Changes to Plantation Course suit Dustin Johnson, who’s healthy, has history in Maui

Now healthy, No. 5 in the world Dustin Johnson makes his return to the PGA Tour at a course he knows all too well.

Dustin Johnson was well on his way to producing another huge year in 2019 when he won twice in the first two months, returned to No. 1 in the world and then posted two second-place finishes in the first two major championships.

Then DJ basically went AWOL.

After winning the Saudi International on the European Tour and notching his 20th PGA Tour title at the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship, Johnson tied for second behind Tiger Woods at the Masters and finished runner-up to Brooks Koepka in the PGA Championship.

After that, however, Johnson didn’t finish in the top 10 again in eight starts to end the 2018-19 season, with a tie for 20th in the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational and Canadian Open his best results. It was the longest stretch without a top 10 in a season since his rookie year in 2008.

Turns out his left knee wasn’t right.

Sentry TOC: Scores | Updates | Tee times, TV info | Podcast

Even when he won twice and contended in the first two majors, Johnson knew something just wasn’t right with his left knee. He rehabbed the knee instead of opting for a surgical procedure, but as the weeks passed, the knee got progressively worse.

As did his form. Johnson said he was “hanging back too much” in his swing and losing control over the golf ball. As much as he tried, he couldn’t make the ball do what he wanted it to do. Johnson decided enough was enough and after the Tour Championship, he had arthroscopic surgery Sept. 5 to repair cartilage damage. The procedure was considered routine and similar to one he had to the same knee in December of 2011.

Johnson, 35, didn’t play again until the Presidents Cup in December, when he went 2-2-0 as the Americans defeated the Internationals. In Australia, Johnson said there were just a few moments of minor pain in the knee that have now disappeared.

“Game is in good form, so I’m excited about this year,” Johnson said ahead of Thursday’s start of the Sentry Tournament of Champions on the Plantation Course at Kapalua in Maui.

“I’m healthy. My knee feels good. No issues there. So I’m looking forward to this year and hopefully getting back to the form I was in a couple years ago.”

He’s in the ideal spot to make that happen.

Maui is one of Johnson’s favorite places in the world and the Plantation Course fits him to a tee – long, mountainous and scoreable. This will be Johnson’s 10th start in Maui and he hasn’t been out of the top 10 since 2010, winning in 2013 and 2018.

In 35 trips around the Plantation Course, he’s failed to break par just four times.

“It’s a place I always enjoy coming to,” said Johnson, the No. 5 player in the world.

Johnson didn’t waste time getting to the course upon his arrival in Hawaii and played the revamped, par-73 Plantation Course every day for a week ahead of the first round.

He likes the changes to the course – a few new tees making the course longer, and the new greens that are playing firm. And he likes feeling 100% again.

“It’s a great way to start off the year,” Johnson said. “I was pleased with the game and how I played (in the Presidents Cup), especially being my first week back and coming off of surgery. My game is in good form. I feel pretty good again.”

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Sentry Tournament of Champions live updates, scores, TV info

Get live updates as the PGA Tour returns this week with the Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua’s Plantation Course.

The PGA Tour is back as the new year kicks off in Hawaii. Thirty-four winners from the 2019 season have assembled in paradise at the Plantation Course at Kapalua for the Sentry Tournament of Champions.

There are a handful of big names who qualified for the winners-only event but failed to commit, like Brook Koepka, Rory McIlroy, Phil Mickelson, and Tiger Woods. However, the field does feature heavy-hitters like Justin Thomas, Jon Rahm, Rickie Fowler and Dustin Johnson.

Even better, golf in Hawaii means another opportunity to watch PGA Tour players in prime time. Keep track of 2020’s first event with some help from social media.

Sentry TOC: Scores | Tee times, TV info | Podcast

https://twitter.com/golfweek/lists/sentry-toc

PGA Tour stars get in Hawaiian spirit at Sentry Tournament of Champions

This week at the Sentry Tournament of Champions in Hawaii, some of the PGA Tours best are embracing the island lifestyle with their attire.

The PGA Tour’s opening event of a two-week swing off the mainland in Hawaii has a unique twist: You have to win to get in.

Thursday marks the opening round of the Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua’s Plantation Course. All 34 players in the field have one thing in common, and that’s a victory in 2019.

At the Tour’s first tournament of the new year, the winners-only field is in for a firm, fast and bouncy experience this week after a nine-month renovation project at the Plantation Course.

That said, some of the game’s best have put aside their normal tournament attire to embrace the island lifestyle.

Rickie Fowler during the pro-am prior to the Sentry Tournament Of Champions. (Photo: Getty Images)

During the practice rounds for the $6.7 million event, some of the competitors dressed as if this week in Maui was just another week at the beach.

Famous for his bright Puma gear on the course, fan-favorite Rickie Fowler rocked a bucket hat during Tuesday’s practice round and went all-out during Wednesday’s pro-am in paradise. His matching blue shorts and button-down shirt were both covered in pineapples.

Fellow Puma ambassador Gary Woodland joined Fowler in debuting different versions of Puma’s new Saltwater Collection at last month’s Hero World Challenge and turned some heads in the process.

While Woodland’s attire was rather pedestrian earlier this week, current FedEx Cup leader Brendon Todd joined Fowler on the Pineapple Express, donning a fun hat that featured the tropical fruit.

Brendon Todd looks on during the pro-am prior to the Sentry Tournament Of Champions at the Kapalua Plantation Course. (Photo: Cliff Hawkins/Getty Images)

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Sentry Tournament of Champions: Betting odds, predictions, picks and PGA Tour best bets

Here are betting odds, predictions and bet bets for the Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua.

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The 2020 portion of the 2019-20 PGA Tour schedule kicks off this week with the Sentry Tournament of Champions at the Plantation Course at Kapalua. The field of 34 players features five of the top 10 golfers in the Official World Golf Ranking.

The key stats best suited to the 7,518-yard, par-73 venue are:

  • Strokes Gained: Approach
  • Strokes Gained: Ball-Striking
  • Bogey Avoidance
  • Sand Saves Gained
  • Good Drives Gained
  • Proximity 175-200 Yards

My model at Fantasy National looks at the most recent 36 rounds played on courses with Bermuda greens.

Sentry TOC: Tee times, TV info | Podcast | Fantasy

Sentry Tournament of Champions – Tier 1

Photo: Adam Hagy – USA TODAY Sports

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Thursday at 7:20 p.m. ET.

Patrick Cantlay (+1400)

Cantlay is the fourth-best golfer in attendance by the OWGR measure. His only 2019 win came at the Memorial Tournament, but he preceded it by back-to-back T-3 results and followed it up late in the year with runner-up finishes at the BMW Championship and Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. He has the most appealing odds of the top golfers in the elite field with a $10 bet returning a profit of $140.

Collin Morikawa (+2200)

Morikawa offers a better return than Cantlay. A rookie in 2019, his first career win came at the Barracuda Championship. He enters the week ranked 65th by the OWGR and most recently finished T-5 at the Japan Tour’s Dunlop Phoenix. He has a great approach game and excels from our key proximity distance this week.

Sentry Tournament of Champions – Tier 2

Photo: Butch Dill – USA TODAY Sports

Corey Conners (+2800)

Conners won’t get the full advantage of his driver this week at a venue with wide, rolling fairways that allow all in attendance to bomb it off the tee, but he will get something of a reprieve from his usual struggles on the greens. Each of the last five TOC champions finished at or below 21-under par, and Conners certainly has the ability to go that low.


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Matt Kuchar (+2800)

Much of Kuchar’s career success has come early in the calendar year. The 24th-ranked golfer in the world won twice last season, at the Mayakoba Golf Classic and the Sony Open in Hawaii. He was also the runner-up at both the RBC Heritage and WGC-Match Play. He ranks second to Conners by my stat model.

Sentry Tournament of Champions – Longshots

Photo: Thomas J. Russo – USA TODAY Sports

Joaquin Niemann (+3000)

Niemann is coming off a Presidents Cup loss as a member of the International team. He gained entry to this event with his first career victory at A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier to kick off the 2019-20 PGA Tour campaign, and has been one of the most active golfers early in the season. His strong approach game gives him an advantage on the expansive greens.

Keith Mitchell (+4000)

Mitchell is our longest dart throw at a tournament without a lot of betting value due to the small field of elites. He also earned his first career victory in 2019 at The Honda Classic in early March. He held off World No. 1 Brooks Koepka on Sunday, and showed he can compete in strong fields.

Get some action on this tournament by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com.

Follow @EstenMcLaren and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

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Sentry Tournament of Champions: Fantasy golf power rankings

Here are the fantasy golf power rankings for the PGA Tour’s Sentry Tournament of Champions.

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The Sentry Tournament of Champions in Maui, Hawaii kicks off the 2020 PGA Tour year with a field of 34 winners from 2019 in attendance. Those set to tee off Thursday include five of the top 10 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

The event returns to the Plantation Course at Kapalua, with the venue having undergone significant renovations since last year’s tournament. It now measures 7,518 yards and plays as a par 73.

Fantasy Golf Rankings: Top 30

Here are my top-30 fantasy golf rankings for the 2020 Sentry Tournament of Champions at the Plantation Course at Kapalua.

30. Adam Long

Long missed five consecutive cuts after getting career win No. 1 at the Desert Classic. He was T-2 at the Mayakoba Classic, but he followed it up with a T-35 at The RSM Classic.

Sentry TOC: Tee times, TV info | Podcast

29. Sung Kang

Kang claimed his first PGA Tour since 2013 at the AT&T Byron Nelson, but he missed the cut in six of his remaining 16 worldwide events on the year.

28. Max Homa

Homa takes a break from roasting his followers on Twitter this week to compete in the Tournament of Champions. His lone top-20 result since winning the Wells Fargo Championship was a T-5 at the Japan Tour’s Dunlop Phoenix.

27. J.B. Holmes

Holmes may be better known now for his “feud” with World No. 1 Brooks Koepka, than for his 2019 win at the Genesis Open. He finished the 2019 Tour year with no other top 10s and 10 missed cuts. He most recently withdrew from the CJ Cup @ Nine Bridges.

26. Tyler Duncan

Photo Credit: Ray Carlin – USA TODAY Sports

Duncan’s victory is the most recent among those in attendance, having claimed his first career win at The RSM Classic. The win vaulted him from No. 387 in the world to 170th, and he’s now 164th. He positions his tee shots well and has a good approach game.

25. Nate Lashley

Lashley got his first PGA Tour win at the Rocket Mortgage Classic. He missed eight cuts in 2019 and withdrew from the no-cut Zozo Championship in Japan, but he enters the week seventh in the field in Bogey Avoidance over everyone’s last 36 rounds on courses with Bermuda greens.

24. Dylan Frittelli

The reigning John Deere Classic champ started his 2019-20 season with top 10s at the Sanderson Farms Championship and Safeway Open before missing the cut at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open.

23. Lanto Griffin

Griffin has gained 1.015 strokes per round putting to start the season and took down the Houston Open in just his fifth PGA Tour event of 2019. He’s coming off a missed cut at The RSM Classic.

22. Ryan Palmer

Palmer gets entry into this event as the playing partner to Jon Rahm at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans in late April. He placed in the top 10 in four solo events, most recently tying for 10th at the Zozo.

21. Keith Mitchell

Photo Credit: Orlando Ramirez – USA TODAY Sports

Mitchell won’t get the full advantage of his distance at this venue with all in attendance able to reap the rewards of the wide, rolling fairways. His victory came at the competitive Honda Classic, showing he can contend in elite fields.

20. J.T. Poston

Poston moved from 158th to 77th in the OWGR with his win at the Wyndham Championship immediately prior to the start of the FedExCup playoffs. He rarely finds trouble or plays himself out of contention.

19. Cameron Champ

Champ picked up a win at the Safeway Open to qualify for his second straight Tournament of Champions. He tied for 19th a year ago, but that’s unrelated to his ranking, here.

18. Matthew Wolff

Wolff won the 3M Open in his rookie season. It came just one week after the only missed cut of his debut campaign at the Rocket Mortgage Classic.

17. Kevin Na

Na won twice on the PGA Tour in 2019, taking down the Charles Schwab Challenge and Shriners. His lack of distance will be a weakness at this venue.

16. Chez Reavie

Reavie stepped into the winner’s circle for the first time since 2008 with a victory at the Travelers Championship. He positions himself well off the tee.

15. Sebastian Munoz

Another first-time PGA Tour winner in 2019, Munoz claimed victory at the Sanderson Farms Championship. He missed the cut in two of five events since, but he was solo third at The RSM Classic.

14. Joaquin Niemann

Niemann had four top-10 showings in the 2018-19 season before starting the 2019-20 campaign with victory at The Greenbrier. He’s one of the top pin-seekers from distance in the field.

13. Brendon Todd

Photo Credit: Ray Carlin – USA TODAY Sports

Todd enters the week in better form than anyone in the field after consecutive wins at the Bermuda Championship and Mayakoba Classic and a solo fourth at The RSM Classic. He’ll face a tougher test at a longer venue amid a stronger field.

12. Corey Conners

Conners came up with a clutch victory at the Valero Texas Open to gain entry to the Masters. His putting struggles won’t be as apparent at a longer venue where his distance and ball-striking will shine.

11. Kevin Kisner

Kisner broke through with a win at the WGC-Match Play, but was held out of the top 10 until back-to-back T-9s at the BMW Championship and Tour Championship in the FEC playoffs.


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10. Collin Morikawa

A finalist for 2019 Rookie of the Year, Morikawa’s first of what seems likely to be many career wins came at the Barracuda Championship. There aren’t any flaws in his game.

9. Paul Casey

Casey avoids trouble and can score low. He tied for 16th a year ago.

8. Rickie Fowler

Fowler finished fifth in 2016 and tied for fourth in 2018. He returns after year off following his win at the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

7. Patrick Reed

Photo: Butch Dill – USA TODAY Sports

It’s unknown at the time of publishing whether Reed made the flight to Maui with his trusted shovel. His accuracy off the tee and on approach hasn’t been in top form of late, and he’ll again need to overcome the ire of spectators.

6. Gary Woodland

Woodland was the runner-up here a year ago and makes his second straight appearance following his US Open win.

5. Xander Schauffele

The defending champ has won a total four PGA Tour events over the last three years, but this was his only win in 2019. He had three runner-up results.

4. Patrick Cantlay

Entering the week at No. 9 in the OWGR, Cantlay won the Memorial Tournament and had seven other top 10s last year. He’s had two runner-up finishes since mid-August.

3. Jon Rahm

The top golfer from the OWGR at No. 3 in the world, Rahm was the runner-up here in 2018 and finished T-8 in 2019.

2. Dustin Johnson

Johnson hasn’t finished worse than T-6 in his last three appearances here, including a win in 2018. He has a total of 12 worldwide wins since the start of 2016.

1. Justin Thomas

Thomas is the 2017 champion of Kapalua and he finished third a year ago. The free distance added by the venue plays to his advantage and lets his ball-striking and putting carry the weight.

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Sentry Tournament of Champions: Round 1 tee times, TV information

Here are the Round 1 tee times for the PGA Tour’s Sentry Tournament of Champions at the Plantation Course at Kapalua.

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The PGA Tour is back as the new year kicks off in Hawaii. Thirty-four winners from the 2019 season assemble this week at the Plantation Course at Kapalua.

The loaded field features 13 of the top 30 players from the 2018-19 FedEx Cup standings, as well as seven of this year’s top 10. There will be 15 first-time winners, the second most in tournament history after 19 competed in 2003 when the event was called the Mercedes Championships.

While the field features heavy-hitters like Justin Thomas, Jon Rahm, Rickie Fowler and Dustin Johnson, there are a handful of big names who qualified but failed to commit, like Brooks Koepka, Rory McIlroy, Phil Mickelson, and Tiger Woods.

More: When and where the pro tours kick off their 2020 seasons

Below are tee times for the first round of the Sentry Tournament of Champions.

All times are listed in Eastern Standard Time.

Round 1

1st Tee

Tee time Players
3 p.m. Brendon Todd, Lanto Griffin
3:10 p.m. Jim Herman, Tyler Duncan
3:20 p.m. Sebastian Munoz, Martin Trainer
3:30 p.m. Adam Long, Matthew Wolff
3:40 p.m. Joaquin Niemann, Graeme McDowell
3:50 p.m. Cameron Champ, Dylan Frittelli
4 p.m. Max Homa, Kevin Na
4:10 p.m. Nate Lashley, Collin Morikawa
4:20 p.m. Keith Mitchell, J.B. Holmes
4:30 p.m. Ryan Palmer, Sung Kang
4:40 p.m. Dustin Johnson, J.T. Poston
4:50 p.m. Patrick Cantlay, Corey Conners
5 p.m. Matt Kuchar, Rickie Fowler
5:10 p.m. Jon Rahm, Gary Woodland
5:20 p.m. Kevin Kisner, Patrick Reed
5:30 p.m. Paul Casey, Chez Reavie
5:40 p.m. Xander Schauffele, Justin Thomas

Viewing information

All information is in Eastern Standard Time

Thursday

Golf Channel: 6-10 p.m. (live)
Replay on Golf Channel: 11 p.m.-3 a.m.

Friday

Golf Channel: 6-10 p.m. (live)
Replay on Golf Channel: 11 p.m.-3 a.m.

Saturday

NBC: 4-6 p.m. (live)

Golf Channel: 6-8 p.m. (live)
Replay on Golf Channel: 8 p.m.-1 a.m.

Sunday

Golf Channel: 6-10 p.m. (live)
Replay on Golf Channel: 11 p.m.-3 a.m.

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Kapalua’s Plantation Course ready for PGA Tour pros with restored and speedy surfaces

Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw finished a project at Kapalua, where thatch buildup had slowed the roll in the fairways.

The PGA Tour players in this week’s Sentry Tournament of Champions are in for a firm, fast and bouncy experience, the result of a nine-month renovation project to Kapalua’s Plantation Course that restored much of the original intent of designers Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw.

The debut course of that now-famous design duo opened in 1991, playing some 400 feet up the side of a mountain in Maui, Hawaii. The coastal course features wide fairways and dramatic slopes, with long views over Honolua and Mokuleia bays. The course has become a staple of the PGA Tour, blasting snow-bound golfers back on the mainland with views of sunshine, tropical breezes and the occasional breaching whale.

The Plantation Course played firm and fast for years, but the venerable track – rated No. 1 on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access layouts – had started to show its age. Thatch buildup had slowed the roll in the fairways, and regular maintenance and top-dressing of the greens had softened some contours and steepened others, leaving fewer reasonable locations for pin positions.

Coore and Crenshaw returned to start a project shortly after the 2019 Tournament of Champions to restore the firm conditions and recreate more hole locations on the greens. Working with management company Troon Golf, which operates the Kapalua courses, and with former golf professional and current Golf Channel personality Mark Rolfing, Coore and Crenshaw rebuilt the greens and bunkers, restored tees and re-grassed the entire property. The course reopened in November.

The second hole at Kapalua’s Plantation Course during restoration (Courtesy of Keith Rhebb)

The course routing is the same, but the fairways are now Celebration Bermuda grass and the greens are TifEagle Bermuda. The 93 bunkers also were rebuilt with a capillary concrete liner system to help handle heavy rains, with several bunkers being reduced in size while others were expanded, all with more natural shapes and edges.

Keith Rhebb, owner of Rhebb Golf Design and a frequent contractor who does course-shaping work for Coore and Crenshaw, spent about three months at Kapalua. Having worked on top-rated courses such as Cabot Cliffs in Nova Scotia, Streamsong Red in Florida and the soon-to-be-opened Sheep Ranch at Bandon Dunes in Oregon, Rhebb said the work at Kapalua was all intended to restore the original playing conditions, where wide fairways offered strategic options but also could play tighter because a golf ball might keep trundling along until it reached trouble.

“The biggest thing was, the ball wasn’t rolling in the fairways as much,” Rhebb said. “The length of the course, for (resort guests) coming to play, it was just getting way too difficult. It had more to do with the conditioning of the fairways – the thatch was slowing the ball down. With the new Bermuda grass, Celebration, it can get a better surface to it to get the firmness back in the fairways. They really de-thatched the fairways, got almost back to basically the dirt and sprigged right back into the fairways.”

Coore and Crenshaw’s assembled teams included Dave Axland, Jimbo Wright, Jeff Bradley and Riley Johns, as well as 15 to 20 contractors. The group faced tight deadlines to finish everything in time for this week’s Tournament of Champions, with frequent logistical and operational challenges tied to renovating a course on an island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.

“You could really feel that pressure because there’s a hard date,” Rhebb said. “All kinds of things could have happened, created big issues. They were shipping in the grass sprigs from another island that were, I think, in refrigerated shipping trailers. There could have been one delay in a shipment, and everything would have been off. It took a lot of logistics and planning to make sure everything came together. …

“Andrew Rebman (Kapalua’s director of agronomy) and his crew pulled it all off, got everything grown in and ready, and kudos to them. I can’t even imagine the amount of pressure for them, having construction going on and having to wait on us before they could get to work, knowing they’re going to host a tournament that’s going to be on TV in January. Andrew, with his skill set, he’s going to have that place dialed in.”

A Sand Pro used to finish greens during the restoration of Kapalua’s Plantation Course (Courtesy of Keith Rhebb)

Rhebb said several of the greens had developed slopes of as much as 4 or 5 degrees in areas, rendering them unpinnable as the surfaces approached Tour speeds because balls wouldn’t stop rolling. Those slopes were the result of nearly 30 years of top-dressing with sand and other common maintenance procedures that buried some contours and steepened others. The green contours also no longer properly flowed into the contours outside the greens.

The crew utilized laser scanning and 3D computer modeling before starting work, then recreated slopes of around 3 degrees that extended playable green surfaces and opened up new hole locations.

“When we cored out those greens, it was almost like the rings of a tree. You could see the years of buildup,” Rhebb said. “What should be about 18 inches at most of the green surface mix, there was in spots two feet or more of mix in the greens. With almost 30 years of top-dressing, it was just time to come back and renovate these greens.”

Sentry Tournament of Champions features loaded field

The 2020 Sentry Tournament of Champions field is loaded with stars like Justin Thomas, Jon Rahm, Rickie Fowler and Dustin Johnson.

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Some of the PGA Tour’s best are bound for paradise.

Thirty-four winners from 2019 have officially committed to the 2020 Sentry Tournament of Champions, the Tour’s first event of the new year, at the Plantation Course at Kapalua, Jan. 2-5.

The loaded field features 13 of the top 30 players from the 2018-19 FedEx Cup standings, as well as seven of this year’s top 10. The field contains 15 first-time winners, the second most in tournament history after 19 competed in 2003 when the event was called the Mercedes Championships.

While the field features heavy-hitters like Justin Thomas, Jon Rahm, Rickie Fowler and Dustin Johnson, there are a handful of big names who qualified but failed to commit, like Brook Koepka, Rory McIlroy, Phil Mickelson, and Tiger Woods.

Here’s the complete field:

Patrick Cantlay Graeme McDowell
Paul Casey Keith Mitchell
Cameron Champ Collin Morikawa
Corey Conners Sebastián Muñoz
Tyler Duncan Kevin Na
Rickie Fowler Joaquín Niemann
Dylan Frittelli Ryan Palmer
Lanto Griffin J.T. Poston
Jim Herman Jon Rahm
J.B. Holmes Chez Reavie
Max Homa Patrick Reed
Dustin Johnson Xander Schauffele
Sung Kang Justin Thomas
Kevin Kisner Brendon Todd
Matt Kuchar Martin Trainer
Nate Lashley Matthew Wolff
Adam Long Gary Woodland

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