Dream deferred: Rob Labritz spent 18 years ‘manifesting’ goal of reaching PGA Tour Champions

A club pro for 32 years in all, Labritz is finally a full-time professional golfer.

PHOENIX — Rob Labritz zipped around Phoenix Country Club in two hours, 45 minutes on Thursday, signing for a 2-under 69 to open the Charles Schwab Cup Championship.

But while he played fast in the opening round of the PGA Tour Champions season finale, his journey getting to the senior circuit was nearly two decades in the making.

As the 36th and last man to make the field, Labritz played solo (markers aren’t allowed anymore) after Steve Stricker’s withdrawal the day before led to an odd number of players. But Labritz didn’t seem to mind.

“I used to get 18 holes in with a cart in under an hour at GlenArbor, at my home course,” he said of the private course in Westchester, New York, where he was the long-time director of golf.

A club pro for 32 years in all, Labritz is finally a full-time professional golfer. There were attempts made at a PGA Tour career but that wasn’t meant to be.

“I went to Q school three or four times, I played in eight PGA Championships, won tons of state opens, everything up in the Met section,” he said after his round Thursday. “As a director of golf, I was pretty bored, to be honest. We built a high-end private club, which is phenomenal, but after 32 years I started getting a little…” and before he finished that thought, he revealed a long-held goal.

“Eighteen years ago I made a decision to try to get to the Champions tour. I started manifesting it,” he said. “Every night I would go into my room, right before I went to bed and sit there for five minutes and just envision it happening. I did that for 18 years. And here we are.”

2023 Charles Schwab Cup Championship
Rob Labritz stands with his caddie on the first hole during the first round of the 2023 Charles Schwab Cup Championship at Phoenix Country Club in Phoenix. (Photo: Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

Without a trace of remorse for decisions that he made, Labritz explained that life just happened.

“I felt like I was close but I always knew I was a part-time player because I had a full-time job. As a director of golf, I coached more than a thousand, 1,400 hours a year for 23 years, so think about how many hours I was putting into the job, 60-80 hours a week,” he said.

“When you have a wife and three kids and a mortgage, it’s hard to just say ‘OK, I’m going to go practice. You figure out the money.'”

Playing in his 52nd event this week in his second year on the Champions tour, Labtriz has figured out the money, having earned more than $1.1 million. But more than that, what he’s doing validates all those nights he envisioned such a future.

“I’m in dream heaven right now.”

No more worrying about those long work weeks. No more trying to figure out how to find time to practice. It’s full speed ahead as a player.

“It’s all about getting the ball in the hole right now,” he said.

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After parole from jail, Angel Cabrera dreams of a comeback on PGA Tour Champions — but will he be given a chance?

“(Cabrera) wants to play, he’s learned his lesson, he wants to get on with his life.”

Former major champion Angel Cabrera, who spent 30 months in jail in Brazil and Argentina and last played PGA Tour Champions in 2020, shot under par last week in his last five rounds at home in Córdoba, Argentina, and is preparing to mount a comeback, said his longtime coach and friend Charlie Epps.

“He wants to play, he’s learned his lesson, he wants to get on with his life. I think he’s in a great frame of mind for what he’s been through,” Epps told Golfweek via phone. “He’s got to go through the mechanics of getting his Visa back and then approach the PGA Tour and I think it’s going to end up being good.”

Cabrera, 54 and the 2007 U.S. Open champion and 2009 Masters winner, was released from jail on Aug. 4, after he completed more than two years in custody over gender violence cases against two of his ex-girlfriends. (Editor’s Note: Read previous Q&A with Charlie Epps when Cabrera was in jail here.) Brazil’s federal police arrested him on an Interpol warrant in January 2021. Cabrera was sentenced in July 2021 to two years in prison for threats and harassment of Cecilia Torres Mana, his partner between 2016 and 2018.

In November 2022, he was also on trial for similar charges against Micaela Escudero, another ex-girlfriend. Cabrera pleaded guilty and the court made the two sentences concurrent, extending his sentence to three years and 10 months in prison.

“Many say prison is bad, but it’s not the case, prison has done me good,” Cabrera said at the trial.

Prior to his release, he spent his final seven months at Monte Cristo, a minimum-security prison 10 miles east of Córdoba.

Epps said that Cabrera, who last competed on the Champions Tour at the Pure Insurance Open in September 2020, still dreams of playing golf professionally. He is seeking a visa so he can travel to the U.S. and then will need to apply for reinstatement to PGA Tour Champions, which according to Epps, suspended him, and inquire whether Augusta National will honor his lifetime invitation as a past champion to the Masters in April.

A spokesperson for the PGA Tour released the following statement on Cabrera: “The Tour is aware that Angel Cabrera has been released on parole. While we do not have any update on his status as a PGA Tour member at this time, the Tour may consider new and relevant information to determine if any change to his status is appropriate in the future.”

When asked for a clarification on his status – and the length of his suspension, if any – a spokesman wrote in an email, “The Tour does not disclose disciplinary actions it takes against its members.” (The 2024 Visa Argentina Open, of which Cabrera is a past champion, is part of the Korn Ferry Tour for the first time in January, and thus runs under the auspices of the Tour. It’s unclear if he would be allowed to participate in his national championship.)

Friends in Córdoba who have seen Cabrera say he lost weight, is in good spirits and also practicing at El Terron Golf Club. Epps visited Cabrera for the first time since he was granted parole last week, flying to Argentina with a set of the latest Ping golf clubs, Cabrera’s longtime clubmaker, made to his specifications and six dozen Titleist balls and a bunch of gloves from the Acushnet Co.

“He demonstrated his talent and drive is still there,” Epps said. “We played five rounds of golf at Córdoba Golf Club, where we both grew up playing, and he was always under par. Right now, he’s just trying to get his life in shape and practice and stuff like that and get here to the United States. He’s been humbled and says, ‘It’s all up to him.’ He knows what he needs to do and he said he’s ready for a second chance. He prays to God he doesn’t take another drink. And he’s so headstrong. When he puts his mind to doing something, he’ll do it just like that. The day he won the Masters he was walking from the 10th green after making a bogey and going three behind. I asked him, ‘What were you thinking about?’ He said, ‘I told myself I just have to make three birdies because 12 under is going to be a good score.’ ”

Cabrera did just that and won in a playoff over Kenny Perry and Chad Campbell. Instead of being hailed for a borderline Hall of Fame career, Cabrera has missed what usually are the best years for a senior golfer. Epps noted that veteran pro Jim Thorpe was allowed to return to the senior circuit in 2009 after completing a one-year prison term for tax evasion. Shortly before his arrest, Cabrera had undergone surgery to repair an injury to his wrist and elbow, which hindered his performance on the senior tour, and Epps says he’s fully recovered. The Houston-based pro said he’s ready to begin training Cabrera for a Rocky Balboa-like resurgence.

“The way Angel plays on hard courses, I think he can still win the U.S. Senior Open,” Epps said. “I want him to be the comeback player of the year.”

Steve Stricker withdraws from season-ending Charles Schwab Cup Championship

“I was eagerly looking forward to competing in this event to cap off this season,” Stricker said.

PHOENIX — Steve Stricker has withdrawn from the season-ending Charles Schwab Cup Championship after announcing that his dad was taken to the hospital.

“He is currently receiving care and it is important that I am here for my family during this challenging time,” Stricker wrote in the statement released through the PGA Tour Champions on Wednesday.

Originally on the pre-tournament news conference schedule, Stricker was then slated to arrive late Wednesday for his first-round tee time Thursday.

Stricker clinched the season-long championship two weeks ago. He didn’t play in the first two playoff events but was all set to play Phoenix Country Club this week in what would have essentially been a four-day victory lap. His six wins and 15 top-10s in 16 events in 2023 gave him such a commanding lead that he became the third golfer in the circuit’s history to clinch the Cup title before the finale.

Statement on Behalf of Steve Stricker

Unfortunately, I will be withdrawing from this week’s Charles Schwab Cup Championship. I was eagerly looking forward to competing in this event to cap off this season – which has been an incredibly special one for me – but a personal emergency has come up that requires me to stay home.

My father was admitted to the hospital on Monday afternoon. He is currently receiving care and it is important that I am here for my family during this challenging time.

I would like to express my gratitude for the tireless efforts of the PGA Tour Champions staff, tournament directors, Charles Schwab and all of the sponsors this season, who have provided us with the opportunity to participate in a season-long race that has been nothing short of exceptional. I am truly grateful for the support and encouragement I have received throughout the season.

Finally, I want to extend my best wishes to all the players playing in the season finale. I will be following the event from afar, cheering for my friends and fellow competitors.

I appreciate everyone’s understanding and support during this time.

Stricker is at $3,986,063 in on-course earnings this season. His withdrawal means no he’ll get no money this week, which will keep him from becoming the first to earn $4 million in a season on the Champions tour.

“It’s a shame,” said Steven Alker after his pro-am round Wednesday. Alker who won the Cup at year ago. “He’s the No. 1 man. He’s got it sewn up. I’m sure he would’ve liked to be here and play and we would have, too, just to see him finish it off in style. It’s sad news.”

Last year’s tournament champion, Padraig Harrington, said he’ll be missed this week.

“We’re all at that age in our lives, we’ve a lot going on, it’s part of life,” he said. “We feel for Steve. I’m sure he would have loved to have been here and take a bow for his great year. But there’s more important things than golf. Family comes ahead of it, and he’s definitely doing the right thing staying at home. We wish him and his family and his father all the best.”

Stricker’s withdrawal means the field is now 35 golfers. The 72-hole tournament concludes Sunday.

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5 things to know about the 2023 Charles Schwab Cup Championship (which already has a winner)

On Sunday, regardless of his position on the leaderboard, Steve Stricker will hoist the Schwab Cup trophy.

PHOENIX — For just the third time since it started in 2001, the Charles Schwab Cup Championship has been decided before reaching the final event of the year.

Steve Stricker lapped his over-50 cohorts in 2023, winning six times, including three senior majors. He’s closing in on the $4 million mark in earnings for the season, and even if he were to finish last this at Phoenix Country Club, he’d earn enough to become the first Champions player to reach that plateau in a single season on tour.

Stricker had more than doubled the No. 2 golfer on the money list, Steven Alker, and with such a sizeable lead, Stricker chose to skip the first playoffs event. Then, anyone with a shot to catch him finished far enough down the leaderboard that he was able to clinch the season title without even playing.

He also chose not to play last week’s TimberTech Championship but will compete in the 2023 Charles Schwab Cup Championship, an event he skipped a year ago. On Sunday, regardless of his position on the leaderboard, he will hoist the Schwab Cup trophy for the first time.

Bogey is enough for the final spot in top 36 for 2023 Charles Schwab Cup Championship

Labritz bogeyed three of his last seven holes but held on to the 36th spot in the points standings.

Kevin Sutherland dropped out. Charlie Wi zoomed in. And Rob Labritz, despite a final-hole bogey, held on to the final spot.

The third and final event in the 2023 Charles Schwab Cup Playoffs is here, with the top 36 players in the PGA Tour Champions points standings following the TimberTech Championship earning a spot in the field at Phoenix Country Club.

For the third time in tour history, the finale will lack drama, as the season-long crown has already been claimed by Steve Stricker, who clinched the title after the first playoff event, which he skipped. He also chose not to play this week but indicated a few weeks ago that he will be in the field in Phoenix, Nov. 9-12, saying “I’ll definitely be at the last one.”

Bernhard Langer finished second in the points. Padraig Harrington, who won the TimberTech by a whopping seven shots, ended up in the third spot in the points. He won the season-ending tournament in Phoenix in 2022. Last year’s season-long champ, Steven Alker, finished fourth this time around. Ernie Els nabbed the fifth-place spot.

One up, one down

One golfer moved into the final 36, and that was Charlie Wi, whose final-round 64 vaulted him into a tie for second at the TimberTech and into the 35th spot in the points standings. Kevin Sutherland, winner of the 2020 Charles Schwab Cup Championship, fell out of the top 36, dropping seven spots to 41st after a WD at the TimberTech.

Hanging on

Labritz shot 69-68-71 at the Old Course at Broken Sound and it was just enough to advance. He was flirting with danger, however, shooting a 3-over 38 on the back nine Sunday, including a bogey putt on the closing hole. But he knew bogey would be enough and let it all out after sinking that final critical putt.

The 72-hole, no-cut Charles Schwab Cup Championship would essentially be a four-day victory lap for Stricker, who won six times this season. He played 16 events, finished top 10 in 15 of them and was runner-up five times. His only non-top 10 was right after he returned from serving as vice captain at the Ryder Cup near Rome.

Even a last-place finish in Phoenix would earn Stricker enough money to become the first to surpass the $4 million mark in one season on the senior circuit.

Qualifiers for 2023 Charles Schwab Championship

Pos Player
1 Steve Stricker
2 Bernhard Langer
3 Padraig Harrington
4 Steven Alker
5 Ernie Els
6 David Toms
7 Stephen Ames
8 Jerry Kelly
9 Brett Quigley
10 Alex Cejka
11 Miguel Angel Jimenez
12 Harrison Frazar
13 Y.E. Yang
14 Richard Green
15 Vijay Singh
16 K.J. Choi
17 Dicky Pride
18 Rob Pampling
19 Thongchai Jaidee
20 Paul Broadhurst
21 Darren Clarke
22 Joe Durant
23 Paul Stankowski
24 Ken Duke
25 Robert Karlsson
26 Mark Hensby
27 Justin Leonard
28 Colin Montgomerie
29 Ken Tanigawa
30 Steve Flesch
31 Retief Goosen
32 Marco Dawson
33 Mike Weir
34 Billy Andrade
35 Charlie Wi
36 Rob Labritz

First five out

37 Lee Janzen
38 Paul Goydos
39 Shane Bertsch
40 Scott McCarron
41 Kevin Sutherland

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Justin Leonard enjoys his new life on the PGA Tour Champions (and his new home in Florida)

After seven years in the broadcast booth, Leonard is back to competing on the golf course.

BOCA RATON, Fla. — Aspen, Colorado, is paradise if your perfect spot mostly requires a layer of fluffy white snow covering the ground and providing a picturesque backdrop. Then you can snowboard or ski or take part in any other activities that require temperatures dipping into the 30s.

And although Justin Leonard tossed in some biking and hiking while living in the heart of the Rocky Mountains, this was not his nirvana as he approached 50 years on this earth and decided to return to a more intense golf schedule.

Leonard needed a new home base, one in which the grass is green year-round. Golf’s epicenter beckoned.

Now, Leonard, 51, is 21 events into his PGA Tour Champions career after recently moving to Tequesta, Florida. He has advanced to this week’s TimberTech Championship, the second round of the Charles Schwab Cup playoffs, at the Old Course at Broken Sound after finishing tied for 13th at the Dominion Energy Charity Classic in Henrico, Virginia, two weekends ago.

And following seven years in the broadcast booth, he’s back to working on his game in year-round sunshine.

“There’s so much great golf here,” Leonard said of Florida on Wednesday before his pro-am round. “I don’t play a lot, I more practice or I’ll play by myself or with my son. But it’s just a great place weatherwise.”

Leonard watched the 50-and-over crowd mostly from afar as he worked on his second career as an analyst. And he was curious as to exactly what was the draw for so many on the back nine of their golf careers, some even surpassing typical retirement age.

His first impression was that the tour offered a group of men who, at one time, were at the top of the mountain in their sport to continue having fun on the course without the pressure and intense competition. A scaled-down version of the PGA Tour in many ways.

It has been all those things. But Leonard — who won 12 times on the PGA Tour, including the 1997 British Open, and was a member of the U.S. winning 1999 Ryder Cup team where he holed a 45-foot birdie putt on No. 17 to cap the Americans’ rally — found it was so much more.

Leonard was working as a broadcaster at the Senior Championship outside of Washington, D.C., when he went to the range on Tuesday. He saw about 40 guys out there at 3 p.m., and groups two or three deep waiting to tee off.

“It’s completely stacked up and I’m like, ‘Are you kidding me?'” he said. “These guys are working as hard as they ever have. So, yes, there’s a little lower kind of vibe on this tour, but the competition is every bit as good.

“For the most part, guys work as hard as they ever have because those are habits that got them to where they were in the game of golf and those things don’t go away.”

Leonard once again is the young blood on tour, but that does not mean instant success. He warned it would take time after spending time talking about the game instead of playing it in recent years, and that has proven correct. He has yet to win on the senior circuit, but this season he was runner-up at the PURE Insurance Championship in California and carded five top-10s.

Leonard qualified for the playoff by finishing 28th in the standings, which earned him about $832,000 in prize money. Not that a man who made just shy of $34 million on the PGA Tour after turning pro in 1994 is playing for the cash.

“I feel like I’m where I want to be,” he said. “I wouldn’t say the results are quite there. But I think that just comes with relearning some things and getting used to the rhythm of a tournament week and those kinds of things.

“There’s a few things that old habits creep into and it’s like … wait a second, that’s not me anymore. So it’s been a fun process. I’ve really enjoyed putting in the work and kind of figure out the balance between golf and the other stuff that I’ve got going on, and things with my family.”

And family was a big part of the move. Leonard’s wife, Amanda, certainly approved, considering that she grew up in North Palm Beach and attended the Benjamin School. Their son, Luke, attends Benjamin and is a member of the golf team, which makes him a teammate of Charlie Woods, whose dad is someone named Tiger.

Luke Leonard’s surge in golf coincides with the Leonards’ move to South Florida. Living in Colorado, the clubs “went on the shelf for seven or eight months,” Justin said this year at the Kitchenaid Senior PGA Championship.

“His skiing is actually pretty good,” Justin said.

Of course it was.

Last spring, Luke was paired with Charlie Woods in a junior club championship and played a round for the first time with Tiger as a spectator.

“It was cool,” Leonard said in the spring. “It was fun to watch him. I enjoyed not only watching my son play, watching Charlie play because he played great, and then talking about junior golf with Tiger for nine holes and little things that we see in our kids that they need to work on or whatever it may be.”

For Justin, he just keeps on working. Moving to the area means many more resources. He sees Daniel Berger and Eric Cole among others. He has “picked the brain” of Shane Lowry and Patrick Cantlay.

“There’s somebody always around,” he said. “And you pick up on little things … how they use their launch monitor, what kind of data it provides and how to rely on it. Those kinds of things.”

Leonard says he’s hitting the ball farther than he ever has, and not just the driver but his irons, too.

Now, it’s about the physical and mental side of his game coming together.

“Finding ways to not focus so much on the results, but more the process and those things, kind of adding that piece to it throughout this year has been fun,” he said. “I’ve seen great results at times and others I kind of forget and fall into some old habits. And so just trying to be more consistent in that way.”

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Tucson golf course where part of the movie ‘Tin Cup’ was filmed will host PGA Tour Champions in 2024

La Paloma Country Club, a Jack Nicklaus Signature golf course, opened in 1984 in Tucson.

TUCSON, Ariz. — “Tin Cup” is probably the second-best golf movie ever made and if you were to Google it, you’d find a slew of interesting facts about the film, including the locations used to film it.

The “tiny Arizona town of Tubac” comes up in that search, as does Kingwood, Texas. But another filming location was La Paloma Country Club, a Jack Nicklaus Signature golf course that opened in 1984.

In February, when the PGA Tour Champions returns to Tucson, the 50-and-over circuit will compete at La Paloma, the first of a three-year deal for the Cologuard Classic by Exact Sciences. Tin Cup fans who look closely will probably recognize parts of the course.

“Kevin Costner was here,” said David Stout, the regional director of agronomy for Troon, who then recounted a funny story. “The mechanic of the golf course was actually mowing this area and there was a problem with the mower and they scalped the grass a few days before the filming of the scene.”

Alas, no harm, no foul, as filming commenced on time.

La Paloma, which means “the dove” in Spanish, opened with nine holes on the Ridge course and nine on the Canyon. In 1985, a third nine dubbed the Hill was opened.

The Cologuard Classic will take advantage of the best parts of the three nines, with the routing for the tournament to include “all of the Ridge Course, Canyon Nos. 1, 4, 8 and 9 and Hill 3, 4 and 9,” according to Stout.

The PGA Tour Champions played at Omni Tucson National’s Catalina Course since 2015 and Cologuard came in as the title sponsor in 2018. But the run at Tucson National is over, with a new era starting at La Paloma.

Located about 10 miles to the southeast, there won’t be much change in elevation, with both courses at about 2300 feet, but the venues are indeed quite different.

“There’s a lot of movement on these golf courses,” Stout said. “It has one of the higher slope ratings out there. Tucson National is a great golf course but relatively flat particularly on that Catalina course. Here there’s just constant movement, so I think the tee shots will be challenging but the second shots in will be challenging. These Nicklaus greens are a little smaller, they’re tight and they’re really well protected on all sides.”

Check out some of the best photos of La Paloma Country Club.

Steve Stricker takes week off, clinches Charles Schwab Cup anyway with two playoff events still remaining

Steve Stricker’s amazing season just got better. And he didn’t even play this past weekend.

Steve Stricker’s amazing season just got better. And he didn’t even play this past weekend.

Holding a commanding lead in the season-long points race, Stricker benefited from his nearest competitors underperforming enough to allow him to clinch the Charles Schwab Cup with two events still to be played.

The first of the three events in the 2023 Charles Schwab Cup Playoffs took place in Virginia, with Harrison Frazar winning in a one-hole playoff. Stricker didn’t play, choosing to take the week off. Participation in the playoff events isn’t mandatory and besides, Stricker had such a commanding lead in the points race, there was a scenario whereby he could skip all three playoff stops and still claim the 2023 Charles Schwab Cup.

The PGA Tour Champions post-season had 72 players qualify but only six had a mathematical chance at winning the points race but none of them made a serious run in Stricker’s absence: Ernie Els tied for seventh; Stephen Ames tied for 20th; Steven Alker and Bernhard Langer tied for 25th and David Toms tied for 35th.

Three weeks ago, ahead of the Furyk & Friends event on the Champions tour in Jacksonville, Stricker verbally committed to the Charles Schwab Cup Championship at Phoenix Country Club, Nov. 9-12, saying “I’ll definitely be at the last one.”

The next tournament is Nov. 3-5 at the TimberTech Championship. Stricker has said he “probably won’t” play that one.

The finale in Phoenix is a 72-hole event with only the top 36 in the points eligible. It’s a no-cut event and even if Stricker should finish last, he’d bank $16,500 and become the first on the Champions tour to surpass the $4-million mark in a season. He currently stands at $3,986,063.

Stricker’s early clinch is not the first time it’s happened on the PGA Tour Champions. In 2002, Hale Irwin did it after the 32nd of 35 events. In 2014, Bernhard Langer clinched after the second-to-last event of the season.

11-time PGA Tour winner Andy Bean dies at 70 following recent surgery

Bean’s lungs were badly damaged from a bout with COVID-19.

Andy Bean, an 11-time PGA Tour winner who underwent a double lung replacement last month, has died following complications from the surgery. He was 70.

Bean won 11 times on the PGA Tour and captured three titles on the PGA Tour Champions. He turned pro in 1975 after an illustrious career at Florida, where he was a three-time All-American and helped the Gators win the NCAA men’s golf title in 1973.

Bean’s lungs were badly damaged from a bout with COVID-19, according to a Facebook post by friend Alan Pope. He underwent surgery at Advent Health Hospital in Orlando last month.

He was born March 13, 1953, in Lafayette, Georgia, near the Georgia-Tennessee border, a mere 35 miles from Chattanooga. His family then moved to Jekyll Island, Georgia, when he was a teenager before settling in Lakeland, Florida, where he graduated from Lakeland High School. Bean competed in high school golf against Fred Ridley, a standout at nearby Winter Haven High.

Bean officially retired from golf after the 2014 season, a car accident in 2011 and ongoing injury issues with his wrists taking their toll.

He is survived by his wife, Debbie, and the couple’s three daughters, Ashley, Lindsay and Jordan. Funeral services are pending.

Vandals damage five greens a day before the start of PGA Tour Champions event in Florida

The Constellation Furyk & Friends was in crisis mode around 4 a.m. on Thursday.

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — The Constellation Furyk & Friends was in crisis mode around 4 a.m. on Thursday.

The issue was solved before noon due to the efforts of the tournament and Timuquana Country Club staffs and outside help from the TPC Sawgrass agronomy staff and Maccurrach Golf Construction.

Four greens on the course and one practice green were damaged in the early morning hours on Thursday by vandals wielding tools believed to be shovels or hoes.

The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office is investigating and the PGA Tour Champions event, which will be played for the third year, will start as scheduled on Friday at 9:20 a.m.

“Obviously disappointing but the story of the day is the team effort and everyone being able to pivot,” said tournament host Jim Furyk.

Greens still have room for pins

The 10th, 12th, 16th and 17th greens had huge gouges taken out of them. The damage was discovered about 3 a.m. by a member of the Timuquana agronomy staff, who began arriving between that hour and 4 a.m. to begin preparing the course for the Thursday pro-am.

Timuquana superintendent Alan Brown, who had around 20 workers at his disposal, made a few phone calls. Within an hour, his counterpart at the TPC Sawgrass, Jeff Plots, and Maccurrach Golf owner Alan Maccurrach’s son Sonny arrived with another two dozen workers and by late morning the damage had been patched with sod.

The Thursday pro-am groups could not play the holes and played a 14-hole tournament. Additional work may be done overnight and before the first shots are struck at 9:20 a.m.

“The folks [pro-am players] come out to support us and they pay good money to come out to support us,” Furyk said. “That money goes to charity and at the end of the day, they were super, super-understanding. No one was feeling bad for themselves. They felt bad for the tournament and the club and what they went through but they went out and had a great day. They pivoted too and we’re very appreciative for that.”

It didn’t take long for the crews from the TPC Sawgrass and MacCurracch Golf (located on the Northside) to get to Timuquana.

“MacCurrach, they’re just across the river so luckily you’ve got a great crew that’s been through a couple of renovations, and you’ve got a great crew from the TPC Sawgrass,” said Davis Love III. “So they’ll get it. The sponsors are going to have a great time, business as usual … it’s just going to look bad on a couple of holes.”

Another player in the field, Jeff Sluman, was surveying the damage on the greens and said the grounds crews and rules officials are fortunate that there are areas of the damaged green that still give them three pins for the three tournament rounds.

“It looks like they’re not going to interrupt anything,” Sluman said.

Furyk, Els praise repairs

Ernie Els, who played the morning pro-am after seeing videos of the damage, called the work by the combined crews, “amazing … they’ve done a hell of a job.”

“It was really bad,” Els said of the damage. “They really went in there. Someone was really, very angry, obviously. For them [the work crews] to do what they’ve done already is really amazing. The tournament will continue and it will be a success.”

Furyk said Brown’s agronomy staff at Timuquana has had to deal with a different issue every year. There was a deluge that interrupted the first round in 2021 and repairs were needed after Hurricane Ian brushed the area last year.

PGA Tour Champions player Jeff Sluman surveys the damage done to the 16th green of the Timuquana Country Club by vandals. Four greens on the course and one practice green were vandalized by what is believed to be a tool such as a shovel or hoe. (Photo: Garry Smits/Florida Times-Union)

“I’ve been singing the praises of Alan Brown and his staff for three years,” Furyk said. “They’ve done an amazing job. And this morning they made some phone calls and everyone came running.”

PGA Tour Champions president Miller Brady said the joint effort will result in another successful tournament, in its third year.

“PGA Tour Champions Rules and Competitions have been working with the tournament team and the outstanding Timuquana Country Club staff to repair the damages to the course,” he said in a statement. “Thanks to their efforts, we will have the course ready for the first round of competition tomorrow morning. We encourage everyone in the Jacksonville community to come out and support this great event and the charitable work of Jim and Tabitha Furyk throughout Northeast Florida.”

Furyk & Friends first round will start as scheduled

Tournament director Adam Renfroe said the vandalism hasn’t deterred the staff’s preparation for the first round of competition.

“What took place is unfortunate, as we want to represent the best of Jacksonville with this tournament,” he said in a statement. “We won’t let the actions of a few individuals take away from a great week for our city and our ability to give back and create impact here in the community. We appreciate the swift action taken by the PGA Tour Champions team to make sure the course is ready for the start of the competition and look forward to fans joining us at Timuquana Country Club this weekend.”

Love was in agreement from a player’s perspective.

“The mission of this tournament isn’t going to slow down,” he said. “Tab and Jim do a great job with everything they’ve done. I just hate it for the guys with the shovels and the sod cutters because they’re going to have a long day and probably a long night.”[lawrence-auto-related count=1 tag=451196875]