Michael Block crashing back to Earth, Harry Hall’s birdiefest lead our 5 things to know from first round at 2023 Charles Schwab Challenge

Many of the pertinent storylines leading up to the Charles Schwab Challenge were tossed out the window.

FORT WORTH, Texas — As is often the case, many of the storylines that seemed pertinent leading up to the opening round of the 2023 Charles Schwab Challenge were kindly tossed out the window through the first 18 holes of action at Colonial Country Club.

Teaching pro and PGA Championship darling Michael Block brought plenty of buzz to the event but he fizzled while part of a featured group on ESPN.

Jordan Spieth, who said his wrist was ready for a run at one of his favorite tournaments, managed just a pedestrian 2-over 72.

And Collin Morikawa, who was one of the betting favorites, finished with a 73, his worst round in 13 at the storied club.

While those storylines didn’t hold up through the first day, that leads us to five things you should know after the first round of the Charles Schwab Challenge.

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2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta: A 65 in a PGA Tour debut and a swarm of bees among takeaways from first round

Watch out for the bees.

Raul Pereda is ranked 810th in the Official World Golf Ranking. Before Thursday’s opening round of the 2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta, he had never played a round on the PGA Tour.

By the end of his first 18 holes, he was tied for second after an opening 6-under 65.

What a debut.

The 26-year-old, one of seven players from Mexico playing in Puerto Vallarta at Vidanta Vallarta this week, was born in Mexico City and played collegiately at Jacksonville University. In his most recent starts on PGA Tour Latinoamerica and the Mexican tour, he has a mixed bag of results. A few top fives. A few missed cuts.

Now, he’s near the lead of a PGA Tour event.

“I just think more than the score I’m proud I was able to stay very present shot by shot,” Pereda said. “My coach, my old coach from school just told me just enjoy shot by shot, and sometimes it sounds easier said than getting it done. I was just able to stay in the present and give myself opportunities and roll it very good today.”

His old coach, Mike Blackburn, has talked with Pereda about taking everything shot-by-shot and living in the moment. And that paid off.

“My mental game was on point, my driver was very good, I think my strategy was very good,” Pereda said. “I think it was all on me today.”

Austin Smotherman, meanwhile, birdied his final four holes, including a chip-in on the ninth, his last of the day, and leads at 8 under after the opening round. Pereda is in a group two shots behind including Tony Finau, Stephan Jaeger, Eric Cole and Taylor Pendrith.

Defending champion and World No. 1 Jon Rahm finished at 4 under after an even-par front nine.

2023 Mexico Open: Defending champ Jon Rahm and early leader Austin Smotherman have one heavy trophy in common

Jon Rahm and Austin Smotherman share at least one thing in common.

Jon Rahm may be World No. 1 and an 11-time winner on the PGA Tour, and Austin Smotherman may trail by 341 spots and still be in search of his first trip to the winner’s circle on Tour, but they share at least one thing in common.

Rahm and Smotherman both are winners of the Mexico Open, and among two of the four past champions in the field this week.

Rahm, who won the Masters earlier this month, is the defending champion of the Mexico Open at Vidanta this week and opened with a 4-under 67 on Thursday at Vidanta Vallarta in Puerto Vallarta. Smotherman won the Mexico Open in 2018 when the national championship was part of PGA Tour Latinoamerica, and while he did so at a golf course in Tijuana, he had no trouble in Puerto Vallarta, posting an 8-under 63 to tie the course record and grab a one-stroke lead over Erik Van Rooyen and Tano Goya after the first round.

“Still get a little bit of some goosebumps thinking about it, for sure,” Smotherman said of his victory south of the border. “The trophy’s not small by any size either, so I think just having to kneel down, take some photos with all the people after the round is one of the memories I remember because lifting that thing’s not easy.”

In the opening round, Smotherman made it look easy, reeling off four birdies in a row to finish his round, including a 37-foot chip-in birdie at the ninth.

“Kind of blinked, and the next thing you know had four birdies to finish,” said Smotherman, who entered the week No. 160 in the FedEx Cup standings. “Felt like I was in my zone today, just very present.”

Rahm, by contrast, seemed to be sleep walking through the first seven holes, which included two bogeys. But he planted his tee shot at 17, his eighth hole of the day, to 6 feet and sank the putt to get back to even par.

Rahm sprayed his driver both right and left, hitting just five fairways, and didn’t have his best stuff, but closed the day with a 26-foot birdie to shoot 67.

“To finish it off that way,” Rahm said, “it always feels like you’re stealing.”

Rahm, who finished the day T-14, one-putted the last four holes and made 116 feet in putts in the opening round.

Rahm went from a marathon-Sunday finish at the Masters to competing in the RBC Heritage the following week. He took last week off, which included a celebration at home with family and friends, but said it wasn’t enough time off.

“I wish I could have rested a little more, but it is the life we signed up for,” he said.

It’s certainly the life for Eric Cole. Growing up, Cole was like so many kids dreaming of playing on the PGA Tour someday. The only difference was not many kids can count their father as a former PGA Tour winner and their mother as a U.S. Women’s Amateur champion and veteran of the LPGA Tour.

Cole, the son of South African golfer Bobby Cole, who once held the 54-hole lead at the British Open, and Laura Baugh, a celebrated golfer in her own right, finally made it to the PGA Tour as a 34-year-old rookie and he’s been having a solid season, including finishing second at the Honda Classic in March.

Cole is off to a fast start at the Mexico Open, shooting 6-under 65, part of a logjam of five players tied for fourth, including Tony Finau, Stephen Jaeger, Taylor Pendrith and Raul Pereda of Mexico, who is playing on a sponsor’s exemption.

Cole won more than 50 times on golf’s mini tours and spent a couple of years on the Korn Ferry Tour before making it to the big leagues. After a bogey at his first hole, No. 10, in the opening round in Mexico, Cole rebounded with seven birdies, including stuffing his approach shot from 193 yards to inside 2 feet for a tap-in birdie at 16.

“I hit my irons really well so I didn’t really get myself out of position much,” said Cole, who gained more than four strokes on the field with his approach game.

Finau turned his season around at this tournament a year ago, finishing T-2, and picked up where he left off.

“I think there’s just some good mojo after last year,” Finau said. “This year getting off to a little bit better start, so hopefully continue the good play.”

Jaeger has some good vibes, too. He finished T-15 in this event a year ago. He has made 13 cuts in 16 starts this season but only has recorded two top-25 finishes. He started his day on the back nine and made birdie on four of his first seven holes, including draining a 20-foot putt at 16. His iron game was sharp as he hit 17 of 18 greens on Thursday.

“It definitely could have been lower, I hit some edges there today,” Jaeger said of putts that just wouldn’t drop. “I’m never going to complain about 6 under.”

Pendrith finished a season-best T-13 last week at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, a two-man team event. But in individual stroke-play events, Pendrith had missed the cut at three of his last five events, and finished T-69 and T-70 on the two occasions when he played the weekend. In short, he’s been firmly planted on the struggle bus but not in Round One.

“Everything was kind of clicking,” he said, including his putter at No. 8 when he drained a 35-foot birdie putt.

Raul Pereda, who is making his PGA Tour debut on home soil, shot a bogey-free 65 by following advice from Mike Blackburn, his golf coach at Jacksonville University, who told him to enjoy every shot.

“That was my goal today, just live it every single shot,” he said.

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Ben Crane (remember Ben?) and Aaron Baddeley (remember Aaron?) have resurrected their games at the Butterfield Bermuda Championship

Has Ben Crane, a five-time Tour winner with over $21 million in earnings, been lost in the Bermuda Triangle?

If you didn’t know any better, PGA Tour veteran Ben Crane could have been one of the passengers on the TV show Manifest, where the passengers and crew of a commercial airliner suddenly reappear after being presumed dead for five and a half years.

After all, the 46-year-old Oregon Duck grad won five times on the PGA Tour, but hasn’t finished inside the top 125 to make the FedEx Cup since 2016. His last top-10 finish? The 2019 Puerto Rico Open. Has the five-time Tour winner with over $21 million in earnings been lost in the Bermuda Triangle? This week, his game has been found there. On Friday, Crane tied a career-low with a bogey-free 9-under 62 at Port Royal Golf Course in Southampton, Bermuda, to take the 36-hole lead at the Butterfield Bermuda Championship.

“I mean, couldn’t be more encouraged,” Crane said after shooting a two-day total of 14-under 128, a stroke better than five golfers. “Obviously played the best golf I’ve played in a long time and to be in this tournament is super encouraging, get to play four rounds.”

Butterfield Bermuda: Leaderboard | Photos

Crane wasn’t even in the field on Sunday, still stuck on the alternate list but called a friend involved in the tournament and said he was going to fly to Bermuda and take his chances.

“He said, ‘Hey, we got you, we took you as a sponsor exempt into the field,’ ” Crane recalled. “I don’t get in a lot and then to get in and the weather starts getting bad right when I finished. So really cool to shoot 62. That 29 on the back, I didn’t see it coming, but it adds up to 29, super fun day.”

Crane also bagged the shot of the day according to Golf Channel, holing a 51-degree wedge from 115 yards for eagle from the sixth fairway.

“Sometimes you kind of picture them, you look up and it’s, man, that’s just like I pictured it, lined up with the pin, landed a few paces passed the hole, spun back and went in,” said Crane, who punched the sky and kicked up his right foot. “I was having an incredible day and then that happened. I was like, wow, this is all going my way.”

Crane, who last won in 2014 and played in just 10 events last year as a past champion, discussed how easily it is to lose one’s game.

“It’s just one little slipped shot here or there and you lose your confidence,” he explained. “I said it to my son who’s 14 and learning to play the game, it’s a really hard game, golf’s hard. Today was one of those special days, one of a hundred whatever it is where it just kind of all comes together.”

For Crane, it added up to his sixth 36-hole lead but first since the 2016 AT&T Byron Nelson.

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Austin Smotherman’s career low, Arjun Atwal sneaks into field, Adam Schenk forgets his clubs among the takeaways at the Butterfield Bermuda Championship

“We got blessed today with a beautiful day on the island,” said Smotherman.

Austin Smotherman prepped for the Butterfield Bermuda Championship by playing in a member-guest last week. Arjun Atwal played in his home club’s weekly Friday game. It may not sound like the typical way to get ready for a PGA Tour event but there’s no arguing with their results. On a day when the wind off the Atlantic Ocean decided to lay down and the conditions were ripe for scoring, Smotherman shot a career-low 9-under 62 at Port Royal Golf Course in Southampton, Bermuda, to share the first-round lead with rookie Harrison Endycott, who bogeyed his first two holes but rallied with two eagles. They are a stroke better than six golfers, including Atwal, who wasn’t even in the field when he woke up Thursday morning, and Adam Schenk, who drove to the airport without his clubs and had to re-book his flight.

“We got blessed today with a beautiful day on the island,” said Smotherman.

The 28-year-old second year pro played in the second group out in the morning and took advantage of soft, smooth greens. He needed just 23 putts and said the longest one he made was no more than 13 feet on Thursday. Last week, he played in the member-guest at his home course in Dallas, Trinity Forest, which formerly hosted the PGA Tour’s AT&T Byron Nelson.

“Shout-out for The Crony,” Smotherman said of the member-guest tournament. “We had our greens rolling maybe 13 and it blew 25, 30 all weekend. I was thinking I was coming here, getting these conditions, it’s almost the opposite of what I just had. I was like, ‘Come on, where’s the wind?’ Like we were just practicing that.”

Smotherman, who has been working hard on his wedge game, said his ballstriking with his short irons was dialed in. That’s been the part of his game that has held him back.

“How do we find three shots a tournament and it’s some of these wedges,” he explained. “I was missing these wedges short-sided.”

Smotherman last made headlines when he double-bogeyed his final hole of the Wyndham Championship to miss the cut and ended up losing his Tour card for this season. But he received a reprieve when several players defected to LIV Golf, making him fully-exempt this season. How did it feel to shoot his career low?

“Good, let’s go better tomorrow, why not,” he said. “We’ve still got room.”

Butterfield Bermuda: Full leaderboard

Six golfers earned PGA Tour cards just as six LIV golfers teed off in shotgun start in Boston

Once a player strikes a tee shot on the LIV Golf Series, he has lost his status on the PGA Tour.

Not sure they should be expecting thank you cards or gift baskets, but when the six newest members of the LIV Golf Series teed off in Boston on Friday for their 1:15 p.m. ET shotgun start, six others earned their PGA Tour cards.

Officially, Cameron Smith, Marc Leishman, Joaquin Niemann, Harold Varner III, Anirban Lahiri and Cameron Tringale were “removed from the 2021-22 FedEx Cup Playoffs and Eligibility Points List,” according to the PGA Tour.

This then elevated Kelly Kraft, Justin Lower, Doc Redman, Austin Smotherman, Matt Wallace and Danny Willett inside the top 125, thus granting them their Tour cards for the 2022-23 season.

The Tour’s announcement specifically mentioned the 1:15 p.m. ET time. Once a player strikes a tee shot on the LIV Golf Series, he has lost his status on the PGA Tour.

Kraft, Lower, Redman were removed from the Korn Ferry Tour Championship on Friday after they earned fully exempt status. They cannot improve their standing on the Eligibility List. Smotherman, Wallace and Willett did not reach the Korn Ferry Tour Finals.

The top 25 finishers at the Finals will earn PGA Tour cards. The final FedEx Cup Playoffs and Eligibility Points List for the 2021-22 season will be finalized at 5 p.m. ET on Sept. 9, 2022.

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The wild story of how 87 golfers made the cut at the Wyndham Championship

Chris Gotterup made sure 21 other players have a pay day come Sunday.

Eighty-seven.

That’s how many golfers survived the 36-hole cut at this week’s Wyndham Championship, the regular-season finale. It’s the most players to make the cut on the PGA Tour since the cut rule changed to low 65 and ties to start the 2019-20 season, breaking the previous high mark of 84 at the AT&T Byron Nelson in May.

There are 21 golfers, including Shane Lowry, who flew home and needed to hire a private jet to get back for his third round 11:20 am tee time (see photo below), Justin Rose and Mark Hubbard, who owe Chris Gotterup big time – at least a thank you note if not a good bottle of wine. When play was suspended on Friday at 8:20 p.m. due to darkness, seven golfers remained on the course with exactly 65 golfers at 2-under or better and 88 at 1-under or better. Four of the remaining players would determine the cut on Saturday morning when play resumed: Bo Hoag (-3 thru 16 holes) Chris Gotterup (-2 thru 17 holes) Austin Smotherman (-1 thru 16 holes) and Joshua Creel (E thru 17 holes).

Hoag made pars to complete a round of 69, while Creel parred in too, but was on the wrong side of the cutline at even-par 140.

Gotterup is a hero to 21 players who have weekend plans and a paycheck thanks to his bogey at the last hole. He went to sleep needing to make a 4-foot bogey to make the cut. He made it and the bogey at the last meant he signed for 69 and a 36-hole total of 1-under 139.

Wyndham ChampionshipPGA Tour Live on ESPN+ | Leaderboard

That brings us to the sad fate of rookie Austin Smotherman. He entered the week at No. 125 on the FedEx Cup point standings. The hot seat got too hot to handle despite a bogey-free 65 in the first round. On Friday, he was leaking oil, 4-over through 16, and facing a 12-foot birdie putt that would have lifted him to 2-under and bounced out all the players at 1-under when play was suspended.

With his 2022-23 Tour card and FedEx Cup playoff hopes hanging in the balance, Smotherman lipped out the birdie putt when play resumed at 6:47 am on Saturday. But thanks to Gotterup’s bogey, all he needed was a par at his last hole to make the cut on the number. It wasn’t to be. Despite finding the fairway at No. 9 with his tee shot, he pushed his approach at the par 4 from 158 yards and missed the green. Shortsided, his pitch ran 33 feet past the hole. Having to make the par putt, he didn’t come up short, but his do-or-die putt rolled 7 feet past the hole. He missed the meaningless comebacker, tapping in for double bogey and a round of 76.

As Max Homa tweeted of Smotherman, “I feel for him. That’s gotta be brutal to sleep on that with your season on the line #golf.”

The last time 87 players or more made the 36-hole cut on Tour was at the 2018 Wells Fargo Championship (87). The score of 1-under 139 is the highest 36-hole cut at the Wyndham Championship since 2013.

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Wyndham Championship: Who’s got the weekend off and whose FedEx Cup bubble burst

These notable players missed the cut and some saw their FedEx Cup bubbles burst.

For the “Bubble Boys,” those trying to secure a berth in the 125-man field for next week’s first of three FedEx Cup playoff events, making the cut is job No. 1.

Consider it mission accomplished for the likes of Max McGreevey, No. 126 in the points standings heading into the Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina. McGreevey shot 67 in the second round of the regular season finale and has improved to a projected 122nd.

After finishing second at the Puerto Rico Open in March, McGreevy had made the cut in only four of his 19 starts before this week, and had missed the cut in six of his last seven events.

“I just had a lot of fun this week,” he said. “It’s been easier than it has been the last couple of weeks somehow, but just felt good, felt relaxed and feels good to finally get four rounds for a week.”

Chesson Hadley, who started the week at No. 121, made three birdies in a row en route to shooting 67, and last’s year Bubble Boy put himself in position where he might not need an ace or a final-round 62 to sneak into the FedEx Cup playoffs. He’s projected at No. 113.

Nick Taylor (71, -2) survived the cut but has slipped from No. 120 at the start of the week to a projected 125th.

Congrats to Brian Stuard, who ended a streak of 11 straight missed cuts. It couldn’t have come at a better time. He entered the week at No. 137 in the FedEx Cup point standings. He’s projected at No. 124.

Austin Smotherman, who started the week at No. 125, wasn’t so fortunate. He shot 76 in the second round to miss the cut and is projected to drop to No. 129.

Martin Trainer shot a second straight 67 and is currently projected 126th, otherwise known as the first guy out. But he still has two more rounds to improve his position and a positive attitude going into the weekend.

“I know what’s at stake, it’s no different than any other week. I mean, I think ultimately I know that I just need to do well,” he said. “Every time I play a Tour event I’m trying my best anyway, so I’ll just look at it as a curiosity, but ultimately it’s out of my control, so to speak. I’m just trying my best.”

U.S. Ryder Cup captain Zach Johnson also still has work to do over the weekend – projected at No. 136 – but has a chance after shooting 5-under 135.

“I’ve got a lot of work to do. Put myself in a position so I can at least make a run on the weekend,” Johnson said. “My focus is to win a golf tournament and the rest of it will take care of itself, but I’m in a position where I can do that.”

Play was suspended on Friday due to darkness with seven golfers still needing to complete the second round. Thanks to Chris Gotterup, who made bogey at 18, another 21 players will earn a paycheck this week. In all, 87 golfers from the field of 156 made the cut. It marks the most players to make the cut on Tour since the cut rule changed to low 65 and ties to start the 2019-20 season. It took a score of 1-under 139 to play the weekend, but Smotherman, who was at 1 under and faced a 12-foot birdie putt at No. 8 when play resumed on Saturday morning, isn’t one of them. He missed the putt and made double-bogey at nine, bursting his playoff bubble in the process.

Here’s a look at some of the notable players who were on the wrong side of the cutline.

Here’s a closer look at a few PGA Tour players on the bubble ahead of the 2022 FedEx Cup Playoffs

Several players are still angling to make the PGA Tour postseason. Some are just inside the cutline while others have work to do.

The PGA Tour regular season is coming to an end Sunday, meaning the FedEx Cup playoffs begin next week.

The Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina, will offer some PGA Tour players one last chance to improve their position or perhaps even make it into the field of 125 for the playoffs.

Since the points structure changed in 2009, an average of fewer than three players per year entered the final week of FedEx Cup regular season outside the top 125 in the standings and went on to qualify for the FedEx Cup Playoffs.

Some players also will look to crack the top 200 in the FedEx Cup Eligibility Points List to qualify for the Korn Ferry Tour Finals, which is set for September 1-4 at Victoria National Golf Club in Newburgh, Indiana.

Scottie Scheffler, who has four wins this season, leads the FedEx Cup standings by more than 1,000 points over second-place Cameron Smith. Tony Finau, who has won the past two weeks, is up to No. 7.

Wyndham ChampionshipPGA Tour Live on ESPN+ | Leaderboard

The three-event playoff series starts at the FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee, next week, but many in the field at the Wyndham Championship this week will be angling to keep their seasons alive.

Here’s a closer look at some interesting names in the FedEx Cup points standings, including some who are in the field and others who need a big week to make the playoffs.