Watch: Chris Kirk buries ace, takes lead at FedEx St. Jude Championship

Kirk was ranked No. 28 in the FedEx Cup standings coming into this week’s event.

Chris Kirk was feeling it on Thursday at the FedEx St. Jude Championship.

Already in the lead on the 14th hole, Kirk made a hole-in-one to get to 7-under-par. His tee shot bounced twice before rolling into the hole from 205 yards out. That gave the 39-year-old Knoxville native a three-shot lead near the end of his opening round.

It also came on the 14th hole, which has been rebranded this year as The Bluff at 14. The hole includes multiple viewing areas next to the green and will have giveaways each day.

Kirk was ranked No. 28 in the FedEx Cup standings coming into this week’s event. He has six wins on the PGA Tour, most recently winning The Sentry in January.

His ace was the second straight year where a golfer connected on a hole-in-one at the FedEx St. Jude Championship. Last year, it was Sam Burns who hit a shot straight into the cup on No. 11.

The tournament is the first leg of the FedEx Cup playoffs and is taking place at TPC Southwind from Thursday to Sunday. The top 50 players in the FedEx Cup standings after this event will advance to the next leg of the playoffs next week in Castle Rock, Colorado.

Reach sports writer Jonah Dylan at jonah.dylan@commercialappeal.com or on X @thejonahdylan.

Celebrating five years of sobriety, this PGA Tour star offers up a heartfelt message

“The work never stops but I live a life of peace and contentment that I never knew was possible.”

PGA Tour golfer Chris Kirk gave a heartfelt message to Instagram followers on Monday as he reached five years of sobriety.

The former University of Georgia golfer battled alcohol issues after a successful beginning to his tour career and fell in the rankings until he decided to get help. He stepped away from the game on May 7, 2019, after becoming sober just over a week prior.

“Hey y’all, it’s April 29 and today I’m celebrating five years of sobriety,” Kirk said on the social media platform. “Five years ago I was completely hopeless and couldn’t see any way out. Thankfully I ran into a group of people that had once been hopeless just like me and showed me the way out.”

Kirk, who turns 39 on May 8, and his wife Tahnee, an Oconee County High School graduate, have three boys and live on 42 acres of farmland in Oconee County.

The caption in his post read, “The work never stops but I live a life of peace and contentment that I never knew was possible.”

A victory at the Korn Ferry Tour’s King and Bear Classic in the summer of 2020 was the beginning of his journey back to the PGA Tour. He regained his Tour card the next year and has become a steady figure on the tour once again, winning The Sentry tournament in Hawaii to open the 2024 season. He also won the Honda Classic (now Cognizant Classic) at the PGA National resort in 2023.

https://www.instagram.com/reel/C6W_3lWuWqd

He’s currently ranked No. 24 in the world after closing 2023 at No. 52. His 2-over par at the Masters tied him for 16th to give him his best-ever finish at the tournament.

“Every good thing, every great thing, every awesome thing that I have in my life is 100% because I got sober,” Kirk said in the video. “God bless you, have a great day.”

Past champs Rory McIlroy, Rickie Fowler highlight field for 2024 Cognizant Classic at PGA National

Chris Kirk, who won the season-opening The Sentry in Hawaii, is returning to defend his title.

The first stop of the PGA Tour’s Florida Swing is going to have plenty of familiar names teeing it up, even if the tournament’s name is different.

The 2024 Cognizant Classic in the Palm Beaches, formerly the Honda Classic, is the first of four straight weeks the Tour will be in the Sunshine State. PGA National’s The Champion course in Palm Beach Gardens is a par-70 layout measuring 7,125 yards and has long been a stern test on the schedule.

Rory McIlroy, the 2012 champion of the event, highlights the field, along with 2017 winner Rickie Fowler. Chris Kirk, who won the season-opening The Sentry in Hawaii, returns to defend his title, as well. Other notables in the field include Matt Fitzpatrick, Tom Kim, Shane Lowry and Min Woo Lee.

Ryan Palmer is also in the field, and it will be his 500th PGA Tour start.

Here’s a look at the field for the 2024 Cognizant Classic.

New exclusive Georgia golf club to be founded by Bubba Watson, Chris Kirk, Brendon Todd and more

The plan is for Georgia’s golf teams — both the men and the women — to be able to use the course.

Bubba Watson slipped into a couple of green jackets in Augusta as Masters champion and returns to Athens on occasion for Georgia football and basketball games.

So what brought the former Bulldog golfer back to the area last week?

He teased a new golf course on the horizon “The Rose,” on his social media accounts.

You might have been thinking, ‘What’s that all about?’

It’s a planned 200 to 300 invitation-only 18-hole golf club that will be built on 588 acres in Hull, less than 15 minutes from downtown Athens. It will be ready to open by late 2026. Unconnected to the course on the tract will be 147 homes.

More: After Brian Harman’s British Open win, which former UGA golfer could be next major champ?

https://www.instagram.com/bubbawatson/reel/C2OHvZZtCb9/?hl=en

It all sprung from an idea of Watson’s Georgia teammate, Nick Cassini, and his brother Dimitri who are developers on the project and have their own development company, Cassini Holdings.

It received approval from the Madison County Board of Commissioners on Jan. 8.

“It’s all centered around creating an amazing golf experience, an amazing golf course,” Nick Cassini told the Athens Banner-Herald. “It’s a collective group that has a ton of experience. Our founders are members of many, many clubs around the country so we’re sort of bringing some of the best aspects of all those clubs into this one.”

Watson, among those who left the PGA Tour for the lucrative Saudi-backed LIV Tour, joined UGA golf coach Chris Haack and Cassini last week along with Georgia golf alums Brendon Todd, David Denham and current assistant coach Mookie DeMoss to walk the site on what was a cold day.

Watson and Cassini were teammates in 2000-2001 who traveled together when they played on what’s now the Korn Ferry Tour.

“When I called Bubba up and told him about this, he immediately was excited about it,” said Nick Cassini who’s been friends with Watson since they were 12. “He saw it as a way to give back to the game, to the University of Georgia and with Athens and to really connect more with Athens and the school again. When we got approval, he wanted to come see the property.”

Watson, Todd and Athens resident and recent PGA Tour winner Chris Kirk are among those who will be founding members. They could have input into hole design, Haack said.

Haack said it could compare to high-end, private clubs Ohoopee in Cobbtown or Congaree near Ridgeland, S.C.

“Just something different for Athens,” he said.

A “well-renowned” golf architect will be hired as well as a clubhouse architect and announced in the coming weeks, Cassini said, “but we’ll have Tour guys eyeballs on the golf course as well which will be great and add something to it. Our goal is to create a world-class golf club.”

Matt Coutu, brother of former Georgia kicker Brandon Coutu, is a partner in the project and owns Woodland Assets which works with the Cassinis. He told the Madison County Board of Commissioners that the project on Howard Road underwent five revisions before approval.

It includes a private dining facility, swimming pool, locker room, spa and driving range. He told the board that cottages would start at about $550,000 and community lots from $800,000 to more than $1 million.

Haack said it took about 15 minutes to get from the UGA golf course to where the new course will be.

The plan is for Georgia’s golf teams — both the men and the women — to be able to use the course.

“They still have a huge interest in the program and think this will be a great place for our guys to play and practice,” Haack said. “Their anticipation on it is they’re going to keep it at really top notch, peak condition and make it a destination place that a lot of guys are going to want to come play. For us to have access to it, would be a huge feather in our cap.”

Even though the club will be for members and their guests, the plan is to host a Madison County Chamber of Commerce tournament, charity and amateur events. The Madison County High School golf team, which does not have a home course in the county, will be able to practice some there and host a match.

“We want to be inclusive and really integrated into the community,” Cassini said.

Cassini envisions fast greens and a track that would be around 7,400 yards from the back tees that will be ready for any level of golfer to enjoy.

“It will be a firm, fast golf course, a little bit more American links-style,” he said. “Natural topography. A lot of long views. It’s going to be something a little bit different than what’s in the area at this point. When I say area, not just the Athens area, but the Atlanta metro area.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=1 tag=352706971]

Former Georgia Bulldog Chris Kirk wins first PGA Tour event of 2024

Former Georgia Bulldog golfer Chris Kirk wins the first PGA Tour event of 2024 with a dominant performance

Former Georgia Bulldog golfer Chris Kirk has won the PGA Tour’s opening event of the 2024 season. Kirk played outstanding to win the Sentry. Fellow Georgia Bulldog Brian Harman finished tied for fifth in the event.

The Sentry is played at Kapalua Resort in Kapalua, Haiwaii. Chris Kirk shot 29-under par to win the Sentry. Kirk won the event with a narrow one-stroke lead.

Chris Kirk earned $3.6 million for winning the Sentry. The tournament had a significant $20 million purse. Kirk shot a 65 on the final day of the event in order to maintain the lead he built up entering Sunday.

Chris Kirk now has six career victories on the PGA Tour. Kirk’s victory means that he will have an opportunity to play in the 2024 Masters.

Fellow Georgia Bulldogs Sepp Straka and Harris English both posted top-15 finishes and shot at least 20-under par. The PGA Tour is filled with former Dawgs.

Winner’s Bag: Chris Kirk at the 2024 The Sentry in Hawaii

Check out the clubs that got the job done in Maui.

[anyclip-media thumbnail=”https://cdn5.anyclip.com/gtBwD4wBAidIEnNCDGkU/1701066254471_248x140_thumbnail.jpg” playlistId=”undefined” content=”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”][/anyclip-media]

A complete list of the golf equipment Chris Kirk used to win the PGA Tour’s 2024 The Sentry:

DRIVER: Callaway Paradym Triple Diamond (9 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Blue 6 TX

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Chris Kirk’s driver (SALE: save $100) at Worldwide Golf Shops” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/210jYG”]

FAIRWAY WOODS: TaylorMade Stealth 2 Plus+ (15 degrees)
with Fujikura Ventus Blue 8 TX, TaylorMade Stealth (18 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Blue 8 TX shafts.

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Chris Kirk’s fairway wood (SALE: save $50) at Worldwide Golf Shops” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/R5d1Wy”]

IRONS: Callaway Apex Pro 2023 (4), Apex CB (5-9), with Project X LZ 125 shafts

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Chris Kirk’s irons at Worldwide Golf Shops” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/daJLEy”]

WEDGES: Callaway Jaws MD5 (46, 50, 60 degrees), Titleist Vokey Design SM9 (56 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Gold S200 shafts

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Chris Kirk’s wedges (SALE: save $30) at Worldwide Golf Shops” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/vN6yON”]

PUTTER: Odyssey Ai One Milled 6T CH

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Chris Kirk’s putter at Worldwide Golf Shops” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/LXdnWO”]

BALL: Titleist Pro V1x

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop Chris Kirk’s golf ball at Worldwide Golf Shops” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/m5yz0Z”]

GRIPS: Golf Pride Tour Velvet

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 category=1364]

Chris Kirk holds off late challengers to win PGA Tour’s first event of 2024 at The Sentry in Hawaii

The win is the sixth of Kirk’s PGA Tour career.

After missing out on the Tour Championship in August, Chris Kirk rested during the off-season by working on his golf game – as a left-hander rather than as a righty, shooting a low score of 82.

“It’s really hard left-handed,” he said. “Really hard.”

Kirk, who won the Ben Hogan Award as the college player of the year, has been making the game look easy for years. His graceful, fluid swing as a right-hander long has produced his trademark natural draw and it delivered in crunch time on Sunday in the final round of the PGA Tour’s season-opening tournament, The Sentry, in Kapalua, Hawaii.

The 38-year-old veteran pro was tied for the lead at the 17th hole at Kapalua Resort’s Plantation Course and facing 209 yards to the green at the toughest hole on the back nine. With the wind, which had been non-existent all week, picking up he switched from a 7-iron to a 5-iron and struck a beauty that bounced on the fringe and rolled to inside 3 feet to set up the winning birdie.

“That one on 17, I’ll remember for a long time,” he said. “One of the best shots of my career, for sure.”

https://www.instagram.com/reel/CxtexYsOh-C/?utm_source=ig_embed&ig_rid=c44c4214-997c-4d37-8250-92906ad6f3d3

Nursing a one-stroke lead after 54 holes, Kirk capped off a bogey-free 9-under 64 on Sunday to win his sixth PGA Tour title with a 72-hole total of 29-under 263 and one-stroke better than Sahith Theegala.

“Just kind of kept reminding myself of no matter how I felt, no matter how nervous I was, there was nothing really stopping me from hitting great shots, hitting great putts, and I was able to kind of remind myself of that before every shot,” Kirk said.

Kirk returned to Kapalua this week for the first time since 2016, booking his trip last February at the Honda Classic, where he won for the first time in nearly eight years. In November, Kirk, who took a leave of absence from the Tour in May 2019 to address issues with alcohol abuse and depression, received the PGA Tour Courage Award.

During the final round in paradise, Kirk said he was nervous but he never showed it. The lack of wind left the Plantation Course vulnerable, and the pros attacked. The final-round scoring average of 66.7 was the lowest single-round average on Tour on record (dating to 1983), on the par-73 layout. Justin Rose equaled the course record with a 12-under 61. Sungjae Im closed in 10-under 63 and set a record with 34 birdies, the most in a 72-hole tournament since 1983. Kirk birdied four holes in a five-hole stretch on the front nine to maintain a narrow lead, but Theegala birdied four in a row on both nines to keep the pressure on Kirk. Theegala caught Kirk with a birdie at 15 to get to 27 under and one group later Spieth made birdie at 15 to make it a three-way tie at the top. Theegala made his fourth birdie in a row and fifth in his last six holes at 16 to take sole possession of the lead at the time, but he lipped out for birdie on 18 that could have forced a playoff.

“I knew I just needed to keep making birdies and there was a bunch of chances, especially with the wind laying down,” Theegala said. “Really wish I could have had that second shot on 18 back. It’s not how it works.”

Spieth was done in by a bad break at 16, where his tee shot plugged in a bunker and he made bogey. He closed in 65 and finished third.

Kirk stayed cool and calm to win the shootout, playing with “more self-belief than I’ve had in years,” he said. Along the way, he’s rediscovered his love of the game.

“Had it for a long time and then lost it,” he said. “I lost the joy of most things in life for awhile there. But, yeah, it’s certainly back. I think I just love how hard this is. Like, it’s so hard to be great at this, and I love the process that it takes. I love the work that it takes to try to be the best version of myself. I definitely have fallen back in love with that process, and sometimes you get rewarded for it, like today, and sometimes you don’t.”

[pickup_prop id=”35110″]

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 category=1375]

Akshay Bhatia’s broomstick, Chris Kirk’s momentous par save among 5 things to know from third round of The Sentry

What do the past three winners of The Sentry have in common? A hot putter.

Before the start of the 2023 Fortinet Championship, Akshay Bhatia switched to a broomstick putter, one similar that Lucas Glover used to win consecutive Tour events only a month before.

Bhatia, a 20-year-old who broke through for his first Tour victory at the Barracuda Championship last summer, had a strong rookie season outside of his putter. He knew something needed to change to be more consistent. He switched his flat stick for one round at the Fortinet Championship and three rounds at the RSM Classic. It has been in the bag again this week, and through three rounds of the 2024 season, it seems that switch is paying off.

After three rounds of the 2024 The Sentry at Kapalua in Maui, Hawaii, Bhatia is sitting at 20-under 199, one shot behind leader Chris Kirk. However, the youngster is first in the field in Strokes Gained: Putting.

“I played nice today,” Bhatia said. “Didn’t make any mistakes. Made some putts. I wish I would have not 3-putted 18, and that’s what I’m going to think about, but it was a good day. We all played really well in the group. I’m looking forward to the opportunity tomorrow.”

What do winners over the last three years have in common at Kapalua? Leading the field in Strokes Gained: Putting.

The Sentry: Photos

As he mentioned, the lone blemish for Bhatia in his third-round 7-under 66 came on the closing par-5 18th, when he three putted for the first time this week. It resulted in a par, but nevertheless, Bhatia will be in the final pairing come Sunday’s final round.

“My caddie has been here plenty of times, and I’m relying on him,” he said. “Our game plan, we have a nice game plan of what holes we need to play conservatively, what holes we can attack, and then what holes we can just kind of plod around. If you make a couple birdies on the harder holes it’s a big jump, I think. Then, like you said, you got to make a lot of birdies. A lot of holes are birdieable, but it’s not the end of the world if you don’t.

“You just keep plotting around and hopefully you play this golf course more and more you get more comfortable on certain things. So, that’s kind of what I’m going about.”

Hereare four more things you need to know from the third round of The Sentry.

Chris Kirk named winner of 2023 PGA Tour Courage Award

Kirk, 38, took a leave of absence in 2019 to address alcohol abuse and depression.

On Tuesday, the PGA Tour named Chris Kirk as the recipient of the 2023 Courage Award.

Kirk, 38, took a leave of absence in 2019 to address alcohol abuse and depression. After being gone more than six months, Kirk returned, regained exempt status in 2021 through a major medical extension, and then this year won his first PGA Tour title since 2015 at the Honda Classic.

“The PGA Tour Courage Award is reserved for very special circumstances and equally special people, and Chris’ impact on the game of golf goes way beyond the singular focus of numbers on a scorecard,” Commissioner Jay Monahan said. “Professional athletes have an incredible platform to help others, and Chris’ honesty, candor and courage in speaking publicly about dealing with a very personal situation has inspired so many people with everyday struggles.”

Monahan presented Kirk with the Courage Award on Tuesday at The RSM Classic, with this year’s event marking the 10-year anniversary of his 2013 RSM Classic victory.

The PGA Tour Courage Award is presented to a person who, through courage and perseverance, has overcome extraordinary adversity, such as personal tragedy or debilitating injury or illness, to make a significant and meaningful contribution to the game of golf. Kirk is the sixth recipient of the Courage Award, which was established in 2012, joining Erik Compton (2013), Jarrod Lyle (2015), Gene Sauers (2017), Morgan Hoffmann (2020) and D.J. Gregory (2022).

The Courage Award includes a contribution of $25,000 by the Tour to a charity of the award recipient’s choice. RSM US LLP, the title sponsor of this week’s RSM Classic and a partner of Kirk’s since 2018, will match the contribution.

During the 2018-19 season, Kirk played in 17 events, with his final start of the campaign coming at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans during the last week in April. On May 7, 2019, the day before his 34th birthday, Kirk posted a statement to his social media accounts:

I have dealt with alcohol abuse and depression for some time now. I thought I could control it, but after multiple relapses I have come to realize that I can’t fix this on my own. I will be taking an indefinite leave from the PGA TOUR to deal with these issues. I don’t know when I will be back, but for now I need my full focus on being the man my family deserves. Thank you for your support.

In 2014, Kirk had two firsts and five top 10s and earned more than $4.8 million. His world ranking peaked at No. 16 and he made the President’s Cup in 2015.

But slowly, his game started a decline. So many nights sitting alone in hotel rooms were destroying his life.

“I was definitely to the point where I knew that I couldn’t keep going the way that I was going,” he told the Palm Beach Post. “My golf game didn’t matter a whole lot to me one way or the other at that point.”

Tuesday’s announcement comes on the four-year anniversary of Kirk’s return to competition following his time away from competitive golf, the first round of the 2019 World Wide Technology Championship.

He has qualified for the BMW Championship in each of the last three seasons and in 2023, broke through for a playoff victory over Eric Cole at The Honda Classic. He finished the 2022-23 season No. 32 in the FedExCup standings, the second-highest finish of his 13-year career on Tour and the highest since he finished No. 2 in 2014.

[lawrence-auto-related count=1 tag=451189723]

Gambling spectators yell at Max Homa, Chris Kirk during play at BMW Championship

“I got to the back of my back stroke, and he yelled, ‘pull it’ pretty loud,” Homa said.

[anyclip pubname=”2122″ widgetname=”0016M00002U0B1kQAF_M8224″]

OLYMPIA FIELDS, Ill. – Max Homa can do without fans shouting while he’s trying to make a critical birdie putt.

But on the 17th hole during the third round of the BMW Championship on Saturday, he heard a spectator who had a $3 bet with his buddy deliberately yell, “Pull it,” and it set Homa off.

Homa holed the short birdie putt nonetheless and posted a 1-over-par 71 at Olympia Fields, nine strokes more than his course-record 62 a day earlier. Homa chalked it up to a fan who overindulged in drinking during the day.

“Or else he’s just the biggest loser there is, but he was cheering and yelling at Chris (Kirk) for missing his putt short, and he kept yelling that he had – one of them had $3 for me to make mine, and I got to the back of my back stroke, and he yelled, ‘pull it’ pretty loud[ly], and I made it right in the middle, and then I just started yelling at him, and then (caddie) Joe (Greiner) yelled at him.”

Asked to recall what he yelled back at the fan, he said, “That he’s a clown, with maybe another word. I don’t know what Joe yelled. He was a lot meaner, I think. It just was — I don’t know. Long day, I guess. Hope he has a nice night, but it just sucks when that happens, but I was happy I made it. It was rude what he did to Chris. Whatever.”

Homa said he has no problem with fans gambling on golf but he is concerned that fans could attempt to impact the result in a negative fashion.

“That is the one thing I’m worried about,” Homa said. “I don’t know what he had to lose. He got kicked out probably, and we were the last group.”

Homa noted that his heckler at 17 was the exception and not the rule.

“It’s just always something that’s on your mind. It’s on us to stay focused or whatever, but it’s just annoying when it happens,” Homa said. “It’s like the one thing we have in this game, fans are so great about being quiet when we play. I think they are awesome. When anybody ever talks, it’s so unintentional. They don’t know we’re hitting. It just sucks when it’s incredibly intentional, and his friend specifically said it was for $3, so that was — not that the money matters, but that’s a frustrating number.”

Homa, who was the 36-hole leader, will enter the final round in fourth place. He’s battling for a spot on the U.S. Ryder Cup and positioning in next week’s Tour Championship, the one event that has a staggered start. In short, every shot matters in crunch time, not to mention that the purse at the BMW is a whopping $20 million.

“It doesn’t matter what we’re playing for,” Homa said. “We’re working so hard, and I grinded my tail off to get that thing back to near even par, and had I missed that I would have just been a pain, but it was nice to make it right in the middle and hopefully he had to pay his buddy that $3 immediately on the way out of the property.”