At a quiet WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational, one sign can salvage the scene

The vibe at the 2020 World Golf Championships-FedEx St. Jude Invitational is unlike any sporting event to come to Memphis.

John Williams was hitting flop shots in his backyard earlier this week, right underneath an #AISENSTRONG banner that’s hanging from his second-floor balcony.

Had he known who his next door neighbor is at the moment, he might not have chosen to fool around with his pitching wedge. But then Williams turned around.

Standing there at the grill was Rory McIlroy watching Williams do what McIlroy does better than just about everyone in the world. Soon enough, Williams and McIlroy began talking from across the fence line and McIlroy met his kids. Before long, Sergio Garcia — who’s sharing a house with McIlroy in the neighborhood surrounding TPC Southwind — came over to pet Williams’ dog.


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“I tried to keep the conversation away from golf,” Williams said with a laugh. “I tried to play it cool.”

The vibe at the 2020 World Golf Championships-FedEx St. Jude Invitational is unlike any sporting event to come to Memphis. Take Friday’s sleepy second round as an example.

It began at 7 a.m., and ended with Brendon Todd atop the leaderboard at 11 under, eating lunch at a picnic table with his wife and caddie where tens of thousands of Memphians would usually be congregating.

The constant murmur and spontaneous bursts of noise from the gallery were replaced by chirping birds and the buzz of cicadas like it was just another Friday morning. But the hackers and club members who would be figuring their way around the course have been replaced by Brooks Koepka and Justin Thomas and Dustin Johnson and Rickie Fowler and the rest of the world’s best golfers walking by.

Only those who live within the gated community around the course, and perhaps a guest or two, are able to catch a glimpse. It’s both fascinating and melancholy. A once-in-a-lifetime experience that this columnist never wants to experience again.

Patrick Reed putts on No. 17 green during the second round of the 2020 WGC FedEx-St. Jude Invitational on Friday, July 31, 2020 at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tenn.

Near the 10th hole, a man walked his dog as Thomas attempted a birdie putt. Along the fairway at No. 12, a man who finished his morning jog sat in an Adirondack chair cooling off as Koepka hit an approach shot. On No. 1, there’s a two-story patio that’s featured a dozen or so onlookers each day cheering golfers as they walk off the tee.

Other than the occasional golf clap, it’s about the only traditional sounds you’ll hear out here.

Ben Williams has been camped out with a folding chair next to the tee box at No. 11 — TPC Southwind’s signature Island hole — since Tuesday.

By Thursday, a handful of neighbors were out there with him. His 8-year-old son, Judah, and his father, Jimmy, joined him for the second round Friday. Three generations of Memphis golf fans watched a historic tournament that’s making history for the wrong reasons this year.

“I was thinking about telling Harry Diamond (McIlroy’s caddie) that it was a two-club wind Thursday. I tried to send mind signals but couldn’t do it (and) Rory hit into water,” Ben Williams said, and almost as soon as he said it Collin Morikawa and Patrick Reed did the same.

“It’s fun to see them miscalculate like me.”

None of this is what it should be, of course. There should be throngs of people walking around. They should be able to follow their favorite golfers from hole to hole. The mansions that border this course should be hosting parties.

Like longtime friends and Southwind neighbors Richard Lusk, Don Lasseter and Jerry Treece. They each were seated in folding chairs by the green at the par-3 14th Thursday, using the backyard of Carol McCourt. A year ago, she had at least 75 people during the final round. This year, there isn’t even a merchandise tent.

“It’s going to be the lost year,” McCourt lamented, and that sentiment applies to a lot more than golf these days.

“We’d be fighting the spectators for this shade,” said longtime volunteer Paul Allen, seated underneath a tree on No. 17.

“You don’t want to show Memphis in a bad light and have all the porches crowded,” added Nancy Mills, watching with another neighbor from the edge of her backyard on the 18th green.

But there is some good to come out of all this.

Nobody would be able to see the #AISENSTRONG banner, or the “We Love the Kids of St. Jude” sign hanging from the balcony of John Williams’ house in any other year. He wouldn’t be able to sit on his patio with a laptop open watching the world’s best golfers pass by his backyard. There would be a giant grandstand blocking the view on the back nine.

But with a pandemic hanging over this year’s tournament, most of the structures normally built out across the course were dismantled weeks ago, once the PGA Tour announced no fans would be allowed on site.

This presented Williams with an opportunity to channel the spirit this tournament usually showcases.

Aisen Cannon is the nephew of a longtime family friend. He was recently admitted to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital with pediatric cancer and began chemotherapy, according to Williams.

“As a parent, I just can’t imagine,” he said Friday.

So he wanted to do more than just light a candle in church. He wanted Aisen to see his name on television.

By now, McIlroy and Garcia have seen the #AISENSTRONG sign. So have Thomas and Fowler and Jordan Spieth, who are staying a few houses down. So has defending U.S. Open champion Gary Woodland, who’s staying in a house across the street. And maybe a national audience eventually will, too.

Memphis’ golf tournament doesn’t look or feel the same this year. But here’s hoping it gives Aisen Cannon at least one moment worth remembering.

You can reach Commercial Appeal columnist Mark Giannotto via email at mgiannotto@gannett.com and follow him on Twitter: @mgiannotto

WGC-FedEx St. Jude notes: Brendon Todd’s confidence; Brooks Koepka’s putting

Brendon Todd, a 35-year-old with three career PGA Tour wins, has never finished better than 23rd in a World Golf Championships event.

Brendon Todd, a 35-year-old with three career PGA Tour wins, has never finished better than 23rd in a World Golf Championships event.

But after a first-round 64, Todd fired a 65 Friday at the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational and, at 11-under, will carry a two-stroke lead over Rickie Fowler into the third round.

Todd said he is putting better this week than he has all year. The highlight Friday was a 50-footer he sank on the par-3 14th for birdie.

“Yeah, it was a little bit in between clubs there, so I shot 6-iron to the left side of the green, safe shot, and had 50 feet over the mound,” Todd said. “It was breaking left to right five or six feet. My caddie really kind of set me up with a good spot there beyond the hole to aim at and I just focused all on speed. it happened to just drift right there in the middle of the hole. Bonus birdie there, but that’s what you’ve got to do to win golf tournaments sometimes and that’s how you shoot low rounds.”

Two of Todd’s three wins came in November at the Bermuda Championship and Mayakoba Golf Classic.

“In my whole life, this is definitely the most confident I’ve ever felt with my golf game,” the former Georgia golfer said. “It’s probably the most versatile I’ve ever been ball-striking-wise. I still don’t hit it far, but I feel like I’m able to shape shots a little bit. And my short game’s solid, so it just kind of comes down to how the putting is.”

Koepka’s short-game struggles return

Brooks Koepka appeared to put his recent putting struggles behind him Thursday.

In the first round, the defending champion sailed smoothly to a career low-tying 62 and entered Friday’s second round atop the leaderboard.

He maintained some of that momentum early in the second round, getting to 10-under, but a three-putt double bogey on No. 2 sent Koepka into a mini-spiral. He needed 10 putts over a four-hole stretch, which included a bogey on the fifth. Another bogey on No. 7 left the 30-year-old at 1-over for the round.

Koepka, tied for third at 7-under, will begin Round 3 well within striking distance of Todd.

“I’ve got 36 holes to go, man, I ain’t worried,” Koepka said.

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Phil Mickelson not going away

Phil Mickelson, 50, turned in a solid second-round showing.

After an opening-round 67, Mickelson shot an even-par 70 Friday, leaving him tied with five others for 15th.

“Although I’m eight back, I feel like I’m in a position that if I can get a hot round, and I’ve certainly shot some of those over the years, if I get a hot round (Saturday), I can move right up into contention for Sunday, which is what I would love, just to have a chance on Sunday,” Mickelson said.

Where’s Rory?

Rory McIlroy, the No. 2 golfer in the world, let things get away from him a bit in the first round, beginning with the par-3 No. 4, when his tee shot found the water. That sparked a string of three straight bogeys and he finished at 3-over 73.

But McIlroy recovered Friday and did so around the same stretch that gave him so much trouble the day before.

Following a birdie on No. 3, McIlroy drilled a 23-foot putt on the fourth for another birdie and added one more on No. 5.

McIlroy shot a 4-under 66 for his round although he is still 10 shots off the lead. He has four straight finishes outside the top 10 after 12 out of 14 top 10 finishes.

Rounds of the day

The best second-round showings belonged to Matthew Fitzpatrick and Kevin Na, who shot 6-under 64.

Fitzpatrick, tied for sixth at 6-under, had an eagle and five birdies. He has five European Tour wins and is seeking his first PGA Tour win.

Na, tied for 12th at 4 under, had six birdies, including five on the back nine after starting on No. 10.

The four-time PGA Tour winner tied for 43rd at last year’s WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational.

Reach sports writer Jason Munz at jason.munz@commercialappeal.com or on Twitter @munzly.

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Brendon Todd’s leads after the second round of play at TPC Southwind

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak discusses the second round of play from the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational.

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak discusses the second round of play from the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational.

Rickie Fowler relishes being back in contention in Memphis

Fowler chipped in for birdie for the second time in as many days and shot 67 on Friday to trail by 2 at the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. – The best club in Rickie Fowler’s bag is usually his putter, but he’s not complaining that he hasn’t had to use it as much this week. Fowler chipped in for birdie at the last for his second hole out from off the green in as many days en route to shooting 3-under 67 in the second round of the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational.

Fowler, 31, overcame a double bogey at the par-3 11th to improve to 9-under 131 for 36 holes and trails leader Brendon Todd by two strokes at TPC Southwind.

It doesn’t hurt that the putter has been doing its job so far, too, for Fowler. He holed a 35-foot birdie putt at the eighth hole, his third birdie in a row.

“I was pulling a lot of putts, I was kind of tense with it, so it’s nice to see things kind of pay off,” he said. “The putter’s definitely in a better spot.”


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But just when it looked like he may chase down Todd and perhaps claim the 36-hole lead, Fowler rinsed his ball in the water at the 151-yard 11th hole and made double bogey.

“Little 8-iron. I think we had 145 to the hole. We were kind of judging that it was playing about 150 to the hole. So, I made a little bit too soft of a swing, I needed to be hitting maybe a 155 shot to try to fly it a few yards past the hole,” he said. “Probably hit it a little soft, which would have still flown hole high, but on top of that, a couple gusts came up. Bad timing.”

That was the only blemish on Fowler’s card and he finished with birdies on the final two holes, including the chip-in at 18 from 40 feet.

Fowler, a five-time winner on Tour, has been searching for answers after missing back-to-back cuts at the Charles Schwab Challenge and RBC Heritage for the first time since 2016. He’s seeking his first top-10 finish since a T-10 at the American Express Championship in January, a span of 10 events. The last time he played 10 or more consecutive events without a top-10 finish was five tournaments at the end of the 2011 season and the first five of the 2012 season. Fowler, who was ranked No. 9 in the world heading into the 2019 Masters, has fallen to No. 32 in the world during his mini-slump, his lowest ranking since 2013.

“This year hasn’t been my greatest. Been working on a lot of stuff,” said Fowler, who has made swing changes with instructor John Tillery. “I feel like I’m heading in the right direction. I think that’s been my main goal is go through some changes for the better. Sometimes you’ve got to take that step back to take two steps forward. I feel like we already made the step back, I feel like we’ve made a step forward. I’m looking for that next step.”

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Brooks Koepka on putter going cold: ‘I’ve got 36 holes to go, man. I ain’t worried’

Brooks Koepka shot 1 over Friday, but he isn’t worried about slipping too far down the leaderboard at the WGC FedEx St. Jude Invitational.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. – For Brooks Koepka, the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational has been a tale of two putting rounds.

On Thursday, the hole looked as big as a basketball hoop and he took just 26 putts en route to shooting 62. But on Friday, the hole must have looked like a thimble as Koepka took 34 swipes and shot 1-over 71 at TPC Southwind. He’s in a three-way tie for third at 7-under-par 133 and trails 36-hole leader Brendon Todd by four strokes.

“I just putted badly,” Koepka said. “It wasn’t really anything other than that.”

The Strokes Gained: putting stat backed up his words as Koepka lost more than four strokes to the field and ranked dead last in the category.

Koepka was skating along just fine early in his morning round, hitting his first 10 greens in regulation and rolling in a birdie putt at No. 11, his second hole of the day. He held the lead at 9 under when his round unraveled at the short, par-4 second hole.

After driving into the left fairway bunker and coming up short of the green, Koepka wedged to 3 feet, 3 inches. That’s when his putter woes struck. Three putts later, he walked off the green with a double bogey, his lead was gone and he was reeling.

“I think it caught a little bit of the bottom lip, I’m not sure. And then the next one, I think it just caught the top lip,” he said.

Koepka switched putting coaches on Wednesday, and despite his struggles on the green, he said he stuck with the new technique that putting guru Phil Kenyon prescribed.

“I felt like I did everything we were trying to do, just wasn’t working, wasn’t seeing the line,” he said. “Even yesterday I said I didn’t feel quite comfortable over anything inside five feet and today it just felt kind of the same.”

After the round, Koepka returned to the practice-putting green and worked with Kenyon some more.

While the putter continuing to plague him, Koepka was pleased with his improved ballstriking since spending time with instructor Pete Cowen. Koepka leads the field in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-green and hit 15 greens in regulation, one more than he did yesterday when he shot 62. Most importantly, his confidence in his game remains intact.

“I’ve got 36 holes to go, man,” he said. “I ain’t worried.”

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Brendon Todd’s quarantine project, a backyard putting, paying dividends as he holes 153 feet of putts

Todd, who had a backyard putting green installed in his backyard in April during the pandemic, holed 153 feet of putts on Friday.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. – Brendon Todd rediscovered his golf game by practicing a swing tip he learned from his instructor Bradley Hughes in a messy, unfinished storage room in their Georgia basement that he and wife, Rachel, call “The Go Room,” because that’s where their kids like to go and run and around.

“I heard an announcer say, ‘Maybe he should finish his basement.’ I kind of like it that way,” Todd said. “I can hit some balls, go get away from whatever, whatever’s going on upstairs when I go down there.”

Todd, 35, already has won twice this season and he’s gunning for what would be the biggest title of his career at the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational. He grabbed the 36-hole by two strokes over Rickie Fowler after shooting a bogey-free 5-under 65 at TPC Southwind on Friday.

The resurrection of Todd’s game arguably has been the story of the 2019-20 PGA Tour season. Even Rachel, who clapped when Todd made putts on Friday and kissed him behind the 18th green after the round said she was surprised to see him continuing to play so well after the suspension of the Tour season in March.

“But we’ll take it,” she said.

Indeed, the Todds will after enduring a dip into the abyss as he suffered from the driver yips and missed 37 cuts in 41 starts between 2016 and 2018. He’s come out the other end and playing the best golf of his life.

“This is definitely the most confident I’ve ever felt with my golf game,” he said. “It’s probably the most versatile I’ve ever been ball-striking-wise. I still don’t hit it far, but I feel like I’m able to shape shots a little bit. And my short game’s solid, so it just kind of comes down to how the putting is.”

The putter has always been Todd’s secret weapon, and it was in rare form in the second round. Todd canned more than 153 feet of putts and ranked first in Strokes Gained: putting this week.

“As good as it gets,” Todd said of his performance with the flatstick. “I think there’s only one putt I would like to have back, and I holed so many other ones that you can’t gripe about it.”

No griping about the big breaking 50-foot left-to-right birdie over a mound that he canned at the par-3 14th hole.

“I just focused all on speed. It happened to just drift right there in the middle of the hole,” he said. “Bonus birdie there, but that’s what you’ve got to do to win golf tournaments sometimes and that’s how you shoot low rounds.”

As for the one putt he wished he had back?

“The downhill seven-footer for birdie on 3; it was pretty straight and I just pushed it a little bit,” he said.

Todd will have to practice from that length next time he is home. In April, during the suspension of play due to the pandemic, Todd had a 3,000-square-foot synthetic putting green installed in the backyard by Tour Greens of Charlotte with three levels and a 4-foot shelf.

“It was our quarantine project,” Rachel Todd said. “It’s our son’s new favorite hangout.”

So far this week, Todd’s caddie Don Gadberry needed oven mitts to handle the putter, which helped him get up and down on 11 of 12 occasions through 36 holes.

“That’s OK with me,” Gadberry said, “I like it when the putter is warm.”

Todd, who had plummeted to No. 2006 in the world and entered the tournament at No. 51, already has wrapped up the Comeback Player of the Year award, but if he can continue to play the way he is the journeyman pro could be the most unheralded player to win Player of the Year.

“I think I’m focused a little bit more on individual events…than I am a title at the end of the year that’s voted on by people – I don’t even know who votes on it, to be honest with you.”

If he can go the distance this week, Todd would be the first player to win three times in this abbreviated season.

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Rickie Fowler, Bryson DeChambeau shine at TPC Southwind (with their shoes)

You couldn’t miss how bright the Puma shoes Rickie Fowler and Bryson DeChambeau wore on Thursday at the first round at TPC Southwind were.

You couldn’t miss how bright the Puma sneakers Rickie Fowler and Bryson DeChambeau wore on Thursday at the first round of the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational at TPC Southwind were.

Both wore highlighter yellow Puma shoes with bright pink midsoles. Fowler even had a matching hat with the letter “P” on it. What a combination.

Both pairs of shoes will be auctioned off, with proceeds going to St. Jude’s Children Research Hospital.

The shoes are eye-popping enough on their own, but the way they contrast with Fowler’s white shirt and white pants makes them stand out even more.

Fowler is known for promoting new Puma releases, which have included some pretty interesting items in the past including pineapple print shirts and pink cardigans.

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Brooks Koepka changes putting coach, rolls rock to career-low-tying 62 at WGC-FedEx St. Jude

Defending champion Brooks Koepka ties his career-best score with a 62 to take the first-round lead in Memphis.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. – Brooks Koepka showed up at the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational, practically the last place golf fans have witnessed his brand of brilliance, and suddenly rediscovered his game as if it were waiting for him in TPC Southwind’s lost and found.

There’s nothing like a hot putting round to make everything better. Koepka birdied the first four holes of his round, the longest streak of his career to begin a round, and barely slowed down en route to shooting an 8-under-par 62 at TPC Southwind for a two-stroke lead over Rickie Fowler and Brendon Todd.

“Everything seemed to click,” Koepka said. “It’s all just the work we’ve put in over the last three weeks of countless hours of beating balls and on the putting green.”


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Koepka hasn’t won on the PGA Tour since winning here a year ago, and entered the week ranked No. 155 in the FedEx Cup standing and in danger of missing the playoffs, which begin in three weeks. On Thursday, he picked up where he left off last year when he out-dueled Rory McIlroy in the final round and looked nothing like the golfer who took 32 putts and tossed his putter in frustration at one point as he lost more than five strokes to the field on the greens last week in the second round at the 3M Open.

“He putted as bad as I’ve ever seen him putt,” Koepka’s full-swing instructor, Claude Harmon III, said.

Over the weekend and on Monday, Koepka spent time with Harmon and teacher Pete Cowen and fixed his swing. But putting remained a bugaboo. Before the St. Jude got under way, Koepka brooded that his putting touch had abandoned him. He entered the week ranked 140th on Tour in Strokes Gained: putting this season. Koepka realized he was drawing the blade back inside, which made it difficult to release properly.

During a practice session on the putting green on Wednesday, Koepka asked Harmon if he thought it made sense to have Phil Kenyon, who specializes in putting instruction and whose students include Gary Woodland, Tommy Fleetwood and Justin Rose, take a look at his stroke. Harmon supported the idea, which led Koepka to approach the wizard in the black arts of putting and say, “Listen, I’m struggling pretty bad and need your help. There’s a reason you’re the best out here.”

Kenyon made a series of adjustments which Koepka described: “You always know my ball sits off the toe, so that’s changed, it’s over the center –  over the line now. My heel is usually off the ground and it’s no longer off the ground. Just the way my left hand kind of works through the putting stroke has become a little bit different. It was kind of the same issue.”

Koepka practiced under the watchful eye of Kenyon for two hours after a rainstorm passed. It did wonders for Koepka on Thursday, although in typical Koepka fashion, he was none too surprised.

“My hand-eye coordination’s pretty good, so I figured it’d be all right,” he said. “My college coach did a drill with me I remember back in college, it doesn’t matter where you line up, whatever is, you can almost will it in just pretty much every time.”

If there’s a will, there’s a way and on Thursday, Koepka made quite an impression. He gained more than three strokes on the green, and ranked fourth-best in the field of 78. He reeled in four birdies out of the gate, beginning with a 9-foot birdie putt at the first and a 23-footer at the fourth. A bogey at the seventh when he missed the fairway to the right was his lone hiccup of the day, but he bounced back with birdies at Nos. 8 and 9 to make the turn in 5-under 30.

Koepka’s clean card on his second nine included an 18-foot birdie at the par-3 11th, a 7-footer at 13, and a two-putt birdie at the par-5 16th. Add it up and it marks the first 18-hole lead for Koepka since he won the PGA Championship last May.

“It feels good to be back to normal,” Koepka said.

How or why a golfer suddenly rediscovers a lethal putting stroke is an enduring mystery. Still to be seen is if Koepka can keep it going.

“One of the things Brooks always says is, ‘I’m not that far away,’ ” Harmon said. “It comes off a lot of times as him being super arrogant, but it’s not. He really believes in himself.”

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Watch Bryson DeChambeau ask for relief from an ant hill at WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational

Bryson DeChambeau asked for relief from an ant hill during the first round of the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Bryson DeChambeau has been the talk of the PGA Tour this season with his long drives and overall strong play.

But Thursday at the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational, DeChambeau tried to make a mountain out of an ant hill.

On the par-4 7th hole amid a strong first-round performance, DeChambeau smashed a drive into an area with trees to the left of the fairway. His lie, among pine straw and sticks, wasn’t the best. Of particular concern to DeChambeau and his caddie, however, was an ant hole near his feet when he attempted a stance.

“It looks like an ant hole, or ant area,” DeChambeau said to PGA Tour tournament referee Ken Tackett on the Golf Channel broadcast.

“I just don’t see Bryson, honestly … I don’t see fire ants,” Tackett said after some discussion.


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DeChambeau pointed out fire ants a couple times, but according to the USGA, ant hills or ant holes are not included as “abnormal ground conditions” eligible for free relief. An animal hole, however, is. The conversation shifted to whether or not it was an animal hole, with DeChambeau’s caddie asking how big a hole has to be in order for it to be considered an animal hole.

Tackett wasn’t buying it.

“It doesn’t interfere with your stance regardless, anyway. It’s not an animal hole,” Tackett said.

The former SMU star left his second shot short and left of the hole, eventually making a double bogey. DeChambeau finished with a 3-under 67.

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Rickie Fowler emerges from dim stretch to light up scoreboard at WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational

Wearing florescent yellow and hot pink golf shoes and a matching cap, Rickie Fowler put 7 red numbers on his scorecard in the first round.

The frequently flamboyant Rickie Fowler has been dealing with a dull stretch of poor play for some time now.

The fan favorite has flashed some brilliance on occasion but this year has mostly been one to put in the rearview as he’s struggled with swing changes while facing the best players in the world. He’s fallen to No. 32 in the world – his lowest ranking since 2013 – missed four of his last seven cuts and had just one top-10 this year. The most recent of his five PGA Tour titles, which includes the 2015 Players Championship, came in the 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open.

But in Thursday’s first round of the World Golf Championships-FedEx St. Jude Invitational at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee, Fowler lit up the first page of the leaderboard.

Wearing florescent yellow and hot pink golf shoes and a matching cap you could see from outer space, he put seven red numbers on his scorecard and signed for a 6-under-par 64. His only blemish was a last-hole bogey.

Ricky Fowler
Ricky Fowler reacts during first round of the WGC FedEx-St. Jude Invitational on Thursday, July 30, 2020, at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee.

His lowest round since January placed him behind only front-runner and defending champion Brooks Koepka, who birdied his first four holes and ended with a 62.

Brendon Todd was with Fowler at 64. At 65 was Sung Kang. Matt Kuchar, Max Homa, Justin Thomas and Chez Reavie were at 66, and in a group at 67 were Phil Mickelson, Sergio Garcia and Bryson DeChambeau.

Newly minted No. 1 Jon Rahm shot 70.


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“I was happy with everything we did today,” Fowler said.

He hasn’t been able to say that much since he began working on swing changes with his coach, John Tillery. The Cliff Notes version of what they are working on? They want Fowler to use his body more to put the club in the proper positions instead of Fowler consciously trying to put the club in the right positions. Let the body make the swing better, in other words.

But after missing the cut at the Memorial two weeks ago, Fowler retreated to his Florida home, took three days off and then hooked up with Tillery to alter things a bit. Their concentration moved to playing the game instead of thinking swing.

“Feel like I did a really good job last week,” Fowler said. “We really focused a little bit more on stuff that I could think of or keep things simple as far as thoughts go, what I can do on the golf course thoughts-wise versus working on the swing on the range and how to separate that.”

The winless stretch hasn’t been easy to go through for the glass-is-half-full Fowler but he remains committed to Tillery and the changes they continue to work on. And in the first round at TPC Southwind, he reunited with his good pal – his putter – and the good vibes led to just 25 putts.

“I definitely have,” been frustrated, Fowler said. “I hate missing cuts. I would probably have like one day that was good and one little off day that kind of kept me from making cuts or held me back. I think some of it, me being a little hard on myself for trying to be too perfect and working on stuff versus leave that on the range and just go play.

“It also hasn’t helped that my putter hasn’t been my best friend and that’s I feel like one of the better parts of my game. I feel like when I get on the greens, I feel like I’m one of the best putters in the world. Today was an accumulation of the work last week and just freeing myself up and simplifying thoughts and just playing golf versus working on the range.

“I was able to get a lot of good work with the putter last week and get myself back into some better positions to free up the putter. I was pulling a lot of putts, I was kind of tense with it, so it’s nice to see things kind of pay off.”

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