Former Oklahoma star Max McGreevy tames winds to take early lead at Club Car Championship

SAVANNAH, Ga. – Curtis Thompson, the older brother of LPGA star Lexi Thompson, spoke for the field when he said, “We’re not living the dream. We’re chasing it.” Thompson and Stuart Macdonald shot 6-under 66s in Thursday morning’s opening round of …

SAVANNAH, Ga. — Curtis Thompson, the older brother of LPGA star Lexi Thompson, spoke for the field when he said, “We’re not living the dream. We’re chasing it.”

Thompson and Stuart Macdonald shot 6-under 66s in Thursday morning’s opening round of the Club Car Championship at The Landings. The tournament is being played on the Deer Creek course.

But Thompson and Macdonald and the rest of the field are chasing former Oklahoma All-America Max McGreevy, who shot a seven-under 65 on the wind-swept course to take the lead with the afternoon starters yet to go off when he finished.

Crowd favorite Shad Tuten, a former All-America at Armstrong State before it was merged with Georgia Southern, turned in a solid 67 to share fourth place with Matthew Short.

Kris Blanks, a former assistant pro at the Landings Club, carded a one-over par 73. Blanks played in last October’s tournament, then known as the Savannah Golf Championship, but he missed the cut.

Jonathan Griz, a 17-year-old high school junior from Hilton Head, carded an even-par 72 to put himself in a position to make the cut.

Griz, who last year at age of 16 became the youngest player ever to win the South Carolina Amateur state championship, got into the tournament by being the runner-up at Monday’s qualifier at the Georgia Southern course in Statesboro.

Kris Blanks blasts out of a bunker on the 9th hole during the first round of the 2021 Korn Ferry Tour Club Car Championship at the Landings Club in Savannah, Georgia. (Photo: Richard Burkhart/Savannah Morning News)

After playing at even par on the front, Griz shot five-under on the back nine to finish second and earn himself a spot in the field. Although graduation is a year away, he has already committed to play at Alabama.

The other amateur in the field, 16-year-old Reed Lotter of Savannah, shot an opening round 1 over 73 and is T-108.

Roberto Diaz, who won last week’s Chitimacha Louisiana Open for his first victory in his 194th start as a professional, let a good round get away from him down the stretch and finished at 2-under 70.

“I’ve not been getting off to a good start,” Tuten, who missed the cut last week, said. “The plan was to get off to a good start and I did.”

Tuten had a group of followers and he rewarded them with an eagle on hole No. 7, which was his 16th of the day.

“You want to play well even if you’re playing without anyone following you,” he said. “But for me to have people watching it motivates me.

“I live for this tournament. It’s a huge deal for me to come out here and have fun. Everyone here makes you feel great. I’m in a comfort zone and it helps me to perform better playing in front of friends and family.”

Tuten said the weather was ideal at the beginning but that the wind started picking up and gusting around his seventh hole and it never let up.

“It was like playing two golf courses,” he said. “This is not a bomber’s course which suits me. I just tried to stay steady.”

In talking about his round Thompson uttered what every player loves to say: “When I won in Chicago…”

Thompson turned pro in 2014 and earlier this season he won the Evans Scholar Invitational for his first win in his 103rd start.

“There was a lot of wind,” Thompson said, echoing the thoughts of nearly all of the early finishers. “I didn’t expect the wind when we started. It was really calm.

“We had four or five holes straight into the wind and all you want to do there is make par,” Thompson said. “Then we went downwind and that’s when you try to make some birdies.”

Thompson hit mostly three-wood off the tee and hit 13 of 14 fairways which enabled him to turn in his best round at Deer Creek. He was 15th at last fall’s tournament.

“I’m just trying to do what I did when I won in Chicago,” Thompson said. “I’m not forcing anything. Today I had great ball striking and putted well.”

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Savannah excited to get Korn Ferry reprieve

The Savannah Golf Championship has been rescheduled for the fall, which is good news for players such as Savannah native Tim O’Neil who have entry into the Korn Ferry Tour event. “I don’t think I have anything else more important to do than that,” …

The Savannah Golf Championship has been rescheduled for the fall, which is good news for players such as Savannah native Tim O’Neil who have entry into the Korn Ferry Tour event.

“I don’t think I have anything else more important to do than that,” O’Neal said Monday, May 4, after the Korn Ferry Tour’s announcement of the new dates of Sept. 28-Oct. 4. “I definitely will be available for those dates to play in the tournament.”

The later dates also could be good news for local golf fans who might be permitted to attend the tournament if deemed safe based on the situation and protocols at that time regarding the coronavirus pandemic.

The Korn Ferry Tour, which is owned and operated by the PGA Tour, announced additional modifications and details regarding the restart of the 2020 schedule and a fall calendar of events that will be part of a one-time, combined 2020-21 Korn Ferry Tour season.

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Included in the fall series of tournaments is the third annual Savannah Golf Championship at The Landings Club’s Deer Creek Course.

The 2020 Savannah Golf Championship, which was originally scheduled for the week of March 30-April 5, was postponed on March 17 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The event is now one of five tournaments that will make up the Korn Ferry Tour’s new fall schedule.

Tournament director Cheyenne Overby said it’s been a fluid situation but the current plan allows for spectators.

“We will not play unless it’s safe,” she said. “We’re moving forward with that notion that we’ll have fans, that we’ll carry the special events that we have as normal. But we will follow all protocols that are in place at the time of the tournament. If there are guidelines handed down by CDC, the World Health Organization, local public health officials, that’s what we’ll go by.”

Dan McCarthy holds the trophy after donning the seersucker jacket awarded to the winner of the 2019 Savannah Golf Championship. McCarthy won by one stroke at 16 under par on March 31, 2019 at The Landings Club’s Deer Creek Course. [PHILIP HALL/SAVANNAHNOW.COM FILE PHOTO]
According to a release from the Korn Ferry Tour, play will resume with at least the first four events closed to the general public while continuing to monitor the COVID-19 situation and follow the recommendations of local and state authorities in order to determine the most appropriate on-site access in each market. Decisions on fan attendance at all events thereafter depend on available protocols.

Overby confirmed that O’Neal has maintained the sponsors’ exemption from Korn Ferry, a global organizational consulting firm and the tour’s title sponsor. O’Neal said he would have understood if it had not been honored because of the complications of players with conditional status and the scarcity of tournaments.

“I’m just happy I still have the exemption and I get a chance to tee it up,” said O’Neal, who hopes that spectators — particularly his children — are allowed to attend.

“They don’t know the news yet but they’ll be excited to come out and watch me play and give their dad some support,” the Savannah resident said.

Overby said that she cannot speak for other events on the Korn Ferry Tour, but the Savannah event will have a Monday qualifier with details still to come. That’s good news for Savannah native and Thunderbolt resident Mark Silvers, a professional golfer like O’Neal without status on the PGA and Korn Ferry tours.

“If anything changes with sponsors or there’s a Monday (qualifier), I will definitely be there,” Silvers said. “Nobody has any plans moving forward unless you’re on the PGA Tour or Korn Ferry Tour. All of us on the inside, looking in are waiting to hear.”

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Silvers and O’Neal have played in previous Savannah Golf Championships and know well the sports landscape in their hometown.

“It was a huge bummer for everybody in Savannah not to have that event – whether you’re playing or just want to go watch,” Silvers said. “To have it back on the schedule is definitely great for everybody.”

The restart to the 2020 Korn Ferry Tour season will begin as previously announced with the Korn Ferry Challenge on June 8-14 at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. The event will now be one of four new events in the first six weeks back to play that have been created by the Tour to make up for the cancellation or postponement of events affected by COVID-19.