Sony Open: 5 things to know from the first round including Jordan Spieth’s confidence, Tiger’s advice for Taylor Montgomery & the Short Game Chef is cooking

Jordan Spieth is tied for the lead heading to Friday in Hawaii.

HONOLULU — On another glorious day of sunshine on the island of Oahu, Jordan Spieth shot 6-under 64 at Waialae Country Club to share the opening-round lead at the Sony Open in Hawaii with Chris Kirk and Taylor Montgomery when play was halted by darkness.

Spieth said he drove it well, hit a bunch of good wedges and his putter was more friend than foe. What a difference a boost of confidence can make. The 29-year-old Spieth put the field on notice that he’s going to be a force to be reckoned with this week, saying that he’s got plenty more in the tank.

“I would say like I started really well in 2018, ’19, maybe a couple events in ’20 where a day like today where I shot 5 or 6 under to start — I think I remember doing it at Travelers one time and the PGA in ’19. I just remember thinking, I know where my game is at and I can maybe fake it as best I can, but I don’t really have great control,” he explained. “I used my hands really well for a couple days. Conveniently the first two in a row. So it’s not like I didn’t believe, it’s just I have a good idea of where things are at and if I have that shot or don’t have that shot.

“This is different. The last couple years have been a little different where off to a good start and I’m like, OK, I think I can improve a little to gain just a little bit more control, but I was in really good control. And for me, it’s about freedom. It’s not separating arms from the body and having to save shots. It’s feeling like I’m in front of them and being able to hold them off and nice fluid strokes on the greens.

“That’s really all it comes down to. Seems simple, but when you’re still fighting the urge to want to hit it hard or get over some bad habits, days like today I’m not surprised, but what I will say is I’m confident relative to other time periods I’ve been off to similar starts, which is a really good place to be. I believe I can shoot 5- or 6-under each day out here. Not to say that that means it’ll happen, but there are other times I would be sitting there going, how do I hold this (stuff) together, to be honest. Seriously.”

Here are four more things to know from the first round at Waialae Country Club.

Lynch: From Tour winner to not knowing where the ball is going, a lonely search for answers

“I don’t know what I’m going to get from day to day.”

Fans invariably focus on the glamorous end of a leaderboard—triumphs, trophies—but stories are often no less compelling at the hardscrabble end of things, where blood vessels pop more often than flashbulbs. If there’s truth in the cliché that it’s lonely at the top, the bottom can be downright desolate.

While attention was trained on the WGC Dell Technologies Match Play in Austin, the PGA Tour’s foot soldiers—the best of the rest—were at the Corales Puntacana Championship in the Dominican Republic. In Thursday’s first round, Parker McLachlin teed off early in a strong wind and was 2-over par through eight holes.

“I felt like I was hanging in,” he told me Saturday morning from the bleachers of a Scottsdale ballpark, where he was watching his 8-year-old son’s season-opener.

On his 9th hole, No. 18 on the course, McLachlin thought his tee shot cleared the inlet to reach dry land. Finding it in the hazard, he returned to the tee. A poor second effort was wet and a rules official went back down the fairway to fetch another ball from his caddie. His third attempt started right, found the rocks, and rolled into the water. The official set off again. McLachlin made four with his fourth ball and signed for 10 on the hole, 87 on the day.

“It’s humiliating, to be honest,” he said. “The group behind is walking up and you’re firing ball after ball into the water.” Warming up before the second round, the recurring plantar fasciitis in his right foot flared, making it impossible to push to his left side. He WD’d, but won’t cite it as an excuse: “I played crappy before my foot started hurting.”

McLachlin was once good enough to win on the PGA Tour, claiming a seven-shot victory in the Reno-Tahoe Open in 2008. At 42, the memory is increasingly distant—he’s made just 5 cuts in 31 starts dating back to 2018—but still enough to sustain a belief that he can be that good again. A week before he went to the Dominican Republic, he played in Mexico. “I hit it the best I’ve ever hit it in my life,” he said. “Five-under through 10 without blinking an eye.”

His voice trailed off.

“I don’t know what I’m going to get from day to day. My swing was never the prettiest, but I just knew I was going to get the ball in the hole,” he finally said. “To go from that to not really knowing where the ball is going to go, and having that anxiety, makes for stressful rounds of golf.”

Day to day, McLachlin is now more teacher than competitor, thanks to a reputation for short-game wizardry. (In the final round of his win, he hit only one green in regulation on the front nine but shot even par.) He works with players from the PGA and LPGA tours and is much in demand for clinics. He concedes that teaching has replaced some of the pleasure taken by scorecards. “I get a sense of joy out of helping people,” he said.

Helping himself is an altogether different challenge.

The first of his three starts this year was at the Sony Open in his childhood hometown of Honolulu. On the morning of the first round, McLachlin woke at 3 a.m.

“The only thing I could see in my head was bad shot after bad shot. For the next two hours until my alarm went off, all I’m seeing is train wreck after train wreck,” he said. “It’s a weird place to be given it’s something I used to be really good at, that I do in front of thousands of people and TV cameras.”

He eventually shot 71-70 to miss the cut. “It makes me consider filling a flask with tequila before the round,” he admitted with a wry laugh. “I need a way to turn my brain off.”

Even for the world’s best golfers, the line between ecstasy and despair is perilously thin. McLachlin mentioned a tweet by Max Homa to the effect that every Tour player is one good swing from thinking he can win the Masters and one bad swing from retiring. “It’s always been the golf swing for me,” he said. “I would have belief in myself, but as I started to get more technical the belief in impact went away.”

McLachlin flew home Friday, discouraged but as yet undefeated. “It’s good to talk about, just get it out so it doesn’t fester,” he said. “There have been professionals who’ve dealt with this and amateurs who want to enjoy the game more. It’s something we can all commiserate with.”

Asked when his next tournament will be, he said, “No idea.” As a past champion, McLachlin can expect a handful of Tour starts each season, but with a young family and a thriving teaching business, the desire to chase Monday qualifiers and mini-tours isn’t there.

“I’ll probably get into one event this summer. Maybe I can get one thing to click and I’ll be as confident as I’ve ever been,” he said, with genuine optimism. “I don’t think it’s that far away. It’s not there currently, but it’s not that far away. It’s what all of us feel at the highest level.”

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PGA Tour’s Parker McLachlin plays coach for a day at UCLA

A volunteer assistant for his alma mater Bruins, Parker McLachlin brings a new perspective to the UCLA men’s golf team.

Most families have a “cool uncle.”

He’s around for all the fun events and helps out when available. The kids look up to him and can relate to him on a level different from their parents.

In a sense, that’s what Parker McLachlin has been for the UCLA men’s golf team this season.

The PGA Tour pro and winner of the 2008 Legends Reno-Tahoe Open joined the program as a volunteer assistant this offseason after he was approached by head coach Derek Freeman.

“Over the summer I played four events and missed all four cuts, shooting under par every week,” explained McLachlin. “So I thought, ‘I need to think of something else to do.’”

He spent a week with the team in the fall and his role has progressed from there.

Southern Highlands: Team Leaderboard | Individual

“A handful of players will send me videos and I’ll help them with their short games if they’re struggling,” said McLachlin, who also noted the guys will Facetime him for help when he’s not around. “For me, it’s great because I love their energy. It’s infectious, I love that. I’ve been playing professionally for 15 or 16 years and it’s nice to be reminded why we play this game and the love we have for it.”

During Sunday’s opening round of the Southern Highlands Collegiate, one of the most competitive tournaments in men’s college golf, McLachlin was one of the on-course coaches for the Bruins alongside assistant coach Andrew Larkin while head coach Derek Freeman sat out.

McLachlin doesn’t see coaching college golf in his future despite his early success, claiming no credit for the Bruins opening-round performance. UCLA sat in third after a blustery day in Las Vegas, four shots back from Day 1 leader USC.

His message was simple: Every shot counts.

“A one-foot putt counts the same as a 320-yard drive. They all count the same, so give it 100% focus and attention,” said McLachlin. “Don’t let up on any shot. They did that really well.”

While Freeman agreed with the “cool uncle” analogy, one player had a slightly more flattering take.


SOUTHERN HIGHLANDS: Watch the final round LIVE on Tuesday, March 3. Part of College Golf Live’s 2020 Spring Series.


“(McLachlin) definitely helps because obviously he’s a coach to us and a mentor, but he’s almost like a fifth-year,” said freshman Tony Hendricks. “He’s super cool, keeps it really calm and is a great guy. When he wants to talk about golf, we talk about golf. His expertise is great, and I trust him with everything. He’s seen it all from four years at UCLA to the Tour, he puts things in simple terms. He doesn’t over-think everything, which really makes me comfortable. As we walk down the fairway we just talk about whatever and it calms us down.”

Topics included everything from UCLA basketball to music – specifically the Red Hot Chili Peppers – and campus life at UCLA.

“We talked about how old he was,” said Hendricks with a laugh, “because we were comparing dorm buildings. He asked if one building was still there and I said ‘yeah, it’s one of the oldest buildings on campus.’”

For perspective, Hendricks is an 18-year-old freshman. McLachlin is 40 and finished at UCLA 18 years ago in 2002.

“These guys are so much better than we were 20 years ago, I swear,” said McLachlin, pointing to the improvements in technology. “Their golf IQ’s are so much higher, but with that said, they’re still 20 year olds. They still need help.”

A Scottsdale resident, McLachlin will be back with the team in April when the Bruins travel to the Wyoming Cowboy Classic in Chandler, Arizona, and the Thunderbird Collegiate in Phoenix. Meanwhile, his next start on Tour will come at the end of March at the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship in the Dominican Republic, held opposite the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play.

Around those events, he’ll be teaching.

“I get notes on Instagram every day from people who want short game lessons, so I’m staying busy with that,” said McLachlin, the @shortgamechef on Instagram. “Spending time teaching and prepping for tournaments, I’m staying busy.”

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