.”

Collin Morikawa Cal
Collin Morikawa during his time on the Cal roster. (Photo: Eric Miller)

Morikawa was of the same mind as his much older instructor. He tapped into Sessinghaus’ ABC’s of mindset principles and appreciated him knowing the X’s and Y’s of the golf swing and being able to play the game at a high level.

“What was appealing with Rick was he was always competitive. As an 8-year-old, I was really competitive. I always wanted to compete against anyone. Rick brought that out of me even more,” Morikawa said. “At all our lessons, we always finished with a contest, whether it was putting, chipping, hitting a shot, whatever it was.

“We did that forever and ever and ever.

“As an 8-year-old you’re trying to beat Rick, who is your coach, and it just kept me wanting to become better, trying to find ways to beat him. I never made an excuse that he was older and could hit it farther. I just wanted to beat him.”

Sessinghaus, now 49 (Morikawa is 24), said he learned early on his young pupil had the makeup to understand and train for being in a flow state, otherwise known as being in the zone.

“Somebody’s DNA in flow states is someone who is completely in the present moment,” Sessinghaus said. “One of the flow triggers for focus is curiosity. What that means is if I can look at a situation in a curious way, it actually takes fear out of the equation. I just want to learn about the present moment. Some people are more wired like that than others.

Collin Morikawa
A young Collin Morikawa competing on the AJGA. (AJGA photo)

“Collin had an interesting mix. He was curious yet creative. He certainly wanted to know the causes and effects of how A+B=C, but he processed it in a way that I think is best for an athlete, which is creative and athletic and not trained to be perfect. He wanted to understand the why. Once he got that answer, it was awesome. I’ve always told him if I don’t have the answer, I will find it for him. He knew I was never going to BS him.”

And Sessinghaus quickly learned Morikawa never played the victim.

“We constantly assessed a tournament not on why he won or didn’t but what did he learn. When he was 16, he played in a tournament at PGA National where they play the Honda Classic, and he came back and said, ‘Rick, I played poorly because I don’t know how to flight my irons in the wind,’” Sessinghaus said. “He said, ‘We need to learn how to flight my irons.’ He wasn’t the victim because it was windy. He took ownership. He never made excuses. That was different.”

The connection grew by the day and remains as strong as ever. And both are continuing journeys to better places.

“The best thing Rick brings to me is his thirst for knowledge, his quest to learn new things and get better,” Morikawa said. “Yes, we’re trying to get better at what we are great at, but Rick is looking for things we’re not great at and try to get better in those areas, whether it deals with the mental process or the golf swing. We’re always trying to gain an advantage.

“I just want to observe and learn and know as much as possible with what’s going on around me. Whether I love the topic or not, if I’m in that situation, I want to learn about it. I want to know how something works; I want to know the history of something. That’s just kind of how my brain works.

“I’m a pretty observant person. So is Rick. So it’s a perfect match.”

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How much money each PGA Tour player earned at the AT&T Byron Nelson

Check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned at the AT&T Byron Nelson.

Despite a lengthy weather delay on Sunday afternoon at the AT&T Byron Nelson at TPC Craig Ranch, K.H. Lee finished the event at 25 under to win by three shots.

Sam Burns, who led after 54 holes, was alone in second while Scott Stallings, Daniel Berger, Charl Schwartzel and Patton Kizzire were all third at 21 under.

The conditions didn’t make it easy for Lee to finish off the win and pick up his payday. With heavy rain coming down and significant puddles on the fairways, his drive on the 16th hole measured just 223 yards, despite being well struck. To put that in perspective, the driving average on the same hole in Thursday’s opening round was 292.4 yards.

Take a look at how Lee made out, as well as how much money the rest of the field made.

AT&T Byron Nelson: Leaderboard | Photos | Winner’s bag
More: Top earners in golf history has plenty of surprises

Prize money

1 K.H. Lee -25 $1,458,000
2 Sam Burns -22 $882,900
T3 Patton Kizzire -21 $395,381
T3 Daniel Berger -21 $395,381
T3 Scott Stallings -21 $395,381
T3 Charl Schwartzel -21 $395,381
T7 Troy Merritt -19 $263,250
T7 Joseph Bramlett -19 $263,250
T9 Jhonattan Vegas -18 $212,625
T9 Seamus Power -18 $212,625
T9 Doc Redman -18 $212,625
T9 Jordan Spieth -18 $212,625
T13 Satoshi Kodaira -17 $153,900
T13 Luke Donald -17 $153,900
T13 Harris English -17 $153,900
T13 Bronson Burgoon -17 $153,900
T17 Will Zalatoris -16 $119,475
T17 Hank Lebioda -16 $119,475
T17 Brandt Snedeker -16 $119,475
T17 Matt Kuchar -16 $119,475
T21 Lee Westwood -15 $84,969
T21 Carlos Ortiz -15 $84,969
T21 Marc Leishman -15 $84,969
T21 Rafael Cabrera Bello -15 $84,969
T21 Alexander Noren -15 $84,969
T26 Wesley Bryan -14 $56,700
T26 Rob Oppenheim -14 $56,700
T26 Ryan Armour -14 $56,700
T26 Sepp Straka -14 $56,700
T26 Rory Sabbatini -14 $56,700
T26 Vincent Whaley -14 $56,700
T26 Keith Mitchell -14 $56,700
T26 Ben Martin -14 $56,700
T34 Jon Rahm -13 $42,201
T34 Mark Hubbard -13 $42,201
T34 Roger Sloan -13 $42,201
T34 Scott Brown -13 $42,201
T34 Adam Schenk -13 $42,201
T39 Talor Gooch -12 $31,185
T39 Brian Stuard -12 $31,185
T39 Johnson Wagner -12 $31,185
T39 Hideki Matsuyama -12 $31,185
T39 Russell Knox -12 $31,185
T39 Pat Perez -12 $31,185
T39 Wyndham Clark -12 $31,185
T39 Sean O’Hair -12 $31,185
T47 J.J. Spaun -11 $20,959
T47 Scottie Scheffler -11 $20,959
T47 Patrick Rodgers -11 $20,959
T47 Ryan Palmer -11 $20,959
T47 Sung Kang -11 $20,959
T47 Nelson Ledesma -11 $20,959
T47 Michael Gligic -11 $20,959
T47 Brice Garnett -11 $20,959
T55 Si Woo Kim -10 $18,630
T55 Aaron Wise -10 $18,630
T55 Sebastian Munoz -10 $18,630
T55 Charles Howell III -10 $18,630
T55 Cameron Champ -10 $18,630
T55 Bryson DeChambeau -10 $18,630
T61 Mark D. Anderson -9 $17,820
T61 Wes Roach -9 $17,820
T61 Luke List -9 $17,820
T61 Martin Laird -9 $17,820
65 Michael Gellerman -8 $17,415
66 Bo Hoag -7 $17,253
67 Michael Kim -6 $17,091
T68 Ted Potter Jr. -5 $16,848
T68 Dylan Meyer -5 $16,848
70 Cameron Percy -3 $16,605
T71 D.J. Trahan -1 $16,362
T71 Austin Cook -1 $16,362

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Collin Morikawa’s Goliath-sized game, curious mind give the defending PGA champ staying power

As Collin Morikawa brings his big game to a monster Kiawah course, get a look at what got the 24-year-old to major-champ status.

(Editor’s note: This is the first installment in a four-part series about defending PGA champion Collin Morikawa.)

Collin Morikawa has rarely been the biggest guy in the room.

Mind you, he isn’t the 97-pound weakling on the beach, but he’s never been mistaken for the muscle-bound bully kicking sand on people, either.

He tips out at 5 feet, 9 inches, about 160 on the scales. He’s heard the jokes of being vertically challenged – prompt the joker saying the rain takes longer to hit his head – but has never wept he didn’t top out at 6 feet, 3 inches and 200 pounds.

He’s brushed off the jokes and even enjoyed a laugh at his expense, especially when he stands next to his caddie, J.J. Jakovac.

“It’s always funny that I look like a child next to him; his massive 6-4 frame over my 5-9 frame,” he said.

But since childhood, Morikawa has more than made do with his size and never shied from dealing with bigger kids, teens, adults. He certainly didn’t go all Napoleon complex. Instead, whatever the size and scope of the challenge, be it on the golf course or in the classroom, Morikawa has put his head down and worked, experimented and moved forward.

It sure did work out.

Despite not being the longest player on the lot, he’s always played large. Goliath large. So as he defends his title in this week’s PGA Championship on the enormous Ocean Course at Kiawah Island, he’ll figure out a way to battle the beast of a course and the best in the world. Just as he has since he followed his parents to the golf course at age 5 and started standing out on every golf course he visited.

Morikawa put together a top-notch junior career followed by a monster amateur career, which included his All-American star turn at Cal. He made his first 22 cuts as a pro, a feat bested only by Tiger Woods.

He won the 2019 Barracuda Championship in just his sixth start on the PGA Tour as a pro. After losing in a playoff to Daniel Berger in the 2020 Charles Schwab Challenge, the first tournament played after the COVID-19 global pandemic shut down the PGA Tour for 13 weeks, he toppled major champion Justin Thomas in a playoff to win the Workday Charity Open.

Collin Morikawa
Collin Morikawa takes a sip of a Memorial Tournament milkshake, given only to the winner this week, while holding the championship trophy after winning a three-hole playoff against Justin Thomas in the final round of the Workday Charity Open. Photo by Adam Cairns-The Columbus Dispatch via USA TODAY NETWORK

Morikawa won the 2020 PGA Championship in just his second start in a major, his “shot heard ‘round the world” a drive that found the green 294 yards away on the 70th hole. It showed he could hang with the longest players in professional golf with the longest club in the bag.

That was his third victory in 29 starts on the PGA Tour. He added his fourth at the World Golf Championships-Workday Championship at The Concession this year. That’s four wins in his first 45 starts on the PGA Tour. And he’s No. 6 in the Official World Golf Rankings.

So that size of the dog in the fight thing? Well, Morikawa proves it’s the size of the fight in the dog that matters.

“From a very young age, I’ve always had the belief that I could overcome any obstacle and I never thought about quitting. I felt like if I gave myself enough time and effort to give myself a shot, I could do it and go out and beat the best,” Morikawa said. “It takes a lot of luck, support from people around you and I’m fortunate to have that in my corner. I never took anything for granted. Everything I did had a purpose and everything I do has a purpose. I put full effort into everything. I’m trying to learn as much as I can. There’s always an unknown.

“I think I was just born with my competitive fire. I hate losing. I will compete against anybody at anything.”

Rick Sessinghaus found that out immediately. He’s one of the key members of Morikawa’s team, which also includes his parents, Blaine and Debbie; caddie J.J. Jakovac; agent Andrew Kipper; and girlfriend Katherine Zhu, who played collegiate golf at Pepperdine and understands the rigors of playing golf at a high level, which Morikawa appreciates.

PGA Championship - Final Round
Collin Morikawa and his coach Rick Sessinghaus with the Wanamaker Trophy after the final round of the 2020 PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park. (Photo by Tom Pennington/Getty Images)

Sessinghaus, a PGA Professional, eagerly agreed to start teaching Morikawa when he was 8, and they’ve been together for 16 years and counting. Despite Sessinghaus’ size advantage and superior golf skills – he was 33 when they met – the two waged battles on the golf course after every lesson, Morikawa never giving an inch and never sulking if he lost.

And while Morikawa insists he’s never heard anyone say he wasn’t long enough to compete against the best – likely in one ear and out the other – Sessinghaus has heard it and was equally dismissive.

“He’s not the longest, but he is Iron Byron,” Sessinghaus said. “He gets the ball closest to the hole more times than anyone else. Collin is creative, a precise player who wins. We have a plan moving forward; he has a trainer, and we will make incremental advances to try to get longer if need be.

“But this is a game to be played; it’s not a long drive contest. There are a lot of variables. Lowest score wins. So you don’t change the essence of the player.”

Despite the age difference – Morikawa is 24, Sessinghaus 49 – the two meshed instantly for two huge reasons. One, their love for the game. And two, they both have – cue Samuel L. Jackson in Pulp Fiction – a big brain.

“Everything about Collin looks like he’s got ‘it,” said two-time U.S. Open champion and ESPN analyst Curtis Strange. “Nobody has this game figured out or any part of it figured out, but he looks like, at such a young age, he has such a mature a golf IQ as anybody that’s come along in a long time.”

PGA Championship
Collin Morikawa watches after teeing off on the 16th hole during the final round of the 2020 PGA Championship golf tournament at TPC Harding Park. (Photo: Kelvin Kuo-USA TODAY Sports)

Off the golf course, too. Morikawa has a Bachelor’s degree in business administration; Sessinghaus a Bachelor’s Degree in Speech Communications and a Masters and Doctorate in Applied Sports Psychology. They both are curious souls, both crave knowledge, both don’t fear change. And that, to Morikawa, is as important as what he does with a golf club in his hand.

“I’m always trying to figure out how to get better,” Morikawa said. “That’s the nature of what we do. I’m going to keep trying new things.”

Especially when it comes to the shortest club.

“In college we would joke sometimes. Let’s say he had a top 5 and I would tongue in cheek say, ‘So, which putter did you use? Or which putter grip did you use?’ Through college he was experimenting,” Sessinghaus said.

It didn’t stop when he turned pro, either.

Ahead of this year’s Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club north of Los Angeles, Morikawa hooked up with two-time major champion Mark O’Meara, who employs the saw grip. Morikawa soaked it in and changed grips.

“He doesn’t do anything haphazard,” Sessinghaus said. “The rationale behind the change made sense to me. He was achieving what he wanted to achieve. The putter was moving through the impact area much freer, he was releasing the putter head much better, so it looked like something we wanted to try.

“That week when J.J, saw it, he said it looked great. But the stats didn’t back it up that week. He had a poor putting performance on that Sunday, but he said he felt comfortable over the ball and I said great. He doesn’t change for change’s sake.

“And the next week he won.”

PGA Championship
Collin Morikawa celebrates with his caddie J.J. Jakovac after winning 2020 PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park. (Photo: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports)

Back to the size thing.

Despite Morikawa’s vast, rapid success – he’s won nearly $10 million in prize money; has sponsor deals with TaylorMade, Adidas, Zurich Insurance, Omega, Grant Thornton, Therabody and US Bank; and is a regular presence during golf tournaments on commercials – he hasn’t gotten a big head.

For starters, he’s always believed he’d be where he is, one of the best players in the world. For another, he’s extremely humble.

“He doesn’t come across as the guy who wants to tell you how good he is,” said Viktor Hovland, another young stud who met Morikawa at college tournaments and now goes toe-to-toe against him on the PGA Tour. “I’m very impressed about what he does inside the ropes. His attitude out here is very relaxed, and he obviously knows he belongs. He’s very professional. To play as good as he has without a long game that is super long, is a testament to how the rest of his game is and his mental strength.

“He’s just really good at so many things.”

Sessinghaus added he’s never heard Morikawa brag.

“He is always looking at what is next, and when you look at what is next, you don’t wallow in what has been done,” he said. “He stays humble because there is more to do. If he thinks about what he’s done, that could derail him going forward.

“I’ve told him to embrace successes and reaffirm what you did well. We want to reinforce things. He knows what he did was great but there’s more to do.”

Starting this week on the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island. The course could play at 7,876 yards – making it the longest course in major championship history.

“It’s a big golf course, I’ll tell you that,” Morikawa said. “Pars are your friend out there. Obviously very wind dependent. If you don’t have any wind it’s playable, but if it’s windy that back nine can pick up.

“It’s going to be a great test because it’s going to test every part of your game.”

Which suits Morikawa just fine.

“He doesn’t have a weakness in his game,” Tony Finau said. “He doesn’t have a weakness mentally. So when you’re dealing with that type of talent, he’s going to be somebody to beat in major championships.

“This isn’t a guy that’s just going to pop up and disappear for the next five years.”

Paul Casey, who tied for second in the 2020 PGA Championship, knew that long before Morikawa hoisted the Wanamaker Trophy.

“There’s always a bunch of guys that rock up on the scene, and he didn’t necessarily get the most publicity out of the group he was in, but you know, I can consider myself veteran. I’ve been around the block, so I know talent when I see it,” Casey said. “We could just tell. Those of us who knew, knew that he’s the one.

“And we weren’t wrong.”

AT&T Byron Nelson Fantasy Golf Power Rankings

Fantasy golf power rankings and odds for the 2021 AT&T Byron Nelson, with PGA Tour picks and predictions.

A field of 156 is in McKinney, Texas, for the AT&T Byron Nelson. This will be the first-ever PGA Tour event at TPC Craig Ranch as the Byron Nelson is played for the first time since Sung Kang won it in 2019. Below, we look at the fantasy golf power rankings and odds for the 2021 AT&T Byron Nelson, with PGA Tour picks and predictions.

Jon Rahm, ranked No. 2 in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings, leads three others from the top 10 in the field this week. This is the final event before next week’s PGA Championship at Kiawah Island in South Carolina.

Rory McIlroy is the betting favorite for the year’s second major after winning the Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow Club last week.

Also see: AT&T Byron Nelson odds, predictions and PGA Tour picks

2021 AT&T Byron Nelson: Fantasy Golf Top 20

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Odds last updated Tuesday at 6:30 a.m. ET.

20. Lee Westwood (+8000)

The veteran Englishman has been off since a 63rd-place finish at the RBC Heritage capped a four-event stretch which included missed cuts at The Honda Classic and the Masters. He previously had back-to-back runner-up finishes at the Arnold Palmer Invitational and The Players Championship to climb as high as No. 19 in the Official World Golf Ranking (OWGR).

19. James Hahn (+12500)

Few in this week’s field have the experience of Hahn at TPC Craig Ranch. He finished as the runner-up at the 2012 Web.com Tour Championship played here. His victory at the 2016 Wells Fargo Championship was at a similarly long course (Quail Hollow Club).

18. Keith Mitchell (+8000)

Mitchell remains a quality value play coming off a T-3 finish at last week’s Wells Fargo Championship. He was second in the field with 1.85 Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee per round and will need to rely on that same part of his game this week.

17. Cameron Champ (+8000)

Sixth on the PGA Tour among qualified golfers and fourth in this field in SG: Off-the-Tee through 32 measured rounds this season. His putting has been awful, but the new venue should help level the field on the greens.

16. Luke List (+7000)

Tied for sixth last week with 1.33 SG: Off-the-Tee and 1.77 SG: Tee-to-Green per round. He tied for 13th at the 2012 Web.com Tour Championship.

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15. Harris English (+6000)

Rose as high as No. 16 in the OWGR earlier this year but has struggled since returning to the mainland after the two events in Hawaii. He tied for 43rd last week with 1.04 SG: Putting but 0.75 strokes lost off-the-tee per round.

14. Sam Burns (+3500)

Returns to play after a week off following his first career PGA Tour victory at the Valspar Championship. It’s another venue that should suit his long irons well.

13. Matt Fitzpatrick (+1800)

Still in search of his first PGA Tour win after a T-4 finish at the RBC Heritage. He has gained an average of 2.13 strokes per round on the average Tour pro over his last 20 rounds, according to Data Golf.

12. Si Woo Kim (+4000)

Looking for his sixth straight made cut since a rough stretch of play following his win at The American Express. He’s eighth on Tour in Par 4 Efficiency: 450-500 Yards and there are five such holes at TPC Craig Ranch.

11. Brooks Koepka (+2000)

Playing his first event since a missed cut at the Masters following knee surgery. The two-time PGA Championship winner is a risky play this week as he tunes his game to Kiawah Island.

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10. Jordan Spieth (+1000)

Hasn’t played since a T-3 finish at the Masters on the heels of his resurgent win at the Valero Texas Open. He seems to always play well in Texas, but he’ll need his driver this week and that has been his greatest weakness this season.

9. Sergio Garcia (+4500)

Still second on Tour among qualified golfers in SG: Off-the-Tee per round. Like Champ, he’ll hope everyone’s lack of familiarity at the venue helps negate his woeful putting.

8. Hideki Matsuyama (+2000)

The 2021 Masters champ will play his first event since donning the green jacket, as he prepares for 2021’s second major. He’ll look to again rely on his excellent iron play.

7. Ryan Palmer (+4000)

Twenty-fourth on Tour in par 4 efficiency from our chosen distance and tied for 11th in Birdie or Better Percentage.

6. Marc Leishman (+3300)

Playing his first solo event since a T-5 finish at Augusta National Golf Club, but he won the Zurich Classic of New Orleans partner event with fellow Aussie Cameron Smith in the interim. He’s averaging 0.44 SG: Approach per round on the season.

5. Will Zalatoris (+2500)

Likely to be one of the most motivated of the top names in the field ahead of the PGA Championship, as he still needs a PGA Tour win in order to qualify for this year’s FedExCup Playoffs despite beginning the week 10th in the Golfweek rankings.

4. Daniel Berger (+1400)

The third-best player in the field by the Golfweek rankings tees it up for the first time since a T-13 finish at the RBC Heritage. One of the leaders in this field with 0.69 SG: Approach per round.

3. Jon Rahm (+700)

The top player in this field by both the Golfweek and OWGR measures following Monday’s withdrawal by Dustin Johnson. He looks to shake off a missed cut last week when he lost 1.36 strokes per round around the green.

2. Bryson DeChambeau (+800)

Barely made the cut last week but finished 68-68 to tie for ninth. He struggled mightily on approach to the green at Quail Hollow Club, but it’s another venue well-suited to his added distance.

1. Scottie Scheffler (+2000)

An excellent value play this week while sharing just the seventh-best odds to win. He’s seventh on Tour in par 4 efficiency and 16th in birdie or better percentage.

Get some action on the 2021 AT&T Byron Nelson by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com. Please gamble responsibly.

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AT&T Byron Nelson odds, predictions and PGA Tour picks

We take a look at the 2021 AT&T Byron Nelson odds and make our PGA Tour picks and predictions to win.

The PGA Tour shifts to TPC Craig Ranch in McKinney, Texas, for this week’s AT&T Byron Nelson as the final tune-up ahead of next week’s PGA Championship. Below, we look at the 2021 AT&T Byron Nelson odds and make our PGA Tour picks and predictions to win.

Five of the top-nine golfers in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings are in attendance. The strong field is headlined by world No. 1 Jon Rahm and reigning FedExCup champ Dustin Johnson. Sung Kang is defending his 2019 Byron Nelson championship but this is the first year the tournament is being played at TPC Craig Ranch.

The venue measures 7,468 yards and plays to a par of 72. It has hosted Korn Ferry Tour events but will welcome the PGA Tour for the first time this week.

2021 AT&T Byron Nelson picks – Favorite

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Monday at 11:45 a.m. ET.

Will Zalatoris (+3000)

At No. 7 in the Golfweek rankings, Zalatoris is the third-best golfer in this field, but he has just the 10th-best odds to win. His missed cut at last week’s Wells Fargo Championship was his first in 14 PGA Tour events since the Sanderson Farms Championship in October.

It was poor putting which did in Zalatoris last week at Quail Hollow Club. He still gained strokes from tee-to-green and around-the-green over his two rounds, and he has been an above-average putter for the 2020-21 season.

As in every tournament immediately preceding a major, the motivation of the top players in the field is questionable this week. Zalatoris still needs a win in order to qualify for the FedExCup Playoffs, despite his world ranking and three top-10 finishes this year.

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2021 AT&T Byron Nelson picks – Contender

Keith Mitchell (+8000)

The value’s still right for Mitchell coming off his T-3 finish at Quail Hollow last week. He held the 54-hole lead and was in the final pairing with Rory McIlroy. He fell two strokes shy of victory with a Sunday round of plus-1, 72.

Mitchell was second in the field with 1.85 Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee and sixth with 2.32 SG: Tee-to-Green per round last week. TPC Craig Ranch is of similar length, and those two parts of his game will transfer well.

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2021 AT&T Byron Nelson picks – Long shot

Sung Kang (+50000)

Kang’s 2019 Byron Nelson win should be ignored as it was at a different venue and against a considerably weaker field. He’s still well worth a long-shot bet, as he is a member of TPC Craig Ranch and will have an edge over most of the field in the venue’s PGA Tour debut.

Kang missed the cut in eight of his 12 events to begin 2021, but he tied for second in last year’s Genesis Invitational and finished T-9 at the 2020 Arnold Palmer Invitational. Both results were in strong fields and at long courses.

New to sports betting? A $10 bet on Kang to win would return a profit of $5,000. The same wager on Zalatoris would net a return of $300.

Get some action on the 2021 AT&T Byron Nelson by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com. Please gamble responsibly.

Follow @EstenMcLaren on Twitter. Follow SportsbookWire on Twitter and like us on Facebook.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage. This information is for entertainment purposes only. We make no representations or warranties as to the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any content.

Keegan Bradley still confident game is trending up after squandering lead at Valspar Championship

Despite a late and costly mistake, Keegan Bradley, 34, was able to put the weekend at the Valspar Championship in perspective.

PALM HARBOR, Fla. — As the ball sailed through the steamy, shimmering late afternoon sky, Keegan Bradley thought he had gotten away with a poorly-hit 8-iron.

The Jupiter, Florida, resident set his eyes on the bunker short of the 13th green and thought if that’s where it was headed it could be worse.

It was.

The ball never reached the bunker, instead hitting the wall that keeps the earth from falling into the water and bounced back into that lake.

Bradley bent over his 8-iron and dropped his head in disbelief. He knew at that moment his chances of a fifth PGA Tour win likely were sunk. Just like that ball.

“I just hit a terrible shot,” he said. “I hadn’t really hit a really bad shot all week and you just can’t hit it there. It was a bummer.”

ValsparLeaderboard | Photos | Money

That shot turned a two-man deadlock at the Valspar Championship into a two-shot lead for Sam Burns, Bradley’s playing partner the final two rounds. Burns would double that lead three holes later before settling for a 68 and finishing with a 17-under 267, three shots ahead of runner-up Bradley.

“I’ve done pretty well in my career when I’ve had a chance,” Bradley said. “I just didn’t hit the shots that I needed coming down the end.”

Bradley, 34, was able to put the weekend in perspective. Yes, there was disappointment that he could not finish after an opening-round 64 and holding the lead after each round … outright after Thursday and tied with Burns following play on Friday and Saturday.

But his game is on the upswing after that final-round 71, mainly because of his putting. And recovering from that one bad shot enough to hang onto second place — even after missing a 4-foot par putt on No. 15 — says a lot about where Bradley is mentally.

Bradley admitted his putting woes had taken the fun out of his game.

“I just didn’t hit the shots I needed coming down the end,” he said. “But I’m proud of the way I finished off to come in solo second. A lot of points at stake, World Ranking points. I can take that away from it.”

What he can take away is his best finish in 43 starts, dating to the 2019 Travelers Championship when he tied for second behind Chez Reavie and got a check for $752,100.

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Although Bradley had the lead at the turn, he seemed to be playing catchup to Burns the entire round. They started even, but Bradley dropped two shots by the third hole after Burns birdied No. 2 followed by a Bradley bogey the next hole.

Bradley battled back and regained the lead outright on No. 9 by dropping a 16-foot birdie putt. That lasted one hole before Burns birdied No. 11, his first of three birdies on the back nine (he had two bogeys but both after he took an insurmountable lead).

“You never wish that upon anyone, you never wish to see someone hit it in the water,” Burns said. “I was hoping Keegan would play his best. I wanted to see how I would hold up and see if I could beat him with my best against his best.”

What made that moment more surreal was this is not No. 17 at PGA National or the iconic island green at TPC Sawgrass. Though the hole played the second toughest on the course that was mainly because it had the second-fewest birdies. Bradley’s was just the second water ball off the tee on the day and the 11th in the 449 times the hole was played in four days.

In other words, Bradley had a 2.2 percent chance to putting that tee shot in the water when he addressed the ball.

Bradley is not going to let one shot derail what he believes is a resurgent career uptick. He said his game is in “great shape” and is confident he will be back in this same spot sometime soon, perhaps this week in Charlotte or in three weeks at the PGA Championship on Kiawah Island.

And nothing said more about his state of mind than his upbeat mood following the round. Bradley quickly turned his attention to his family as he walked off the 18th green with hugs for his wife, Jillian; sons Logan and Cooper.

“We got a four-hour drive back to Jupiter,” he said with a big smile. “We’ll see how much I like them then.”

No matter what happens on that drive, he will enjoy it more than that tee shot on No. 13.

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