Bryson DeChambeau debuted new muscles during the PGA Tour’s return at Colonial Country Club and other players took notice.
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. – Now that Bryson DeChambeau has become Paul Bunyan wielding a 5.5-degree axe, the golf world is stepping back and taking measure of what they are seeing.
Last week, he chopped down Colonial Country Club into a pitch-and-putt in the PGA Tour’s return to play. With a quarantine-added 20 pounds on his already large frame – the result of five protein shakes a day and three intense workouts per 24 hours – DeChambeau tipped the scales at 240 pounds, challenged the limitations of XL golf shirts and hammered the revered, tree-lined course into submission in the Charles Schwab Challenge.
He had 19 drives that reached at least 330 yards. He averaged 340.5 yards off the tee (in his rookie year in 2016, he averaged 299.4 for the entire season). During one round, he was within 100 yards of the green on 10 occasions.
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And he finished in a tie for third, one shot out of the playoff.
During the telecast, Colin Montgomerie told the BBC the PGA Tour should adopt a tournament golf ball and dial down the distance.
“I’m an advocate of what Jack Nicklaus proposes – a tournament ball for professionals, that goes only 80 to 85 percent as far,” he said. “It’s now brute force and a sand wedge.”
And DeChambeau said he’s not done growing – or adding ball speed and distance. He continues to pound protein shakes. A couple hours after his 72nd-hole putt lipped out to deny him a spot in a playoff, he worked out for 90 minutes. When he arrived here for this week’s RBC Heritage, he hit the gym. And he’s still chasing more speed despite adding 15 mph and hovering in the 190-195 range.
As players arrived at tight, quirky, tree-lined Harbour Town Golf Links for the PGA Tour’s second tournament of its restart, DeChambeau, who made his pro debut here in 2016 and finished in a tie for fourth while weighing about 200 pounds, was a main topic of conversation.
“My only concern would be keeping (his weight) up but also staying healthy because it is a lot of speed,” Rickie Fowler said. “It’s a lot of pressure being put on the body in certain areas. I’m not worried about him creating the speed. We know he can, and he’s obviously put on plenty of muscle and weight to where he can create that, but, yeah, my only concern would be him staying healthy with it being a lot more repetitive.
“Where does it become almost counterproductive as far as like too much speed, where dispersion becomes too great. There has to be some sort of peak in there. It seems like it may be around the 190 (mph) area. It gets tough to control the ball going straight once you get to the 200-plus area.
“The long drive guys, obviously, have a lot of speed, but they can get away with 1 in 8 in the grid. One in 8 won’t do very well out here on Tour.”
So don’t expect Fowler to go all Hulk. Yes, he’s trying to get stronger and a bit longer but knows what lugging around a lot of extra weight feels like. During workouts, he sometimes puts on a weight vest that weighs 50 pounds.
“Just walking a golf course with that extra weight, let alone doing some work out at the house, that’s enough for 45 minutes to an hour,” he said. “I’ll stick at my 155. I could probably use a little more muscle, but that will be something to work on continuously from here on.”
Webb Simpson joked he’d add 75 pounds to add 20 mph ball speed. Instead, he’ll seek incremental increases in both.
“I put my hands on (DeChambeau’s) shoulders last week, just because he looks like a different person,” Simpson said. “It’s really impressive to be able to change your body that fast and put on that that much weight and still not have it affect your game in a negative way. He was tearing apart Colonial in terms of distance and still hitting it really straight.
“I’ve definitely set out the last couple of years of trying to get stronger and trying to add ball speed, and I have. I’ve added three or four miles an hour of ball speed, certainly not at the rate Bryson’s going. But our games are different. I have to rely on shot making, distance control, more than Bryson. He was already long before he did all this. I’ve never really been long.
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“So I’ve got to go about it in a more methodical way than he’s doing.”
Defending RBC Heritage champion C.T. Pan smiled when he said he’d have to talk to his wife before gaining any weight.
“But 20 miles more swing speed, that sounds terrific to me, so I wouldn’t mind that,” he said. “But my team and I need to discuss that next time we meet, and hopefully my wife can be a part of it.
“I was very impressed about his dedication and the goals he’s trying to achieve because we played a bunch of tournaments together in college golf, and he was pretty skinny back then. Now he’s just a totally different guy. He’s hitting bombs out there. His stroke is still good. His putting is still good.
“I think he’s got the game figured out, I guess.”
Jim Furyk built his possible World Golf Hall of Fame career on grit and accuracy. Any attempt to change speed and add weight would get him worrying.
“It’s always great to improve your weaknesses but not at the risk of hurting your strengths,” he said. “The best players in the world attack the golf course differently than I do right now at 50 years old because that’s the way I grew up. It’s fun to watch. Fairways hit really isn’t an important stat anymore.”
Furyk said he was startled when he saw DeChambeau hit his tee shot off of No. 1 in the second round at Colonial. DeChambeau’s ball speed was 185. In the group was Dustin Johnson, who hit 177 on the ball speed radar.
“That was kind of an eye raiser,” Furyk said. “Dustin is pretty big, pretty strong, athletic, hits it pretty far. If you’re gaining 8 miles an hour on Dustin Johnson, that’s moving it. But I think there’s going to come a point where enough is enough, but the difference is you can’t regulate how big and strong a person gets or how well they train.
“I remember when 7,000 yards was long, and I’m 50 right now, and 7,000 yards isn’t scaring me. I’m thinking that’s pretty short. I think the bodies that be are trying to find the right way to regulate, but there will be a time where we’ll have to kind of make sure we cap things off.
“We can’t build 8,000, 9,000, and 10,000-yard golf courses.”
Jim Furyk, who turned 50 on May 12, will still ply his trade on the PGA Tour but wants to taste the senior circuit.
Phil Mickelson isn’t sure when he’ll play on the PGA Tour Champions.
Jim Furyk is heading out there this year.
Furyk, who turned 50 on May 12 and has won 17 PGA Tour titles including the 2003 U.S. Open, will still ply his trade on the PGA Tour. He played in last week’s Charles Schwab Challenge and is playing this week in the RBC Heritage at Harbour Town Golf Links.
He remains confident – just as Mickelson does – that he can win on the PGA Tour. But since Furyk and his wife, Tabitha, are hosting a new event on the PGA Tour Champions next fall, he wants to get a taste for the senior circuit.
The Constellation Furyk & Friends tournament will be played Oct. 8-10, 2021, at Timuquana Country Club in Jacksonville.
Furyk and Mickelson, who turned 50 on June 16, could play in the PGA Tour Champions’ Ally Challenge in Michigan beginning July 31.
“My goal, when (COVID-19 break) started, was to play the PGA Tour through our playoff schedule and hopefully be able to play some Champions Tour events,” Furyk said Tuesday at Harbour Town Golf Links. “I’m still holding pat with that. I would like to get at least a couple, say two to four, Champions Tour events in probably this calendar year and kind of reevaluate.
“Eventually, the timing is going to be right, and I’ll kind of flip the switch and go play the Champions Tour full-time. With Tabitha and I, with our foundation hosting an event, I want to get out there and see the guys.
“I played a practice round last week with Olin Browne and Scott McCarron. I played with Davis (Love III) today. I want to get out there and see the look, the feel, what a Champions Tour event is all about, what the Champions Tour is all about, because we have an event we need to build, and I want it to be successful, and I want the guys to like it.”
Lefty’s colleagues shared with Golfweek their takes on Phil Mickelson and their favorite memories of the man who continues to hit bombs.
He’s a comedian with a lightning-quick, razor-sharp needle.
A man with a golf IQ that’s off the charts, a wannabe Albert Einstein who at times thinks he’s Google. Is a great husband and father. Has a generous heart, a desire to mentor, an enormous appetite for life and the finest foods and wine.
He is a massive presence and possesses a mammoth charitable arm. Loves games of chance and fears no man or bad lie or any tree between him and his intended target.
And Phil Mickelson is one of the best golfers that has walked the planet.
That’s what Lefty’s colleagues said about the man who turns 50 on June 16. They shared with Golfweek their takes on Mickelson and their favorite memories of the man who continues to hit bombs and has a plaque in the World Golf Hall of Fame, three green jackets, a Wanamaker Trophy, a Claret Jug, a record six silver medals from the U.S. Open and 44 PGA Tour titles.
In short, it’s been a half-century of laughs, wonderment, fulfillment and plenty of excitement. Mickelson’s lived large, played large and certainly been a large presence in the game he started playing by mirroring his father with left-handed swings despite being a natural righty.
And he’ll continue to make us all wonder what Phil will do next.
“He’s really just a goofball. One of the greatest players ever, but still a goofball,” said Harris English, who pointed to a moment during The Match II as an example that encapsulates Mickelson. On the third hole, Mickelson was chirping about activating his calves and begging Tiger Woods for an advantage ahead of the long-drive contest. Woods turned to the camera, smiled and told the viewing audience “this is what I have to listen to every time we play.”
“That’s Phil,” English said. “He is who he is. Always talking, always having fun, always on the ready. He is very personable. A great guy to talk to. You can ask him about anything and he’s never going to short-change anybody. His heart and his mind is in everything he does. He’s just a great guy to be around.
“He’s a lot of fun and he’s been great for this game.”
While Mickelson usually takes over any room he walks into with non-stop jokes and stories, he can have an impact without saying a word. At the 2016 PGA Championship, Ryan Palmer said he told Mickelson that his wife, Jennifer, had been diagnosed with breast cancer. Mickelson’s wife, Amy, and mother, Mary, are both breast cancer survivors.
“I pulled Phil aside in the scoring tent and I told him and I wanted to ask him a few things,” said Palmer, whose wife beat cancer. “He didn’t say a word and he just gave me the biggest hug. For a long time, he didn’t say a word. Then we chatted.
“I’ll never forget that moment.”
Here are some more stories and memories from his PGA Tour brethren.
Steve Stricker
“One of the funniest things I’ve always remembered was one year we were in an In-N-Out in the Palm Springs area and I was with Mario, my brother-in-law, and we had already sat down to eat. And Phil and Bones came in, they ordered and they came to sit with us. And Phil gets his food and comes over and he has two triples, no fries. Two triples. Not doubles, triples. They were huge. And this obviously was before he started taking care of himself more. And he sat down and had this big grin on his face and he’s just like, ‘What? What’s the big deal?’ And he pounds both of them.
“What you see on TV is who he is. This fun-loving guy who has a lot of jokes, a lot of pranks, and he just loves to have fun. He loves to give you crap and he loves when you give it back to him. He’s one of the top 15, 20 best players best ever. He has all the shots, especially up around the greens. And he was never afraid to do anything. He didn’t back down from anything and there aren’t many guys who can play like that. And he still plays that way. That’s a unique feature about him because a lot of guys play with fear.”
Gary Woodland
“I was with Callaway in 2015 playing the final round of the BMW Championship at Conway Farms with him. Callaway had a new prototype golf ball and I was in love with it. Now, I was a big George Brett fan when I was growing up, so my baseball number as a kid was No. 5. And when I started testing this golf ball they were all Callaway 5s. And I’m thinking this is sweet, they made me a golf ball with a 5 on it.
“So I’m playing with Phil on Sunday and we get on the first tee and we both have Callaway 5 balls. So I go, ‘Why do you have Callaway 5? They made this golf ball for me.’ He goes, ‘I have 5 major championships, idiot, they made it for me.’ I felt so small. I heard later on that that wasn’t the case, that they didn’t go with 5 because of him, but he came up with it on the spot and he made me believe it. That’s the beauty of Phil Mickelson – he’s not afraid to dish it out and he can take it. He’s pretty witty and he always has the answers.”
The Furyk’s donation also will help increase bed capacity as the number of patients who have contracted the COVID-19 virus mounts.
The Jim and Tabitha Furyk Foundation is swinging into action to help providers at Baptist Health get the personal protective equipment they need to help treat patients with the coronavirus.
The foundation is donating $100,000 to the Baptist Health Foundation COVID-19 Emergency Relief Fund for PPEs. The donation also will help increase bed capacity as the number of patients who have contracted the COVID-19 virus mounts in North Florida.
The Furyks also are encouraging people to donate through the foundation’s Facebook page.
“We felt like this is what is really needed right now, because this might get worse before it gets better,” said Ponte Vedra Beach resident Tabitha Furyk, the wife of 17-time PGA Tour winner and 2010 FedEx Cup champion Jim Furyk. “Everybody is worried about staying safe, and it’s easy for us and most people because all we have to do is stay home. But the doctors and nurses out there who are helping people with the virus don’t have that option. If we can give them a safe work environment, every patient has a better chance of survival.”
Baptist Health has long been one of the major recipients of the Furyk foundation donations.
In addition to the donation to Baptist Health, the Furyk Foundation is stepping up its efforts in other areas:
• The Furyk Foundation is working with Urban Mining, a Jacksonville company that refurbishes and recycles electronic equipment, to provide computers to children in Title 1 schools who haven’t been able to participate in online classes.
• The cancellation of the PGA Tour’s RBC Heritage in Hilton Head Island, S.C., next week meant the cancellation of one of the foundation’s “Operation Showers,” for military mothers-to-be.
• More than 5,000 packages of beef jerky donated by Kingmade Jerky have been shipped to seven of the schools served by the Foundation’s “Blessings in a Backpack” program to ensure children receive healthy food during the weekends when they’re away from school. The donation will supplement the snack packs for lunches and dinners that have been provided by Duval County Schools during the pandemic.
The foundation began sending out “Showers in a Box,” gift packages to the mothers who would have attended, and Jim and Tabitha Furyk sent video messages to those mothers to let them know the packages would be arriving.
The Operation Shower in advance of The Players Championship took place on March 8.
Jim Furyk talks an array of topics in this Golfweek Q&A from the best shot he ever saw Tiger hit to his pet peeve.
Pennsylvania native Jim Furyk has won a major, a FedEx Cup, shot 59, and a 58. He’s played on Ryder and President Cup teams and even captained the last U.S. Ryder Cup team in Paris.
You know all that, of course, but do you know his pet peeve? Do you know who was his childhood hero or his favorite quotation? How about the best shot he’s ever seen a player hit or the adventure that most impacted his life?
Didn’t think so. Well, read on, because you’re about to find out.
Golfweek: Golf is a game that you never perfect, but sometimes it feels like you can rent it for a while. When have you felt most like you owned your game?
Furyk: I go back to my best years. I was feeling pretty good in 2003, 2006 and 2010. Those are the times I had long extended periods of time that I played really well. I guess I rented it for long periods of times. Those are the years I won the most and had the best opportunities. 2010 was my best year but I had a long, extended period of time in 2006 when I was feeling it. There was just a guy named Tiger up there too.
Golfweek: What’s your biggest pet peeve?
Furyk: When reporters that I’ve never met before don’t introduce themselves. I will usually stop them and ask their name and who they work for and say, “Great, it’s nice to meet you. What do you need?” I’m doing it genuinely, not to be a smart ass. I just want to know those basics and then go from there.
GW: Thomas Bjorn got a tattoo after his team won the Ryder Cup. If you had to get one, what would it be and where would you put it?
Furyk: If you made me, it would be something of my family — initials or something. It wouldn’t be visible.
GW: You famously overslept and missed your tee time for your pro-am round at The Barclays in 2010 and were disqualified from the tournament. When’s the last time you overslept?
Furyk: I do like to sleep. I’m not as good at it as I used to be. That’s the last time I overslept and missed something important.
GW: What do you consider your greatest achievement?
Furyk: In golf terms, I’ll go with (PGA Tour) Player of the Year in 2010.
GW: What’s your favorite quotation?
Furyk: Vince Lombardi’s “Winning isn’t everything it’s the only thing.” It was my senior high school yearbook quote.
GW: What’s the best nickname in golf?
Furyk: Gotta go with Fluff.
GW: What golf course would you like to see preserved so the PGA Tour is still playing it in 50 years?
Furyk: Harbour Town (host of the RBC Heritage). It’s so different than anything we play now. It will be way different than what they’ll be playing in 50 years the way equipment is going. It’s not very long, not a lot of rough, but if you happen to catch a little breeze out there, 8-to-12 under could win the tournament. You better hit it good and be able to control the golf ball. You need every shot around the green too. It’s a cool course and my favorite one that we play.
GW: What advice would you give to your younger self?
Furyk: Learn to be more efficient in practice and to practice with more of a purpose.
GW: What adventure most changed your life?
Furyk: I’d say Q-School, 1993. I got through (chuckles). It was in Palm Springs and I made the four-round cut and six-round cut on the number. A lot of stress. I actually made a 15-footer in the fourth round to make it on the number and I didn’t realize I had to hole it. I thought I could 2-putt and be safe. It was a fast, downhill putt and I was just trying not to hit it 4 feet by and knocked it in. I was the first group off of No. 10 in the sixth round so I was on the outside looking in and shot 69, I think (Editor’s Note: he did!) and had to wait and sit on it for 2+ hours to find out if I was going to make the top 40.
GW: What is your guiltiest pleasure?
Furyk: Mexican food or beer (I’m a Yuengling guy). When they’re both together is even better.
GW: Who were your heroes growing up?
Furyk: Terry Bradshaw. Die-hard Pittsburgh Steelers fan. I’d have to go through a list of Steeler players. Jack Lambert. Probably Bradshaw most of all, I always wanted to be a quarterback. In golf, Nicklaus and as a kid I was a big Fred Couples and Greg Norman fan. As I got older, Byron Nelson, who I got to meet, be around a number of times and talk to. He was a hero.
GW: When did the dream of being a QB die?
Furyk: I signed up to play high school football in ninth grade and was all set to go to practice, but that summer I played in a bunch of tournaments in Philadelphia and I won six of them. I decided I was going to go out for the golf team instead. It just seemed to make sense. Golf was coming relatively easy to me and it seemed like a good idea at the time. I quit baseball the next year. Winter was my off-season so I played basketball the whole way through.
GW: What is the greatest shot you’ve seen another golfer make?
Furyk: I was playing a Presidents Cup with Tiger as my partner. The 8th hole at Robert Trent Jones Golf Club is a downhill par 3 with an L-shaped green and the pin was in the back-left corner, a real small area there over a bunker. The greens were really firm so you couldn’t stop it and you had to be so precise. We had the tee and I led off. I hit a 5-iron pretty flush and it took a big hop and rolled through the fringe like an inch. I had about 25 feet to the hole and a really easy bump and run or putt. It was a good solid shot. It freed Tiger up and he took a 6-iron, aimed left and hit a cut to a back-left pin and held it up against the wind. It landed 2 feet from the pin took a little bounce and spun to about 3 feet. Did I mention this green was brick-firm? It was all I could do not to laugh out loud. I knew exactly what was going through our opponent’s mind. The best they are going to do is 25 feet and my partner just stuck it to 3 feet. I’m not sure there is anyone else on the planet who could’ve done that. I just remember thinking: No wonder he’s so damn good.
Mike “Fluff” Cowan is golf’s most popular and hippiest caddie and still going strong at 72.
Mike Cowan is making the most of his extended COVID-19 pandemic-induced layoff. On March 26, he underwent elective surgery to have a stent inserted in his right leg to open up a partially-blocked peripheral artery. It instantly relieved the pain in his right calf.
If the name Mike Cowan doesn’t ring a bell, you’re not alone. His boss Jim Furyk guesses only about 10 percent of golf fans would recognize that name and says, “I’d be curious how many Tour pros would know it.” One of Cowan’s previous bosses, Tour veteran Peter Jacobsen, says that any time he mentions his former caddie by his name during a speaking engagement he gets the same response.
“I get blank stares,” Jacobsen says.
As soon as Jacobsen mentions his nickname, there’s a collective look of recognition.
To the man better known as Fluff, all that matters is this: “The guys who’ve written checks to me have known,” he says.
Everybody loves Fluff, perhaps golf’s most famous caddie. He’s certainly the hippiest caddie and one of the Last of the Mohicans, dating back to the days when loopers found work in the parking lot and subsistence living meant bunking four to a room and eating under the golden arches. And yet Fluff keeps showing up with a smile and his trademark fluffy, walrus mustache, which he last shaved off in 1984 and makes him the spitting image of actor Wilford Brimley.
“If you told me 10 years ago that Mike would still be caddying at 72 years old, I’d have chuckled and said, ‘C’mon. Get out of here,’ ” Furyk says. “But he’s still going strong.”
Let’s start with the nickname.
A couple of otherwise long-forgotten Eddies from Jacksonville, Florida – Eddie Davis and Eddie Fletcher – coined the name in the late 1970s because they thought Cowan bore a resemblance to Steve Melnyk, the 1969 U.S. Amateur champion, Florida Gator and former PGA Tour pro turned broadcaster. Melnyk’s nickname in college was Fluff, and they started calling Cowan “Short Fluff.”
“Pretty soon it was shortened to Fluff,” Cowan says. “I think they were trying to get my goat because Steve Melnyk isn’t exactly the most handsome man.”
Fluff accepted it as something of a rite of passage, noting, “It’s almost like you haven’t made it in the caddie world until you’ve got a nickname.”
Fluff’s first PGA Tour event was a Monday Qualifier for the 1976 Greater Hartford Open long before it became known as the Travelers Championship. He caddied for Dave Smith at Tunxis Plantation (now known as Tunxis Country Club) in Farmington, Connecticut.
“I was so green that when he didn’t qualify I didn’t know enough to go to the course and see if I could get a bag there,” Fluff says.
Smith asked him to go to the Buick Open the next week and Fluff, who learned the game from his father growing up in Maine, played small-time college golf at William Penn University, and had recently been fired from his job as an assistant golf pro, couldn’t think of anything better to do that summer than follow around the pro circuit. For his first half dozen or so events he never worked for the same guy twice. He showed up at the next stop and worked the Monday qualifier. Back then, it was easy to find a bag in the parking lot. No one was out there to make a living – his first bag paid him $20 a day and 3 percent of earnings.
“Cesar Sanudo was the first pro that actually paid me $100 when we missed the cut. That was huge,” he says. “Gypsy (Joe Grillo) and I stayed together a lot, almost regularly. A bunch of us would share a room, low round of the day would get the bed and the rest of us would make do. If you had a good week, you partied hard; if you didn’t, you got by. It wasn’t like we were out there saving money. But I didn’t have anything but me.”
At the last event of the season, Fluff looped for Ed Sabo at Walt Disney World, and after Sabo paid him he asked Fluff a question that would come to define his life: “What are you doing next season?”
“I had no intentions of turning this into what it has become,” Fluff says. “I’ve never planned anything in my life. I always have gone with the flow. It must be the Grateful Dead in me. Every time I went home to see my dad, he’d ask me, ‘When are you going to quit this caddie thing? When are you going to find yourself a real job?’ After four, five years working with Peter, my dad quit asking me that question.”
Peter would be Peter Jacobsen and they first met at Silverado Country Club in Napa, California, in the fall of 1977.
“He looked like a cross between Grizzly Adams and Jerry Garcia,” Jacobsen says. “He introduced himself and said he was impressed with my game.”
Fluff didn’t start packing for Jacobsen until the following spring at the Heritage Classic. At the time, Fluff was living in his car with a dog named Shivas and hoping just to earn food and gas money to get from one tournament to the next. He was (and remains) a loyal “Dead Head,” and anytime they drove to a tournament together, Fluff cracked open his case of cassettes of bootleg Grateful Dead concerts. (Fluff has since upgraded to a hard drive with every concert the band has ever played.) Jacobsen, who once joined Fluff at a concert in Providence and eventually converted into a fan of the band, loved to push Fluff’s buttons and saw the Dead as an easy target. He’d say that he listened to a one-hour special on the Dead last night. “They played all their greatest hits for two minutes and talked to them for the other 58,” Jacobsen recalls. “He’d get really pissed at me.”
For more than 18 years, Fluff was as important as any club in Jacobsen’s bag. Fluff claimed his first winning bag with Jacobsen at the 1980 Buick Open before many of today’s players were even born. In August 1996, at the PGA Championship at Valhalla Golf Club, Jacobsen withdrew midway through the second round. He could barely walk. That Friday afternoon as Fluff packed Jacobsen’s golf bag, his boss said he was going home and didn’t intend to play again until he was healthy.
“I didn’t know whether that was going to be two weeks or two months. I went home to wait it out. During that time, I got a call from Tiger. It was right after he won his last U.S. Amateur in Portland. Tiger basically said to me, ‘What are you doing?’ I said, ‘I’m not doing nothing.’ He said he was turning pro and asked me to work the next six, seven events. I said, ‘I don’t know when Peter will be ready again but I can work the next couple, for sure, and then go from there,’ ” Fluff recalls. “It was two, three events into working for Tiger and I’m seeing stuff that is blowing my mind, the shots he hit, the distance he hit it. Everything about his golf game was ‘Oh my God, what is this?’ I knew from the get-go it was special.
“I still hadn’t come to grips with anything until I caught wind that there was a caddie – and I’d just assume not name him – that wanted to make a play for Tiger’s bag. It was at that point where I thought, I can’t let this go by. I’ve got this job right now. All I thought I had to do was tell Tiger I was ready to go full time.
“It was at that point that I called Peter. I hated doing it over the phone but that was the only way to do it. I said I was going to go to work for Tiger. That’s kind of how that all went down. I was family with Peter. I changed his kid’s diapers. I lived with them in the off-season in Portland back when we used to have an off-season. Peter took it in stride and (his wife) Jan said to me if I didn’t take it she was going to fire me.”
Fluff still calls it one of the hardest decisions he’s ever had to make in his life. To this day, he will see people point at him and say, ‘That’s Tiger’s old caddie.’ Usually Fluff will let the remark pass but sometimes he’ll correct them and say, “No, I’m not Tiger Woods’ caddie. I’m Peter Jacobsen’s caddie. I had a stint with Tiger, which was wonderful, and when I was Tiger’s caddie I was his caddie, but in my mind I was always Peter Jacobsen’s caddie.”
Fluff was on the bag for Tiger’s first major championship as a pro at the 1997 Masters. That’s the one when Tiger famously shot 40-30 in the opening round and then cruised to a 12-stroke victory. As they made the turn after shooting 40, Fluff delivered the following pep talk. “I don’t know what it had to do with anything but walking to the 10th tee, I said something to the effect of it’s nothing more than the start of a long tournament. Let’s go shoot something in the red and we’ll be all right, and from there he just dominated that golf course.”
“Tiger was fun to work for,” Fluff continues. “He never put the blame on me for anything that happened. I’ve been very fortunate because there are a lot of players that, for whatever reason, can’t take the blame for their own actions. So, who is the closest one to them? Their caddie. They get blamed. I’ve never had that out of a player. Not one of them has ever blamed me for something that happened. Jim may be the best at it.”
Jim would be Jim Furyk, his employer since 1999. After the final round of the Nissan Open at Riviera Country Club that year, Tiger ended their 29-month partnership in the parking lot.
“I don’t hold a bit of animosity because he fired me. I don’t know why he did it exactly. I’ve never asked him and I never will. I don’t care,” Fluff says. “It happened and you move on. You can’t worry about what isn’t. All my life, I’ve hated ‘What if.’ Deal with what comes along. I never went, ‘Oh jeez, I could’ve won that Open.’ ”
Instead, he went home and waited. Well, there was a short-term flirtation. Fluff is passionate about playing the game and toyed with the idea of turning professional.
“Be it the mini tours or try to Monday into some Senior Tour events. At that time, I still felt like I could play, but nothing ever came of it,” he says.
The week of the 1999 Players Championship, after Furyk had parted ways with caddie Steve Duplantis, Fluff got a phone call. Furyk’s wife Tabitha and father Mike made the initial overtures to see if Fluff was interested.
“Jim and I started at a small, little tournament in Augusta,” Fluff jokes of their debut at the Masters. “That was my first week. It helps that I’ve had a great deal of success with Jim. As it turns out, I’ve done just fine.”
Together, Furyk and Fluff won the 2003 U.S. Open, the 2010 Tour Championship and FedEx Cup and shot a 59 at Conway Farms and the Tour’s all-time low 18-hole score of 58 at TPC River Highlands. To commemorate those sub-60 rounds, Fluff framed his pin sheets for his boss. When ticking off a list of what makes Fluff exceptional at his job, Furyk compliments him for never being late – “not once” – and loves that he has the demeanor of a sphinx.
“He’s the same guy whether I’m shooting 60 or 80,” says Furyk, who has employed Fluff for 21 years as of next week, “although his (Maine) accent comes out when he gets excited.”
Back to Fluff, who still remembers one instance at the par-3 16th at Augusta National where they were in-between clubs and Fluff recommended a comfortable 5 iron over nuking a six.
“So, he hits 5-iron over the green, which is not a good place to be on that hole,” Fluff says. “His comment to me was, ‘I hit that harder than I wanted to.’ He put the blame on himself rather than my decision.”
Fluff is golf’s iron man. (Only Pete Bender and Andy Martinez who started in 1969 have been caddying on Tour longer, but both took extended breaks.) He’s like the Energizer Bunny; he keeps going and going, losing weight and ditching the Mountain Dews that used to fuel him.
“My dad used to say to me the world belongs to those who show up. And that’s what he does,” Jacobsen says. “He shows up, and I’ve never seen him have a bad when he’s caddying.”
Even his peers marvel at his endurance and longevity.
“It’s not possible,” says Paul Tesori, caddie for Webb Simpson. “And when Jim takes time off he’ll go find another bag and keep working.”
“It blows me away,” says Neil Oxman, a longtime caddie, most notably for Tom Watson. “And let it be known that Furyk has one of the heaviest bags.”
How much more mileage is left in Fluff? Three years ago, he said he wanted to hang on long enough for his daughter, Bobbie, to graduate high school. That would be next spring. Earlier this year, Fluff hobbled around and missed a few pro-ams and practice rounds. But he could be in store for a new lease on life later this year, when Furyk turns 50 and becomes eligible for PGA Tour Champions. Whenever Furyk makes the jumps, Fluff will be able to use a golf cart until the tournament starts on Friday (the vast majority of senior tournaments banned the use of golf carts during tournament play in 2015) and most of them are only 54 holes rather than the typical 72-hole grind on the junior circuit. Still, even after successful surgery, Fluff knows he’s deep into the back nine of a legendary career.
“If you saw me after the round getting out of my car at the hotel, you’d say, ‘How the hell is he going to caddie tomorrow?’ But somehow or other I get out here and I put one foot in front of another. How many more years? I can’t really say. Until I’m a hindrance. I’m thinking I might outlast Jim. I’m thinking he might retire before me. Just imagine if I can make it to 80, then I can be really crotchety.”
Analyzing the golf betting odds to win the 2020 Players Championship, with PGA Tour betting odds, picks, predictions and best bets.
The top names in golf are in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., this week for the 2020 Players Championship. Below, we break down the 2020 Players Championship outright odds to win, with betting picks, tips and best bets.
Tiger Woods is one of just four players from the top 50 of the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings not part of the 144-man field. He’ll finalize his preparations for his Masters defense next month, while world No. 1 Rory McIlroy attempts to hold off the strongest field in golf for the second straight year at TPC Sawgrass.
The key stats for the 7,189-yard, par-72 TPC Sawgrass:
Strokes Gained: Ball Striking
Strokes Gained: Around the Green
Opportunities Gained
Greens in Regulation Gained
Proximity from 120-150 Yards
My model at Fantasy National looks at the most recent 36 rounds for each golfer in the field on courses shorter than 7,200 yards.
One of many former world No. 1’s in the field, Johnson enters the week ranked ninth by the Golfweek rankings, but he shares the sixth-best odds at BetMGM. He tied for fifth last year, following a T-17 in 2018 and a T-12 in 2017.
Johnson leads the field in Opportunities Gained while ranking fourth in SG: Ball Striking and eighth in Greens in Regulation Gained. He won at least twice internationally in each of the last four years and won’t often carry these lofty odds.
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Adam Scott (+3300)
Scott hasn’t finished worse than T-12 in any of the last four years at TPC Sawgrass. His 1.95 strokes gained per round across 66 career rounds on the Stadium Course ranks third in the field, according to Data Golf. He has two worldwide wins since late December after not winning since 2016.
The Players Championship Betting Picks – Tier 2
Jason Day (+6000)
Day withdrew from the Arnold Palmer Invitational last week due to a back injury, but he remains in the field for an event he has won and dominated in recent years. The 2016 Players champ tied for fifth in 2018 and tied for eighth last year.
He’s one of the best in the field/world around the greens and his odds are inflated solely by last week’s injury. If he’s healthy, he’s an incredible bargain.
Scottie Scheffler (+9000)
Scheffler has climbed all the way to No. 27 early in his rookie season on the PGA Tour. He finished T-15 in a strong field at the API last week and has shown he can be a regular contender. He ranks 18th in the field in Opportunities Gained and has the ability to score low on these shorter courses.
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The Players Championship Betting Picks – Longshots
Corey Conners (+15000)
Conners tied for 41st last year ahead of his breakout win at the Valero Texas Open. He missed the cut in three of his last four events and each of his past two, but he’s an expert ball striker and low scorer. He gained 7.8 strokes tee-to-green and 4.4 strokes on approach here last year and just needs a decent putting week.
Jim Furyk (+15000)
Furyk will be eligible for the PGA Tour Champions circuit in May, but will give it another go at TPC Sawgrass following his runner-up finish last year. It was his second second-place result since 2014, losing both times by just a single stroke. He entered in better form last year, but he’s well-versed on a course designed by Pete Dye to level the playing field.
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A historic Donald Ross course will host the tournament as the PGA Tour Champions returns to Jacksonville for the first time in 19 years.
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JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – The PGA Tour Champions will return to Jacksonville for the first time in 19 years when the Constellation Furyk and Friends will be played at the historic Timuquana Country Club Oct. 4-10, 2021.
The Tour signed a five-year deal with Constellation and Timuquana for the full-field event, with a $2 million purse. It will be aired on Golf Channel.
Jim Furyk, a 17-time PGA Tour winner and the 2003 U.S. Open champion, will host the tournament. The foundation he runs with his wife Tabitha is the charitable beneficiary and Constellation, which sponsored the Senior Players Championship until 2018, returns to the tour as a title sponsor.
Furyk made the announcement on Sunday at the 10th annual Furyk and Friends Concert, at the 17th hole of the TPC Sawgrass Players Stadium Course.
“We think it’s a huge opportunity to raise more dollars to help folks and more charitable organizations in Northeast Florida,” Furyk told the Florida Times-Union. “To be able to align ourselves with the PGA Tour and everything about their history of $3 billion in charitable giving is a very big step and something we’re very proud of.”
“It seemed like the right time to make this move to continue that growth,” Tabitha Furyk said. “Bring folks to Jacksonville to see how great our city is but also help us benefit those who need it.”
The last time a PGA Tour Champions event was played in the Jacksonville area was the the Legends of Golf at the Golf Club of Amelia, the Slammer & Squire, and the King & Bear from 1998-2002. The Senior Players was at the Sawgrass Country Club in 1987 and the TPC Sawgrass Dye’s Valley in 1988 and 1989.
Constellation, a Baltimore-based energy company, has pledged $500,000 per year to the foundation beginning in 2021, and will make an initial donation of $100,000 this year. That means over the duration of the first contract, at least $2.6 million will go to charity.
Constellation’s parent company, Exelon, has been one of Furyk’s sponsors in the past.
“This is going to be a home run,” said Constellation president Mark Huston. “What really sold us was the personal interest Jim and Tabitha have in their community. The charity aspect of the tournament is something we’re behind 100 percent.”
Furyk and his wife’s foundation has assisted children and families in need in Northeast Florida for the last decade, such as Wolfson Children’s Hospital, Community PedsCare, Operation Shower and Blessings in a Backpack.
But transitioning that event to a PGA Champions tournament is a game-changer.
“We were a bit limited with the two-day event,” Tabitha Furyk said about the current version of Furyk and Friends. “Now we have an opportunity to grow it. We have already gained momentum, locally and nationally, and this week we needed 100 hotel rooms for the guests. Even with what we’ve been able to do right now, we’re scratching the surface. We know there is an opportunity to do more big things.”
PGA Tour Champions president Miller Brady said that goal of the Furyks is closely aligned with every Champions event.
“It’s going to be a week-long party,” Brady said. “PGA Champions players love the pro-ams, the pairings parties and have a good understanding of the importance of a sponsor and the fans. And Jim is such a great professional on and off the golf course who will give the event great name recognition. They’ve done a great job assisting children and families for the last 10 years and Constellation is committed to make sure that will continue, and to increase the charitable giving.”
Furyk said the pros should enjoy Timuquana, a Donald Ross design that is 97 years old. He and his wife recently became a members.
“I love this golf course … I think it’s going to set up phenomenal for this tournament,” Furyk said.
Furyk will be the second PGA Tour Champions member to host a tournament. Steve Stricker is the host for the American Family Insurance Championship in Madison, Wis., in June.
A seemingly endless PGA Tour schedule is finally in the books for 2019. How do Tour pros plan to spend their “off-season” and the holidays?
ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. — A seemingly endless PGA Tour schedule is finally in the books for 2019 with the conclusion of the RSM Classic, the last official event of the decade (let the Silly Season begin!).
How do Tour pros plan to spend their “off-season” and the holidays? We asked 18 pros after the RSM Classic.
Weddings, surgeries, pulled wisdom teeth, hunting and fishing, and — shocker — more golf are on the agenda.
Scott Brown
“If you’re looking for me, I’ll be hunting. I went deer hunting 20 of the last 25 days before going to Mayakoba. It’s fun to try to kill something bigger than you.”