Weather delays, Joseph Bramlett’s ace among five takeaways from suspended third round of Wyndham Championship

Weather wreaked havoc on the third round of the Wyndham Championship.

Weather is wreaking havoc on the final regular season event of the PGA Tour schedule.

Two separate rain delays halted play, caused myriad disruptions during the third round of the Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina. The first rain delay lasted an hour and five minutes, the second starting at 4:15 p.m. ET and ending play for the day. The second delay nearly ended at 6:40 p.m. ET, as players were in position to begin play, but a lightning strike extended the delay and ultimately ended the day. Only 12 players finished.

The third round will resume at 7:30 a.m. ET Sunday.

With a record 87 players making the cut, if play is not able to conclude Sunday, the Wyndham Championship could be headed for a Monday finish. It would be the first PGA Tour event with a Monday finish since the 2022 Players Championship in March.

Shane Lowry, who went home Friday after thinking he would miss the cut, dialed up the private jet Saturday morning and arrived with time to spare before his third-round tee time.

Meanwhile, Will Zalatoris and his caddie went their separate ways between rounds, and Zalatoris fired his second-straight round of 66 to move up the leaderboard.

There are 10 players within two shots of the lead heading to Sunday.

Wyndham ChampionshipPGA Tour Live on ESPN+ | Leaderboard

Here are five takeaways from the suspended third round of the Wyndham Championship:

An inspired Joseph Bramlett comes up 1-stroke short at Korn Ferry Challenge

Joseph Bramlett, one of four Black golfers on the PGA Tour, was trying to be second player of Black heritage to win on the Korn Ferry Tour.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Walking up the 17th fairway after sticking his approach shot 15 feet from the hole, Joseph Bramlett wheeled to his caddie and with an impish grin said, “How cool is this?”

For three months while golf hit the pause button due to concerns with COVID-19, Bramlett itched not simply to get back to competition, but to get in the trophy hunt and he gave it his all in his bid to catch eventual Korn Ferry Challenge champion Luke List.

“My stomach was going crazy and my adrenaline was pumping, and I felt like I could hit my driver 400 yards,” Bramlett said. “That rush is what I’ve missed and it was so great to do it again today.”

Bramlett would sink the birdie putt en route to shooting a 2-under 68 at Dye’s Valley at TPC Sawgrass, and finished tied for second place with Shad Tuten with a 72-hole aggregate of 11-under 269.


KORN FERRY CHALLENGE: Leaderboard


Bramlett, 32, surged into contention on Saturday, shooting 6-under 64, the low round of the day, and trailed the 54-hole leader Will Zalatoris by one stroke. The Stanford product carded birdies at Nos. 7 and 9 to keep the heat on List, who grabbed the lead with an early birdie binge to start his round.

Bramlett’s one mistake came at the par-3 11th hole. Bramlett held two clubs in his hand on the tee as he did often for much of the round on a gusty day. PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan, who followed the final group on the back nine, joked that he usually grabbed three clubs. But Bramlett chose poorly, going with a 5-iron instead of a 4-iron and his ball splashed into the water fronting the green.

“We thought the wind was a little more left-to-right, but it was probably much more into our face than we thought,” he said. “Just the wrong club.”

The double bogey dropped him three strokes back, but Bramlett made it interesting with consecutive birdies at 16 and 17 to cut his deficit to one stroke.

Bramlett, who has PGA Tour status this season, began the week as the fourth alternate at the Charles Schwab Challenge and originally flew to Fort Worth, Texas before settling for a spot in the Korn Ferry Challenge field when it appeared he wouldn’t get into the stacked field at Colonial.

Bramlett hit 16 of 18 greens on Sunday, but his putter let him down. He missed several chances for birdie on the closing nine that could’ve been the difference.

“I tried to scare him, but couldn’t quite catch him,” said Bramlett, who is scheduled to compete next week at the King & Bear Classic at World Golf Village.

Bramlett, who is one of four African-American players on the PGA Tour,  was attempting to become the second player of Black heritage to win on the Korn Ferry Tour. (Cameron Champ won the 2018 Utah Championship.) It marked his best result on the Korn Ferry Tour since the 2019 Pinnacle Bank Championship in July, where he tied for fourth. Bramlett took solace that the experience of playing in the last group and feeling the nerves of being in contention again will only help him down the road.

“I learned that I’m pretty close,” he said. “I think all of the things that I’ve been working on in my game are heading in the right direction and I hope that I can keep that up this summer.”

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Joseph Bramlett, Tony Finau speak out against social injustice

Joseph Bramlett, one of four players of black heritage on the PGA Tour, voiced his opinion on George Floyd’s death.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Joseph Bramlett’s opening round 1-under 69 at TPC Sawgrass Dye’s Valley Course left him five shots behind leader Paul Barjon in the middle of the pack after the opening round of the Korn Ferry Challenge. It certainly didn’t arouse interest from reporters in having him recount his birdies and bogeys.

Instead, it was Bramlett, via his agent, who requested to talk the media, not about his game but rather about the color of his skin and the racial unrest in the world.

Bramlett is one of only four players of black heritage on the PGA Tour – along with Cameron Champ, Harold Varner III and Tiger Woods – and he wanted to use his platform as a professional golfer to speak out about racial unrest, social injustice and police brutality.

Varner was the first to speak out on the nationwide protests and social injustice in the wake of George Floyd’s death, posting a 632-word statement on social media on June 1.

“To whoever wants to listen, I have so much I want to say,” his note began.

Woods also issued a statement of support against racial injustice and several other influential figures in the game spoke to Golfweek. Bramlett and Tony Finau, who is of Tongan and Samoan descent, are the latest in the golf community to bring their voice to the story.

”Have I dealt with racism in my life as a person of color in this country? Yes, I have. I’m not proud to say,” Finau said in a video posted Wednesday. ”I’m not proud to say that I have been disrespected and mistreated because of the color of my skin.”

Finau detailed an incident with police that happened in 2014.

”I voice my opinion because I stand with those who are for justice, those who are for equality and that are against police brutality and anyone abusing their authority because of the color of someone else’s skin,” he said. ”I’m against racism, and I’m for Black Lives Matter and this movement.”

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Bramlett watched Finau’s Instagram video and was moved by Finau’s experience.

“I was really glad he shared it, to be honest. I wouldn’t have expected Tony would’ve gone through something like that,” Bramlett said. “I think he surprised a lot of people. I think it’s a further example of what people of color go through in this country.”

Bramlett, 32, may not have been subjected to such blatant racism, growing up a child of mixed race in Northern California, where he attended a private school before matriculating at Stanford.

“I don’t have any George Floyd-type stories,” Bramlett said. “I’ve gotten some funny looks as a kid growing up, going to the golf course with my dad. I’ve had some run-ins with junior and amateur organizations over the years, but all in all, all encompassing, I’ve had a great experience with golf. Especially ever since I’ve gotten out here on the PGA Tour and the Korn Ferry Tour. I’ve been treated, in my opinion, like anyone else out here, and I’m really grateful for that because I think 40-to-50 years ago that wouldn’t have been the case. So, I’m very grateful to the people who have come before me and I’ve had a pretty good experience.”

But Floyd’s death struck a chord with Bramlett. He called it an emotional period. Asked why the Floyd incident has proved to be a tipping point in race relations, Bramlett called it a “ticking time bomb,” after incidents such as Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbery and said, “I think the really big difference with this is that we’re in quarantine, so everybody’s sitting in their living room, everyone’s on their phones all day, and you blatantly saw a cop murder a black man right in your living room, essentially. And I think that brought what people would chalk up to being black urban legends, it brought it right into their living rooms, and people were forced to see it, to face it and to think about it. And it pissed a lot of us off.”

The PGA Tour set aside an 8:46 a.m. tee time that featured no players at both the Charles Schwab Challenge and Korn Ferry Challenge – eight minutes and 46 seconds being the length of time that a white Minneapolis police officer pressed his knee on the neck of Floyd before he died. How did Bramlett spend that minute? He bowed his head and said a prayer for Floyd’s family.

“I reflected on my heritage,” he said. “I’m in a unique place where I’m mixed, I’m white and I’m black. It’s something that I’ve been raised with. I’ve grown up to and was taught a lot about some of the challenges the black community faces in this country. I really just kind of sat and thought about how grateful I was to be in the position I’m in, in this world.”

Despite all the soul-searching, Bramlett remains conflicted about how he can be part of efforts for change.

“I really wish I did. I’ve done a lot of talking the last two weeks with friends and loved ones, and I don’t know that there necessarily is an answer right now,” he said. “But in terms of what people can do, educate yourselves; talk to people who are close to you; have tough conversations from an honest and open-minded position. I really think that’s the biggest positive that has come out of this is that the world has kind of shut down the last two weeks due to the protests, and people have been forced to sit and think about what’s really going on and take a little bit of a deeper look.”

Whatever Bramlett decides to do going forward, he proved by initiating his own press conference that he’s willing to be a spokesman for his race in the golf world.

“First and foremost, I can be a good role model and I can be someone of understanding. I think my heritage is unique in this situation and I feel like I’ve got a little bit of a foot on each side of the fence, and I can kind of see where a lot of people are coming from,” he said. “As of right now, I’m just really trying to do some soul searching within myself and just be me.”

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Joseph Bramlett receives Charlie Sifford Memorial exemption for Genesis Invitational

Joseph Bramlett has received the Charlie Sifford Memorial exemption and will play at the Genesis Invitational Feb. 13-16 at Riviera.

Joseph Bramlett was named the recipient of the Charlie Sifford Memorial exemption for the 2020 Genesis Invitational, Tiger Woods announced Tuesday.

The exemption, awarded annually since 2009 to a golfer representing a minority background, exists to promote diversity in golf. The exemption was re-named in 2017 to honor Charlie Sifford, the first African-American player to compete on the PGA Tour.

Harold Varner III (2014), J.J. Spaun (2016) and Cameron Champ are among past recipients.

“It’s great seeing Joseph back on Tour,” Woods said in a statement. “The determination to rebuild his swing and regain his card shows the perseverance Charlie would have admired.”

Bramlett, the first two-time recipient of the Sifford exemption after receiving the honor as a rookie in 2011, suffered an annular tear to his L4 and L5 discs in 2013 while playing on the Korn Ferry Tour. Since his injury, Bramlett changed his swing to reduce pressure on his back and has since played in 11 PGA Tour events, including eight this season. He most recently played in the Farmers Insurance Open in which he tied for 45th.

Bramlett earned his PGA TOUR card in 2019 for the first time since 2011 after finishing in the top 25 in the Korn Ferry Tour Finals.

“Being selected to represent and promote the diversity of the game through this tournament in 2011 was an experience that I’ll never forget,” Bramlett said in a statement. “Receiving the exemption again in 2020 is a huge honor, but an even greater opportunity for me to carry on Mr. Sifford’s legacy of promoting the game of golf to minority communities across the country. I sincerely thank Tiger and TGR Foundation for this opportunity and for all the incredible work they do throughout the year.”

The 2020 Genesis Invitational will be held Feb. 13-16 at Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California. The full field will be announced Feb. 7.

It’s the first year the Genesis will have invitational status, meaning the field will be limited to 120 players.

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