On this day, former Boston Celtics Bruce Bowen, Rick Brunson, and Jerry Kelly were born.
On this day in Boston Celtics history, former Celtics small forward Bruce Bowen was born in Merced, California in 1970. Bowen played his collegiate ball with Cal State Fullerton and was signed by the Miami Heat in 1997 after several stints playing overseas, having gone undrafted in the 1993 NBA draft.
While Bowen only played one game for the Heat, it was enough to get him noticed by the Celtics, who signed him as a free agent the next year. With Boston, the Californian would slowly establish a reputation as a defensive stalwart, eventually earning an All-Defensive Second Team nomination.
He would play two seasons in total for the Celtics, averaging 4.5 points, 2.5 rebounds, 1.2 assists, and as many steals per game.
A Stephen, Steven or Steve has won the last five PGA Tour Champions events
DES MOINES, Iowa — Stephen Ames, Steve Stricker and Tim Herron shuffled around the green at the 18th hole, calculating the best strategy to finish off the Principal Charity Classic on Sunday.
Ames — who teed off the final hole with a one-stroke lead — knew he had secured the win when Stricker missed his putt, and the 2021 Principal Charity Classic winner was relieved to avoid a playoff for the trophy.
“The fact that Steve (Stricker) missed his putt, I knew we weren’t going to a playoff,” Ames said. “In the past, Steve would’ve made the putt on 15, 16 and here. Fortunately for me, it worked out that way.”
Ames finished 17-under for the week after scores of 66-66-67–200. The Canadian birdied four holes on the front nine and two in the back, which gave Ames the padding needed to pull off the win, even with a bogey on No. 14.
The win at the Wakonda Club marked the third PGA Tour Champions win of the season for Ames, who came out on top in the Trophy Hassan II in February and Mitsubishi Electric Classic in May.
The Principal Charity Classic victory was Ames’ second win on this tour in less than a month. He claimed the winner’s purse of $300,000, which brings his total Charles Schwab Cup winnings to $1,138,164. He was ranked fourth ahead of the PCC, with three top-10 finishes, including his two victories and a ninth-place finish in the Insperity Invitational.
“Everything,” Ames said when asked what was working well right now. “At this stage, it’s the same things I was doing last year…and maybe the putter’s a little warmer at times.”
He held on for the win, but Sunday’s round was Ames’ highest score of the competition. Fortunately for Ames, the other leaders struggled, as well.
Stricker, who won last week at the Senior PGA, had a bogey-free day but he only birdied four times, two in the front nine, two in the back nine.
Stricker has two PGA Tour Champions major wins in 2023 – the Regions Tradition and the Senior PGA Championship – and has three wins in all this year, including the Mitsubishi Electric Championship in January.
“It was a battle today, there’s no doubt about that,” Ames said. “Steve obviously, the way he’s played this year already tells you that it was going to be a good battle. And the fact that I ended up on top is more fulfilling than anything else right now.”
Herron, who entered the final round tied for the lead, slipped a bit on Sunday. He had three bogeys across the first five holes and dropped eight places to finish ninths.
Others outside of the leader group had successful performances, but they weren’t enough to get past Ames’ advantage. Richard Green finished with the best score of the day (63), and a few others — Miguel Angel Jiménez, Marco Dawson and Ken Duke — scored a 64 on the final round.
Defending champion Jerry Kelly was fifth in the standings after two rounds and tied Stricker for second. He avoided bogeys while picking up seven birdies to score a 65 on the final round.
But the players who crept into the top-three or moved up in the standings might not have had a chance to win if the Steves had anything to do with it.
A Stephen (or Steve or Steven) has won the last five PGA Tour Champions events and seven of the last 12 tournaments on the circuit this season. Steven Alker won the Insperity Invitational in April, and Ames and Sticker have each won two of the last four.
It’s a group that Ames is happy to be a part of.
“Popular names, I don’t know. I have no clue what’s working for the Steves, but nice fun fact, though.”
This year’s field includes nine former champions at the Wakonda Club.
DES MOINES — The Principal Charity Classic tees off Friday as some of golf’s best on the PGA Tour Champions converge for three days of competition.
This year’s field includes nine former champions at the Wakonda Club, including defending champion Jerry Kelly and three-time winner Jay Haas. Five World Golf Hall of Famers and several fan favorites also highlight the tee sheet.
From Fred Couples to Steve Sticker, here are some of the golfers to keep an eye on at the 2023 Principal Charity Classic.
Stephen Ames
Ames won this event in 2021 and finished in a four-way tie for 12th in 2022. He is currently fourth on the PGA Tour Champions standings, but the third-highest-ranked player heading into the tournament, with Steve Alker not competing in Des Moines.
Notah Begay III
This is Begay’s first appearance in the Principal Charity Classic. One of the only Native American golfers to have played in the PGA Tour, the 50-year-old professional returned to playing with the Champions circuit. He is a top-100 player in the Schwab Cup rankings.
Fred Couples
A World Golf Hall of Famer and former World No. 1 will make another appearance in Des Moines. A fixture in pro golf for over four decades, Couples has finished in the top-10 twice this season — eighth in the Chubb Classic and 10th in the Galleri Classic.
Ernie Els
Another World Golf Hall of Famer and former World No. 1 with four major championships and more than 70 career victories under his belt. He doesn’t seem to be slowing down, as Els is sixth in the Schwab Cup rankings.
Judd Gibb
Iowa golf fans, this is the player to root for this weekend. The Fort Dodge native was a four-year letter winner at Iowa State and a five-time Iowa PGA Player of the Year.
Miguel Angel Jimenez
Ever the fan favorite, Jimenez returns to Des Moines as the fifth-best player in the PGA Tour Champions leaderboard. He finished in the top-35 in last year’s event.
Jerry Kelly
Kelly returns to the Wakonda Club as the reigning Principal Charity Classic champion. He beat Kirk Triplett in a playoff last season. He is currently 12th on the PGA Tour Champions leaderboard.
Steve Stricker
Stricker is on an absolute roll right now. He sits at No. 1 in the Schwab Cup rankings after a 2023 season that includes three wins and three runner-up finishes. Stricker has already won over $2 million this season with wins in the Mitsubishi Electric Championship as well as two majors, the Regions Tradition and the KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship.
David Toms
Toms is No. 2 in the rankings behind Stricker. He won the Cologuard Classic and the Galleri Classic and has collected winnings of more than $1 million this season.
Kirk Triplett
Triplett may sit at No. 53 in the Schwab Cup rankings, but he isn’t a player to count out. He finished in the top-10 in the Mitsubishi Electric Classic and was the runner-up in this event last year. Only Kelly and the playoff stood between Triplett and a win.
Full field at the 2023 Principal Charity Classic
Robert Allenby
Stephen Ames
Billy Andrade
Stuart Appleby
Woody Austin
Notah Begay III
Shane Bertsch
Kris Blanks
Jason Bohn
Paul Broadhurst
Mark Calcavecchia
Alex Cejka
Russ Cochran
Brian Cooper
Fred Couples
Marco Dawson
Glen Day
Chris DiMarco
Ken Duke
Scott Dunlap
Joe Durant
David Duval
Ernie Els
Bob Estes
Steve Flesch
David Frost
Fred Funk
Jim Furyk
Brian Gay
Paul Goydos
Richard Green
Jay Haas
Mark Hensby
Tim Herron
John Huston
Thongchai Jaidee
Lee Janzen
Miguel Angel Jimenez
Robert Karlsson
Jerry Kelly
Rob Labritz
Bernhard Langer
Tom Lehman
Jeff Maggert
Billy Mayfair
Scott McCarron
David McKenzie
Rocco Mediate
Colin Montgomerie
Timothy O’Neal
Rod Pampling
Scott Parel
Tom Pernice Jr.
Kenny Perry
Tim Petrovic
Dicky Pride
Brett Quigley
Fran Quinn
John Senden
Wes Short Jr.
Vijay Singh
Jeff Sluman
Paul Stankowski
Steve Stricker
Kevin Sutherland
Ken Tanigawa
Mario Tiziani
Esteban Toledo
David Toms
Kirk Triplett
Scott Verplank
Duffy Waldorf
Mike Weir
Willie Wood
Y.E. Yang
Wakonda Club is a par-72 golf course that will play 6,851 yards this week. The first place prize is $300,000.
Jerry Kelly had seven birdies on his scorecard once again at the Country Club of Virginia.
Jerry Kelly had seven birdies on his scorecard once again at the Dominion Energy Charity Classic, keeping his two-stroke lead intact in the first event of the 2022 Charles Schwab Cup Playoffs.
Kelly did have two bogeys but signed for a 5-under 67 at the Country Club of Virginia in Richmond, Virginia. He’s now 18 holes away from his fourth win, which would tie Steve Stricker for most on tour this year.
“I’m in position, that’s all I can ask for,” Kelly said. “Great Sunday, playing with Alky on Sunday and it’s where I want to be.”
Steven Alker, who finished atop the points standings at the end of the regular season, shot a 7-under 65 on Saturday to get to 10 under and grab solo second with 18 holes to go. Alker had eight birdies and a bogey in his second round.
“If you’re two or three behind, you’re chasing, you know what I mean?,” Alker said. “Sometimes you tend to push it. You know that the weather could be a factor tomorrow, but you need to make some birdies, so you just keep on trucking on.”
Padraig Harrington, who also has three wins this season, is tied for third at 9 under with Doug Barron. They both shot 67 on Saturday. K.J. Choi, Brian Gay and Rob Labritz are tied for fifth at 8 under, four shots back of the lead.
The Charles Schwab Cup Championship have three events with the top 72 players qualified for the Dominion. Four players didn’t sign up to play, however, as Fred Couples, Stricker, Brandt Jobe and Mike Weir all chose to be elsewhere.
Bernhard Langer, a two-time defending champion at the Dominion and a six-time Schwab Cup winner, shot a 71 in the second round and is tied for 13th.
The top 54 from the Dominion will advance to the TimberTech Championship in two weeks at the Royal Palm Yacht & Country Club in Boca Raton, Florida, Nov. 4-6.
From there, the top 36 move on to the season finale at Phoenix Country Club for the Charles Schwab Cup Championship, Nov. 10-13.
The race for the Charles Schwab Cup Championship is officially underway.
The race for the Charles Schwab Cup Championship is officially underway.
Jerry Kelly rode seven birdies Friday to post a 7-under 65 to open the first tournament in the three-event PGA Tour Champions postseason.
The top 72 players in the regular-season standings qualified for the 2022 Charles Schwab Cup Playoffs, but four players chose to skip the first event for various reasons. That includes Fred Couples, who shot a 60 in the final round of the regular-season finale last Sunday. Joining him on the sidelines are Steve Stricker, Brandt Jobe and Mike Weir.
Kelly avoided bogey over the first 18 holes Friday at the Dominion Energy Charity Classic at the Country Club of Virginia in in Richmond, Virginia, on Friday. Kelly has three wins this season; a fourth would tie Steve Stricker for the 2022 Champions season high.
“I love great starts, but that’s all they are is great starts. I’d love to be in the lead and have a great finish, that would be really cool,” Kelly said. “As long as I can stay in position, it’s just trying to close it out on Sunday.”
Kelly is not the longest hitter on tour and was faced with using his 3-iron a couple times Friday, but he’s good with that.
“You’re kind of hoping it messes with them,” he said of his longer-hitter playing partners, Steven Alker and Padraig Harrington. “If I can get my 3-irons inside of their 8-irons, it makes me feel pretty good. I don’t mind going first, I don’t mind putting that pressure on them. Yeah, it’s a game within a game, no doubt.”
Joe Durant, Bob Estes, Glen Day and Miguel Angel Jimenez are all tied for second at the Dominion after they each fired 5-under 67s.
Jimenez has three wins in 2022, but Durant hasn’t won on the Champions tour this season and neither Estes and Day have ever won on the circuit.
Bernhard Langer, a two-time defending champion at the Dominion, shot a 4-under 68 and is tied for sixth. He is seeking a seventh Schwab Cup title.
Steven Alker, who finished No. 1 in the regular-season standings, shot a 3-under 69 and tied for 15th.
From here, the field will be cut to 54 for the TimberTech Championship at the Royal Palm Yacht & Country Club in Boca Raton, Florida, Nov. 4-6. Then, the top 36 move on to the season finale at Phoenix Country Club for the Charles Schwab Cup Championship, Nov. 10-13.
Although it took an extra hole, Jerry Kelly continued his stellar season Sunday.
The 55-year-old captured his fourth PGA Tour Champions title of the season at the Shaw Charity Classic at Canyon Meadows Golf and Country Club in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. He and John Huston were tied at 9 under following 54 holes, but Kelly birdied the par-5 18th on the first playoff hole to add another victory to his resume.
He had a lengthy putt for eagle from the back of the green, which he lagged to about 4 feet. He then poured in the birdie and gave a big first pump toward the crowd.
Kelly, who also won the Bridgestone Senior Players earlier this year, shot a 3-under 67 in the final round. The victory moves him to second in the Charles Schwab Cup standings. Kelly had rounds of 68 and 66 during the first two days.
Huston fired a 5-under 65 on Sunday to make the playoff. Five golfers tied for third, one stroke out of the playoff. Joe Durant shot the round of the day, an 8-under 62, to finish at 8 under for the tournament, along with Padraig Harrington, Dean Wilson, Alex Cejka and Kirk Triplett. Triplett held the solo lead after the second round at 7 under.
Marco Dawson and Shane Bertsch rounded out the top 10, finishing in a tie for eighth at 7 under.
Up next, the Champions Tour travels to the Boeing Classic at The Club at Snoqualmie Ridge in Snoqualmie, Washington.
Champions Tour star Jerry Kelly supports wife’s cancer battle.
Jerry Kelly looked at his fist, often used for comparison to the size of a healthy kidney.
Kelly looked at his fist again, nearly the size of his wife’s tumor.
It has been more than eight months since Carol Kelly had her cancerous right kidney removed. But a glance at his hand reminded 10-time PGA Tour Champions winner Kelly how close he came to losing his beloved partner of 28 years.
And in a sense, Carol has been lucky.
Two doctors dismissed the blood in her urine as a normal urinary tract infection. When she doubled over in pain and went to the emergency room, Kelly said they were fortunate it was a hospital, not an urgent care center. Kidney stones were suspected; a CAT scan was ordered. Kelly said they knew it was bad news because of the interminable wait.
The tumor was four centimeters by six centimeters, he said.
“There’s no way her fist is bigger than four centimeters by six centimeters,” Kelly said Saturday at Firestone Country Club. “And it was contained. Pretty amazing.”
Since her diagnosis, the Kellys take amazing any way they can get it. As they stepped out of the car Sunday for the final round of the Bridgestone Senior Players Championship, Carol gave Jerry the words to win by.
He used her motivation to capture his second Senior Players title in three years, his final round 68 and 269 total two strokes better than defending champion and close friend Steve Stricker. The victory earned Kelly $450,000 and a trip to the 2023 Players Championship, one of the PGA Tour’s signature events.
“She said, ‘It doesn’t matter what happens, I want to see the attitude up the entire time,’” Kelly said Sunday after the trophy ceremony. “The lid was on the hole for a long time and I was rolling my eyes. But I was doing it with a smile on my face like I used to a little bit more. That was keeping me in a positive frame of mind knowing that it would come to me because of that. That was all her with that attitude.”
With Carol diagnosed with cancer for the second time — the first was melanoma when she was pregnant with son Cooper in 1998 — Kelly is cherishing the fact that Carol has been traveling with him since November.
“Just the fact that she’s here this week … It may not be our normal restaurant-laden place or the hotel that is our favorite on tour, but the golf course is that special,” Kelly said. “She’s like, ‘You know what, I want to be there for you, I love that golf course, it’s really cool just to be out there.’ I mean, this is a different world once you step inside these gates. I love it that she can appreciate that and that she wanted to come here.”
She nearly didn’t make it. Carol, 57, is undergoing immunotherapy treatments of Keytruda every three weeks, flying from their home in Madison, Wisconsin, to the Mayo Clinic in Phoenix, where they have another house.
There are side effects. Carol said sometimes she feels run down for a couple days after treatment, a couple times it’s stayed with her until she was about to return to Phoenix.
“I was kind of dragging coming into this week and I was going to pass, just to try to recover again. He kind of gave me the sad eyes, so I’m like, ‘OK, I’ll go,’” Carol said Sunday morning. “This tournament, I love to walk this golf course.”
The bear hug Kelly gave her after he left the 18th green showed how glad he was that they shared the victory together.
“She’s been troopering it out,” he said.
With their positive attitude, luck has shined on Carol Kelly more than once of late.
Initially she was told she was not a good candidate for immunotherapy, which she called “the future of cancer treatment.” Eventually that was approved due to what she called a “reclassification.”
The every-three-week routine began in January, and Kelly has only missed one treatment, that when he had early-week commitments at his hometown tournament, the American Family Insurance Championship in Madison on June 10-12.
“I’m only going to miss one more, she’s got to have it done when I go to the British Senior,” Kelly said of the Senior Open Championship at Gleneagles July 21-24. “So I’ll miss two out of that year of treatment and I’m not happy about missing two of them.”
After capturing his second senior major, Kelly isn’t considering skipping the trip overseas.
“She would want me to go do my job. She knows how important the Senior Open Championship is to me, I love going over there,” Kelly said. “I’d love to have her with me, but she had to do it on those dates and we didn’t want to mess with that.”
Carol knows how much accompanying her to treatment means to her husband, and said his devotion is not out of character for him.
“There’s been one time he wasn’t able to be there, and I took a picture of his empty chair. I know he’s there with me in thought,” she said. “That’s who Jerry really is. I don’t think he lets people see that side of him very often. He gives me a lot of strength.”
She just went through her six-month scans and said, “I’m on a really good track. Things are looking real good right now.”
Kelly and Stricker families support each other during health crises
The Kelly and Stricker families are close as both live in Madison. Recovering from his own serious health crisis, Steve Stricker was glad to hear about Carol’s recent scans.
“She’s gotten some good news of late, so things are looking better. But still, with that you just cross your fingers with cancer, right?” Stricker said Sunday. “You just don’t know when it’s going to come back, you hope and pray that it won’t.
“To see her out here and them having a good time with each other, it kind of puts things in perspective really quickly. We’re out there battling for a golf tournament, but it’s not really what they were going through in life.”
It’s possible the kidney cancer was linked to her melanoma, but the Kellys will never know.
“They’ve just looked at everything and nothing makes sense. I’m just one of the unlucky ones,” Carol said. “But I’m lucky, too. It was not looking good originally. It sounds corny, but just to be alive it feels pretty good because I wasn’t feeling that way early on that I was going to be around.”
Kelly remembered when Carol was pregnant and said it took some coaxing for her to address the melanoma.
“We made her go and get it out because if Coop would have been born, she never would have given a thought about herself,” Kelly said. “It would have been all him and she never would have got it checked and she wouldn’t be here already.
“There’s incredible positives.”
Golfer Jerry Kelly marvels at the advancements in cancer treatment
Kelly marvels at the immunotherapy “targeting system” that is helping her body attack renal cell carcinoma.
“The way I was described it, cancer cells hide from the body, so we don’t kill it. Certain immunotherapies plant a cancer flag for that type of cancer,” Kelly said Saturday. “So the body comes over and says, ‘That’s a cancer cell, I’m going to kill it.’
“Gene therapy, you find different gene mutations are susceptible to certain cancers. It’s amazing what they’re doing through the drugs, through the genes, the human genome, breaking that trail. It’s growing leaps and bounds.”
Carol has been back walking with her husband since the Charles Schwab Cup Championship in Phoenix on November 11-14. Not that far removed from late October surgery, she could only last nine holes.
“I think it’s good for her to keep the blood going and keep that medicine actually circulating through her blood. It just wears her out,” Kelly said.
“I think I’ve been doing really well as far as bouncing back,” Carol said. “My energy is not great. But I know I can walk 18 holes, so I’m going to try it. I pay for it sometimes; it just depends on the day.
“Fresh air is good.”
Jerry Kelly credits his wife, Carol, for motivating him to two victories in 2022
Kelly, 55, said Carol’s presence provided huge motivation as he won the Principal Charity Classic in Des Moines, Iowa, on June 5.
“It’s the whole reason I won at Des Moines,” he said Saturday. “That just brings life into perspective so golf can be a little easier, and it really has been easier. Eased up on myself just because we’re having so much fun when we come out that we’ve got to realize that’s what life’s about.
“The work can obviously pile on you, especially in this sport, in any job I would say. We’re hard on ourselves out here, but to have a partner like Carol, we’re just loving it.”
He felt the same way Sunday.
“You know I get frustrated pretty much more than just about anybody. When you guys used to say Tiger [Woods] hates making bogeys more than anybody, I beg to differ. He just never made them,” Kelly said of the 18-time major winner and eight-time champion at Firestone. “But, yeah, perspective is a beautiful thing if you can get it.”
Kelly had no doubt Carol would eventually rejoin him.
“I knew she’d always come back out,” he said Saturday. “She’s always been there and she’s there. All I can do is be there for her, be strong for her, and hopefully play good golf for her. We just do it together, we always have.”
Marla Ridenour can be reached at mridenour@thebeaconjournal.com. Follow her on Twitter at www.twitter.com/MRidenourABJ.
“It was very unexpected how much attention we got, but she is really cute, so it is not too surprising.”
AKRON, Ohio – Jayni and Ryan Hershberger were “looking for something to do” Sunday afternoon in Akron.
With temperatures in the mid-80s and plenty of sunshine, the couple made the short walk to Firestone Country Club with their five-month old daughter, Marlowe, to watch the final round of the Bridgestone Senior Players Championship.
They also brought a hand-written sign that read “My first golf tournament” to Firestone’s South Course.
Bridgestone Senior Players Champion Jerry Kelly saw the sign and young Marlowe after he compiled a four-day score of 11-under-par 269 and met with the family.
Kelly handed the Hershberger family his hat that he wore Sunday, posed for pictures and even held young Marlowe, who wore a shirt that read “Little Wonder.”
“I got her smiling,” Kelly said. “She is cute.”
Kelly also signed the hat and the sign, which came from the inside of a Pampers box.
When asked when was the last time he held a baby that little, Kelly said with a laugh: “Yeah, that would be 22 years ago, almost 23 years ago, yes. Nieces and nephews, things like that, but no grandkids. “Soon, I hope.”
Ryan Hershberger said the “My first golf tournament” sign idea came from his mother.
“We love the tournament that comes here every year,” Ryan Hershberger said. “We live two blocks away and decided to come over. We are looking forward to the Akron Symphony afterwards as well.”
“I grew up five minutes away and used to come to the golf tournament here all the time with my parents,” Ryan Hershberger said. “Now, we have this one so we wanted to share the tradition with her.
“… This is very memorable for sure, especially getting to meet the one who wins the whole tournament. To have that moment with our daughter is definitely something we can treasure forever.”
“It will be fun to show her things that she didn’t even know she was experiencing,” Jayni Hershberger said. “When she gets older, it will be fun to show her ‘Yeah, you met that guy.'”
Marlowe Hershberger smiled as her parents spoke and fiddled around with her new toy, a signed Jerry Kelly hat.
“It was very unexpected how much attention we got, but she is really cute, so it is not too surprising,” Jayni Hershberger said with a laugh.
Thongchai Jaidee won the 2022 American Family Insurance Championship in Madison, Wisconsin.
MADISON, Wisc. — The leaderboard was crowded throughout the final round Sunday during the PGA Tour Champions’ American Family Insurance Championship at University Ridge. At one point, nine golfers were tied for first.
Thongchai Jaidee, a former paratrooper in the Royal Thai Army, calmly waited for his opportunity and then pounced to the claim the title.
Jaidee took sole possession of the lead with a birdie putt from around 20 feet on No. 17. He then made par on the 18th hole to become the first player from Thailand to win on the senior circuit.
He won with a 14-under 202 total after shooting a 68 on Sunday.
“I’m very, very happy to be on tour the more important thing I think. I think thank you to my caddie, the important more thing, too, because he helped me a lot. It’s family support, my sponsor support me for whole life, that’s more important things,” Jaidee said after his round. “Great tournament here. I played solid, solid, solid week.”
Much to the delight of local fans, Jerry Kelly and Steve Stricker vaulted themselves into contention on the final day with strong play.
Kelly had three birdies on his front nine and was tied for the lead, but he couldn’t pull off his third straight victory in the event.
Kelly carded a 5-under 67 and finished two shots behind Jaidee, but he lamented missing three birdie putts on Nos. 16-18.
“I struck it well,” Kelly said. “I putted well; they just didn’t go in this time. I gave myself some good looks.
“I come into this week every year thinking, yeah, this is going to be my year, I want to knock this one off, and then I always end up here trying to rally at the very end,” Stricker said. “I’ve got to get off to better starts.”
Stricker will get a week to rest before the U.S. Senior Open Championship at Saucon Valley Country Club in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. It’s been an eventful year for Stricker with a Ryder Cup victory, a mysterious illness and then a golf comeback that included a major victory in the Regions Tradition in May.
“I’ve got a different perspective on life and all sorts of different things now,” Stricker said. “I still have some battles to kind of get over. I’ve still got to get stronger and continue to work on that part of it.
“I’m just thankful to be able to do this, to be able to continue to play, something that I really love to do. And yeah, so it’s come a long ways and the ups and the downs in these last six months were something else, but I’m glad where I’m at now.”
“I know I have more fun in Wisconsin. I mean, why wouldn’t you? Spotted Cow and cheese curds? I mean, come on, yaderhey.”
MADISON, Wisconsin — It’s easy to tell which hole Jerry Kelly and Steve Stricker are on at University Ridge.
The hometown heroes naturally draw the largest flocks of spectators at the PGA Tour Champions’ American Family Insurance Championship.
As Stricker walked up to the first tee Friday morning, the Edgerton native and Madison resident drew a hearty applause from the public bleachers, which were back on the course after capacity was limited at last year’s event. Before he was introduced to the crowd, Stricker and his wife/caddie, Nicki, talked to a few friendly faces in the gallery and handed out hugs.
A few minutes after Stricker and his group started their round, Kelly made his way to No. 1 to the same warm reception from the crowd despite a slight drizzle.
The two old friends are inextricably linked, especially when it comes to the tournament in which Stricker is the host and Kelly is the two-time defending champion. And this year they have even more reasons to be thankful to be together in their home state.
The 55-year-old Stricker has endured some well-documented health issues, including mysterious ailments that hospitalized him last fall and a positive COVID-19 test that knocked him out of the Senior PGA Championship a few weeks ago. Kelly, 55, has been playing with a preoccupied mind in recent years as his wife, Carol, was diagnosed with cancer.
“We’ve been friends for a lot of years,” Stricker said before the tournament. “I was just telling somebody else we played junior golf together back in the early ’80s and that’s a long time ago all of a sudden.
“But we love his family. Carol’s been going through some tough times and so we’ve been trying to help and be there for them for that. They have a boy that’s a similar age to our oldest, so we’ve always been friends.”
Carol just got a clean scan after having a cancerous right kidney removed in October, and Kelly is coming off a victory in the Principal Charity Classic in Des Moines, Iowa.
So there’s a lot of emotion this weekend and it’s hard for Stricker and Kelly to focus strictly on golf.
Steve Stricker not happy about finish to Friday’s round
Kelly shot a 4-under par 68 and was three shots behind first-round leader Steve Flesch. Stricker shot a 1-under 71 after a double-bogey on No. 17.
“It’s a busy week for sure but that’s no excuse,” a frustrated Stricker said after his round. “I should be able to go out there and put it behind me and play. But I didn’t today. Two more rounds and I’m going to have to shoot something pretty special both the rounds to get in there.”
Steve Stricker hits from a sand trap on the first hole on Friday.
Stricker is still trying to find his groove after losing almost 30 pounds in the last year, even though he won the Regions Tradition major last month.
“I’ve been drained for a while, since last November I think,” Stricker said. “I’m not quite there yet physically yet. There’s some good days and bad days yet.
“Yeah, it is what it is. I keep trying. I’m getting better, there’s no question. I feel good. My body isn’t reacting sometimes very well. That’s not the excuse today. I actually played pretty poorly, but managed my game around pretty well.”
Jerry Kelly is seeking his third consecutive win at the American Family Insurance Championship
Kelly won last year’s American Family Insurance Championship, which was played over a hot few days. That won’t be the case this year after several days of rain softened the course.
“It isn’t really cool but wet,” Kelly said. “It’s just not hot and fast so the ball’s not going as far. So it played a little longer than it normally does.”
Kelly finished strong with two birdies and an eagle on his last five holes. He hopes to carry that momentum over to Saturday and keep him in the mix for a Madison three-peat. Kelly also won the 2019 event — there wasn’t one in 2020 due to the pandemic — in a playoff with Stricker and Retief Goosen.
“I’m looking forward to the putting session, the range session tomorrow morning and lock in some of the things that I started feeling again that felt fantastic,” Kelly said. “Yeah, I’m definitely going to enjoy cooking and cracking open something (Friday night).”
The affable Kelly seemed loose after his round, a good sign considering the stress of the last year.
“I know I have more fun in Wisconsin,” he said with a smile. “I mean, why wouldn’t you? Spotted Cow and cheese curds? I mean, come on, yaderhey.”