So much for Tyrrell Hatton’s Augusta warmup. He leads our list of 7 big names to miss the cut at the Valero Texas Open

Hatton had six bogeys in a sloppy second-round 75 and was the biggest name sent packing from the tournament.

SAN ANTONIO — Organizers of the Valero Texas Open can’t be thrilled with the fate of the top players who’ve traveled to the Alamo City over the last few years, each hoping to fine-tune their game before the Masters.

In 2022, Rory McIlroy came to TPC San Antonio, hoping to break his Augusta drought. He left early after missing the cut.

This year, Tyrrell Hatton tried the same move, saying on Tuesday that he’s been pleased with the beginning of his season, but still felt adding this tournament might be the springboard to better results at the year’s first major.

Unfortunately, Hatton’s game plan worked about as well as McIlroy’s did the year before.

The Brit had six bogeys in a sloppy second-round 75 and was the biggest name sent packing from the tournament, one that saw some players finish their second round Saturday because of inclement weather early in the week.

The cutline is the top 65 players plus those tied at the end of that group, and the number settled at even par. Here’s a look at the biggest names who fell on the wrong side of the cutlist after two rounds at the Oaks Course:

Jordan Spieth gets up-and-down from bunker to win 2022 RBC Heritage in playoff with Patrick Cantlay

The win is the 13th of Spieth’s PGA Tour career.

Eleven players were within three shots of the lead down the stretch on Sunday, setting up for a thrilling finish along the South Carolina coast.

Jordan Spieth claimed the 2022 RBC Heritage at Harbour Town Golf Links in Hilton Head after a one-hole playoff with Patrick Cantlay for the 13th win of his career.

Spieth was first in the clubhouse, posting a number at 13 under following an impressive Sunday 66 aided by two front-nine eagles. The 28-year-old Texan was one shot behind Lowry, who immediately made double bogey on the 14th to give up the lead to Spieth.

RBC Heritage: Leaderboard | Photos

Just minutes later, Sepp Straka rammed in a putt for birdie on the 17th to briefly tie Spieth before falling back to 12 under with a bogey on the last. Cantlay made a birdie of his own on the par-3 17th to tie Spieth and then missed a 12-footer for the win on 18, forcing a playoff at 13 under.

[listicle id=778088484]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Lions announce new additions to the coaching staff

Detroit introduced three new coaches under Dan Campbell

The Detroit Lions have filled out the coaching staff for the 2022 NFL season. In addition to many prominent returning names underneath head coach Dan Campbell, the Lions added three new members to the staff.

New senior offensive assistant John Morton is an experienced coach who most recently spent the last three seasons in the same role with the Las Vegas Raiders. Morton, not to be confused with former Lions WR Johnny Morton, has over 20 years of NFL coaching experience. He had one season (2017) as the offensive coordinator for the New York Jets. Morton also coached with Campbell in New Orleans in 2016, serving as the Saints wide receivers coach that year.

Morton also played wide receiver in the NFL Europe and CFL after graduating from Western Michigan back in 1993. He will work with offensive skill position players.

Wayne Blair is the new defensive quality control coach, but he’s a familiar face in Allen Park. Blair coached under the Bill Walsh Diversity Coaching Fellowship program for the Lions in 2021.

The third new coach is one previously announced. Assistant defensive line coach Cameron Davis was known to be with the team. He jumps up from FCS-level Lamar University.

New Lions assistant coach Cameron Davis earns some high praise

New Lions assistant DL coach Cameron Davis earns some high praise from former Raiders CEO Amy Trask

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqbx8sj47vkwrznr player_id=none image=https://lionswire.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

The news got buried a little in the fervor over the NFL scouting combine, but the Detroit Lions addition of new assistant defensive line coach Cameron Davis did not go unnoticed. The Lions hired Davis over the weekend to join the staff.

One of Davis’ prior coaching stops was with the Raiders organization when the team was still based in Oakland. The CEO of the Raiders at the time, Amy Trask, went on Twitter and let the praise flow on the former team coaching intern.

Trask noted that Davis, “impressed me tremendously” and she is “thrilled the Lions hired him” and “Lions fans should be thrilled as well”.

The stint with the Raiders, back in 2012-2013, was Davis’ first post-college job. He’s since moved on to coaching at several college programs, most recently the DL coach at Lamar in Texas.

Lions hire Cameron Davis as the new assistant defensive line coach

The Lions have hired a new defensive assistant coach

The Detroit Lions have filled what appears to be the final vacancy on the team’s coaching staff. On Saturday, the Lions hired Cameron Davis to be the new assistant defensive line coach.

Davis was most recently the defensive line coach at Lamar University in Texas. He has also coached on the defensive line at Texas A&M, Rice and Kentucky.

The Lions didn’t technically employ an assistant DL coach in 2021. Todd Wash remains as Detroit’s defensive line coach. The Lions used unspecified defensive assistants Brian Duker and Stephen Thomas in a variety of roles across the defense.

Winner’s Bag: Cameron Davis, Rocket Mortgage Classic

A complete list of the golf equipment Cameron Davis used to win the PGA Tour’s 2021 Rocket Mortgage Classic

[mm-video type=video id=01es22ba2d9ajd3e5m playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01es22ba2d9ajd3e5m/01es22ba2d9ajd3e5m-1a7ed570fcdcea461c8cdf137e2d3ab5.jpg]

The golf equipment Cameron Davis used to win the PGA Tour’s 2021 Rocket Mortgage Classic:

DRIVER: Titleist TSi3 (9 degrees), with UST Mamiya LIN-Q White 7 shaft (Buy a Titleist TSi3 driver from $549 at titleist.com or Dicks Sporting Goods)

FAIRWAY WOOD: Titleist TS3 (15 degrees), with Fujikura ATMOS Blue Tour Spec 8 TX shaft

IRONS: Titleist T200 prototype (2), 620 MB (4-PW), with KBS Tour-V 120X shafts

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM8 (52, 56, 60 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 shafts
(Buy Titleist Vokey Design SM8 wedges from $159 at titleist.com or Dicks Sporting Goods)

PUTTER: Scotty Cameron Timeless 2 prototype

BALL: Titleist Pro V1x
(Buy Titleist ProV1 golf balls from $50 per dozen at titleist.com or Dicks Sporting Goods)

We occasionally recommend interesting products, services and gaming opportunities. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

This footage of Cameron Davis hitting righty and lefty is downright hypnotizing

The YouTube video of a teenage Cameron Davis smoothly striking an iron right-handed then dropping the club to hit left-handed is wild.

Trick-shot artistry comes in all forms, but the art of switch-hitting falls into a category all its own.

Often, a player swinging with his non-dominant side looks a little clunky, no matter how talented he or she is (re: Rickie Fowler and Justin Thomas playing a spring-quarantine golf match as lefties at Michael Jordan’s golf course, The Grove XXIII in Hobe Sound, Florida – neither broke 90).

Enter Australian Cameron Davis. The 25-year-old showed up with something less than his A-game at the Country Club of Jackson on Sunday, thus sliding down the leaderboard in the final round. But the switch-hitting footage that emerged from 2014 makes Davis a winner regardless.

The below YouTube video of a teenage Davis smoothly striking an iron right-handed (which is how he normally plays) then dropping the club to hit a ball left-handed is downright mesmerizing. If you didn’t know better, you might question which way he actually plays this game (he is, in fact, righty).

[lawrence-related id=778068921,778068811]

Sergio Garcia shares Sanderson Farms lead, seeks first PGA Tour win since 2017 Masters

Don’t look now, but Sergio Garcia may be on the verge of breaking out of his funk.

JACKSON, Miss. – Don’t look now, but Sergio Garcia may be on the verge of breaking out of his funk. The 40-year-old Spaniard posted a bogey-free 6-under 66 at the Country Club of Jackson to claim a share of the 54-hole lead at the Sanderson Farms Championship.

Garcia, who is seeking his first win on the PGA Tour since the 2017 Masters, improved to 14-under 202 and enters the final round tied with Cameron Davis and J.T. Poston.

Garcia is in the midst of a prolonged slump, with just one top-10 finish since February and he had missed three of his last four cuts. He failed to qualify for the FedEx Cup Playoffs and dropped out of the top 50 in the Official World Golf Ranking this week for the first time in nine years.

“He’s just been really struggling as of late and it’s hard to turn it around 180 and win,” said NBC/Golf Channel analyst Notah Begay III on Sirius XM/PGA Tour Network earlier this week, noting that Garcia is anxious to find form before the Masters in November. “He’s thinking if I can put together a solid week and find something it might jumpstart me into a good segment of weeks going into Augusta. It can happen at any moment.”

It’s happening as Garcia has put on a ballstriking clinic – he ranks first in Strokes Gained: Off the Tee and SG: Tee to Green this week – combined with an improved putting performance using an eyes-closed putting technique. Garcia, who ranked No. 187 in SGP last season, has gained strokes against the field on the greens in each of the first three rounds, and he ranked first in putts and greens in regulation and is 30-for-30 inside 3 feet. His performance with the flatstick on Saturday was his best yet.

“From 1 to 10 I would give myself at least a 9 or 9½,” he said. “And I’m not giving myself a 10 because two or three putts could have gone in and then it would have been even better.”

Count Brandt Snedeker among those who have been impressed with Garcia’s strong showing on the greens with his eye closed. “If he keeps making putts, everybody else will be trying it out here, too,” Snedeker said.

Garcia will face stiff competition if he wants to return to the winner’s circle. Davis went out early and fired a tournament-low 9-under 63. Playing in the last group of the day, Poston drained a 13-foot par putt to maintain his share of the lead and shoot 3-under 69. It marks the first time that Poston, 27, has held or shared a 54-hole lead on the Tour. He came from behind to win the 2019 Wyndham Championship for his lone victory.

“Three guys tied for the lead and a bunch of guys right behind us, so I think you’re going to have to go shoot something pretty low because out of that group somebody is going to shoot probably 6-, 7-under I would guess, maybe even lower,” he said. “I think if I got to 20 (under par) I would feel pretty good.”

Poston isn’t the only wizard with the putter in contention. Brandt Snedeker (67) is tied for fourth with Kristoffer Ventura (68) and trying for his 10th Tour title and first victory since the 2018 Wyndham Championship.

“Probably as excited and confident as I’ve been about my golf game in a long time. I’m talking years,” he said. “I’m really excited to see how it holds up tomorrow. I think it’s going to hold up really well, and I can shoot another low one.”

In all, there are 21 players within five strokes of the lead, including defending champion Sebastian Munoz, who will start five back. There’s a mix of proven winners such as Garcia and Snedeker and 36-hole leader Keegan Bradley, who struggled to shoot 73 and will start two strokes behind, and youngsters Ventura, Denny McCarthy (69), and Davis, who would fit into the tournament’s recent narrative of six straight first-time winners since the tournament began making its home at the Country Club of Jackson.

“I don’t know why it’s come down to every single one being a first-timer,” Davis said, “but hopefully there’s another one.”

[lawrence-related id=778068811,778068804,778068786]

Cameron Davis birdies first five holes, shoots 63: ‘I was just in the groove’

Cam Davis made birdie on his first five holes en route to shooting a tournament-low 9-under 63 at the Country Club of Jackson.

JACKSON, Miss. – Cameron Davis set out with a simple goal of trying to improve his ball-striking during the third round of the Sanderson Farms Championship. He did that and then some, making birdie on his first five holes of the day and adding an eagle on the second nine en route to shooting a tournament-low 9-under 63 at the Country Club of Jackson.

“It’s nice to get on the train,” he said. “It’s been a little while since I’ve had a kick like that to start my round out.”

The 25-year-old Australian made the biggest move on Moving Day, carding seven birdies and an eagle to vault to the top of the leaderboard at 14-under 202. Davis had been frustrated with his tee game in the opening round, but a hot putter saved him and he signed for 66. In the second round, his iron game let him down and his putter failed to bail him out as he settled for 72. On Saturday, it was all systems go as he led the field in both Strokes Gained: Off the Tee and Strokes Gained: Tee to Green and third in Strokes Gained: Putting.

“I just felt like I had a little bit better idea of where the ball was going today,” he said.“It was one of those rounds where you kind of find that zone where you’re trusting your driver, you’re trusting your irons, your putter feels really good, you’re not worried about the score … today was an opportunity where halfway around, having a great round, and I was just like, ‘I’ve got to keep doing this.’ ”

Sanderson Farms: Leaderboard | Photos

After shooting 6-under 30 on the front nine, Davis drilled a fairway wood from 266 yards to 10 feet at the par-5 14th and sank the eagle putt to claim the lead. One hole later, he blasted out of the bunker to 2 feet at the short par-4 for his final birdie of the day.

Davis is in his third season as a PGA Tour member and made steady improvement last season, qualifying for the FedEx Cup playoffs in his sophomore campaign. Just as he seemed to be finding a rhythm, the season was suspended due to the global pandemic.

“I felt like I was really kind of finding my stride, and after a couple of months of not touching a club or hitting a ball I kind of lost a little bit of that and had to work back into it,” he said, “but now I’m starting to find a groove and it’s starting to come down to the finer details.”

Davis contended through 36 holes at the Northern Trust in August, shooting 64-65, but sputtered on the weekend. The next step for him is to put four good rounds together and win his first Tour title. (He won the 2017 Emirates Australian Open and the 2018 Nashville Golf Open on the Korn Ferry Tour.) That would cap off a year that has had its share of momentous moments. Davis closed on a home in Seattle in March with his longtime girlfriend Jonika, and they tied the knot on September 5.

[vertical-gallery id=778068545]

“Things haven’t changed much. We’re still together,” he said with a smile. “It’s working really well, and yeah, it’s nice to kind of really have a nice home base now in Seattle. We’ve got a house and a dog together.”

On Sunday, Davis could continue what has become something of a Sanderson Farms Championship tradition – all six winners since the tournament shifted to the Country Club of Jackson have claimed their maiden Tour title.

“I don’t know why it’s come down to every single one being a first-timer,” Davis said, “but hopefully there’s another one.”

[jwplayer 7NBaZ2A0-9JtFt04J]

Cameron Davis turns heads with share of Northern Trust lead to start the playoffs

Cameron Davis’s name was probably never mentioned in discussions about potential winners, but he has a share of the Northern Trust lead.

NORTON, Mass. – The NBA Playoffs started this week, and in the opening game of their series against the Los Angeles Lakers, the eighth-seed Portland Trailblazers upset the Western Division’s top-seeded team. The Orlando Magic, another 8-seed, defeated the Eastern Division’s top team, the Milwaukee Bucks.

Like Lakers and Bucks fans, golf lovers probably assumed that one of the top-ranked players this week at TPC Boston would take command early at the Northern Trust. Justin Thomas tops the FedEx Cup point list and is ranked No. 2 in the world. Collin Morikawa arrived in Norton, Massachusetts, ranked second in FedEx Cup points thanks to winning the PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park two weeks ago. Maybe Rory McIlroy, he’s won twice on this course.

Cameron Davis’s name was probably never mentioned in discussions about potential winners. Andy why should it be? Entering this week, he was 203rd on the Official World Golf Ranking, No. 91 on the FedEx Cup point list and he’s missed the cut in four of the seven PGA Tour events he has played since the Tour’s restart. But on a New England morning that was so beautiful James Taylor probably wrote a song about it, Davis, 25, lit up TPC Boston. He carded eight birdies en route to a 64 and a share of the first-round lead.


Northern Trust: Leaderboard | Best photos


“My swing was a little sloppy, and I wasn’t hitting the ball very solid on the range,” Davis said Thursday evening. “The start to this back nine, which is where I started my round, is very strong, and (I) hit a lot of good quality shots. I feel really proud of the way I dug in.”

Davis is joined by other players who did not get a lot of attention heading into the week: Harris English and Kevin Streelman.

“It helps when the greens are soft,” said English, who was a standout at the University of Georgia. “Five-iron into No. 11, then a really good shot, a 5-iron, at No. 12. (On) 13 I hit 8-iron and 14 I hit 7-iron. A lot of mid-irons, a lot of long irons and I feel like you’ve got to hit those clubs well. I felt like my iron game was on point.”

That’s one way to describe it. English hit 15 of 18 greens in regulation and finished the day ranked No. 1 in proximity to the hole and second in strokes gained approach the green, a stat that measures how much of an edge a player has on the field based on his iron game.

“I don’t swing it like everybody else, and other people don’t swing it like I do,” English said after being asked about switching coaches and searching for a better move. “I can’t look at how Rory swings it, how Dustin swings it, how Brooks swings it. I mean, everybody is different, and I’ve begun to realize that.”

Streelman, 41, came into the week ranked No. 22 in FedEx Cup points. He has two runner-up finishes this season but hasn’t won a PGA Tour event since the 2014 Travelers Championship. A strong showing here could put him in a position to reach his first Tour Championship since 2013.

“(I) just kind of did what I was supposed to today, and you’ve got to keep pushing,” Streelman said. “I think the wind is not going to be a major factor this weekend. The weather looks beautiful. The course in perfect shape. I’m excited to get out in the morning with even better greens than we had today.”

Another Georgia Bulldog who had a great day was two-time Masters champion Bubba Watson, who shot 65 in the afternoon wave.

“The problem that I’ve had over the last year or so is the mental part, the thinking,” Watson said. “I’ve been trying to work on that a little bit. I knew my ballstriking was in the right spot. We’ve got three more days, so I could shoot 102 tomorrow, but right now, I’m hitting the driver really nicely. I’ve got an old (Ping) B60 (putter) in the bag now from my junior days, so I rolled the ball nicely as well.”

[vertical-gallery id=778062208]

Other players who shot 65 on Thursday were Louis Oosthuizen, Scott Piercy, Kevin Kisner, Matthew Wolff and Charley Hoffman, who won on this course in 2010, and Sebastian Munoz, who birdied his first seven holes.

Among the notable players who also posted low scores are:

  • Daniel Berger, Adam Scott and Tommy Fleetwood (66)
  • Rickie Fowler and Dustin Johnson (67)
  • Justin Thomas, Xander Schauffele and Tiger Woods (68)

Woods put his old Scotty Cameron putter in the bag on Thursday, taking out the longer and heavier putter that he used at the PGA Championship.

“I had a good feel today. I had nice pace, and I like the speed of these greens,” Woods said. ” They’re fast. Even though they’re soft, but they’re still quick.”

Brooks Koepka withdrew from the Northern Trust on Wednesday due to a hip injury, and on Thursday morning, Ryan Moore withdrew after playing seven holes in 2-over par due to a back injury. Neither player was already inside the top 70 spots on the FedEx Cup point list, so they are out of the playoffs.

Among the notable players who struggled on Thursday were Phil Mickelson (74), Marc Leishman (75) and Graeme McDowell (77).

[lawrence-related id=778062279,778062244,778062169]