PGA Tour Champions player Brandt Jobe always wanted an MLB career. His son might carry it out.

PGA Tour Champions player Brandt Jobe may be on the verge of reliving the career he wished he’d had.

PGA Tour Champions player Brandt Jobe may be on the verge of reliving the career he wished he’d had.

Jobe wanted to play Major League Baseball, but the shortstop and pitcher abandoned that pursuit after high school and went to UCLA on a golf scholarship. Turning pro in 1988, Jobe has competed around the world, racking up 13 international victories and two more on the senior tour.

With the MLB Draft approaching July 11-13, Jobe’s son Jackson is poised to act out his father’s dream.

Jackson Jobe, a shortstop and right-handed starter, exploded on the scene during his senior year at Heritage Hall High School in Oklahoma City. With a four-seam fastball that tops out at 96 mph, a devastating slider and a spin rate over 3,000, the younger Jobe is rated as the top prep pitcher in the 2021 draft class by Baseball America, ESPN, Fangraphs, and MLB Pipeline.

SENIOR PLAYERS CHAMPIONSHIP: How to watch, tee times 

“I did the same things he does; he just does them a lot better than I do,” Jobe said.

Being selected in the top five is not out of the question, although Jackson Jobe also has the option to play college baseball. His father said Jackson is about to head to summer school at the University of Mississippi, but will return home in about two weeks for the draft.

As Brandt Jobe competes this week in the $3 million Bridgestone Senior Players Championship at Firestone County Club, his family life is a whirlwind, not to mention his to-be-determined draft day schedule.

“It’s going to be a really exciting time for him and for us,” Jobe said Thursday after his round at Firestone South. “Nerve-wracking, but at the same time, it’s a good nerve-wracking. He’s worked hard and earned it.”

As for the choice of college versus the pros, Jobe said, “I think right now it’s 50-50 each way. First of all, you have a team that likes you and second of all from a monetary standpoint it has to all work out for both parties to be good.

“You hope that the team that selects him, obviously we know a lot about some of the teams, too, we’re not going in it blind. He has an advisor, so we have some good people we’ve gained a lot of knowledge [from]. I think you just sit back and you enjoy the ride.”

Jackson Jobe has thrown two no-hitters and struck out 82 batters in 34 innings pitched this season while giving up just 11 hits and one earned run to tally a 0.20 ERA in Oklahoma high school baseball action. (Sarah Phipps/The Oklahoman/USA Today Network)

Jobe said Jackson had already committed to Ole Miss before his senior season. But the COVID-19 pandemic gave Jackson, now nearly 6-foot-3 and 180 pounds, more time to train and the effect was dramatic. Jobe said last season Jackson was out the door at 6 a.m. to work out six days a week and didn’t get home from practice until 6 p.m.

“It’s kind of been one of those crazy things. He’s been a real nice player and all of a sudden during COVID he worked out hard and put on weight, which is the big thing for him,” Jobe said. “All of a sudden when he came out, instead of 91, 92 [mph] it was 96, 97. That was a game-changer.

“And then everyone says, ‘We need to see you start’ because he was a shortstop and a closer. He doesn’t have that many innings under his belt. So this year he started and his velocity started the year maybe 93 to 95 and it was 95, 97 at the end of the year, touching 99. So he progressed and got stronger.”

It’s not just his velocity. Draft analysts say Jackson Jobe has the best slider among high school prospects.

Asked where he got it, Jobe said, “That’s a great question. He does give me a little credit. I kind of showed him when he was about 13 how I thought he should throw a curveball. It really wasn’t, it was a 12-6 pitch. He’s kind of developed that from a 12-6 to his own slider.”

Jobe also coached Jackson in youth football and baseball.

“Every time I got injured, I’m like, ‘It’s a year off, I can play coach.’ I did that a lot,” said Jobe, who suffered a shoulder injury in 2018 and a herniated disc in 2012.

Jobe thought back to the first time Jackson’s pitches were measured by Trackman, a device that provides such statistics as exit velocity and movement on pitched or hit balls. Jackson, also a high school quarterback, really opened eyes.

Brandt Jobe waves his ball after a birdie on the 18th green during the third round of the 2017 U.S. Senior Open Championship at Salem Country Club on July 1, 2017, in Peabody, Massachusetts. (Photo by Drew Hallowell/Getty Images)

“The Trackman craze … I remember the first event a year ago when this went crazy, some people were like, ‘Ah, Trackman’s broken.’ I’m like, ‘It isn’t broken. This is going to surprise everybody.’

“Most of the kids were 2,700, his popped out at 3,200, 3,300. I think that’s what makes people interested because you’re different. You have a unique skill. His fastball spins more than most. Everything he does, it must be how he grips it or his fingers, or the football. I don’t know it’s all tied in. We don’t have to figure that out, just keep doing it.”

Jackson Jobe is not the only son of a Champions Tour player who didn’t follow in his father’s footsteps athletically.

Jim Furyk’s son Tanner, 17, a senior at The Bolles School in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., started playing lacrosse in the seventh grade and is now considering Division III schools. Furyk said Tanner, now a 12-handicap, gave up golf for about five years before taking it up again when he was 15. His father’s profession is now his second-favorite sport.

“He just came from a showcase in Connecticut,” Furyk said Wednesday of Tanner’s lacrosse career. “He started late, just fell in love with it, and worked hard at it. He likes to play with his buddies, teammates, schoolmates.

“Their team was real successful back in the ‘80s, ‘90s. … They’re building it back up. They went to the state final four last year, lost in the semis.”

Furyk realizes how hard it is for a son to follow his father into a golf career. He once discussed that pressure with Bill Haas, son of Champions Tour player Jay Haas. Haas’s other son, Jay Jr., an eight-year pro and former PGA Tour caddie, now serves as director of instruction and coaching at Haas Family Golf in Greenville, S.C.

“Billy said he’d go to the scoring tent at a junior tournament and everybody wanted to know how the Haas boys played,” Furyk said.

That was not the case for the Jobes. Jobe said Jackson won state titles in football and baseball, but never liked golf. Jackson’s performance as a senior proved he’d chosen the right path.

“It wasn’t like he was a slouch before this all happened. He took it upon himself to say, ‘I want to see how good I can get,’” Jobe said. “When you see [his fastball] coming out at 96 miles an hour easy, that’s when I was like, ‘OK.’ I knew how good his slider was.”

The draft starts on a Sunday, planned by MLB to lead into the All-Star Game in Atlanta, which will pose an issue for Jobe. He will be playing in the U.S. Senior Open at Omaha (Nebraska) Country Club.

“I’m not sure what I’m going to do yet or how I’m going to do it,” Jobe said. “I thought the draft started at 7. If we finish by 5, that’s the last group in. I’m an hour and seven minutes on a flight, I can hire a plane and be home, right?

“Now I’m finding out [the draft] is at 6. It’s a good problem to have. It’s exciting.”

As for the best thing he ever taught his son to prepare him for a professional future, Jobe thought back to something Jackson mentioned in a recent interview.

“I said, ‘The one thing you’re going to find in this game, it’s so hard because people are always looking at you. So as good as you are on the field, you’ve got to be that good off the field,’” Jobe said. “’If you can do that, that will separate you from a lot of people because it’s very hard to do.’”

Marla Ridenour can be reached at mridenour@thebeaconjournal.com. Follow her on Twitter at www.twitter.com/MRidenourABJ.

Paul Goydos, Brandt Jobe lead Charles Schwab Cup Championship

Paul Goydos and Brandt Jobe took advantage of perfect conditions on Friday in Phoenix at the Charles Schwab Cup Championship.

Record-high temperatures on Thursday gave way to cooler weather on Friday at Phoenix Country Club, where Michael Allen hit the first tee shot to open the 2020 Charles Schwab Cup Championship.

It was 99 on Thursday, the hottest day Phoenix has ever had in November. When the 81-man field hit the course for the first round on Friday, the group was greeted by overcast skies, no wind and a great golf course.

Paul Goydos and Brandt Jobe took advantage of the conditions, each firing bogey-free 7-under 64s. Both of them birdied the 527-yard par-5 18th and will take a one-shot lead over Mark Brooks, K.J. Choi and Kevin Sutherland into Saturday.

“I kind of got off to I wouldn’t say a slow start but maybe not the most confident start,” said Goydos. “I hit a sprinkler head or something on 3 and it caught a good break and it kicked somewhere I could get up and down, and hit a poor shot. Then I chipped in on 4 for birdie, which kind of got the thing started.”

Charles Schwab Cup Championship: Leaderboard

Goydos has now led or been the co-leader in tournaments on the PGA Tour Champions six times. Four of those came in the Charles Schwab Cup Championship. He won the event in 2016, the final time it was played at Desert Mountain Golf Club in Scottsdale. In 12 rounds at Phoenix Country Club, Goydos has nine rounds in the 60s and a 67.17 average.

Jobe has four top 10s this year. He is seeking his third PGA Tour Champions victory.

On Thursday, he was one of three golfers who wore microphones during the round, joining Billy Andrade and Tim Herron. Along the way, the group talked about dinner and the Dodgers winning the World Series but things got interesting on the 7th hole.

Charles Schwab Cup Championship
Brandt Jobe hits his tee shot on the sixth hole during the first round of the 2020 Charles Schwab Cup Championship on November 6, 2020 in Phoenix, Arizona. Photo by Steve Dykes/Getty Images

“Billy hits a 3-wood, pretty good shot, kind of right where he’s aiming and we couldn’t find it,” Jobe said. “So finally someone goes, ‘There’s a ball up in the tree.’ So a guy in the gallery takes his shoe off and we start throwing the shoe at the ball. Billy’s throw wasn’t real good though, but (PGA Tour Champions VP of Rules, Competition and Administration) Brian Claar hit it on like the second or third try.”

Andrade had to take an unplayable lie but he saved himself about 250 yards. He ended up taking bogey on the hole. He’s T-50 after his first-round 71.

About those greens

The putting surfaces at Phoenix Country Club have dominated the discussion so far this week. Players, caddies and tournament officials are all raving about the greens.

“The greens are embarrassingly good,” Goydos said. “If you miss a putt, you either misread or mis-hit it, there’s no way it’s not going to roll on the line that you hit it on. It might be the best Bermuda greens I’ve ever seen in my life.”

Phoenix Country Club golf course superintendent Charlie Costello has a lot of fans this week.

“Boy, the greens are so good,” Jobe said with a big smile on his face. “I’ve got to take my hat off to them, these greens are really good. They’re fast, they roll incredible. And when you have greens that good, if you get some opportunities, you’re going to make some putts.”

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