Justin Thomas clarifies father’s role as swing coach, confirms parting ways with putting coach

Thomas says he’s confident he’s not that far away from playing his brand of winning golf again.

NAPA, Calif. – For Justin Thomas, waiting to find out whether he’d receive a captain’s pick from U.S. skipper Zach Johnson for the Ryder Cup in Rome later this month caused numerous sleepless nights.

“It was brutal,” he said Wednesday during his pre-tournament press conference ahead of the Fortinet Championship. “I told Zach after the fact that I compared it to like if you had an ex-girlfriend that you were trying to find any excuse you could to reach out to them to get in contact, that’s pretty much how I felt like with Zach.”

With his spot secure, Thomas said he has nothing else to prove and he’s ready to get back to work – he hasn’t played since finishing 12th at the Wyndham Championship in Greensboro, North Carolina, on Aug. 6 – after a disappointing season by his high standards. Thomas, 30, finished 71st in the FedEx Cup regular season and failed to qualify for the Playoffs for the first time in his career.

As he prepared to make his sixth start at the Fortinet Championship and first since 2019, Thomas discussed some of the changes he’s made to his team – parting ways with putting coach John Graham – and clarified his father, Mike’s role going forward.

“We had gotten to a point where everything was fundamentally or mechanically or on the putting green was as good as it could get. Basically, what I told him was he can’t go out and make the putts for me, I have to figure that out, and that’s something only I can do,” Thomas said of Graham. “It’s something where I grew up just going out and practicing and hitting putts and figuring out how to get it in the hole. I didn’t necessarily care how it looked, all that mattered was getting the ball in the hole as fast as I can, and that’s more what I want to do. I know there’s a lot of really knowledgeable people out there, John included, that down the road if I feel like it gets to a point where I need to see somebody then I can, but the hope is that I don’t need to.”

2023 Fortinet Championship
Justin Thomas plays his shot from the eighth tee during a practice round ahead of the 2023 Fortinet Championship at Silverado Resort and Spa in Napa, California. (Photo: Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)

Thomas learned the game from his father, a club pro in Louisville, Kentucky, and while Matt Killen at times has served as a second set of eyes, Mike has been his primary coach. Under his tutelage, Justin won 15 times on the PGA Tour, including two majors and reached world No. 1. His father retired from his club pro position to travel more regularly with his son and pupil but that schedule may be trimmed next season. Mike Thomas disputed a previous report by Golf Channel that Justin intended to figure out his swing issues on his own while still working with him.

“Some things definitely got lost in translation and incorrect, to be perfectly honest,” Justin said.

But what he went on to say essentially confirmed the Golf Channel report. Justin said his goal is to return to working more in the fashion that went swimmingly during his run from 2017 to 2019 when he seemingly had the game on a string and reached world No. 1.

“My dad came out a handful of times a year, more so because he was working,” he said. “But he can come out any and all as he wants as a dad, but there’s just going to be some weeks where if things are good, I don’t necessarily need a coach, and I think that’s more of just where I want things. We can exchange texts, we’ll work, you know, when we’re home and when it’s needed, but when things are great, I don’t need to have somebody there with me hitting balls or putting all the time because then it’s like I’m just going to end up finding something that’s not even there.”

Thomas settled on the changes for good reason.

“I just lost all ownership, all accountability to where when things were going wrong I was looking to (my dad and John Graham) to answer the questions instead of I’m the one that needs to figure it out at some point,” he explained.

He’s also trying to channel his swing from 2017-19 too, which he called his best ball-striking years, when he had more width and a more repeatable action.

“I just got away from some of that,” he said. “I felt like the club was getting too steep going back and then I had to reroute it going down.”

After not touching a club for two weeks after the Wyndham, Thomas is raring to go and hopes to “get some competition under my belt” before going to Italy for the Ryder Cup, which begins Sept. 29. He’s confident he’s not that far away from playing his brand of winning golf again.

“I have a lot of belief in myself that I’m not as far off as I think,” he said. “All it takes is one week, one stretch, one whatever you want to call it that could just completely flip everything and nobody even talks or remembers it anymore.”

Where will Calvin Ridley, Christian Kirk rank among all-time Jaguars WR duos?

The Jacksonville Jaguars’ duo of Calvin Ridley and Christian Kirk have high expectations, but how will they rank against former Jaguars receiving pairs?

Ahead of the 2022 NFL season, the Jacksonville Jaguars invested in the Trevor Lawrence era in a big way. The Jaguars gave former Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Christian Kirk a four-year, $72 million contract to give Lawrence his biggest target to date.

The move was met with criticism, but Kirk was crucial to Lawrence’s development into a projected 2023 Most Valuable Player candidate. The Jaguars then made a move for the future ahead of the 2022 trade deadline.

Jacksonville sent a 2023 fifth-round pick and a conditional fourth-round pick that could become a second-round pick to the Atlanta Falcons for wide receiver Calvin Ridley.

The former Falcons receiver became the featured target in Atlanta due to Julio Jones’ decline and departure. However, he dealt with injury during the 2021 and only played five games because of a fractured foot and time off to address his mental health.

Ridley was then suspended for the entire 2022 season for violating the league’s gambling policy. If he can return to form following his nearly two-year-long break from football, Ridley and Kirk will likely form one of the best duos in Jaguars history.

Based on production in a single season, Jacksonville hasn’t seen many dominant receiver pairings in its short history. Ridley and Kirk will automatically be one of the most talented duos Jacksonville has seen, but how do they stack up compared to past Jaguars pairs?

5) 2012: Justin Blackmon and Cecil Shorts III

Heading into the second year of Blaine Gabbert’s tenure in Jacksonville, the Jaguars decided to give him the top receiver in the 2012 NFL Draft. They selected wide receiver Justin Blackmon with the fifth overall pick.

Blackmon didn’t have a great career, but he looked the part of the fifth overall pick in his one full season. The former Oklahoma State Cowboys star earned 132 targets and tallied 64 catches for 865 yards and five touchdowns in his rookie year.

Blackmon quickly became Gabbert’s favorite target, but Cecil Shorts III — who was in his second season in Jacksonville — was the second half of a solid receiving duo. The reliable Shorts had the best season of his career in 2012.

Shorts garnered 105 targets and capitalized on them for 55 receptions, 979 yards and seven touchdowns.

The duo of Blackmon and Shorts didn’t last long in Jacksonville, but their production in the 2012 season ranks among the best single-season receiving duos in Jaguars history.

Blackmon and Shorts combined for 119 catches, 1,844 yards and 12 touchdowns.

4) 2010: Marcedes Lewis and Mike Thomas

In a season in which the Jaguars went 8-8 and missed the playoffs, the 2010 pairing of Marcedes Lewis and Mike Thomas made the season somewhat memorable. Lewis is now a Jaguars legend, but in 2010, he was in only his fifth of 12 seasons in Jacksonville.

He is most known as a blocking tight end, but Lewis had his most productive receiving season in 2010. The former Jaguar pulled in 58 passes for 700 yards and 10 touchdowns to earn his first and only career Pro Bowl appearance.

Outside of the Jags legend’s best season, 2010 also featured the heroics of Mike Thomas. The receiver made the Jaguars’ play of the year when he caught a deflected hail mary to beat the rival Houston Texans on Nov. 14.

Thomas contributed 66 catches for 820 yards and four touchdowns in total during the best season of his career.

Lewis and Thomas combined for 124 catches, 1,520 yards and 14 touchdowns in the season.

3) 2022: Christian Kirk and Zay Jones

Few expected Kirk and Zay Jones to form one of the most productive wide receiver duos in Jaguars history when they first joined the team in 2022. However, by the end of the season, it was hard to deny their impact.

Kirk’s contract distracted NFL fans from the player Jacksonville was adding to their roster. He was a consistent contributor for the Cardinals throughout his four seasons with the team.

The former Cardinals receiver spent the first three seasons of his NFL career in the shadows of Larry Fitzgerald and then DeAndre Hopkins. However, Hopkins was suspended to start the 2021 season, and Kirk produced his best season to date, tallying 77 catches for 982 yards and five touchdowns.

In one season in Jacksonville, Kirk quickly proved his worth. He registered 84 catches for 1,108 yards and eight touchdowns as Lawrence’s featured receiver.

However, he had plenty of help from another misunderstood route runner. Former Buffalo Bills and Las Vegas Raiders receiver Zay Jones had been in the league for five years. His best season came in his sophomore year when he produced 56 catches, 652 yards and seven touchdowns.

Despite his career slowing down, the Jaguars brought Jones into Jacksonville, and he quickly became the No. 2 option. Jones caught 82 passes for 823 yards and five touchdowns.

Jones and Kirk helped Lawrence transform into one of the league’s top young quarterbacks. The pair combined for 166 receptions, 1,931 yards and 13 touchdowns.

2) 2015: Allen Robinson and Allen Hurns

The 2015 season was former Jaguars quarterback Blake Bortles’ second year in the league, and his surrounding cast lifted him to the best season of his career. Allen Robinson and Allen Hurns formed a highly productive duo to help Bortles achieve 4,428 yards and 35 touchdowns.

Robinson looked the part of a true No. 1 option and is still trying to replicate the numbers he produced in 2015. He reeled in 80 passes for 1,400 yards and 14 touchdowns in his second season in the NFL.

His yards were the second best single-season total in franchise history, and his 14 touchdowns stand as the most in a single season in Jaguars history.

Hurns played the perfect partner alongside Robinson. He was a dynamic second option that turned 64 catches into 1,031 yards and 10 touchdowns.

Robinson and Hurns combined for 144 receptions, 2,431 yards and 24 touchdowns. They are one of two pairs in Jaguars history to each have 1,000 receiving yards in a season.

1) 1996-2001: Jimmy Smith and Keenan McCardell

And if there was ever any doubt, Jimmy Smith and Keenan McCardell are the best receiving pair in Jaguars history. It was impossible to pick just one season for them, as their six seasons together would all rank in the top 10 receiving seasons in Jaguars history.

They are the only other duo in Jacksonville’s history to each contribute 1,000 receiving yards in the same season; they did it four times in six seasons.

Smith and McCardell are also the only duo to have sustained success for more than just one or two seasons.

Smith is easily the best receiver in Jaguars history. He leads the franchise in career targets, receptions, receiving yards and receiving touchdowns and was a Jaguar from 1995 to 2005.

McCardell checks in as the second best receiver in franchise history. He is second in franchise history in targets, catches and receiving yards and is third in receiving touchdowns.

Smith and McCardell played together from 1996 to 2001 and consistently got open for former Jaguars quarterback Mark Brunell. Smith never had less than 1,200 receiving yards during the stretch, and McCardell never had less than 800.

The Jaguars legends combined for 1,061 catches, 14,365 and 71 touchdowns during their six years together.

Where will Ridley and Kirk rank?

Assuming Ridley and Kirk are healthy for the entire season, they will likely become at least a top-three receiving duo. Ridley’s past suggests he’s a clear upgrade from Jones. If Kirk plays the same as he did in 2022 and Ridley returns to form, they will surpass Kirk and Jones’s production in 2022.

Ridley’s 2020 season showed his ability to excel in the No. 1 receiver role. He produced 90 receptions, 1,374 yards and nine touchdowns in 2020, so he could give Robinson’s 2015 season a run for its money.

If Kirk reproduces his 2022 numbers, he and Ridley would pass Robinson and Hurns for the second-best receiving duo in Jaguars history. While it isn’t impossible for them to put up numbers similar to Smith and McCardell, they likely won’t catch them unless they stick together for a long time in Jacksonville.

It’s entirely possible for Ridley and Kirk to become the second-best duo in Jaguars history, but they have much to prove in their first season together.

What if George Allen were the Commanders GM in June 2023?

Remember the Over-the-Hill Gang?

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It’s almost July and the Commanders have not signed a veteran free agent whose stock has lowered following the June 1 annual cuts.

The ownership of the Commanders has not yet been settled officially, which apparently has put the team on hold to make free agent signing move.

When George Allen was head coach and general manager (1971-1977) he would stop at nothing to sign a player whenever he could. He was even worse when it came to trading for aging veterans. But that story is for another day.

Way back in 1976, Allen was anxious in June. You see, Allen’s teams had made the playoffs (only four from the conference qualified in those days) each of his first four seasons in Washington (1971-1974).

But in June of 1976, Allen had much to make him nervous. The 1975 team was his first to not make the playoffs, finishing 8-6. Sonny Jurgensen had retired following the 1974 season and Billy Kilmer was now age 36 and on the decline.

Allen had Joe Theismann who was only age 26, but Allen didn’t like Joe’s style and was content to keep Theismann inexperienced for as long as he could.

Larry Brown who had been one of the few to have rushed for 5,000 yards in five NFL seasons had been run into the ground and so banged up he was not expected back in 1976. Brown did return but only gained 56 yards in 20 carries and retired following the season.

Allen had Mike Thomas who had rushed for 919 yards as a rookie in 1975. But Moses Denson provided little hope for the future. So Allen went out and signed a free agent running back in June.

Allen had it all figured out, as he planned on making the running back his fullback. Allen would use him as a fullback for short yardage gains and also to block for Thomas.This fullback started all 14 games in that 1976 season, carrying the ball only 162 times for 572 yards (3.5 ypa).

But the fullback did block well for the halfback, Thomas. Thomas enjoyed his best career season in 1976 gaining 1,101 yards on 254 carries (4.3 ypa) and 5 touchdowns.

George Allen was a great defensive coach, but sometimes his ideas for the offense left players and coaches scratching their heads. Allen continued to start Billy Kilmer as much as he could in 1976. Kilmer was given 9 starts and struggled so at times that Allen gave Theismann the other five starts.

Yet, amazingly the team finished 10-4 earning a wild card playoff birth.

What’s that?

You say, I forgot to provide you the name of the fullback whom Allen had signed in June?

Oh, sorry about that.

John Riggins.

Ravens sign six players to reserve/future deals

The Ravens sign six players to future/reserve deals.

With the Baltimore Ravens losing to the Cincinnati Bengals in the Wild Card round, their season came to an end.  Another year with plenty of potential ended too soon, especially without their best player in quarterback Lamar Jackson.

With the season ending, the team’s offseason roster moves have already begun. The Ravens have signed six players to reserve/future deals in wide receiver Shemar Bridges, defensive back Bopete Keyes, outside linebacker Jeremiah Moon, defensive lineman Rayshad Nichols, guard John Simpson, and wide receiver Mike Thomas.

Bridges was a star in training game and preseason before being cut due to an injury.  He was signed back to the practice squad late in the season, but never made it to the active roster.  Defensive tackle Rayshad Nichols played in Week 17 against the Pittsburgh Steelers in the absence of Calais Campbell. Nichols recorded four tackles on 15 snaps in that game.

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Ravens announce five moves on Tuesday

The Ravens announced five roster moves on Tuesday

The Baltimore Ravens are preparing for their Week 16 game at home against the Atlanta Falcons.  The Ravens need to win in order to keep pace with the Cincinnati Bengals if they want to have a shot of winning the AFC North title.  If the season ended today, the Ravens would be playing in the Wild Card round against the Tennessee Titans.

Baltimore announced five roster moves to start the week ahead of Week 16.  First, they designated inside linebacker Josh Ross to return from the injured reserve, and is now back at practice.  This gives him a 21-day window where he would need to be added to the 53-man roster.

Two other moves that the Ravens made were signing wide receiver Mike Thomas to the practice squad and releasing guard Zach Johnson from the practice squad.   Thomas might get a call up from the practice squad depending on the availability of some of the receivers on the active roster.

Finally, Baltimore brought back an old friend in wide receiver Sammy Watkins, who they claimed off of waivers from the Green Bay Packers while placing wide receiver Devin Duvernay on injured reserve with a foot injury that he suffered in practice.

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Jaguars brought in 2 receivers for tryouts Monday

The Jaguars spent Monday trying out a pair of wide receivers.

The Jacksonville Jaguars brought in wide receivers Calvin Jackson and Mike Thomas for tryouts on Monday.

While the team previously had a Mike Thomas who spent four seasons with the Jaguars between 2009 and 2012, the Thomas who visited Monday is a 28-year-old free agent who previously played for the Los Angeles Rams and Cincinnati Bengals.

In four seasons with the Rams, Thomas saw most of his time on special teams, but also caught 10 passes for 144 yards. He was more of an offensive contributor in his time with the Bengals, catching 20 passes for 222 yards and one touchdown before he was waived last month in his third season with the team.

Jackson is an undrafted rookie who initially signed with the New York Jets in May and spent preseason with the team. He later had brief stints on the Jets and Miami Dolphins practice squads.

The Jaguars have six wide receivers on the active roster with Jamal Agnew, Marvin Jones, Tim Jones, Zay Jones, Christian Kirk, and Kendric Pryor. There’s another three receivers — Kevin Austin Jr, Jaylon Moore, and Seth Williams — on the practice squad, and recently acquired Calvin Ridley still suspended indefinitely.

Pending free agents on Super Bowl LVI teams for Titans to consider

A look at some players from both Super Bowl LVI teams the Titans could consider in free agency.

While the Tennessee Titans can’t officially sign anyone until the new league year begins on March 16, I’m certain a list of players to target in free agency is being formed internally.

On Sunday, the 2021 season will officially come to a conclusion with the Super Bowl between the Cincinnati Bengal and Los Angeles Rams.

After that, the proverbial wheel in motion begins with the NFL Combine, the start of free agency, the NFL draft, and then organized team activities — all leading up to next year’s training camp.

The Titans have several key free agents to re-sign this offseason, including center Ben Jones and outside linebacker Harold Landry. Tennessee may have to get creative to retain both thanks to their being over the cap to start the offseason.

That said, several players rostered on the Bengals and Rams ahead of Super Bowl LVI could be realistic targets once the free agency period opens. Here’s a look at some of them.

Justin Thomas and his dad wore their PNC Championship title belts to Tiger Woods’ house last Christmas

Mike Thomas says Tiger Woods’ game is ahead of schedule.

ORLANDO – After Justin Thomas and his father Mike won the PNC Championship last year, they wore the champion’s belts from the two-person best-ball event around their waists when they went over for Christmas dinner at Tiger Woods’s house. It was the ultimate flex.

“We enjoyed that,” said Justin Thomas of beating Tiger and his son, who finished tied for seventh in their tournament debut. “Until they get that belt and we don’t, I know that we have the forever bragging rights for the time being.”

This year, the Thomases are delighted that they will be paired again with Tiger and Charlie Woods in the first round of the 36-hole tournament on Saturday at Ritz-Carlton Golf Club as they attempt to become the fourth duo to successfully defend. Tiger announced last week that he would compete with his 12-year-old son for the first time since this event a year ago. That appeared to be the longest of longshots after Tiger was involved in a single-car accident in Los Angeles on February 23 and was hospitalized with a myriad of injuries, including fractures to both the tibia and fibula in his right leg.

“My excitement level is high just for him being out here and being somewhere other than his house and getting to see a lot of familiar faces. And I know spending time with Charlie is a huge deal to him. So, I know he’s excited for that part,” Justin Thomas said. “In terms of the competing, I think his expectations are very low. But at the same time, he is who he is for a reason, so I’m sure he’ll be pissed off if he didn’t play well.”

While the star-studded field is loaded with Hall of Famers such as Gary Player, Lee Trevino and Tom Watson, all eyes will be on Team Woods – to see how much improvement Charlie has made since he stole the show with his impressive performance a year ago, but primarily to see how Tiger is able to get around the course – competitors are allowed to use carts – and how the swing of the 15-time major champion looks. Count Mike Thomas, a longtime PGA professional who has provided Tiger a second set of eyes to the development of Charlie’s game, among those who say Tiger’s game is ahead of schedule.

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“I played with him last week a couple days,” Mike Thomas said. “It’s crazy how good he’s hitting it and far he’s hitting for what he’s been through.

“He’s still – he’s got some speed. He’s got some length. Hits a lot of really, really flush shots. I mean, I was surprised.”

Nelly Korda, the top-ranked woman in the world, is playing in the event for the first time with her father, Petr, a former professional tennis player and winner of the 1998 Australian Open. But she couldn’t stop gushing about being in the same tournament as Tiger.

“Playing right in front of Tiger Woods is pretty cool too. I’m not going to lie,” she said. “I’m being a little selfish here, but that’s pretty cool.”

When Petr noted that it’s a great honor for a woman to compete in the same event that over the years has featured Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Trevino “and other guys,” his daughter interjected, “Tiger Woods,” and rolled her eyes as if she couldn’t believe her father could leave out the most dominant golfer of the last thirty years.

“Yes,” Petr said, “Obviously I wanted to finish with, you know, the cherry on the top of the cake having Mr. Woods here.”

Justin Thomas has become one of Tiger’s closest confidantes and one of the Tour pros who visited Tiger regularly when he was able to return to his Florida home and began rehab. Even he expressed surprise that Tiger had made it back to compete so soon.

“I’m sure some days he’s like, ‘Oh, wow, I can do this,’ and there’s some days where it’s like, ‘Oh, I’m not really sure.’ But it is, it’s very impressive and unbelievable,” Justin Thomas said. “But I know that he somewhere deep down in there had this circled on the calendar of wanting to come back here.”

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Mike Thomas just announced he won’t return this season and the Saints just can’t catch a break

Mike Thomas won’t be back with the Saints this season.

Welp. Just when you thought things couldn’t get any worse for the Saints, the injury bug comes back and bites them again.

The Saints improved their record to 5-2 with a convincing win over Tom Brady’s Tampa Bay Buccaneers. And while that win was certainly one worth celebrating, it didn’t last too long. Because, shortly after, news broke that Jameis Winston tore his ACL. He was done.

Bad just got a little bit worse, too.

The Saints planned on getting Michael Thomas back at some point this season. Even without Jameis Winston, whoever is playing quarterback would have an elite target to throw to, at the very least. Right?

Think again. Thomas just announced he’s out for the year after suffering a setback with his ankle injury.

“Unfortunately, there has been another small set back which we will have to address. To my displeasure, I will not be able to make it back in time for this season but will do everything in my pwoer to get back to the player I have always been.” 

That’s rough, man. Really rough. It would’ve been a huge help for the Saints to get Thomas back.

They’ll just have to do without him for now. Regardless, here’s to a speedy recovery.

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Justin Thomas, dad Mike, win PNC Championship; Charlie Woods shines in debut

Father and son Thomas teamed to make 15 birdies and win the PNC Championship by one stroke over Vijay Singh and his son Qass.

ORLANDO – Make room in the Harmony Landing Country Club display case for another victory golf ball.

Mike Thomas has been collecting balls at the Louisville, Kentucky, golf club where he worked as head professional (and remains pro emeritus) from his son Justin’s victories and other memorable achievements since he was a wee lad. Justin has won 13 PGA Tour titles, including the 2017 PGA Championship, since turning pro.

On Sunday, father and son teamed to make 15 birdies and win the PNC Championship at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club at Grande Lake by one stroke over Vijay Singh and his son Qass.

“I put it to the side in case if it was the one that got it done,” Justin said of the winning ball. “I’ll be giving it to him whenever I get my hands on my bag.”

PNC CHAMPIONSHIP: Money | Scores

Team Thomas shot 10-under 62 during Saturday’s opening round, but erased a four-stroke deficit with seven consecutive birdies to open the round. As Mike noted, having the No. 3 player in the world as a partner didn’t hurt.

“We kept making birdie after birdie,” Justin Thomas said.

They combined to birdie 10 of the first 11 holes as Justin found something with his driver to set up easy short iron approaches. Mike, 61, who joked that the last time he played a competitive round was with an aluminum shaft, contributed with a hot putter.

“Which made it easy on me,” Justin said. “I probably hit six putts all day.”

As the Thomases played the par-5 18th hole, Justin figured they needed one more birdie.

“I knew the tournament wasn’t over, but I felt like we had won just because of how much fun we had and how well my dad had played,” Justin said.

Short-sided in two, he hit a delicate pitch to 8 feet and let his father take care of the rest.

“I wanted my dad to make that putt so badly,” he said.

They finished with a tournament-best 15-under 57 and 36-hole aggregate of 25-under 119. Team Singh kept it interesting to the end, reeling off nine straight birdies at one point before missing a 30-foot eagle putt at the last that would’ve forced a playoff.

Lee Trevino, 81, the only player to have competed in all 23 PNC Championships, teamed with son Daniel to shoot a 13-under 59 and finish T-3, his best result in this event.

Team Thomas collected $200,000, and became the fourth team to win the PNC Championship in their first start and the first team to win with a father playing as partner.

Jani Thomas, Justin’s mother, caddied for Mike, and she contributed to the team win. While her guys were answering questions from the media, she went and fetched three Coronas with limes to celebrate. Indeed, it was a full family affair at the PNC Championship.

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