Collin Morikawa wins one for the Class of 2019 in what could become epic battle with Class of 2011

Chalk up a victory for Collin Morikawa, Class of 2019, who outlasted Justin Thomas of the vaunted Class of 2011.

The final round of the Workday Charity Open had a little bit of everything. It was the type of Sunday drama that we missed during the 91-day suspension of the PGA Tour season and the reason why we mourned the loss of the British Open and the Ryder Cup from the 2020 golf calendar.

We’ll remember this one for years to come, even if there isn’t another Workday Charity Open to remember. Mark it down as the first clash of the Class of 2011 vs. the Class of 2019. Round One goes to the new kids on the block.

Justin Thomas, all of 27 years of age, opened the day with a two-stroke lead over Viktor Hovland and three over Collin Morikawa, but it didn’t last long as Hovland, 22, made birdie on three of the first five holes to grab the lead. It looked like the Norwegian, the only player to make the cut in all five events since the restart, would notch his second Tour title and validate the hype he’s generated since winning the 2018 U.S. Amateur. That is until he hit into the water at No. 6 and again at 14 and fell out of the trophy chase.

Morikawa, the 23-year-old Cal grad, charged out of the gate with early birdies at Nos. 2 and 4 and an eagle at the fifth and never backed off, signing for 66, even when he trailed by three strokes with three holes to go.

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The third member of the Class of 2019, Matt Wolff, 21, had the weekend off after a missed cut, but showed his high-octane game a week ago when he held the 54-hole lead at the Rocket Mortgage Classic. All three of these young guns already have Tour cards, not to mention wins to their credit, less than a year after an NCAA title seemed like life or death.

In time, the Class of  ’19 may give the Class of  ’11 a run for its money, which is saying something. You remember the high school Class of 2011, right?

Justin Thomas let a three-stroke lead with three holes to go get away from him at the Workday Charity Open at Muirfield Village Golf Club (Joseph Maiorana-USA TODAY Sports).

Jordan Spieth was the first to leave college for the pro ranks and breakthrough in a major way – three majors already in his trophy case. Then there was Thomas. It feels as if it was a long time ago that he was introduced everywhere as “Jordan’s friend,” but it is Thomas, the winner of the 2017 PGA Championship, who has surpassed Spieth for most victories. Had he won the Workday, Thomas would have been only behind Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods for shortest time to win 13 times on Tour. He’ll have to wait another week because after a sluggish start and a magical putting stretch through the middle of the round he coughed up a three-stroke lead with three holes to go and eventually succumbed to Morikawa in a playoff.

Much was expected from fellow Class of 2011 graduates Patrick Rodgers and Ollie Schniederjans, but so far they are still searching for their first Tour title. Emiliano Grillo and Michael Kim have tasted victory, but Grillo still is seeking his second triumph while Kim is seeking a semblance of his former game.

The forgotten man of the Class of 2011 was Xander Schauffele, the Ringo Starr of the group, who has become one of its most consistent members. Justin Suh and Will Gordon, who finished T-3 at the Travelers Championship a few weeks ago, are hoping they can be the Schauffele of the Class 2019 and join Hovland, Schauffele and Wolff in the big leagues soon.

Xander Schauffele, Justin Thomas
Xander Schauffele and Justin Thomas stand at the 6th hole during the second round of the Travelers Championship golf tournament at TPC River Highlands. Photo by Bill Streicher/USA TODAY Sports

Other than Thomas and Schauffele, the Class of 2011 has experienced a quarter-life crisis of sorts. There’s plenty of time for Spieth to regain his winning touch and for the others to reach their potential, but there also are no promises of success in professional golf no matter how many plaudits one amasses on the AJGA, amateur and college ranks.

When Thomas, representing the old guard, poured in an eagle putt at 15 to take a three-stroke lead, his 10th one-putt in a row, it looked as if he had shown these young whippersnappers Hovland and Morikawa that he was still boss.

“Just was one of those days,” Hovland said as the putts failed to drop and he made some unforced errors on his way to finished third. “Maybe next time we can have a better chance at it.”

But the other member of the Class of 2019 never faltered. Hovland got a front row seat as Morikawa drove the 14th green after his lone bogey of the day and kept the heat on Thomas with a birdie at 17.

Hovland’s takeaway from seeing Thomas recover from a sluggish start and Morikawa hang around may help him win a major some day.

“You’re never really out of it, even though you’re three, four back,” he said. “You never know if the other guy is going to make a birdie or you might make four or five birdies in a row. So they did a good job of staying patient and hitting really good shots.”

Viktor Hovland
Viktor Hovland lets go of his club as he reacts on the 18th hole during the final round of the Workday Charity Open golf tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club. Photo by Joseph Maiorana/USA TODAY Sports

Thomas admonished himself afterwards for letting the title slip through his hands. The way he made four birdies in a row starting at eight and that eagle at 15 to flip the script showed his killer instinct. But he let Morikawa up from the mat with bogeys at 16 and 18, and when given a second chance to end it, missed from 9 feet. As much as it hurts to fall short, Thomas may learn more in failure than in victory. Would anyone be surprised if he holds the 54 lead at the PGA next month?

Only a month ago, Morikawa was the one left trying to learn from a playoff loss. He missed a 3-foot putt to lose to Daniel Berger at the Charles Schwab Challenge, but this time he said he felt comfortable.

“That’s the most important thing out here being on the PGA Tour a year and a half in is being comfortable. How many times can you put yourself in a playoff spot like this?” Morikawa said. “I knew if I just kept going at it, we’d just keep putting pressure on him.”

This was the first time the names Thomas, Hovland and Morikawa battled on a Sunday, but it likely won’t be the last nor the last time these two vaunted classes are pitted against each other.

Which class will achieve more greatness: 2011 or 2019? It may take another two decades to determine an answer, but score a victory for Morikawa and the young guns in Round 1.

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Brandel Chamblee Q&A Part III: Advice for Bryson; talking classes of 2011 & ’19, and the Tour’s next breakout star is …

Brandel Chamblee spoke to Golfweek for an exclusive Q&A on all parts of the professional golf landscape, from teachers to top players.

It seems in every infomercial there’s eventually a moment when the host says, “But wait … there’s more!”

We’ve reached that point in the Q&A with Brandel Chamblee, which took place at the Waste Management Phoenix Open before Sungjae Im or Viktor Hovland won. If you missed Part I or Part II, click the links to catch up. Trust us, Part III with Chamblee is better than The Godfather III.

GW: If Bryson DeChambeau came to you for advice, what would you tell him?

BC: (Laughing) What would I tell him? There’s a lot of things I like about Bryson’s game. I guess I would tell him to go back and look at the records of John Schlee, Mac O’Grady and Bobby Clampett (note: they won a combined four PGA Tour titles, or one fewer than DeChambeau on his own). I would say you go look at those records. And you just tell me if that led to the kind of career that you want. Because that’s where you’re headed.

All those players were highly technical, very conscientious players, very sharp intellectually, but is that the kind of career you want? And then it’s like, “What kind of career do you want?” There is room for curiosity in the game, but the game is more art than it is science; it’s more abstract than it is linear. And you’re completely linear and that’s great if you want to be an engineer, but this game, the beautiful thing about golf is engineers can make money out here, you know, but artists make more money.

Seve made a hell of a lot more money than Mac O’Grady, and the thing is that those engineers are all sure they’re right. Because math adds up and they go down and they look at all these numbers and it absolutely has to work. You look at the way DeChambeau looks at a miss, he looks at it with such an incredulous hatred last week when his ball goes left, he’s like, “How does that go left?” It makes no sense to him because two and two is four. But not on a golf course it’s not. Two and two, to quote “The Big Short,” two and two equals fish. Can’t remember the character’s name that said that but two and two equals fish. Golf is not like that. So I would tell him to go look at those players and then look at their careers. It’s like, “Do you want a career like that? Because that’s where you’re headed.”

GW: The class of 2011 had its “quarter-life crisis” last year. Jordan Spieth was winless, Justin Thomas was injured for a stretch, but he’s bounced back. Daniel Berger was out, too, and looks to be on solid footing again. Patrick Rodgers still hasn’t won yet and struggled to keep his card. And Ollie Schniederjans lost his while Michael Kim is lost in the wilderness and hardly has made a cut since his lone win at the 2018 John Deere Classic. Xander Schauffele was the unheralded guy of the group and was the best of the bunch last season. What do you make of them?

BC: It’s beautiful that Xander is taught by his father, Justin Thomas is taught by his father. Those two have gone on. So, the others did what? They went and started talking to every teacher there was, or their teachers started changing the way they taught them. Again, you cannot overstate the fact that both Justin Thomas and Xander were taught by their fathers who were there, not for their own benefit as teachers, but purely for their son and they enjoy watching their sons invent and create and get better. Experience will make you better.

Schniederjans has this incredibly sharp angle of attack, lowest launch angle on the PGA Tour. When you start seeing people with a launch angle of six, they’re in trouble. That’s way too much angle. They’re not going to have great proximity to the hole and it’s going to creep into their putting.

Not quite sure what happened to Daniel Berger. Growing a superstar is fraught with issues. You get, you know, lured away by equipment contracts, you get lured away by teachers who have only their best interests in mind. Yeah, they’re trying to make you a better player but they’re also trying to use you as their guinea pig for their ideas. You make a little bit of money, maybe you get a little complacent. There are all kinds of potholes out there. Injuries, there’s all kinds of things. You go to the gym and hurt yourself, things like you look at Camilo Villegas and Anthony Kim, they were going to be superstars but they go into the gym, they hurt themselves, existential hurdles, nocturnal issues. There are all kinds of things that get in the way of growing a superstar.

GW: Which of the Class of 2019 – Viktor Hovland, Collin Morikawa and Matthew Wolff – would you want to caddie for, to have as your meal ticket, for the next decade or two?

BC: That’s a tough one. You would be happy if you got any of those three. It may just be that 20 years from now, all three of them have comparable careers the way Phil (Mickelson) and Ernie (Els) did, who came out at the same time and the question would have been asked, “Who is going to have the better career, Phil or Ernie?”

To the degree that Phil beat Ernie is only because Phil is smart enough not to let anybody mess with his golf swing, and he had multiple teachers and none of them changed his golf swing one iota. If Ernie had stuck with the golf swing that he had in 1992, he would have probably annihilated Phil. You look at Ernie Els’ golf swing in 2000-2001, he goes up to the top and casts. Els was nowhere near the driver of the golf ball that he should have been because he cast the club. He threw away all his power on his angle in the transition. The reason Ernie Els couldn’t beat Tiger Woods was not because Tiger Woods was better at golf, it was because Ernie Els was being taught to cast the club. He couldn’t drive the golf ball like Tiger Woods. And he was winning majors when Phil couldn’t win majors. It took a bizarre set of circumstances for Phil to start winning majors, like a solid core golf ball turning everybody into inaccurate drivers that put them in the rough and all of a sudden Phil could beat people in the rough.

But to answer your question, I guess probably Viktor Hovland. If you’re a caddie, you would never have to stray very far from the fairway, you’re not going to get mud on your shoes very often. He’s got the smallest miss of just about anybody out there and he’s just a delightful young man. He hits as many or more solid shots than anybody in the game. He hits it right on the meat of the club. Tony Finau and Hovland, those are the two who could at any moment just go off.

GW: What do you think is holding Finau back?

BC: Nothing. I mean, is he a great putter? No. But statistics lie a lot and win totals lie a lot. He is more on the cusp of breaking out than any other player in golf right now. He may only win one time this year, but he may win four or three, he may do what David Duval did. He is, as we sit here and speak, he’s second in Strokes Gained: Tee to Green, only Rory is better than him. He’s seventh in Strokes Gained: Total, in spite of the fact that he’s a below-average putter. He’s an extraordinary golfer. Any minute, any minute he could go off.

If you look who in the top, say, 200 in the world, who is poised for a breakthrough, there’s Sungjae Im, Ben An, Joaquin Niemann and Matt Wolff, Collin Morikawa. There’s Doc Redman, but there’s nobody more poised to break out than Tony Finau. There’s Victor Hovland, good gracious, it’s Finau and Hovland who are the two that are most poised in my opinion. But Collin Morikawa is right there. Those are the players who are most poised to break out.