Jerry Kelly beats Kirk Triplett in a playoff at 2022 Principal Charity Classic on PGA Tour Champions

Jerry Kelly stayed composed through a weather delay and a playoff to win the 2022 Principal Charity Classic.

DES MOINES, Iowa — Jerry Kelly took advantage of a final round drop in standings by Steven Alker to win the Principal Charity Classic on Sunday, staying composed through an inclement weather delay and a playoff.

The last time the PCC went to a playoff was 2019, and Kevin Sutherland was the champion that year.

He finished with a birdie in the single playoff hole, while Kirk Triplett hit par, to claim the winner’s prize of $277,500. Both Kelly and Triplett finished at 18 under.

“It’s just a good old-fashioned afternoon,” Kelly said after accepting the championship trophy at the Wakonda Club. “It felt good all week, I just had to keep my patience in there, and that was what sent me through.”

That brings Kelly’s total Charles Schwab Cup winnings to $703,805. He was ranked 14th ahead of the PCC, with top-10 finishes in the Cologuard Classic, Chubb Classic and ClubCorp Classic. This was Kelly’s first win this season.

Kelly finished the second round on Saturday in a four-way tie for first. He shared the top spot with Kirk Triplett, Brett Quigley and Alker, all of whom shot 13-under 131 through the first two days of the PCC.

At the lightning delay Sunday, Kelly was tied for first with Triplett at 17 under through 15 holes. It was back-and-forth between the two frontrunners all Sunday, as Alker couldn’t continue his success from Saturday into Sunday’s competition and Bernhard Langer couldn’t find a way past the top two golfers.

Rain was expected Saturday and Sunday but didn’t hamper play during the second round. The final round didn’t go off as smoothly, and around 3:45 p.m. the horn was blown and play was suspended due to lightning.

Kelly said after the second round that weather often controlled the results of these tournaments more than anything else. But the weather ended up having little effect on the field.

Play resumed at 4:47 p.m. local time.

After returning from the delay, Kelly hit par on the 16th hole before recording a birdie on the 17th hole. He hit par on the final hole, which led to the playoff round. With the championship coming down to a playoff round, Kelly’s shot landed in better position compared to Triplett’s, and Kelly sank the birdie for the win.

Triplett’s lead after Friday’s opening round marked the seventh time he led or co-led the after the first round of a PGA Tour Champions event, but he had yet to win a tournament after posting the top score out of round one. That streak continued Sunday.

It was emotional moment following the win for Kelly, whose wife, Carol, has been dealing with the effects of kidney cancer.

“I had to miss Carol’s treatments that are going on right now for this tournament,” Kelly said. “I wanted to give her something to actually be happy about, and then she gave me the best present possible by having such clean scans on Friday afternoon.

“Big chills right now, great feelings. (Carol and my son are) the ones that make me stay strong out here even when I’m not strong. It’s everything.”

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Miguel Angel Jiménez makes another ace, cruises to win in Arizona desert at Cologuard Classic

The Mechanic earned his 12th victory on the senior circuit in Tucson, Arizona.

TUCSON, Ariz. — Miguel Angel Jiménez survived a playoff to win the PGA Tour Champions season opener in Hawaii. His win Sunday in Tucson, Arizona, was a walk in the park by comparison.

Two aces in 50 holes will do that for a guy.

Leading by three shots in the final round, Jiménez hit a 6-iron from 188 yards on the 14th hole. Four bounces and a clanged flagstick later, Jiménez had himself a second hole-in-one this week and more importantly, a five-shot lead with four to go in the Cologuard Classic.

Jiménez finished his round par-par-par-par to shoot a final-round 65 and finish 18 under, four clear of the field. Bernhard Langer and Woody Austin finished tied for second at 14 under.

Cologuard Ambassador Jerry Kelly started the final round tied for second, two shots back of Jimenez. He closed with a 70 after opening 68-67 and finished solo fourth. Scott Parel was solo fifth at 10 under.

Jiménez’s ace Friday also came off the face of his 6-iron on the 196-yard 7th hole. Tim Petrovic had a pair of aces a year ago but Jiménez used his 1s to guide him to his 12th Champions victory. The aces were the 12th and 13th in competition for Jiménez, who had 10 on the DP World (formerly European) Tour.

Jiménez started birdie-eagle and was five under through eight holes before clipping a tree with his second shot on the 9th. After a third shot to about eight feet, Jiménez missed his par putt but still made the turn at 15 under, four clear of Langer and Jeff Sluman. The lead was down to three after Langer and Woody Austin each birdied the 12th but the Jiménez ace on No. 14 essentially sealed the win.

Jiménez pocketed $270,000 for the win. He has earned $668,795 so far this season. Loren Roberts in 2006 was the last golfer to win two of the first three Champions events to start a season.

Sluman, who co-lead after the first round and was tied for second after 36 holes, was seeking to break a stretch of 2,821 days since his last victory in 2014 when he teamed with Fred Funk to win Big Cedar Lodge Legends of Golf.

Langer came into the week off his win a week ago at the Chubb Classic, his 43rd win on the senior circuit. He finished xx and remains two victories from tying Hale Irwin’s Champions tour mark. Langer will get another chance to cut the gap to one next week at the Hoag Classic in Newport Beach, California.

Other notables in the field:

  • Jim Furyk, playing just 15 miles from his college home at the University of Arizona, 74-74-69 and finished T-25.
  • Omar Uresti, one of four golfers to get through the qualifier on Tuesday, went 73-70-71 and finished T-33.
  • John Daly, in the field on a sponsor exemption, posted scores of 78-71-73 to finish T-66.
  • David Duval, Champions tour rookie and winner of the Tucson Chrysler Classic on this same course on the PGA Tour in 1998, shot 77-77-73 to finish T-69.

Celebrity Challenge winners

Annika Sorenstam, who played at the University of Arizona in Tucson, and Larry Fitzgerald, the former Arizona Cardinals receiver, teamed up to win the Celebrity Challenge on Saturday.

Sorenstam, who has committed to the U.S. Women’s Open in June, was runnerup in the celebrity division at the LPGA’s season-opening Tournament of Champions in January. In the best-ball format in Tucson, Sorenstam made a birdie putt on 18 to get her and Fitzgerald to 4 under to defeat the team of country music star Jake Owen and former NFL running back Eric Dickerson by two.

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Watch: Sparks fly as Jerry Kelly hits driver off cart path to make birdie at Cologuard Classic

Perhaps the best shot of the opening day at Omni Tucson National came off the driver of Jerry Kelly. And not off the tee.

Heading into the second round of the Cologuard Classic, Jerry Kelly sits just a pair of strokes behind leaders Jeff Sluman and Miguel Angel Jimenez, with the latter making one of the best shots of the day when he aced No. 7 en route to a 66.

“The ball never left the flag,” Jimenez said after the round. “Piece of luck it was a hole-in-one there and I put myself 4 under par.”

But perhaps the best shot of the opening day at Omni Tucson National came off the driver of Jerry Kelly, who earlier in the week explained how important this tournament is to him.

Kelly pushed a drive to the right on the par-5 17th hole, which left him nudged on the cart path and with a dangerous shot underneath a group of trees. The 8-time winner on the PGA Tour Champions pulled a driver out of his bag and swung away, making “electric” contact — his shot sparking him to a birdie on the hole.

Others near the top of the leaderboard after the opening day included Tom Lehman, Woody Austin and Rod Pampling, all of whom carded a 67 on Friday.

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Every player in Boston Celtics history who wore No. 24

This is every player in Boston’s history who wore the Celtics’ No. 24 jersey for at least one game.

The Boston Celtics have more retired jerseys than any other team in the NBA, but that doesn’t mean the rest of their jerseys have little history of interest tied to them.

In fact, with 17 titles and decades of competitive basketball played in them, their unretired jersey numbers pack in some of the most history not hanging from the rafters of any team in the league. To that end, we have launched our accounting of that history, with every player in every jersey worn by more than one Celtics player in the storied franchise’s history accounted for.

Today’s installment focuses on the four players who wore No. 24 over the years.

Senior British Open: Darren Clarke halfway home to rare Open double

Darren Clarke aims to become just the fourth player to win both the British and Senior British.

At 52, Darren Clarke has enough mileage on his career to know that the work is only halfway done if he’s to hoist a trophy on Sunday at the Senior British Open. A 67 on Friday at Sunningdale Golf Club (Old) in Berkshire, England, propelled the Northern Irishman and 2011 British Open champion to 8-under 132 at the midway point of the championship and a one-stroke lead over Germany’s Bernhard Langer and American Jerry Kelly.

“Just made good swings all the way coming in and kept giving myself opportunities,” he said. “Pleased that I finished on 8-under because the wind was swirling about a little bit.”

Clarke, who finished T-10 at his first Senior Open Championship at Royal Lytham and St. Annes two years ago, is making sure he doesn’t get ahead of himself in his quest to become just the fourth player to win both the British Open and Senior British Open.

“We’re all long enough in the tooth to know this is only two rounds and a lot of golf to be played yet. I would love to have this trophy sitting behind the Claret Jug. Got to go work on some iron play, my iron play wasn’t there especially around the front nine today but other than that drove the ball well,” he said. “Really (would like to be) in the mix come Sunday afternoon and would love to improve.”

Clarke has company from a couple Hall of Fame stalwarts as well as the leader in the season-long Charles Schwab Cup. Kelly, who won the American Family Insurance Championship and has finished outside the top-8 finishers once in his last eight starts, eagled the first hole on Friday and made four birdies en route to shooting 66.

“The putter was suspect and I kept on trying to do something, do something, and then finally the last four holes, I kept my head down, which you know I’m not known for,” Kelly said.

It worked and it was good enough to tie Langer, who continues to defy his age and contend for senior majors, for second at 7-under 133. The 63-year-old Langer already has collected a record 11 senior majors, and shows no signs of slowing down. He shot 67 on Friday, and said he’d be ready for rain and more wind on the weekend.

“Just plug along. It’s going to be miserable at times when it’s rainy and windy and all that but hey we’ve been there before,” he said. “Just try and make the best of it.”

Langer has done that and then some at the British Senior. In 12 previous starts, Langer has 11 top 10s, four wins and three runner-up finishes.

South African Ernie Els is tied for fourth at 6-under 134 with England’s Paul Broadhurst. While this is Els’ first Senior Open Championship, he always has thrived at playing links golf, winning the Open in 2002 at Muirfield and again in 2012 at Royal Lytham and St. Annes. He also has three runner-up finishes at the British and 11 total top 10s.

“It was a little bit more difficult today, a little trickier,” he said. “I feel like what I’m working on is kind of coming through a little bit. But Darren is a great frontrunner, played really well today, so got a lot of work to do.”

Els could also join elite company – with Gary Player, Bob Charles and Tom Watson – as the only players to win both the British and Senior British Opens. Asked when he starts thinking about winning a tournament, Els answered, “Hopefully on the last putt. I’m just trying to stay in it. I haven’t quite got my old game there, so I’m really fighting hard to stay in it. Darren seems like he’s striking it nice. I’m trying to stay in touch with him. Stay there until Sunday afternoon and then whatever happens, hopefully Sunday I can think about that but not right now.”

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Steve Stricker goes wire-to-wire to win Bridgestone Senior Players Championship

Steve Stricker withstood an early scare from Jerry Kelly but was able to hang to win the Bridgestone Senior Players.

AKRON, Ohio — Steve Stricker withstood an early scare from Jerry Kelly and nearly fell victim to some loose play on the back nine on Sunday but was able to hang to win the Bridgestone Senior Players Championship at Firestone Country Club.

As sloppy as Stricker was on the first four holes on the back, his play was stellar over the final five and that’s what won him the tournament.

Kelly also faltered late, making bogey on two of the final three holes.

Stricker, 54, became the third wire-to-wire winner of the event and won his third major on the Tour Champions when he shot a final-round 33-37 70 to finish at 7–under 273 to win by six shots.

Kelly, attempting to win a second consecutive Senior Players, finished second after shooting 34-38 72 for a 72-hole score of 1-under 279.

Stricker, who earned $450,000 for the victory, joined Arnold Palmer and Bernhard Langer as previous wire-to-wire winners of this event, which moved to Firestone three years ago.

Palmer led from start to finish in winning the 1985 Senior Players at Canterbury Golf Club in Beachwood, and Langer, who has won 41 events on the Tour Champions list, followed suit in winning in 2015 at the Belmont Club outside of Boston.

Undoubtedly, their journeys were less stressful than Stricker’s, who for the second day in a row was nearly done in by the back nine on the South Course.

He began the day with a 4-shot lead over Kelly and had a 5-shot lead at the turn before things began to unravel a bit, just as they did during Saturday’s third round when his 9-shot lead shriveled to three when he bogeyed three of the first six holes and double-bogeyed another.

A similar scenario seemed to unfold Sunday when Stricker bogeyed the 11th and 13th holes and Kelly poured in a 15-foot putt for birdie on 13. The lead had dwindled to two shots.

A saving grace came on the 460-yard 14th hole. Kelly, who won here last year by two shots, left his second shot in a greenside bunker and it led to a bogey to Stricker’s par.

A bigger break came on the 625-yard 16th. Kelly attempted to reach the green in two but his shot hit the far bank and dribbled back into the pond that fronts the green. The penalty shot and two putts resulted in a bogey. Striker chose to lay up and a wedge to 15 feet led to a kick-in par.

Stricker made bogey on the fourth hole, which is where he made his first bogey of the tournament on Saturday. However, this time he responded with a routine par and consecutive birdies on the sixth and 190-yard seventh when his tee shot stopped a tidy four feet from the hole.

Ken Duke, who began the day five shots behind, shot himself out of contention when he bogeyed four of his first six holes.

Fred Couples turned in the lowest round of the day with a 3-under 67 for a total of even-280 to share third place with David Toms, who followed a third-round 66 with a final-round 70.

Defending Bridgestone champion Jerry Kelly riding high after wobbly driver woes rectified

Jerry Kelly returns to Firestone Country Club this week, no longer cranking the club head of his unstable driver.

AKRON, Ohio — Jerry Kelly returns to Firestone Country Club this week riding an ultimate high, now that he is no longer cranking the club head of his unstable driver.

On June 13, Kelly defended his title in the American Family Insurance Championship in his hometown of Madison, Wisconsin. He captured his first victory on the PGA Tour Champions since he claimed his first major, the Bridgestone Senior Players Championship, in Akron last August.

“That was much needed for my psyche,” Kelly said of his one-shot triumph over Fred Couples and Miguel Angel Jimenez at University Ridge Golf Club. “That’s what that major can do for you confidence-wise. It was huge for me to win the Players, but last week was just incredible and I’m not quite two feet on the ground yet.”

Kelly will need to return to earth if he hopes to prevail for the second consecutive year in the $3 million Bridgestone Senior Players that opens Thursday at Firestone’s famed South Course. The last man to take home consecutive Senior Players trophies was Bernhard Langer from 2014-16. The last to post back-to-back victories at Firestone was Tiger Woods from 2005-07 in the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational.

“When we get to a world-class golf course — no two ways about it, this is completely world-class, it’s major quality — and we all know it and we all want to win at courses like that because it just proves the game can hold up under any circumstance,” Kelly said Wednesday. “Having won at Firestone Country Club … I know I can win just about anywhere now because it’s that great of a golf course.”

He got a lift from the American Family triumph in more than one regard. It followed what he called his worst round in 2021, a 75 on the final day of the Principal Charity Classic in Des Moines, Iowa, where he finished tied for 23rd.

Kelly said he broke his driver about six weeks ago and had been struggling since. Going into the American Family, in his previous four tournaments dating back to May 9 he had tied for 19th, tied for 14th, tied for 12th and tied for 52nd in the field in driving accuracy, normally his strong suit.

He remained third in the Champions Tour driving accuracy standings for the 2020-21 wraparound season, but in Des Moines hit only 42.86 percent of the fairways, well below his season average of 79.20 percent.

Kelly has an endorsement deal with Srixon but was playing with a PING driver, and said his game wasn’t the same after it was broken.

“The internal threading stripped,” he said. “I hit a shot once and my head looked [bent] and I’m like, ‘That’s not good.’ Basically, I cranked it back down; I could hold onto the grip and twist the head.”

Kelly said he thought it was a problem with the ferrule, the covering between the shaft and club head, so he replaced that. He tried a different driver, but couldn’t find the right shaft-club head combination, so he went back to the broken one.

“I played with it for a few weeks that way,” he said. “It was stable for solid hits, but it was not stable for mishits. I think it moved enough on mishits that I was not hitting shots that I’m used to seeing.

“Even though it probably was the ferrule, just me cranking that thing to show everybody what was going on I think I stripped the head as well.”

He was finally sent a new head and shaft before the Wisconsin tournament, and he said the driver “worked out perfectly.”

Kelly said it’s the kind of problem all pros encounter. He joked that what he did wasn’t nearly as bad as what happened to Rod Pampling in Des Moines. Pampling ducked under a spectator rope and dropped the rope across his bag on the back of his cart. When the cart pulled away, two of his clubs fell out and snapped.

“It’s good comedy if you haven’t seen that one,” Kelly said.

Hitting fairways with his rebuilt driver will be key for Kelly at Firestone, where he and runner-up Scott Parel were the only two in the field to finish under par in 2020.

“You can’t just hit straight drives, you have to actually shape it in the fairways,” Kelly said. “The way that they’re sloped, even when a fairway is wide, you probably only have half to a quarter of that fairway to actually hit. If I’m confident with my driver, I really enjoy the way I’m hitting my irons, the way I’m putting and my short game. So that course especially comes down to the driver.

“If it plays firm and fast. Even though you’re hitting it farther, you need more control over your ball off the tee. I really love that about that golf course because that’s my strong point.”

Kelly explained why his victory in Madison was so important, especially coming off that round of 75 in Des Moines.

“I knew I hadn’t won this year,” he said. “It was great to actually outplay the guys on the backside on Sunday. I knew I was close. But after making double bogey on Saturday to finish my round and then starting my round with a bogey the next day, to come back from those on two separate days, you had the same feeling both times.

“I had to dig deep. That’s probably what I’m most proud of, the comeback that I posed from those two spots. I was in the lead and faltered. And when you come back from something like that, that just makes you that much more proud rather than having everything go so smoothly, which obviously never happens.”

Kelly, 54, also had his mother, Lee, in the gallery. She said in an interview with the Champions Tour staff that she has been keeping his scorecard since he was 5 and making scrapbooks with clippings of his accomplishments.

But her most unusual quirk is burying feathers at the course he’s playing for luck.

“If you bury a feather, you grow a birdie,” Kelly explained in the video.

“She’s been doing it forever,” he said Wednesday. “I played at my regular golf course yesterday, I had a charity outing, and I’m walking down the fairway and I’m like, ‘Wow, there’s an eagle feather, she’d really like that one.’ And I eagled the next hole. It’s crazy, it really is.”

Eagles can be rare at Firestone, but Kelly got one with a hole-in-one at the par-3 No. 12 in the final round last year. Coming into 2020, Kelly had played in four NEC-Bridgestone Invitationals from 2003-09. His best finish in that span was a tie for 11th in 2009, when his 277 total was nine shots behind winner Woods. Last year Kelly also posted a 277 and beat Parel by two strokes.

As he looked forward to competing again in Akron, where he likes to relax at the restaurants beside the water at Portage Lakes, Kelly set another goal besides winning.

“I am going to hit the fairway on the eighth hole this year,” he said, shaking his head affirmatively. “I am, I know I am. Every time I step up on that tee, I say, ‘This is the day that I finally hit you, fairway.’”

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Jerry Kelly repeats at American Family Insurance Championship on PGA Tour Champions

Wisconsin native Jerry Kelly won on familiar turf Sunday at the American Family Insurance Championship in Madison.

Jerry Kelly did Wisconsin proud once again.

Defending his title from 2019 in his hometown American Insurance Championship, Kelly shot a 66 on Sunday, then watched as Fred Couples, who nearly chipped in for a birdie on 18 to win, miss a six-foot comebacker for par to hand Kelly the win.

“Can’t get any better than this,” Kelly said after earning his eighth victory on the PGA Tour Champions. “After doubling the 18th hole yesterday and bogeying the first hole, I was reeling a little bit.

“It means so much for me to win around here, and now twice, I’m over the moon.”

Couples, won the 2017 tournament for the last of his 13 senior titles. He tied Miguel Angel Cabrera for second. Jim Furyk and Retief Goosen tied for fourth at 12 under, two shots back.

“Hit a good shot. 18, I’ve been there before, I don’t mind driving it over there,” Couples said about the par-5 closing hole. “Then I chose to be long coming back this way. I knew I wasn’t going to get it close and it just came out hot and rolled through the green. I thought I was putting and then chipped it strong and pushed the putt and that was it.”

Tournament host and Ryder Cup captain Steve Stricker finished T-7 at 9 under after a 65. Like Kelly, Stricker grew up and lives in Madison.

Hall of Fame pitcher John Smoltz was 79th among the 80 finishers, shooting a 74 to get to 16 over.

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Despite a tough finish Saturday, Jerry Kelly is in the hunt at the AmFam Championship

Jerry Kelly admitted he took the wrong approach to the 440-yard, par-4 No. 18 on Saturday, but he’s still in contention at the AmFam.

MADISON, Wis. – Jerry Kelly had played bogey-free golf through 35 holes of the American Family Insurance Championship.

The Madison native was tied atop the leaderboard at 10-under-par with Miguel Angel Jimenez heading into the final hole at University Ridge Golf Course on Saturday. Then Kelly admitted he took the wrong approach to the 440-yard, par-4 No. 18.

“I need to hit the ball better,” Kelly said. “I need to hit the driver better. I need to hit my shots better.

“It doesn’t change anything. It just shows that I can get caught. I got caught trying to skirt that bunker. I wasn’t smart. I’m not hitting it good enough to split hairs. I should’ve put it out to the right and hit something longer in. That’s the way I’ve been playing. I haven’t been taking chances.”

He three-putted the hole for double-bogey and ended up with a 3-under par 69 in the second round. His 136 total was two shots back of Jimenez, who was steady in the second round with one bogey on No. 14.

“You’re going to be 18 holes anyway, you know?” Jimenez said. “The thing you have to do tomorrow is keep patience, have a good swing rhythm and let everything happen.

“You have to respect all the players that are behind you. They’re all great players, and tomorrow the one who plays better will win the tournament. Or the one who keeps more concentrating, more calm. Don’t think about it. Just do your best.”

Fred Couples heads into Sunday’s final round in second at 9 under. Kelly, who won the last AmFam title in 2019, was in a group with Retief Goosen and Jim Furyk at 8-under.

“I didn’t hit it great again today,” Kelly said. “Just making the most of it, not making any big mistakes and then I made a big mistake.

“That was a bummer to finish on. But I’m the same amount of shots back that I was yesterday (after the first round). I know it’s there, but, boy, I would have liked to be in the last group putting the pressure on. But second-to-last group putting pressure on is OK.”

Madison’s Steve Stricker, the tournament host, carded an even-par 72 after a 70 on Friday.

“I want to play well here so badly, I think, and that’s part of the problem,” Stricker said. “I put some extra pressure on myself to play well. And I had been playing well coming into here and I’m still striking the ball fairly nicely at times.

“A couple wayward shots on the way in when I tried to force things. So that’s disappointing.”

Kelly and Stricker are the big names in Wisconsin golf, along with 71-year-old Andy North, who continues to battle back issues and shot a 74 on Saturday. But other familiar names are competing at University Ridge.

Skip Kendall has played in all five AmFam Championships. Now working as a coach in Orlando, it was a no-brainer for the 56-year-old to fly up despite a recent break from competition. It is his first PGA Tour Champions event of the year.

“Any time they ask me to be here, I will absolutely be here,” Kendall said. “This is home for me. This tournament is a very special tournament. It’s done a lot of great things for the community.”

Kendall had a solid front nine, including four birdies in five holes, but had a tough stretch of three straight bogeys and finished with his second straight 72.

“I’m disappointed I’m even par,” Kendall said. “But at the same time, I’m happy. I really came here to do better than how I’m doing. Hopefully tomorrow I can get it rolling like I did early today.”

Kendall, who also played in the Wisconsin State Open last year, doesn’t know when he will be back in his home state again, but he is making the most of it.

“Had a bunch of nice dinners with some people I haven’t seen in a while,” Kendall said. “Just saying ‘hi’ to everyone. It’s been nice.”

Mario Tiziani is also enjoying mingling with familiar faces. The 50-year-old former University of Wisconsin standout is playing his first PGA-sanctioned event in over a decade, thanks to a sponsor’s exemption.

Tiziani is well-known in these parts. He played for his father at UW and Stricker is his brother-in-law. Stricker’s daughter, Bobbi, acted as Tiziani’s caddie as he shot a 75 in the second round.

Tiziani lives in Minnesota, but is still deeply involved in golf as an agent. His client list includes Stricker, for whom Tiziani often caddies for at pro events.

 “I didn’t really know how I was going to feel,” Tiziani said. “I feel at home, honestly, I don’t feel like I’m an outsider.

“It’s good to see a lot of guys that I know and have met being out here over a few years caddying a bit. It’s been awesome. It definitely gets you excited. I’m anxious to work on my game.”

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Here are 6 players to watch for at this week’s Chubb Classic

Here’s a look at a few players to watch this week at Tiburón Golf Club at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Resort, which will be played on the club’s Black Course.

The field of the PGA Tour Champions’ Chubb Classic presented by SERVPRO is filled with World Golf Hall of Famers, major champions, and those who have made their names on the Champions Tour.

Here’s a look at a few to watch this week at Tiburón Golf Club at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Resort, which will be played on the club’s Black Course, the first time it has been used for a tour event. The Gold Course, the original of the two Greg Norman layouts, has been used for every QBE Shootout since 2001, and also for the LPGA Tour’s CME Group Tour Championship since 2013.

Tiburón had 27 holes, then an additional nine were added, with the Black Course opening in 2002, four years after the Gold. The fourth nine joined with the old South Course to become the Black Course. The North and West became the Gold Course.

Here are a few players to watch for: