Aloha course record: Justin Thomas fires 61 in Sentry Tournament of Champions

“If I did something berserk this weekend, I might have a chance to win.”

Saturday went better this year for Justin Thomas.

The world No. 7 lit up the Plantation Course at Kapalua on a bright, warm day with a tournament-record, bogey-free, 12-under-par 61 to move into contention in the year-opening, winners-only tournament.

“I played well. Didn’t do anything crazy. Just took advantage of all the, I felt like, easy opportunities and chances that I had and hit a lot of really good drives, quality iron shots, and wedges. If there’s such a thing as an easy 12-under, I definitely felt like it was,” Thomas said. “I felt like yesterday closing that round out at least gave myself a chance to get a respectable week, respectable finish out of it, and if I did something berserk this weekend, I might have a chance to win.”

Starting the third round 12 shots behind overnight leader Cameron Smith, Thomas started to do his damage on the third hole with a birdie, added another on the fourth, and then dropped a 40-footer for eagle on the par-5 fifth. He made the turn in 5-under 31 following a birdie on the ninth and kept on sizzling.

Starting on the 12th, he wrote down five consecutive 3s on his scorecard, another eagle coming from 7 feet on the par-5 15th. After a birdie 3 from short range on the 16th, he wrapped up his day’s stellar work with a two-putt birdie from 22 feet on the par-5 closing hole for a 7-under 30 on the back nine.

Five players, the most recent being Xander Schauffele in the final round en route to winning in 2019, had posted 62.

When Thomas put his signature to the scorecard, he was two shots out of the lead with leader Cameron Smith headed to the eighth tee.

Justin Thomas of the United States plays his shot from the second tee during the third round of the Sentry Tournament of Champions at the Plantation Course at Kapalua Golf Club on January 08, 2022 in Lahaina, Hawaii. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)

“Just the same thing,” Thomas said about his approach come Sunday. “I wasn’t crazy aggressive today. When you have wedges in your hand with soft greens, you attack. It doesn’t matter if you’re in last or first. You’re just trying to make birdies and I felt like that’s what I did.

“I was so far back, it’s not like I could really look at the leaderboard and try to play any differently. It was just trying to birdie every hole we played.”

A year ago in Saturday’s third round of the Tournament of Champions, Thomas uttered a homophobic slur that was picked up by a TV mic and his world turned upside down. Despite a genuine, heartfelt, and proper apology, Thomas lost a sponsor and was clearly affected by the incident for many weeks to come.

This time, most of the words picked up by TV mics were playing partner and good friend, Jordan Spieth, saying, “Good shot,” over and over again. The 61 was his fifth round of 61 or better since 2015, the most on the PGA Tour.

Thomas had been frustrated in the first two rounds by a balky putter – he opened with a 74 and followed up with a 67. In the third round, however, he had made more feet of putts through 14 holes than he did the first two days combined.

He hit every green in regulation and needed just 27 putts to make 130 feet of putts.

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His superb play in the Tournament of Champions comes as no surprise – he won in 2020 and 2017, and finished third last year and in 2019. Among his 14 PGA Tour titles are the 2017 PGA Championship and the 2021 Players Championship.

Thomas said his first course record came when he was a kid.

“A Junior World practice round. I can’t remember the name of the golf course. It was, I was like probably nine years old. It was like an executive course,” Thomas said. “I just remember because Tiger (Woods) had the course record, and I remember beating him and it was like the coolest thing obviously I had ever done at that time.

“Something tells me it’s not still standing. But that was the first one I had ever broken, and I was pretty pumped about that.”

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Justin Thomas can keep Citi sponsorship if he donates ‘meaningful portion’ of deal to LGBTQ causes

Justin Thomas can keep his Citi sponsorship if he donates a “meaningful portion” of his deal to LGBTQ causes.

One of Justin Thomas’ sponsors is making their stance very clear: they’re sticking by their guy, but an apology isn’t enough.

Two weeks ago Ralph Lauren was the first company to ditch Thomas as a sponsor after the 13-time winner on the PGA Tour used a homophobic slur during a recent tournament. On Monday, Citi, the New York-based investment bank, announced via a company blog post titled “When an apology is not enough” that it would continue to sponsor Thomas, with conditions.

“We considered terminating our relationship with him,” wrote Carla Hassan, Citi’s chief marketing officer. “It would send a clear and important message, but we decided to use this moment to work with Justin to try to create change.”

The post condemned Thomas’ language and announced he will be required to donate a “meaningful portion” of his deal to LGBTQ causes.

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“We want to more than make it clear that it is wrong to use this word,” Hassan wrote, also noting the company will end its relationship with Thomas if they feel he isn’t being sincere. “Instead, we hope our efforts can lead more people to make an affirmative choice not to use this word or others like it — and speak up when others do — because they understand the impact it can have, including on a friend, colleague or teammates who may be struggling with the decision to disclose their sexual orientation.”

Financial information wasn’t announced in the post.

Thomas finished third in his first start of 2021 at the Sentry Tournament of Champions, where he uttered the slur, and missed the cut last weekend at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship on the European Tour.

Thomas is not listed in the field at either the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines nor the Omega Dubai Desert Classic this week.

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Justin Thomas speaks in Abu Dhabi after losing Ralph Lauren sponsorship

Justin Thomas spoke about his use of a homophobic slur and losing his Ralph Lauren sponsorship ahead of the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship.

Justin Thomas spoke publicly Wednesday for the first time since losing his Ralph Lauren sponsorship last week in the fallout of his use public of a homophobic slur.

In his first public appearance since being dropped by his sponsor, Thomas answered questions from reporters Wednesday at Abu Dhabi Golf Club ahead of the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship. One of the questions was focused on Thomas’ using the slur after missing a putt at the Sentry Tournament of Champions on Jan. 9.

“I’m clearly beyond (not) proud of what I said,” Thomas said Wednesday. “It’s humiliating. It’s embarrassing. It’s not me. It’s not a word that I use but for some reason it was in there and that’s what I’m trying to figure out as to why it was in there.”

Ralph Lauren announced in a statement Friday, six days after the incident caught on camera, it would end its relationship with Thomas. The designer, however, left the door open for Thomas to re-join the brand if he “does the hard and necessary work” to grow from the incident.

The 13-time PGA Tour winner spoke of his hope for growth and learning from his mistake Wednesday.

“It’s going to be a part of this process or training program or whatever I need to do not only to prove to myself and prove to my sponsors and prove to those people who don’t know who I am but that’s indeed not the person I am,” Thomas said.

Thomas begins his first round at Abu Dhabi Golf Club Thursday morning alongside Rory McIlroy and Lee Westwood.

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Opinion: Justin Thomas’ use of homophobic slur shows how far sports still has to go

Justin Thomas was caught using a homophobic slur and was later dropped by Ralph Lauren. It showed how far sports has to go in battling homophobia.

If you want to understand how strong the poison of homophobia still is in sports, and how it remains a potent yet still sometimes unaddressed malignancy, look no further than golfer Justin Thomas, an ugly slur, and a fashion company.

What happened with Thomas shows how in the post-George Floyd era, the country is immeasurably better at blunt discussions about race, but we are still infantile, with numerous blind spots, when it comes to homophobia.

At the Sentry Tournament of Champions on Jan. 9, Thomas, the No. 3 ranked golfer in the world, used an anti-gay slur after missing a putt. The slur was caught on a live mic.

“There’s no excuse,” he said in an interview after his round was complete. “I’m an adult. I’m a grown man. There’s absolutely no reason for me to say anything like that. It’s terrible. I’m extremely embarrassed. It’s not who I am, it’s not the kind of person I am but unfortunately I did it and I have to own up to it and I’m very apologetic.”

The problem with Thomas saying that’s not who he is, unfortunately, is that’s exactly who he is right now. That doesn’t mean he will always be this way. It doesn’t mean he can’t change. But no one blurts out that type of ugliness without it being a core part of who they are.

Cores are not always made of a hardened substance. They can slightly shift, like molten lava, and reform into something better. But for now, for right now, this is exactly who Thomas is.

One of his sponsors, Ralph Lauren, dropped Thomas about a week after the incident.

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“We are disheartened by Mr. Thomas’s recent language, which is entirely inconsistent with our values,” the company said in a statement. “While we acknowledge that he has apologized and recognizes the severity of his words, he is a paid ambassador of our brand and his actions conflict with the inclusive culture that we strive to uphold. In reflecting on the responsibility we have to all of our stakeholders, we have decided to discontinue our sponsorship of Mr. Thomas at this time.

“As we make this decision, our hope is that Mr. Thomas does the hard and necessary work in order to partner with us again – truly examining this incident, learning, growing, and ultimately using his platform to promote inclusion.”

It’s good that Ralph Lauren severed ties and condemned what Thomas said. But it’s this part of the statement that’s problematic: “…our hope is that Mr. Thomas does the hard and necessary work in order to partner with us again…”

This makes the severing of ties seem more like a publicity stunt than a sincere gesture. No sincere gesture would already allow the possibility of a return to the company just days after such a disgusting incident.

No one is saying that Thomas should never have another sponsorship. Or that he should live with this forever. That’s not the point.

Ralph Lauren’s statement demonstrates how sports, and key parts of the sports machine, still don’t take homophobia as seriously as they should, and certainly not as serious as racism.

There’s a good chance that if Thomas used the N-word live on a mic, he’d have been suspended indefinitely. Even in these harrowing and ugly times of domestic terrorism and almost 400,000 dead from a pandemic, the conversations about race would have still been extensive and forward-facing. It would have gotten far more attention.

There’s simply no way Ralph Lauren could have gotten away with – we hate what he did, but the door is still open for him to come back – if Thomas screamed a racial slur. The excoriation of Ralph Lauren would have been nuclear. Faces at that company would have melted off.

There’s still a lack of understanding, even by straight allies, about the amount of damage that’s done to openly gay people (particularly young ones).

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Alphonso David,Copy checked president of the Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s largest LGBTQ civil rights organization, tweeted after the incident: “This type of discriminatory language causes real harm, and there is no place for it in sports. We must continue to work for greater inclusion and acceptance. That’s how we all ultimately will win.”

The tour’s reaction is tepid as well. Condemning Thomas’ actions is fine. Fining him, sure. But why is he still allowed to play?

It’s because elements of professional golf, like so much of the rest of society, doesn’t view homophobia with the same sense of disgust as racism when they are both on equal planes of depravity.

Thomas is a cautionary tale for golf, advertisers and really, the entire country.

When it comes to beating homophobia, we have a hell of a lot to learn.