Do PGA Tour pros ever grow tired of playing in Hawaii? The answer is what you might expect.

We put together a summary from the pros as they reflect on a little quality time in this Pacific paradise.

The courses, while picturesque, are now tame by PGA Tour standards, as evidenced by consecutive weeks with scores so low they’ve been breaking records.

And the travel is intense, with players often making a journey of 4,000 miles or more, needing to build substantial cushions into their schedule to account for a massive plane ride over nothing but Pacific Ocean blue waters.

So do trips to Kapalua’s Plantation Course in Maui, site of last week’s Sentry Tournament of Champions on the PGA Tour, and Waialae Country Club in Honolulu, site of this week’s Sony Open in Hawaii, still resonate with PGA Tour pros who frequently enjoy the game to the world’s most scenic backdrops?

Absolutely.

Kapalua was designed by the team of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw and is the top-ranked public-access layout in Hawaii. Waialae is near the state’s only major metropolis and offers plenty of nightlife and cultural opportunities on top of the amazing views.

Still, we put together a summary from the pros as they reflect on a little quality time in this Pacific paradise.

Sony Open: In-depth preview | Check the yardage | Leaderboard

How much money each PGA Tour player won at the Sony Open in Hawaii

Check out how much money each PGA Tour player won this week at the Sony Open in Hawaii.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour, folks. Just ask this week’s winner, Kevin Na.

The 37-year-old has now won in four consecutive seasons, earning his fifth victory on Tour on Sunday at the Sony Open in Hawaii. Na made birdie on the final hole at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu to claim the top prize of $1,188,000 at 21 under. Chris Kirk and Joaquin Niemann finished T-2 at 20 under, taking home $587,400 each. Webb Simpson, Marc Leishman and Brendan Steele finished T-4 at 19 under, earning $277,750.

Check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned this week at the Sony Open in Hawaii.

Sony Open: Leaderboard | Photos | Winner’s bag

Prize money

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Kevin Na -21 $1,188,000
T2 Chris Kirk -20 $587,400
T2 Joaquin Niemann -20 $587,400
T4 Webb Simpson -19 $277,750
T4 Marc Leishman -19 $277,750
T4 Brendan Steele -19 $277,750
T7 Collin Morikawa -18 $200,475
T7 Patton Kizzire -18 $200,475
T7 Billy Horschel -18 $200,475
T7 Daniel Berger -18 $200,475
T11 Matt Jones -17 $153,450
T11 Nick Taylor -17 $153,450
T11 Russell Henley -17 $153,450
T14 Carlos Ortiz -16 $113,850
T14 Nick Hardy -16 $113,850
T14 Keith Mitchell -16 $113,850
T14 Peter Malnati -16 $113,850
T14 Charley Hoffman -16 $113,850
T19 Kyoung-Hoon Lee -15 $78,210
T19 Charles Howell III -15 $78,210
T19 Kramer Hickok -15 $78,210
T19 Mackenzie Hughes -15 $78,210
T19 Hideki Matsuyama -15 $78,210
T19 Stewart Cink -15 $78,210
T25 Sepp Straka -14 $50,710
T25 Hudson Swafford -14 $50,710
T25 Michael Thompson -14 $50,710
T25 Vaughn Taylor -14 $50,710
T25 Si Woo Kim -14 $50,710
T25 Robby Shelton -14 $50,710
31 Cameron Davis -13 $43,230
T32 Kevin Kisner -12 $34,577
T32 Brice Garnett -12 $34,577
T32 Harris English -12 $34,577
T32 Ryan Armour -12 $34,577
T32 Mark Hubbard -12 $34,577
T32 Jim Herman -12 $34,577
T32 Wesley Bryan -12 $34,577
T32 Pat Perez -12 $34,577
T32 Harry Higgs -12 $34,577
T41 Ryan Palmer -11 $24,090
T41 Lanto Griffin -11 $24,090
T41 Brendon Todd -11 $24,090
T41 James Hahn -11 $24,090
T41 Adam Scott -11 $24,090
T41 Aaron Baddeley -11 $24,090
T47 Sergio Garcia -10 $16,903
T47 Austin Cook -10 $16,903
T47 Mike Weir -10 $16,903
T47 Brian Stuard -10 $16,903
T47 Jim Furyk -10 $16,903
T47 Emiliano Grillo -10 $16,903
T47 Scott Brown -10 $16,903
T47 Nelson Lauta Ledesma -10 $16,903
T47 Martin Trainer -10 $16,903
T56 Brian Harman -9 $15,048
T56 Jason Kokrak -9 $15,048
T56 Troy Merritt -9 $15,048
T56 Satoshi Kodaira -9 $15,048
T56 Sungjae Im -9 $15,048
T56 Chris Baker -9 $15,048
T62 Cameron Smith -8 $14,454
T62 Anirban Lahiri -8 $14,454
T62 Zach Johnson -8 $14,454
T65 Sebastian Munoz -7 $14,124
T65 Michael Kim -7 $14,124
T67 Chez Reavie -6 $13,728
T67 Ryosuke Kinoshita -6 $13,728
T67 Jamie Lovemark -6 $13,728
T67 Robert Streb -6 $13,728
71 K.J. Choi -5 $13,398
72 Brian Gay -3 $13,266
73 Jerry Kelly E $13,134

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Sunday tee times, TV info for the 2021 Sony Open in Hawaii

Check out finalround tee time and television information for the 2021 Sony Open in Waialae Country Club in Honolulu.

Feast your eyes on another week of the PGA Tour in paradise, golf fans.

The second event of 2021 and the first full-field event of the new year is off and running at the Sony Open in Hawaii at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu.

Brendan Steele leads by two shots through 54 holes following a third-round 61. Steele leads Kevin Na, who also shot 9-under 61 on Saturday, and Joaquin Niemann at 16 under. Peter Malnati, Stewart Cink, Charley Hoffman, Chris Kirk and Russell Henley sit T-4 at 15 under. Four golfers including Daniel Berger are T-9 at 14 under.

Final-round tee times were pushed up by two hours, the Tour announced Saturday evening, due to inclement weather expected late Sunday.

From tee times to TV info, here’s everything you need to know for Sunday’s final round of the Sony Open. All tee times are listed in Eastern Time.

Sony Open: Leaderboard | Photos

Tee times

1st Tee

Tee time Players
1:20 p.m. Sergio Garcia, Kevin Kisner, Cameron Davis
1:30 p.m. Ryan Palmer, Hudson Swafford, Lanto Griffin
1:40 p.m. Ryan Armour, Carlos Ortiz, Kramer Hickok
1:50 p.m. Brendon Todd, Michael Thompson, Mark Hubbard
2 p.m. Matt Jones, Jason Kokrak, James Hahn
2:10 p.m. Vaughn Taylor, Mackenzie Hughes, Si Woo Kim
2:20 p.m. Patton Kizzire, Nick Hardy, Collin Morikawa
2:30 p.m. Webb Simpson, Anirban Lahiri, Robby Shelton
2:40 p.m. Aaron Baddeley, Billy Horschel, Hideki Matsuyama
2:50 p.m. Nick Taylor, Marc Leishman Daniel Berger
3 p.m. Stewart Cink, Chris Kirk, Keith Mitchell
3:10 p.m. Charley Hoffman, Russell Henley, Peter Malnati
3:20 p.m. Kevin Na, Brendan Steele, Joaquin Niemann

10th Tee

Tee time Players
1:20 p.m. Brice Garnett, Harris English, Sepp Straka
1:30 p.m. Charles Howell III, Kyoung-Hoon Lee, Cameron Smith
1:40 p.m. Mike Weir, K.J. Choi, Austin Cook
1:50 p.m. Brian Harman, Jim Herman, Wesley Bryan
2 p.m. Pat Perez, Brian Stuard, Troy Merritt
2:10 p.m. Jim Furyk, Adam Scott, Emiliano Grillo
2:20 p.m. Scott Brown, Satoshi Kodaira, Harry Higgs
2:30 p.m. Brian Gay, Nelson Ledesma, Sebastián Muñoz
2:40 p.m. Jerry Kelly, Zach Johnson, Sungjae Im
2:50 p.m. Chez Reavie, Chris Baker, Michael Kim
3 p.m. Ryosuke Kinoshita, Martin Trainer
3:10 p.m. Jamie Lovemark, Robert Streb

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TV, Radio info

Sunday, Jan. 17

TV

Golf Channel (watch for free on fuboTV): 4-8 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 5-10 p.m.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

Saturday tee times, TV info for the 2021 Sony Open in Hawaii

Check out third round tee time and television information for the 2021 Sony Open in Waialae Country Club in Honolulu.

Feast your eyes on another week of the PGA Tour in paradise, golf fans.

The second event of 2021 and the first full-field event of the new year is off and running at the Sony Open in Hawaii at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu.

Nick Taylor holds a two-shot lead at 12 under through 36 holes after carding 8-under 62 Friday. Stewart Cink, Webb Simpson, Russell Henley, Chris Kirk and Vaughn Taylor trail Taylor at 10 under. Eight golfers including Collin Morikawa sit T-7 at 9 under.

Among the most notable players to miss the cut are Matt Kuchar, Vijay Singh and Davis Love III.

From tee times to TV info, here’s everything you need to know for Saturday’s third round of the Sony Open. All tee times are listed in Eastern Time.

Sony Open: Leaderboard | Photos

Tee times

1st Tee

Tee time Players
3:50 p.m. Mike Weir, Mackenzie Hughes, Cameron Davis
4 p.m. Michael Thompson, Si Woo Kim, Robby Shelton
4:10 p.m. Kevin Na, Troy Merritt, Keith Mitchell
4:20 p.m. Adam Scott, Carlos Ortiz, Cameron Smith
4:30 p.m. Jim Herman, Patton Kizzire, Nelson Ledesma
4:40 p.m. Jason Kokrak, Hudson Swafford, Lanto Griffin
4:50 p.m. Pat Perez, Brian Stuard, James Hahn
5 p.m. K.J. Choi, Daniel Berger, Nick Hardy
5:10 p.m. Aaron Baddeley, Billy Horschel, Brendan Steele
5:20 p.m. Hideki Matsuyama, Peter Malnati, Joaquin Niemann
5:30 p.m. Charley Hoffman, Marc Leishman, Collin Morikawa
5:40 p.m. Vaughn Taylor, Chris Kirk, Russell Henley
5:50 p.m. Stewart Cink, Nick Taylor, Webb Simpson

10th Tee

Tee time Players
3:50 p.m. Brendon Todd, Anirban Lahiri, Mark Hubbard
4 p.m. Brice Garnett, Harris English, Austin Cook
4:10 p.m. Charles Howell III, Kyoung-Hoon Lee, Sepp Straka
4:20 p.m. Brian Harman, Satoshi Kodaira, Kramer Hickok
4:30 p.m. Ryan Armour, Ryan Palmer, Wesley Bryan
4:40 p.m. Jim Furyk, Emiliano Grillo, Robert Streb
4:50 p.m. Jerry Kelly, Matt Jones, Michael Kim
5 p.m. Brian Gay, Sergio Garcia, Chris Baker
5:10 p.m. Jamie Lovemark, Harry Higgs, Sebastián Muñoz
5:20 p.m. Chez Reavie, Kevin Kisner, Sungjae Im
5:30 p.m. Zach Johnson, Martin Trainer
5:40 p.m. Scott Brown, Ryosuke Kinoshita

TV, radio info

Saturday, Jan. 16

TV

Golf Channel (watch for free on fuboTV): 7-10:30 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 5-10:30 p.m.

Sunday, Jan. 17

TV

Golf Channel (watch for free on fuboTV): 6-10 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 5-10 p.m.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

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With COVID-19 behind him, Webb Simpson back at full strength, shares Sony Open lead

The world No. 8, who tied for 17th in the Sentry Tournament of Champions, is at full strength after contracting COVID-19 around Christmas.

The chalk is writing a predicable script through two rounds of the Sony Open in Hawaii.

Webb Simpson, a pre-tournament favorite and a winner of two events last season, birdied his final three holes Friday to fire his second consecutive 5-under-par 65 to move into a share of the lead midway through the second round of the Sony Open at windless Waialae Country Club.

The world No. 8, who tied for 17th in last week’s year-opening Sentry Tournament of Champions, is back at full strength after contracting COVID-19 around Christmas. The 2018 Players champion and 2012 U.S. Open victor has 12 birdies and two bogeys through 36 holes.

“Today wasn’t quite as sharp as yesterday,” said Simpson, who finished third and in a tie for fourth in his last two starts in the Sony. “Hit a ball in the water on 2. Didn’t hit quite as many fairways but managed really well. I think staying present this week has allowed me to kind of get through these frustrating moments.

Sony Open in Hawaii: Photo gallery | Leaderboard

“I birdied the last two holes yesterday and today I birdied the last three. I think being patient on this golf course is paying off for me. It’s one of those days where calm winds, you feel like you need to go shoot 7-, 8-, 9-under, and I was a couple under for a while there. So really happy with my finish and I thought if I can get it to double digits, I would be at least close to the lead going into Saturday.”

Simpson, who has 11 top-20 finishes in his last 14 starts, said earlier this week he’s as confident about his game as he ever has been. And it doesn’t hurt when you’re playing alongside Collin Morikawa and Marc Leishman, who each shot 65.

Sony Open in Hawaii
Webb Simpson (left) fist bumps Marc Leishman on the ninth hole during the second round of the Sony Open golf tournament at Waialae Country Club. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

“I think seeing good shots before you hit always kind of helps to frame the shot well and then seeing putts go in, you realize, OK, the holes are big enough for these balls to fit in,” Simpson said. “I love playing with those two guys. I’ve played a lot of golf with them. Collin made a lot of putts. Mark made a lot of putts. I made a lot of putts. That’s always nice knowing you don’t have to force birdies, but you put it in the right spot, you’re probably going to make some.”

Simpson was atop the crowded first page of the leaderboard.

Simpson shared the lead with Stewart Cink, who is continuing his resurgence with a 63 on Friday. Cink won the season-opening Safeway Open for his first title since his playoff victory against Tom Watson in the 2009 Open Championship.

Cink also finished in the top 12 two other times in the fall and has finished in the top 20 in his last six starts in the Sony Open.

“Today was a dream day for playing here at Waialae. It was almost no wind,” Cink said. “There was a little bit of moisture on the ground from last night, and it was just a day where you could really dial it in. You could really hit your spots instead of having to do the usual here which is trying to figure out how much wind is going to help or hurt the ball and crosswinds and all that.

“Today there was nothing out there.”

Morikawa, the reigning PGA champion, is in a large group at 9 under with Leishman. Hideki Matsuyama, who hasn’t won on the PGA Tour since 2017, and Charley Hoffman, who hasn’t won since 2016, also each shot 65 to get to 9 under. Joaquin Niemann (69), who lost in a playoff last week in the Tournament of Champions, also moved to 9 under.

The Tank, K.J. Choi, has rolled up the leaderboard as he followed an opening-round 67 with a 65. Choi, who last won on the PGA Tour in the 2011 Players Championship and won the Sony Open in 2008, said he took advantage of the calm winds and an improving putter. Joining him at 8 under were Aaron Baddeley (68) and Daniel Berger (68).

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In-course OB added to Waialae’s 18th to prevent shortcut at Sony Open in Hawaii

The Sony Open in Hawaii instituted internal out-of-bounds stakes to prevent shortcuts at the 18th hole at Waialae Country Club.

It’s not the Lon Hinkle tree, but the PGA Tour did the next best thing to prevent players at the Sony Open in Hawaii from taking a shortcut to the 18th green.

PGA Tour rules officials didn’t bother to plant a tree overnight the way the USGA once did at the 1979 U.S. Open at Inverness Country Club. Instead, they instituted in-course out-of-bounds stakes that run adjacent from the 10th green up to approximately 25 yards from the 18th green. Any shot coming to rest left of the white stakes on 18 will be determined to be out of bounds. The decision was made to prevent players from taking a short cut that could cut 60-70 yards off the par-5 18th hole at Waialae Country Club and cause delays and potentially dangerous situations.

The possibility of blasting tee shots into the adjacent 10th fairway to set up a short iron to the green with an unobstructed view existed this year due to the lack of a grandstand surrounding the 18th green.

Sony Open: Leaderboard | Photos

Players received a text from the Tour at 7:00 p.m. on Wednesday night informing them of the local rule.

“Seemed a little late,” said Brendan Steele, who lost in a playoff at this tournament a year ago. “I was hoping that they would do the right thing and only put them where guys would try to go in between the trees down 10 fairway or whatever and not where like if you over-hook one trying to get it going left that it would actually go out of play and it doesn’t. So, I think they did a good job if that’s what they were trying to do.”

Billy Horschel agreed that the Tour made the right call. He was playing in the Pro-Am on Wednesday when Golf Channel analyst Justin Leonard mentioned to him that many players were talking about how that was the aggressive play this week. Horschel said in years passed, when the grandstand had been in play, it had never crossed his mind.

“He said, ‘Well a lot of guys are. They are having like flip wedges into the green.’ I was like, ‘Well, maybe I’ll have to look at it when I get on the tee,’ ” Horschel said. “We got a text saying that there was an internal OB now on No. 18, which is smart. I think the hole should be played the way it was designed and not cheat – not saying cheat, but not take advantage of whatever you want to take advantage of.”

A year ago, Steele benefited from a free drop from the grandstand when he tugged his second shot at the 72nd hole. Steele said his ball still would have been in bounds based on where the white stakes have been place, adding, “but if you know it’s out of bounds, you probably don’t hit over there, either.”

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Friday tee times, TV info for the 2021 Sony Open in Hawaii

From tee times to TV info, here’s everything you need to know for the second round of the 2021 Sony Open in Hawaii.

Feast your eyes on another week of the PGA Tour in paradise, golf fans.

The second event of 2021 and the first full-field event of the new year is off and running at the Sony Open in Hawaii at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu.

Peter Malnati began the first round with a bang, going low to the tune of 8-under 62 to take the early lead. Cameron Smith – and his incredible mullet – carded a 3-under 67 to start his title defense.

From tee times to TV info, here’s everything you need to know for Friday’s second round of the Sony Open. All tee times are listed in Eastern Time.

Sony Open: Leaderboard | Photos

First round tee times

1st Tee

Tee time Players
12:10 p.m. Jerry Kelly, Aaron Baddeley, Emiliano Grillo
12:20 p.m. Y.E. Yang, Ryo Ishikawa, Sepp Straka
12:30 p.m. Hunter Mahan, Branden Grace, Brian Stuard
12:40 p.m. Stewart Cink, Pat Perez, Richy Werenski
12:50 p.m. Jason Kokrak, Lanto Griffin, Michael Kim
1 p.m. Davis Love III, Brandt Snedeker, Andrew Landry
1:10 p.m. Vijay Singh, Grayson Murray, Andrew Putnam
1:20 p.m. Satoshi Kodaira, Si Woo Kim, Daniel Berger
1:30 p.m. Tim Wilkinson, Brian Harman, Tom Hoge
1:40 p.m. Mike Weir, Anirban Lahiri, Matthew NeSmith
1:50 p.m. In-hoi Hur, Michael Gligic, Michael Gellerman
2 p.m. Chris Baker, Jinichiro Kozuma, Kramer Hickok
4:50 p.m. Bo Hoag, Harry Higgs, Russell Henley
5 p.m. Rory Sabbatini, Peter Malnati, J.J. Spaun
5:10 p.m. Bill Haas, Seamus Power, Talor Gooch
5:20 p.m. Scott Piercy, Chez Reavie, Sebastián Muñoz
5:30 p.m. Carlos Ortiz, Cameron Smith, Sungjae Im
5:40 p.m. Matt Kuchar, Adam Scott, Harris English
5:50 p.m. Zach Johnson, Billy Horschel, Russell Knox
6 p.m. Kevin Na, Nate Lashley, Wesley Bryan
6:10 p.m. Scott Brown, Sam Ryder, Abraham Ancer
6:20 p.m. Bronson Burgoon, Danny Lee, Tyler McCumber
6:30 p.m. Rafael Campos, Mark Anderson, Ryosuke Kinoshita
6:40 p.m. Nick Hardy, Hank Lebioda, Doug Ghim

10th Tee

Tee time Players
12:10 p.m. D.J. Trahan, K.J. Choi, Luke List
12:20 p.m. Matt Jones, Kyoung-Hoon Lee, Will Gordon
12:30 p.m. Charley Hoffman, Matt Every, James Hahn
12:40 p.m. Charles Howell III, C.T. Pan, Hudson Swafford
12:50 p.m. Marc Leishman, Webb Simpson, Collin Morikawa
1 p.m. Sergio Garcia, Hideki Matsuyama, Joaquin Niemann
1:10 p.m. Brian Gay, Patton Kizzire, J.T. Poston
1:20 p.m. Jimmy Walker, Sung Kang, Michael Thompson
1:30 p.m. Nick Watney, Mackenzie Hughes, Cameron Davis
1:40 p.m. David Hearn, Xinjun Zhang, Mark Hubbard
1:50 p.m. Nelson Ledesma, MJ Daffue, Chase Seiffert
2 p.m. Shane Bertsch, Brandon Hagy, Evan Kawai
4:50 p.m. Vaughn Taylor, Kyle Stanley, Erik van Rooyen
5 p.m. Jamie Lovemark, Andres Gonzales, Adam Schenk
5:10 p.m. Parker McLachlin, Fabián Gómez, Henrik Norlander
5:20 p.m. Kevin Kisner, Brendon Todd, Jim Herman
5:30 p.m. Ryan Armour, Brice Garnett, Martin Trainer
5:40 p.m. Ted Potter, Jr., William McGirt, Troy Merritt
5:50 p.m. Ryan Palmer, Keegan Bradley, Austin Cook
6 p.m. Nick Taylor, Kevin Tway, Keith Mitchell
6:10 p.m. Jim Furyk, Brendan Steele, Robert Streb
6:20 p.m. Bo Van Pelt, Chris Kirk, Robby Shelton
6:30 p.m. Rhein Gibson, Roger Sloan, Takumi Kanaya
6:40 p.m. Rob Oppenheim, Eric Dugas, Ben Taylor

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TV, radio info

Friday, Jan. 15

TV

Golf Channel (watch for free on fuboTV): 7-10:30 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 5-10:30 p.m.

Saturday, Jan. 16

TV

Golf Channel (watch for free on fuboTV): 7-10:30 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 5-10:30 p.m.

Sunday, Jan. 17

TV

Golf Channel (watch for free on fuboTV): 6-10 p.m.

RADIO

PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM: 5-10 p.m.

We recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

The ties that bind Collin Morikawa to Hawaii … and the story of a book of matches

Collin Morikawa would love noting more than to win in the state of Hawaii, where his father’s family once owned a restaurant on Maui.

There is a flicker of excitement in the dark eyes of Collin Morikawa at the mention of playing golf in Hawaii.

Last week, he played in Maui, finishing tied for seventh in the Sentry Tournament of Champions, on the island where his grandparents were born and once owned a restaurant. This week, the Sony Open in Hawaii takes him to Oahu, where many of his cousins still live.

“We have so many cousins,” he said. “I lose count.”

A little more than a year ago, before the 23-year-old former Cal Bear became the youngest PGA Championship winner, the Maui News wrote a profile of Morikawa and recounted his family’s ties to the 50th state in the union and the restaurant that is part of family lore.

I wish I knew the name of it, but they did have a restaurant in Lahaina,” Morikawa said in that story that ran on Dec. 27, 2019.

Dave Murphy, a resident of Maui dating to 1983, read the story and felt an immediate connection with Morikawa and turned to the old “Google Machine” for help in solving the mystery of Morikawa’s family restaurant.

“I thought, ‘Well, the logical place to start might be ‘Morikawa,’ so all I did was go online and say ‘Morikawa Restaurant’ and immediately I was taken to eBay where a guy had a book of matches for sale. It was like buy it now for $7.50 or join the auction,” Murphy told the Maui News. “I thought, ‘Well, hey, how cool,’ so I just bought it.”

Murphy turned the matchbox over along with a heartfelt note and some hand-drawn artwork of the matchbox cover to Maui News staff writer Robert Collias in hopes he could get it delivered to Morikawa who had already left for the mainland and the PGA Tour’s West Coast Swing.

Collias FedEx’ed the package to “Mr. Hawaii Golf” Mark Rolfing of NBC Sports/Golf Channel, who passed it on to Andrew Kipper, Morikawa’s agent. Consider Morikawa floored by the effort: “It’s amazing. It’s so crazy to see something like that because I didn’t know anything about the restaurant, I had never been to it — it was closed well before I was born,” Morikawa said.

It’s evident that the restaurant, which served local Hawaiian fare – “plate lunches, noodles, all that type of stuff,” Morikawa said – meant a great deal to the family and his father, in particular.

“My dad remembers the food and he wants that type of food, specific certain types of food that just are hard to find,” Morikawa said. “My dad talks about the restaurant every time we’re here, and he misses it. I wish we had it, because how cool would that be to have it on Front Street where every tourist goes pretty much everywhere on Maui now?”

Morikawa remembers visiting his Hawaii relatives every couple of years, usually during summer vacation and he’s been back to the Islands every year since his senior year of high school.

“Now playing out here, you can tell the family ties are just getting stronger and stronger,” he said.

Morikawa, who has three wins in just 38 career Tour starts, would like nothing more than to notch a victory in the Aloha State, which feels to him like a home away from away. He nearly did so at Kapalua last week, shooting a pair of 65s in the middle rounds but struggled on Sunday.

“I’m going to learn from it,” he said. “On a course like that, where guys are making birdie, you have to keep your foot on the pedal, you have to keep making birdies but you have to stay patient.”

Will last week’s failure light a match under his feet this week at Waialae Country Club, a course that should fit his brand of precision play to a tee?

“Any time you have a tie to location or a golf course, whatever it is, it just makes you want to kind of win at that location a little more,” he said. “So hopefully we have a good week.”

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