Phil Mickelson turns 50: Fellow pros tell favorite Phil stories

Lefty’s colleagues shared with Golfweek their takes on Phil Mickelson and their favorite memories of the man who continues to hit bombs.

He’s a comedian with a lightning-quick, razor-sharp needle.

A man with a golf IQ that’s off the charts, a wannabe Albert Einstein who at times thinks he’s Google. Is a great husband and father. Has a generous heart, a desire to mentor, an enormous appetite for life and the finest foods and wine.

He is a massive presence and possesses a mammoth charitable arm. Loves games of chance and fears no man or bad lie or any tree between him and his intended target.

And Phil Mickelson is one of the best golfers that has walked the planet.

That’s what Lefty’s colleagues said about the man who turns 50 on June 16. They shared with Golfweek their takes on Mickelson and their favorite memories of the man who continues to hit bombs and has a plaque in the World Golf Hall of Fame, three green jackets, a Wanamaker Trophy, a Claret Jug, a record six silver medals from the U.S. Open and 44 PGA Tour titles.

In short, it’s been a half-century of laughs, wonderment, fulfillment and plenty of excitement. Mickelson’s lived large, played large and certainly been a large presence in the game he started playing by mirroring his father with left-handed swings despite being a natural righty.

And he’ll continue to make us all wonder what Phil will do next.

“He’s really just a goofball. One of the greatest players ever, but still a goofball,” said Harris English, who pointed to a moment during The Match II as an example that encapsulates Mickelson. On the third hole, Mickelson was chirping about activating his calves and begging Tiger Woods for an advantage ahead of the long-drive contest. Woods turned to the camera, smiled and told the viewing audience “this is what I have to listen to every time we play.”

“That’s Phil,” English said. “He is who he is. Always talking, always having fun, always on the ready. He is very personable. A great guy to talk to. You can ask him about anything and he’s never going to short-change anybody. His heart and his mind is in everything he does. He’s just a great guy to be around.

“He’s a lot of fun and he’s been great for this game.”

PGA Championship Phil Mickelson
Ryan Palmer hits a putt on the 15th green as Phil Mickelson looks on during the final round of the 93rd PGA Championship at the Atlanta Athletic Club on August 14, 2011 in Johns Creek, Georgia. Photo by Stuart Franklin/Getty Images

While Mickelson usually takes over any room he walks into with non-stop jokes and stories, he can have an impact without saying a word. At the 2016 PGA Championship, Ryan Palmer said he told Mickelson that his wife, Jennifer, had been diagnosed with breast cancer. Mickelson’s wife, Amy, and mother, Mary, are both breast cancer survivors.

“I pulled Phil aside in the scoring tent and I told him and I wanted to ask him a few things,” said Palmer, whose wife beat cancer. “He didn’t say a word and he just gave me the biggest hug. For a long time, he didn’t say a word. Then we chatted.

“I’ll never forget that moment.”

Here are some more stories and memories from his PGA Tour brethren.

Steve Stricker

“One of the funniest things I’ve always remembered was one year we were in an In-N-Out in the Palm Springs area and I was with Mario, my brother-in-law, and we had already sat down to eat. And Phil and Bones came in, they ordered and they came to sit with us. And Phil gets his food and comes over and he has two triples, no fries. Two triples. Not doubles, triples. They were huge. And this obviously was before he started taking care of himself more. And he sat down and had this big grin on his face and he’s just like, ‘What? What’s the big deal?’ And he pounds both of them.

Steve Stricker and Phil Mickelson
Steve Stricker and Phil Mickelson on the 18th green during a practice round for the 2017 PGA Championship at Quail Hollow Club. Photo by Rob Schumacher/USA TODAY Sports

“What you see on TV is who he is. This fun-loving guy who has a lot of jokes, a lot of pranks, and he just loves to have fun. He loves to give you crap and he loves when you give it back to him. He’s one of the top 15, 20 best players best ever. He has all the shots, especially up around the greens. And he was never afraid to do anything. He didn’t back down from anything and there aren’t many guys who can play like that. And he still plays that way. That’s a unique feature about him because a lot of guys play with fear.”

Gary Woodland

“I was with Callaway in 2015 playing the final round of the BMW Championship at Conway Farms with him. Callaway had a new prototype golf ball and I was in love with it. Now, I was a big George Brett fan when I was growing up, so my baseball number as a kid was No. 5. And when I started testing this golf ball they were all Callaway 5s. And I’m thinking this is sweet, they made me a golf ball with a 5 on it.

Gary Woodland and Phil Mickelson
Gary Woodland and Phil Mickelson greet each other at the 1st hole before the first round of the 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. Photo by Sean Logan/USA TODAY Sports

“So I’m playing with Phil on Sunday and we get on the first tee and we both have Callaway 5 balls. So I go, ‘Why do you have Callaway 5? They made this golf ball for me.’ He goes, ‘I have 5 major championships, idiot, they made it for me.’ I felt so small. I heard later on that that wasn’t the case, that they didn’t go with 5 because of him, but he came up with it on the spot and he made me believe it. That’s the beauty of Phil Mickelson – he’s not afraid to dish it out and he can take it. He’s pretty witty and he always has the answers.”

Ryan Palmer was a ‘little nervous’ hitting PGA Tour’s first shot back

Ryan Palmer, a member at Colonial Country Club, admitted to excitement and nerves after hitting the first shot of the PGA Tour restart.

FORT WORTH, Texas — Ryan Palmer stood on the first tee box at Colonial Country Club on Thursday — something he’s done thousands of times in the past as a member of the storied club — and the nerves crept in.

The results, however, didn’t show it. Palmer ripped a 297-yard drive down the left side of the 568-yard par-5 to open the Charles Schwab Challenge, the official return of the PGA Tour 91 days after the Players Championship was halted one round in.

Palmer said on Thursday he was honored to be the one to handle that assignment.

“I was a little nervous, obviously, but very exciting. I’m honored that they asked me to do it. I’m proud to be a member of this great club in Fort Worth, Colonial, and I’m pretty honored to be asked to hit the first shot for the return to golf for sure,” Palmer said. “Not the day I wanted, but overall some good things happened out there today. Yeah, I was a little nervous obviously going to hit that first shot and hit it good, but it was a great feeling to be that person.”


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Like Palmer said, while the beginning of Thursday’s round went smoothly, things turned somewhere near the 9 a.m. CT point. After posting birdies on Nos. 2, 6 and 7, Palmer finished the front with a pair of bogeys to make the turn at 34.

Things got worse on the back. After a bogey on No. 10, he pushed a drive on No. 16 out of bounds and wound up with a double-bogey. Palmer, who had been picked by many as a pre-tournament sleeper to contend, finished the opening round with an unimpressive 72.

Palmer lives in nearby Colleyville, has been a member of Colonial since 2010, and his long-time caddie, good friend James Edmondson, has been a Colonial member since 2005. Edmondson lives just 22 minutes away in North Richland Hills.

When Palmer had his birdie putts rolling in early, and got no reaction to the lack of fans, he said he almost had to manufacture the support.

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“You hit a putt and it goes in, and you’re talking to yourself, making the crowd noise yourself, I guess,” Palmer said. “It was a little different because I’m used to having a lot of friends and family out watching, so that was obviously different. But it was nice to get off to a good start like that. Making putts, you don’t hear much from it, so a little different. But it was just great to be out there playing.”

As for the lengthy break, Palmer said it made Thursday’s opening round akin to a winter tournament. Palmer was paired with Bill Haas and Brian Harman, and the latter fired a 65 to get near the top of the leaderboard.

“It felt like it was the Sony Open almost when you take November and December off and you have an off-season,” Palmer said of the Hawaiian tournament he won back in 2010. “It was an off-season we had during the season. So that’s kind of the feeling, I guess.”

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What PGA Tour players are saying about vacant 8:46 tee time

In the wake of the death of George Floyd, 8:46 has become a symbol for the racial injustice and the PGA Tour says it wants to do its part.

In the wake of the death of George Floyd, 8:46 has become a symbol for the racial injustice faced by the black community, and the PGA Tour says it wants to do its part to help move forward.

On the PGA Tour’s official website, it reads:

As part of ongoing efforts to amplify the voices and efforts underway to end racial and social injustice, the TOUR has set aside an 8:46 a.m. tee time that will feature no players. The time has been set aside at both Colonial Country Club (Charles Schwab Challenge) and TPC Sawgrass (Korn Ferry Tour Challenge), as 8:46 has become a universal symbol for the racial injustice faced by the black community.

Here’s what various PGA Tour players have said about the idea, leading into Thursday’s opening round of the Charles Schwab Challenge:

Rory McIlroy

Yeah, so I think what the PGA Tour has done with the moment of silence at 8:46 and not using that tee time is a wonderful gesture. And I think if you look at golf — look, I grew up — my hero growing up was Tiger Woods. Tiger doesn’t look the same as me, has had a very different upbringing to the one that I have had, but he was my hero growing up, and it didn’t matter what color his skin was, what his beliefs were. Tiger was my hero, and he’s been a lot of kids’ heroes over the years that have grown up playing golf. We have had him — we’ve been very lucky to have him in our game. I think that there should be more people like him in golf, and I think what the conversation that Jay and Harold Varner had about these issues I think really hit home with me. Harold said, it maybe just isn’t about the players, it’s about everyone in the game of golf. There’s so many people that are involved with the game, and as long as we continue to give people from different backgrounds opportunities to be in golf, that can only be a good thing.

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Harold Varner III

I think there will be discussion. I think some will forget about it. I think so many people will move on, but the conversation I had with Jay when we weren’t being recorded, I think this week won’t be the last week, because it’s getting to the point where everyone has a voice that if the PGA Tour was to forget it, they would get hounded every day. So it’s just kind of like yes, they’re pressured, but I also think that it’s the right thing to do, and I think Jay knows that, so I’m super behind him on that, and we got to talking about some things where I come from, what I think about it. I’m just super fortunate to be able to say something and it matter but also be a part of the change. Everyone in this society right now is going to be a part of that.

Brooks Koepka

First off, I think it’s awesome that the PGA Tour has stepped up. Being especially one of the first sports back, it’s important to set the tone going forward for other sports, for just people in general. And I think it’s important to set the tone. 8:46, I think it’s going to be special. It’ll be something — I don’t know that the PGA Tour has ever really done something like this, a moment of silence even during the rounds. Not while I’ve been playing. I think it’s special with what’s going on right now. There needs to be change, and I want to be part of the solution, and I think this is one way that the PGA Tour is stepping up and doing that.

Jordan Spieth

I think it’ll be something that hopefully we can kind of stick with however long we need to. But I think it’s certainly a really nice thing to do with the way things have been.

Ryan Palmer

I think it’s great. 8:46, everybody on the golf course, the driving range, everywhere will stop and have a moment of silence and say a quick prayer for all those affected through all this. It’s been crazy obviously watching what you see on TV, but I think it’s great to show our support just for America in general. It’s been a tough few weeks for a lot of people I know. I know I speak — I watched the episode with Jay Monahan and Harold Varner, which was unbelievable what they talked about, so all I can do is support them and support America coming together, and like I said, everybody just love one another and stay safe.

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Ryan Palmer in great spot for PGA Tour’s return in Texas

Ryan Palmer has a few advantages when the PGA Tour returns next week in Texas.

Ryan Palmer is in a good place these days.

His Lone Star State home in Colleyville is 25 minutes from revered Colonial Country Club, where the PGA Tour is scheduled to restart its season next week with the Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth.

He’s been a member of Colonial since 2010. And his long-time caddie, good friend James Edmondson, has been a Colonial member since 2005 and lives just 22 minutes away in North Richland Hills.

That’s a powerful 1-2-3 punch of advantage for the four-time Tour winner as the PGA Tour starts to get back up from being knocked out by the COVID-19 pandemic that halted play on Friday the 13th in March.

“It’s huge,” Palmer said of being in the right place at this time where so much uncertainty lies. “It’s an extra week at the house. We’re on a course I get to play all the time and I’ve had some success on. It’s very comforting knowing I don’t have to worry about going any places because I’ll be eating at home. I’ll go to the golf course and get back home.

“I can kind of quarantine myself.”

Another edge Palmer has in his bag is recent form at Colonial, otherwise known as Hogan’s Alley as the iconic Ben Hogan won five times on the grounds. The course has hosted a Tour event every year since 1946 except in 1949 (flooding) and 1975 (home to The Players Championship, won by Al Geiberger). Craig Wood won the 1941 U.S. Open here, Meg Mallon the 1991 U.S. Women’s Open.

On the stretch of 7,209 yards that plays to a par of 70, Palmer has four top-6 finishes in his last eight starts. While he’s yet to win the famous plaid jacket, he has to be considered a favorite next week in a field that will boast Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm, Brooks Koepka, Justin Thomas and Dustin Johnson, the top five players in the world rankings.

“We know all the nuances of the place from hundreds if not thousands of rounds playing there year-round,” Edmondson said. “There is not a wind I haven’t seen and not a wind he hasn’t seen. We’ve played in every temperature.

“And we have a pretty good idea what the greens are doing.”

It’s like that back-of-the-hand thing.

“When we play the tournament, if I bring up a question on a tee box, he wonders why I’m even thinking about it,” Palmer said. “Do what you’ve done here for 10 years, he’ll say. It doesn’t take a lot of thinking when we’re there.

“When we play No. 7 during the tournament, we’ll see certain pins that we don’t see regularly, so I’ll play that hole a little differently. But other than that, I’ve seen every tee shot, every wind, every temperature from hot to cold, so there’s nothing I haven’t seen. Sometimes I’ve pulled my yardage book out on 15 and my scorecard and the page are on the fourth hole.

“There are a lot of small things about the course and the wind that you really don’t know about unless you’ve played there so many times.”

The two said the tight, tree-lined Colonial is home to some of the toughest fairways to hit in regulation and is an old-school, traditional course that has stood the test of time. But this time around, because no spectators will be allowed and no stands or hospitality tents have been built, the players will see a Colonial they’ve never seen. And it will play differently for one and all.

Well, except for Palmer.

“From a visual standpoint, some players will be used to seeing a row of stands here or fans there or used to seeing this or that. It can throw you not seeing that,” Palmer said. “And if you miss 10 or 16 or 17 long, you’re going to be doing things differently than you’ve done before. So it’s an advantage for me.”

Palmer and Edmondson have played quite a few rounds recently at Colonial and Palmer is starting to hit more balls on the practice ground to sharpen his game. And Edmondson has already started taking notes for his job.

“The course is in great shape,” Edmondson said. “The rough is where you’ll get jumpers so the ball is going to go a long ways a lot of times, especially in the heat. The ball is taking off right now.”

He’s also checked the long-term forecast – no rain, plenty of wind.

“I know it’s 10 days away, but if we get wind, like 20-, 25-mph gusts that are in the forecast, Colonial will have teeth,” Edmondson said. “I think 8-, 9-, 10-under will win the golf tournament.”

A tournament Palmer has dreamed of winning. Well, why not this year? Home cooking, home-field advantage, a brainy bagman at his side. He’s in the right place at maybe the right time.

“It’s time to get back to work and it’s time to play. Fans need it, we need it. We need to get sports going,” Palmer said. “I’m ready to play. And if this is the year? I couldn’t put it into words if I won. Being a member, the friends I have there, my dad’s favorite tournament, I couldn’t begin to put it into words.

“Well, until it happens.”

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Ryan Palmer wishes he was dining on jambalaya this week, but optimistic for home-cooking at re-start in Texas

Palmer says PGA Tour will be ready to return at the Charles Schwab Challenge if it can figure out testing protocol.

Ryan Palmer’s internal clock tells him that this week he should be dining on crawfish, shucked oysters and other Cajun delicacies. This week should be the PGA Tour’s Zurich Classic of New Orleans, aka the best eats on the PGA Tour.

It’s a tradition unlike any other that on Tuesday of tournament week at TPC Louisiana’s driving range a wooden canoe is filled with boiled crawfish, shrimp, and potatoes. That’s just a warmup for Wednesday’s pro-am, which includes food stations at nearly every tee serving up some of the best dishes in town.

Dining is a sport for pros, who juggle reservations at French Quarter Institutions such as Acme Oyster House, Drago’s, Mr. B’s and Commander’s Palace. It’s just not right to come here without tasting the jambalaya, etouffees, and muffulettas.

Funny, though, in a city where the pros feast on fine dining almost as much as on birdies and you practically can’t go wrong picking a place to eat, Palmer and his partner in the two-man team event, Jon Rahm, stopped at, of all places, Popeyes for their victory celebration and walked in wearing their winner’s belts.

“We were both flying home that night and ordered fried chicken for the plane ride home,” Palmer explained on a conference call Tuesday.

For Palmer, it marked his fourth Tour title and first victory in more than nine years. His defense will have to wait another year as the Tour’s annual visit to The Big Easy was canceled due to the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Palmer, to his credit, has launched a fundraising platform called Pros for a Purpose to benefit charities behind each of the nine canceled or postponed PGA Tour events. Along with wife, Jennifer, he donated $20,000 to the events he was committed to (Valspar Championship, Valero Texas Open, RBC Heritage, Zurich Classic of New Orleans and AT&T Byron Nelson). Moreover, Meiomi Wine ponied up $100,000 and promised to contribute $5 to the charity for every person participating in the Meiomi Pinot Putt Off that is seen making a putt with a glass of pinot in their hand, up to an additional $50,000 for charity.

Palmer is counting the days to June 11, when the PGA Tour is expected to resume the 2019-20 season at the Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth, Texas. Palmer is a member at host club Colonial Country Club and has played the event every year since 2004, notching three top-5 finishes and a T-6 last year. He said he didn’t get too excited because he knows he still has to wait all of the month of May, adding, “I think I’ll be ready in a week,” and that he plans to play the first three events out of the gate.

The Charles Schwab Challenge was originally scheduled for May 21-24, but was pushed back two weeks into June. Palmer is a member of the Tour’s Player Advisory Council, and he said he expects guidelines for testing to be released following a call with the Tour’s PAC scheduled in 10 days.

“This all depends on testing, assuming it’s available to everyone,” Palmer said. “I’m very positive and optimistic we will be playing in June. We’ll know more in the next few weeks as the Tour begins their testing protocols.”

And Palmer is confident if proper measures for testing and social distancing are put in place and the first events go off without a hitch – there will be no fans for at least the first four events – then he doesn’t see why the season won’t be able to resume and why the three remaining scheduled majors, beginning with the PGA Championship, wouldn’t be played too.

“If we start in June at Colonial, I’d expect to see everyone at the PGA in August, for sure,” he said.

For Palmer, playing without a gallery will be an adjustment, but one he’s experienced on a few occasions before, most recently at the 2019 Zozo Championship in October.

“It’s going to feel like college again,” he said. “The funny part is them announcing you on the first tee with no one around and the habit of raising your hand and tipping your cap. Who are you raising your hand to?”

Coronavirus: Secret Golf Match Play Series announced for PGA Tour downtime

At a time when the world is starved for fresh golf content, Secret Golf plans to release up to six matches between PGA Tour pros.

With professional golf tournaments around the world on hiatus due to concerns of COVID-19, former PGA champion Steve Elkington and his partners have dreamed up a modern-day version of Shell’s Wonderful World of Golf to bring golf fans the fresh content they crave.

It’s called the Secret Golf Match Play Series for COVID-19 Relief and it will consist of up to six matches that will be played prior to the continuation of the PGA Tour season. The matches are expected to be shown on television – negotiations are ongoing and event production is pending discussions with the PGA Tour – and streamed via the Internet to a global audience along with a companion app that includes exclusive behind the scenes and interactive content to enhance the viewing experience as the competition unfolds.

Among those PGA Tour stars committed to partake in the stroke-play matches are Secret Golf regulars Marc Leishman (World No. 15), Jason Dufner, Russell Knox, Andrew Landry, Ryan Palmer and Pat Perez. Each has been allowed to challenge a player of their choice to face them that may not be on its roster of more than 30 tour pros, male and female. (Potential women Secret Golf ambassadors include Stacy Lewis, Brittany Lincicome and Gerina Piller.)

The initial matchups will be named at a later date, Elkington said, along with the courses, but they will all be at private venues that are closed to the public. Players will wear microphones as they talk, interact and informally educate fans about the shots they are going to hit and just hit. Prepare for plenty of trash talk.

“There are levels of trash talk,” Elkington said. “There are guys who make a lot of noise like Pat Perez and those who are more discreet and pick their spot. Jason Dufner is a real quiet and stoic guy, but in our group you can’t shut him up. It just depends who his audience is. He’s like a parrot that never talks when you ask him to talk.”

As for the stakes?

“Pride mostly,” Elkington said. “The scorecard is a big thing for these guys, but could they be making some side bets for added charity money? I wouldn’t put it past them.”

(Video courtesy Secret Golf.)

The players will carry their own bags, and players, crew and commentators numbering less than 10 in total will follow all safe distancing guidelines advised by the CDC. Elkington will provide on-course commentary and color throughout the match, and Diane Knox will conduct pre-during-post round interviews and provide social media support throughout the event.

“We’re going to ham it up,” Elkington said. “You never get to hear what the Tour player is thinking right after he hits a shot. We’re going to ask them what happened – good or bad?”

The PGA Tour canceled the Players Championship after the opening round on March 12 and later canceled or postponed all tournaments through May 17. All of the Secret Golf matches are expected to be released while the Tour’s schedule is suspended. (It is tentatively scheduled to resume with the Charles Schwab Championship, beginning May 21.)

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“We huddled and felt we needed to do something to help people of all ages at grave risk from the virus. We did not at the time know what to do, but we knew it would be important to offer hope and maybe some ways to show golf fans how to be safe, and maybe offer up something to help everyone get by as we are virtually in quarantine,” event organizers said in a release. “Our events had to be charity based, fall under the guides of the CDC, and be highly sensitive of how the country’s health was as a whole before we would release our matches.”

“When we see the virus flatten, see positive trend statistics support very positive change, and diligently listen to CDC guidance we will at that time make a decision and begin to release the series,” said Vito Palermo, a founding partner of Secret Golf.

Proceeds from these events will go to the charitable foundations of participating players as well as the United Way Pandemic Relief Fund.

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Ryan Palmer has 11 birdies Friday, rockets up Farmers Insurance Open leaderboard

Ryan Palmer has 11 birdies so far this week at the Farmers Insurance Open. He got them all on Friday.

Ryan Palmer had 11 birdies on Friday at the Farmers Insurance Open to make a big move at Torrey Pines.

Palmer shot an even-par 72 on Thursday on the South course in the first round. On Friday on the North, Palmer caught fire and was 10 strokes better than he was 24 hours earlier.

Palmer’s 11 birdies and one bogey added up to a second-round 62 to help him rocket up the leaderboard and take the clubhouse lead in La Jolla.

MORE: Leaderboard | Tee times, TV info | Updates | Photos

He started posting red numbers right away on Friday, as he birdied the first. He then birdied 2, 5, 6 and 8 to make the turn at 31. On the back nine, he birdied 10, 11, 13, 14, 16 and 17 to get to 11 under. His only stumble on Friday came on his closing hole when he bogeyed the 18th.

Brandt Snedeker, a two-time winner at Torrey Pines (2012, 2016) is two shots back after shooting a 67. There are several players still on the course.

Palmer’s Friday round continues his recent solid play. He finished T-4 in last week’s Sony Open in Hawaii and T-3 at the QBE Shootout in mid-December.

He teamed up with Jon Rahm to win last season’s Zurich Classic. Palmer’s last solo victory on the PGA Tour came in 2010 at the Sony Open.

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Cameron Smith wins the Sony Open in a sudden-death playoff

Cameron Smith closed with a 2-under 68 and won the Sony Open in Hawaii with a par in a sudden-death playoff over Brendan Steele.

Cameron Smith waited until the 72nd hole to catch Brendan Steele and then made par to win a sudden-death playoff for his first individual title on the PGA Tour.

“That’s one I’ve wanted to tick off for some time,” Smith told Golf Channel.

Smith rallied from three strokes behind entering the final round and canned a 9-foot birdie putt at 18 to shoot 2-under 68 and force extra holes.

On a rainy, soggy day, Steele closed with a 1-over 71 and squandered a two-stroke lead with three holes to go, missing a 6-foot-par putt at 17 and then a 28-foot birdie putt for the win.

On the first playoff hole, Smith blocked his tee shot right, but he drew a decent lie and punched an approach under a tree that chased to within 10 feet of the hole. With the pressure applied, Steele’s wedge from 87 yards away in the fairway flew the green and he pitched past the hole and missed his par putt to the right.

Smith, a native of Brisbane, Australia, was among the Aussie players in the field who pledged to donate $500 per birdie and $1,000 per eagle to aid the Australian wildlife effort.

Smith previously had won the 2018 Zurich Classic of New Orleans, a team event with Jonas Blixt.

Smith and Steele finished regulation with a 72-hole total of 11-under 269.

 

Four teams join Harold Varner III, Ryan Palmer at top of QBE Shootout leaderboard

At the end of the second round of the QBE Shootout, there’s quite the traffic jam atop the leaderboard after movement in both directions.

NAPLES, Fla. – Saturday is known as moving day in professional golf.

At the end of the second round of the QBE Shootout, there’s quite the traffic jam after movement in both directions at Tiburón Golf Club at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Resort.

First-round leaders Harold Varner III and Ryan Palmer stumbled a bit on a windy day in the modified alternate shot format, but when it was all over, they still had a piece of the lead – albeit with four other teams including Jason Kokrak and J.T. Poston, Kevin Tway and Rory Sabbatini, Bubba Watson and Charles Howell III, and Brendon Todd and Billy Horschel.

“It was a grind,” Varner said. “I enjoy that part of golf. It’s way more fun when you have someone else with you. It’s nice to have a chance (Sunday).”

“It’s a tough format,” Poston said.

“If we roll a few more in (on Sunday) … we didn’t waste any today,” Kokrak said.

All five sides are at 19 under, and former Ryder Cup teammates Graeme McDowell and Ian Poulter are one shot behind that.

None of the 12 players in the top six groups have won the tournament except for Poulter, who won with Dustin Johnson back in 2010.

Teams will play better ball in Sunday’s final round.

The wind and the format led to quite a few bogeys, including by Varner and Palmer on No. 11 after both hit it into either side of the woods. Kokrak and Poston couldn’t take advantage, with Kokrak hitting it into the greenside bunker, and both teams left with bogeys.

Tway and Sabbatini had the lead at that point, but only had one birdie in the last six holes.

Todd, who had back-to-back wins a month ago and was a last-minute replacement for and injured Brandt Snedeker, and Horschel birdied two of the last four.

“I knew when Brendon was going to be my partner when Sneds had to withdraw I got a better partner – sorry, Sneds,” Horschel said with a chuckle. “But Brendon’s been playing really well, two wins, fourth-place finish, I was probably the happiest guy in the world at that point.”

Watson and Howell had back-to-back birdies to finish.

“We were good today and it was really windy,” Watson said. “Solid off the tee with two balls in fairway every hole makes it easier in this format. Sunday the routine is simple — look for birdies.”

McDowell and Poulter were hoping for some wind, got their wish, and took advantage with a 7-under 65 to tie for the best score of the day.

“We wanted a tougher day today because we needed to make a move,” McDowell said. “I think through eight holes we were 4 under today in modified alternate and that’s what we were in scramble (Friday), so we knew we were doing OK.”

McDowell had a little fun with his partner.

“Anytime you’re playing partner format with this guy, it’s always fun when he’s in the mood,” McDowell said. “Obviously his Ryder Cup record speaks for itself and he was in the mood today, so it was fun.”

“I’m always in the mood,” Poulter responded, “It’s just not always the right mood.

“We’ve obviously timed the gap to the front, and obviously if we can go out there (Sunday) and play like we should, then hopefully we can go close,” he added.

The leaderboard after Saturday’s round was quite close enough.

Round 2 scores

Position Players R1 score R2 score To par
T-1 Brendon Todd-Billy Horschel 59 66 -19
T-1 Bubba Watson-Charles Howell III 59 66 -19
T-1 Rory Sabbatini-Kevin Tway 58 67 -19
T-1 Harold Varner III-Ryan Palmer 55 70 -19
T-1 J.T. Poston-Jason Kokrak 57 68 -19
6 Ian Poulter-Graeme McDowell 61 65 -18
T-7 Chez Reavie-Kevin Chappell 60 67 -17
T-7 Andrew Putnam-Corey Conners 61 66 -17
T-7 Kevin Kisner-Charley Hoffman 58 69 -17
10 Matthew Wolff-Viktor Hovland 65 65 -14
11 Patton Kizzire-Brian Harman 62 72 -10
12 Lexi Thompson-Sean O’Hair 64 74 -6

[opinary poll=”would-you-rather-watch-team-golf-or-indi” customer=”golfweek”]

Unlikely pairing of Harold Varner III, Ryan Palmer lead by two at QBE Shootout

Ryan Palmer and Harold Varner III closed with an eagle by Palmer on No. 17 and a 20-footer for birdie on No. 18 by Varner.

[jwplayer FZwyJKCw-9JtFt04J]

NAPLES, Fla. — Ryan Palmer and Harold Varner III were an unlikely pairing.

But the two did something Friday that’s never been bettered in 31 years of the QBE Shootout.

Palmer and Varner shot a 17-under-par 55 to tie the record for the scramble format, and take a two-shot lead at Tiburón Golf Club at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Resort.

Some of the 12 two-person teams are set up ahead of time. Maybe they’re close friends, or have the same agent, or something like that. Then others are simply matching together two of the remaining players.

“Ryan was in and I was the odd ball out and I talked to Taylor (Ives of management company Wasserman Sports) and it worked out,” Varner said.

“He’s got a 66 scoring average for the weekend, so I’ll take him,” Palmer said.

QBE SHOOTOUT: Saturday’s Round 2 tee times

Varner hadn’t played since the Mayakoba Classic in Mexico a month ago, and had spent that time moving into a new house.

“I like playing golf, but the best thing that happened was when I got here, Ryan was like, ‘I want to have a chance to win,’ and I’m like, ‘All right, bro. I haven’t touched a club in a while,'” Varner said.

Nevertheless, Palmer and Varner paired together fantastically. They closed with an eagle on No. 17 by Palmer, and Varner drained a 20-footer on No. 18 to tie a record held by four other teams.

“(Palmer) almost made it, so I just tried to hit it close to where he hit it, just a little firmer, and lucky enough for it to go in,” Varner said.

“They played incredible golf,” said Jason Kokrak.

So did Kokrak and J.T. Poston, just not as good. They shot 15 under and are two back. Kevin Tway and Rory Sabbatini and Kevin Kisner and Charley Hoffman — who had a hole-in-one — are tied for third at 14 under.

Former Oklahoma State teammates Matthew Wolff and Viktor Hovland struggled to a 7-under 65 and are in last. LPGA Tour star Lexi Thompson and two-time winner Sean O’Hair shot a 64. Defending champions Brian Harman and Patton Kizzire are 10th at 10 under.

Teams will play modified alternate shot on Saturday, with each golfer teeing off, one drive being chosen, and then players alternating the rest of the hole.

Palmer and Varner birdied every hole but No. 5 and No. 16.

“Yeah we’re going to go back and talk about those two holes,” Palmer joked. “We had a little mental lapse.

“We brought it back hard. I told Harold ‘Take 17 off, hitting driver, 5-wood and making the putts.'”

Palmer credited Varner for making most of the 15 birdies, many times, just like on No. 18, after he had come close.

“I was fortunate enough to hit some good putts that didn’t go in and he just rolled them right in,” Palmer said. “The putts he made, I’m curious how many feet of putts he made today, which was pretty good. We hit a lot of close ones, too.”

Correspondent Dave Kempton contributed to this article.

Round 1 scores

Players Score
Ryan Palmer-Harold Varner III -17
Jason Kokrak-J.T. Poston -15
Rory Sabbatini-Kevin Tway -14
Charley Hoffman-Kevin Kisner -14
Billy Horschel-Brendon Todd -13
Charles Howell III-Bubba Watson -13
Kevin Chappell-Chez Reavie -12
Corey Conners-Andrew Putnam -11
Graeme McDowell-Ian Poulter -11
Brian Harman-Patton Kizzire -10
Sean O’Hair-Lexi Thompson -8
Viktor Hovland-Matthew Wolff -7

QBE Shootout

Where: Tiburón Golf Club at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Resort

When: Through Sunday

Info: qbeshootout.com

TV: Saturday, Golf Channel, Noon-4 p.m.; Sunday, Golf Channel, Noon-4 p.m.

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