Can 4 grams make that much of a difference? Matt Fitzpatrick thinks so

“My fault,” Fitzpatrick said when asked if anyone was fired over Weight-gate.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — With the weighty issue surrounding his driver solved, Matt Fitzpatrick once again feels good about his game.

Who knew 4 grams could lift such a burden?

Fitzpatrick is an analytical whisperer when it comes to golf, tracking every shot he hits during tournament play. But for much of last year, something felt a bit off when the Jupiter resident pulled out his driver.

He took the club to Titleist five weeks ago to have it shortened. They discovered a 4-gram weight in the grip. That jogged Fitzpatrick’s memory.

“I almost had a heart attack,” he said.

Fitzpatrick added weights to the grips of his irons about a year ago. That felt so good, about a month later he did the same with his driver.

The problem was that he forgot the weight was there, even as his driver started feeling uncomfortable.

“My fault,” Fitzpatrick said when asked if anyone was fired over Weight-gate.

After the discovery, Fitzpatrick felt the weight of the world was lifted … from his driver.

Now …

“I probably had five weeks of it and it’s been a mixed bag,” the 29-year-old said. “But from a feeling standpoint, it’s felt better.”

This week at the Players Championship, that bag is a good mix.

Fitzpatrick shot a 69 Friday, putting him 9-under for the first two rounds, five shots behind leader Wyndham Clark. He ended his second round leading the field in Strokes Gained: Off the Tee, and second in driving distance.

So, can 4 grams make that much of a difference?

“Yeah,” he said. “The weight in the grip just made the ball go more right-to-left, basically more club closure.

“More face rotation, more kick from the shift. So left is the popular miss.”

Both days here, Fitzpatrick felt more like the man with two career PGA Tour wins, including the 2022 U.S. Open, at least off the tee.

“Just drove it well, drove it like I feel like I can drive it,” said Fitzpatrick, who also has eight wins on the DP World Tour.

“That obviously puts me in a great position to hit solid golf shots from there. To me, it felt a bit more like my old self, drove the ball well, putted well, and that’s kind of always been the key to when I’ve played well really.”

Of course, Fitzpatrick’s definition of playing well comes with a high standard. Even while being weighted down in 2023, the Englishman had one win, 11 top 25s and was a part of Europe’s dominating win over the U.S. in the Ryder Cup.

Fitzpatrick’s world ranking has hovered between No. 8 to its current No. 11 since winning the RBC Heritage in April.

Now, he’s made the cut at The Players for the first time in three years and is looking for just his second top-10 finish in nine starts at TPC Sawgrass. He tied for ninth in 2021.

While Fitzpatrick is looking to become the eighth to capture The Players while living in our area (Jack Nicklaus has won it three times, Tiger Woods twice), he would be the first Englishman.

Fitzpatrick pointed to the 12 years The Players was held in May for his country’s drought in North Florida, when it was played in warmer weather with firmer fairways and greens. Not exactly the maritime climate England experiences.

Although March is a bit cooler and can be wetter, it’s still not like the conditions when most of your coast is on the North Sea.

“I guess once it’s in March it’s probably a little bit better … It feels probably a little bit more like home with the grass,” he said. “It’s a tough golf course, there’s no two ways about it. Some weeks you have it, some weeks you don’t.”

Fitzpatrick has had it for most of his first two rounds with 12 birdies, and an eagle Thursday on No. 16. He’s carded three bogeys on the Stadium Course, but the one hole he’d like back is the par-4 No. 4 Friday, when his second shot out of the rough didn’t clear the water to the left of the green.

Fitzpatrick hit a nice wedge to 7 feet after his drop but missed his bogey putt. He went from a two-shot lead after a birdie on No. 2 put him at 10-under, to tied for third with the double bogey on No. 4.

“I felt the lie was good enough to kind of hack it onto the right side,” Fitzpatrick said. “It just kind of snagged me and went left. Just couldn’t really work out why it had gone so far left.”

That’s the only thing he hasn’t worked out so far this week.

Tom D’Angelo is a senior sports columnist and golf writer for The Palm Beach Post. He can be reached at tdangelo@gannett.com.

Matt Fitzpatrick announces engagement to girlfriend Katherine Gall

Congrats to Matt and Katherine!

It’s been a special couple years for Matt Fitzpatrick.

He had his signature win last June when he captured the 2022 U.S. Open at The Country Club at Brookline. He added another victory in a three-hole playoff this year in Hilton Head, beating then-defending champion Jordan Spieth at the RBC Heritage in April. Later this month, he’ll represent Team Europe in the 2023 Ryder Cup at Marco Simone outside Rome.

But first, Fitzpatrick had some other hardware to take care off.

Fitspatrick announced Saturday he and his girlfriend, Katherine Gall, were engaged. The couple posted photos from Bay Head, New Jersey, announcing their engagement.

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7 Alex and Matt Fitzpatrick photos of the golfing brothers over the years

A look back at the golf star siblings over the years.

Matt Fitzpatrick isn’t the only member of his family who is really, really good at golf.

The winner of the 2022 U.S. Open has his brother, Alex Fitzpatrick, who played really well at the 2023 Open Championship. And they teamed up together to play at the 2023 Zurich Classic, where Matt described how different they are from each other.

“I’m organized, he’s unorganized. He’s happy, I’m miserable,” Matt said, via Golfweek. “Yeah, that’s probably a good way to put it really.”

The Open Championship: Live leaderboard, Schedule, Tee times

Let’s look back at some great photos of the pair of siblings over the years:

Best final round pairings to watch Sunday at the 2023 U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club

Sunday’s finale in Beverly Hills features some must-watch pairings.

LOS ANGELES — As soon as your Father’s Day plans are over, find a television, change the channel to the 2023 U.S. Open and enjoy the show.

Or better yet, watch with your dad because neither one of you will want to miss this finish.

After 54 holes at the famed Los Angeles Country Club the leaderboard is loaded with PGA Tour and LIV Golf stars, as well as compelling would-be first-time major winners. Co-leaders at 10 under, Wyndham Clark and Rickie Fowler are in the latter category. Four-time major champion Rory McIlroy is solo third a shot back at 9 under, with 2022 Masters champion Scottie Scheffler three back in fourth at 7 under. Then there’s the likes of Harris English, Dustin Johnson and Xander Schauffele all idling within reach.

And what comes with a packed leaderboard? A handful of must-watch pairings. Here are the groups you won’t want to miss during Sunday’s final round of the 2023 U.S. Open.

U.S. OPENLeaderboard | How to watch | Sunday tee times

Rickie Fowler leads the way, first-time major winners in contention, the course strikes back and more from Friday at the 2023 U.S. Open

Here’s what you missed from a busy second round on Friday at the 2023 U.S. Open.

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LOS ANGELES — When co-leader Rickie Fowler birdied his opening three holes on Friday, it seemed as if we were in for another getable day at the 2023 U.S. Open.

But during the afternoon at Los Angeles Country Club, the sun came out, the winds picked up and brought the scores with it. On Thursday, 55 players were even par or better. That number dropped to 41 on Friday, with an average score of 72.22, 0.84 more than Thursday’s record low of 71.38.

A handful of would-be first-time major champs are near the top of the leaderboard after 36 holes in Beverly Hills. Fowler strung together another solid round at 2-under 68 and sits alone in the lead at 10 under, one shot clear of Wyndham Clark (67). Sitting T-3 at 8 under are Rory McIlroy and Xander Schauffele, with Harris English rounding out the top five at 7 under.

From Fowler’s peaks and valleys round to a lacking atmosphere and notable names on their way home, here’s what you missed from a busy Friday at the 2023 U.S. Open.

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Two rounds, three aces: Matthew Fitzpatrick makes the third hole-in-one of the 2023 U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club

The defending champion sent fans into a frenzy on Friday with his first career ace as a professional.

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LOS ANGELES — Aces are running wild here at the 2023 U.S. Open.

In the early stages of Friday’s second round, defending champion Matthew Fitzpatrick made the third ace of the week – and the first of his professional career – on the par-3 15th. Fitzpatrick had a delayed reaction to his ace because players can’t see the hole from the tee box, and not many fans can get near the green on No. 15 at Los Angeles Country Club.”

“Yeah, I wish it would have been louder. I wish it was a few more people,” said Fitzpatrick, the defending champion. “But, yeah, I’m surprised there’s not been as many people out as I thought this week.”

The ace is the 51st in U.S. Open and third of the week after both Matthieu Pavon and Sam Burns made holes-in-one on the 15th on Thursday.

“As soon as I hit it I thought that it got a good chance of going close anyway. Dead center,” said Fitzpatrick, who signed for an even-par 70. “My hand was a bit sore afterward, I’ll be honest, after all the high fiving.”

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History on the line: Players who can add their name to the record books at the 2023 U.S. Open

Phil Mickelson, Jon Rahm, Scottie Scheffler and more can make a little history this week at LACC.

LOS ANGELES — Major championships don’t need a lot of extra juice, and this week’s 2023 U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club is no different.

The field of 156 players is filled with some of the PGA Tour and LIV Golf’s best, like Jon Rahm, Scottie Scheffler, Cameron Smith and Phil Mickelson, as well as a handful of players who survived the 36-hole marathon that is final qualifying.

While the players mentioned above may currently compete on different tours, they all have one thing in common this week: a chance to etch their name into the record books.

Here’s a look at some of the history that can be made this week at the 2023 U.S. Open.

U.S. OpenLeaderboard, tee times, hole-by-hole

Lynch: Dubious invitations risk turning the Zurich Classic from a fun week into a joke

Perhaps fans imperiled by wayward shots enjoyed seeing those on exemptions, but fellow Tour players likely did not.

The criteria by which fields are assembled on the PGA Tour is considerably more byzantine than over on LIV Golf, where competitors require only the blessing of Greg Norman and amoral ambivalence about the abuses and butchery of their princely benefactor.

The Tour’s official list has 39 exemption categories, ranging from the obvious (winners of majors and the FedEx Cup) to the arcane (PGA Section champions, players with 300 career made cuts). They’re ranked by priority and not every classification is used at every event. The Zurich Classic, for example, used 20 categories to compile its field, a trickier construct than usual since the tournament is comprised of 80 two-man teams.

The most opaque criterion has always been sponsor invites, in which those who write the checks are granted tremendous latitude in deciding who gets the call for a handful of spots. As a general rule, that’s fair. Sponsors ought to have a say in drawing attention to their tournaments and not be hostage to filling tee times from a pre-determined pecking order of pedestrian pros, even if the basis for extending invitations appears parochial.

In February, Ricky Barnes was gifted a spot in the WM Phoenix Open — a designated event with a $25 million purse — for no apparent reason other than that he lives locally and is popular with the event organizers.

But an exemption category intended to benefit a tournament can also be a detriment when improperly applied.

When two-time PGA Tour winner Michael Thompson was added to the field at the Zurich Classic, he chose as his team partner Paresh Amin, a 43-year-old military veteran with a beggarly record on mini-tours, and who shot 42-over-par in Q-School for the Mackenzie Tour.

“He’s become my really good friend,” Thompson explained to my colleague, Adam Schupak. “I haven’t had any success with a partner in the team format. If I was going to play a team event, I wanted to be with someone I really liked. He’s trying to play professionally and I wanted to give him a chance to experience a PGA Tour event, meet the equipment reps, meet the caddies.”

In the opening round of best ball, when scores are typically lower, the pair managed only a 71 that placed them 77th among the 80 teams. A 75 in Friday’s alternate shot format dropped them another two spots.

“These guys out here obviously have an advantage over me,” Amin told the Times-Picayune, the local paper in New Orleans. “They’ve been doing it their whole life. I’m just trying to crack the code and make it full-time out here.”

Somewhere, the ghost of Maurice Flitcroft laughs.

Thompson and Amin were spared the indignity of last place only thanks to another pair of sponsor invites: David Duval and John Daly. Zurich presumably hoped the name recognition of these former major winners would draw eyeballs to an event that sits in no man’s land on the calendar, wedged amid majors and designated stops. The tournament could boast some quality names — Cantlay, Schauffele, Fitzpatrick, Morikawa, Homa — but too many others who would be recognized only by job-seeking caddies or alert process servers.

The problem is that Duval and Daly are woefully uncompetitive even on the PGA Tour Champions, much less a more demanding stage. Duval is 0-for-25 in cracking the top 10 in his senior career, while Daly has done so just once in his last 33 attempts. Predictably, their performance was execrable: rounds of 75-83 secured last place by 12 shots. Perhaps the few spectators who were imperiled by the team’s wayward shots enjoyed seeing the old timers, but there are ample reasons why some of their fellow Tour players might not.

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Each member of the winning team in New Orleans earns more than mere cash: fully exempt status through 2025, 400 FedEx Cup points, spots in the upcoming PGA Championship, Charles Schwab Challenge and Memorial Tournament, plus entry to the 2024 Sentry Tournament and Players Championship. It’s a heck of a return for only hitting half of the shots in half of the rounds.

FedEx Cup points are the currency of the PGA Tour, and have never been more valuable. Only the top 50 in points will guarantee access to all of 2024’s lucrative designated events. Only the top 70 will secure playing privileges for next season, down from 125 in years past. Fewer players have guaranteed status as more fields are reduced in size. Points are precious, and so too is the opportunity to earn them. There is less room than ever for veterans who fancy a couple of days in the Big Easy and friends Michael Thompson wants to introduce to equipment reps.

Doubtless, there will be locker room grumbling if Alex Fitzpatrick — an invited non-member of the Tour — earns status by partnering his brother, Matt, to victory in the Zurich Classic on Sunday. Family ties isn’t one of the 39 official exemption categories either. That will at least be a debate about an invitee who proved competitively relevant and earned those rewards, rather than the no-hopers whose presence only served to exclude others more deserving of a shot.

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2022 Golfweek Awards: Shot of the Year

The 2022 Golfweek Award for Shot of the Year went to a star player, on a massive stage, in a tight situation.

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The Shot of the Year divided the staff more than any other category among the 2022 Golfweek Awards because there are so many to consider.

Pros make difficult shots look routine every week, and sometimes Lady Luck plays a part too, but the writers, reporters and editors at Golfweek also felt that the circumstances and the moment mattered.

A miraculous shot in a major championship is just bigger than the same shot hit on a Thursday at a week-to-week event.

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In the end, it came down to six shots. Five have been awarded honorable mention, and in some other years they each could have been the winner, but the 2022 Shot of the Year delivered in every way. A star player, on a massive stage, in a tight situation. The 2022 Golfweek Award winner for Shot of the Year goes to …

U.S. Open: Matt Fitzpatrick’s golf equipment at The Country Club

Check out the gear Fitzpatrick is using this week in Brookline.

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A complete list of the golf equipment England’s Matt Fitzpatrick is using at The Country Club in the 2022 U.S. Open:

DRIVER: Titleist TSi3 (9 degrees), with Mitsubishi Tensei AV 65 TX shaft

FAIRWAY WOODS: Ping G425 Max (14.5 degrees), with Mitsubishi Tensei AV 65 TX shaft, G410 (20.5 degrees), with Mitsubishi Tensei CK 80 TX shaft

IRONS: Ping i210 (4), S55 (5-PW), with True Temper CFS shafts

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM9 (52, 56, 60 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S300 shafts

PUTTER: Bettinardi DASS BB1 Flow Tour Dept

BALL: Titleist Pro V1x

GRIPS: Golf Pride Tour Velvet 

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