Spectator with remote-control golf ball interrupted play at BMW Championship, and Rory McIlroy shut him down

“That wasn’t exactly something I expected to see on a Saturday afternoon.”

WILMINGTON, Del. – Don’t mess with Rory McIlroy.

The Northern Irishman was paired with Scott Stallings during Saturday’s third round of the BMW Championship at Wilmington Country Club’s South Course when a fan intruded and dropped a remote-control golf ball on the green and attempted to make it go in the hole at the par-3 15th.

“That wasn’t exactly something I expected to see on a Saturday afternoon,” said Stallings, who was lining up a sand shot.

“He kept yelling at Rory, ‘This is my dream, this is my dream,'” Stallings said. “I don’t know exactly what he was dreaming about, but his ball is gone.”

That’s because McIlroy ended his fun quickly. First he took a couple of swats at it with his putter, but when the spectator made a third attempt at holing the ball, McIlroy picked it up and heaved it into the pond fronting the green. Game over.

“I thought it was great,” Stallings said of the way McIlroy handled the situation. “I was about to go and do the same thing.”

A police officer came over and escorted the spectator away. For Stallings, this didn’t rank as the strangest thing he’s witnessed from a spectator at a golf tournament.

“I was with a streaker doing sand angels completely naked at Waste Management at 17,” he said.

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‘All golfers are certifiably insane to an extent’: Scott Stallings spends $400 to go back to old irons, moves up leaderboard at John Deere

Stallings has posted six consecutive rounds in the 60s.

With his bread-and-butter iron play a tad off, Scott Stallings dipped into his wallet and had some old friends sent his way.

It was money well spent.

Before last week’s Travelers Championship, Stallings had a friend go to his house and hunt down an old set of irons he hoped would cure his ailing game. His friend wanted to make sure he shipped the right set, so he overnighted three sets of irons to Stallings at a cost of $400.

One of the sets is what Stallings was looking for. After one so-so round, Stallings became comfortable again with his old faithfuls, a set of Titleist T100s that replaced a newer set of the same brand. His 7-under 64 in Saturday’s third round of the John Deere Classic at TPC Deere Run in Silvis, Illinois, was his sixth consecutive round in the 60s.

More importantly, the round moved him up the leaderboard and into a prime position to win his first PGA Tour title since 2014.

“I think all golfers are certifiably insane to an extent because we know something is good, and there is always kind of the double-edged sword of always trying to get a little bit better. I tried this other set for about a year and went back to it last week and ended up third in approach to the green and I have no idea what I am this week. Feel like I’m doing something right,” said Stallings, who has shot 67-66-64. “Definitely have seen significant improvement in my iron play.

“I had some nice weeks, but just kind of inconsistent through the middle of the bag for me. Nothing is wrong with the way the club is made. It’s just as far as the way I deliver it in there. I think I match up a little bit better with the older ones.

“It’s nice to see that we were correct.”

Stallings’ 64 moved him to 16 under through 54 holes and into second place, three shots behind pace-setter J.T. Poston, who is trying to go wire-to-wire for his second PGA Tour title.

Joining Stallings at 16 under were Emiliano Grillo (65) and Denny McCarthy (66). At 15 under was Callum Tarren (65). At 14 under was Bo Hoag (day-low 63) and Monday qualifier Chris Naegel.

All those atop the leaderboard know Sunday will not be a day of rest. TPC Deere Run has yielded the most birdies on the PGA Tour since 2000, so red numbers and plenty of them will be needed to win the championship hardware.

J.T. Poston hits his tee shot on the 6th hole during the third round of the John Deere Classic golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Marc Lebryk-USA TODAY Sports

Poston, who opened his week with a 62 (he also shot 62 in the first round of last week’s Travelers Championship), held a four-shot lead before he faltered a bit on the back nine with two three-putts. But he eagled 17 to go up by three.

“Obviously the first two days I had everything working great. Hitting it great off the tee, irons, and making a lot of putts,” said Poston, who has posted scores of 62-65-67. “And today wasn’t as sharp tee to green and didn’t putt it as well. To be able to still shoot 4-under, which is still very solid today, that gives me some confidence going into tomorrow. Hopefully hit it better, but if I don’t, I still got the ability to shoot a decent number.”

Stallings didn’t give all the credit to his old irons.

“It’s definitely the player. I mean, as much as I want to think it has to do with the equipment, it’s definitely me and the comfortability being over the top of the ball and being able to go and execute under pressure,” Stallings said. “I have no idea what tomorrow holds. I know that I have some things that I can control and kind of manage expectations, understand, but I showed up here Tuesday morning and told my caddie, if we’re here for anything other than to have a chance to win on Sunday then we don’t need to be here.

“That was kind of my mindset going in. I’ve played a ton of golf going into this week and obviously had a great Sunday last week to kind of build some momentum going in here. Look forward to the opportunity. Today was a big step in the right direction to tomorrow.”

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2022 John Deere Classic odds, field notes, best bets and picks

In a star-less field, who can take advantage of the opportunity?

Before the best players in the world head across the pond for a few weeks of links golf, a field of PGA Tour pros is in Silvis, Illinois, for the John Deere Classic.

Webb Simpson, who’s coming off a tie for 13th at the Travelers Championship, enters the week as the betting favorite at +1300. Adam Hadwin follows him at +1500 while Sahith Theegala, who suffered heartbreak once again, this time in Cromwell, Connecticut, sits at +2000.

Lucas Glover is the defending champion and enters with four straight made cuts, including a T-23 at the PGA Championship.

Let’s take a look at some names to target this week.

Golf course

TPC Deere Run | Par 71 | 7,289 yards

TPC Deere Run
A view of the second hole with the Rock River in the background at TPC Deere Run in Silvis, Illinois. Photo by Brian Spurlock/USA TODAY Sports

Key statistics

Birdies. Players need to make a lot of birdies if they want a shot at contending. The average winning score over the last five playings of the JDC is 21.4 under. So, let’s target players with great par 4 scoring averages and proximity to the hole.

Data Golf Information

Course Fit (compares golf courses based on the degree to which different golfer attributes — such as driving distance — to predict who performs well at each course – DataGolf): 1. The Summit Club, 2. East Lakes Golf Club, 3. Annandale GC

Percent chance to win (based on course history, fit, trending, etc.): 1. Charles Howell III (3.6 percent), 2. Adam Hadwin (3.4 percent), 3. Webb Simpson (3.3 percent)

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Like golf? How about two idiots talking PGA Tour, golf betting and everything in between? Oh, and a lot of laughs along the way. Listen to the Twilight 9 podcast!

LIV additions, Travelers recap, JDC preview:
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Betting preview

Scott Stallings is ‘home’ at U.S. Open: ‘I’m a confused New England redneck. But I can speak both languages’

Stallings was born in Worcester and lived there until he was three years old before his family moved to Tennessee.

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BROOKLINE, Mass. — You would never know by his voice but Scott Stallings is from Massachusetts.

The professional golfer was born in Worcester and lived there until he was three years old before his family moved to Tennessee. That’s where Stallings developed his southern drawl.

“I’m a confused New England redneck. But I can speak both languages,” Stallings, 37, said. “I can roll the Rs, drag the As and I can take 10 minutes to say one sentence. I always say I learned the language from my mom.”

A three-time winner on the PGA Tour, Stallings is in Brookline this week for the 122nd U.S. Open at The Country Club.

“This one means a little bit more…,” Stallings wrote in a note on social media on May 23. “Not often a major championship is played in New England, so to qualify for this in Massachusetts – where I’m from and where a lot of my family still lives … this is special.”

U.S. Open: Photos | Leaderboard | How to watch

Although he’s excited to be back in Boston, the burly golfer says he’s on a business trip. But that mindset didn’t stop him from indulging in Italian food in the North End or discussing the option of jumping on a duck boat with his kids.

“As much as it is exciting to be here and definitely (is) my favorite city, it’s still work. So that’s first and foremost,” Stallings said. “… At the end of the day it’s a golf tournament. There’s 18 holes start to finish. So put your head down and deal with it.”

Last year, Stallings signed a partnership with NOBULL – a footwear, apparel and accessory brand that also sponsors New England Patriots quarterback Mac Jones. During practice rounds this week, an entourage of people wearing NOBULL clothing followed Stallings around.

One of those people was Matt O’Keefe, of Massachusetts. O’Keefe and Stallings became friends four years ago through fitness training.

“He helps me with golf and I help him with fitness,” said O’Keefe, who went to Boston College. “He wouldn’t agree with that, but that’s sort of how we met.”

Scott Stallings plays a shot from the rough onto the fifth green during the first round of the U.S. Open golf tournament. Photo: John David Mercer-USA TODAY Sports

O’Keefe caddied for Stallings for all three of his practice rounds. The two have become close through fitness – and their love of Boston sports.

“I’m so happy for him,” O’Keefe said. “I know this was one of the top goals he had – especially this year but maybe of his career – to come home because how often do you get to play in a major championship in your hometown?”

One hint that Stallings has ties to Boston is his yardage book. On one side is a red ‘B’ Boston Red Sox logo and the other a New England Patriots logo.

On Tuesday, Stallings and his family toured Fenway Park and attended a Sox game. Stallings posted a photo on social media of his wife and two kids sitting in the Green Monster seats with the caption of “Doesn’t get much better” followed by a red heart and baseball emoji.

Two days later, Stallings teed it up on the 10th hole to start his third Open championship.

He began with a bogey on the 500-yard Par 4 before securing two pars. Stallings then bogeyed the 437-yard Par 4 13th hole before he recovered on the next hole with a birdie. Yet Stallings couldn’t get it going after that and carded three more bogeys to finish with a 4-over-par 74.

“Not my best on the course today, but this is a win,” Stallings posted on Instagram following the round as he referenced a picture of a braid he made in his daughter’s hair. “Better tomorrow @usopengolf.”

Scott Stallings plays his shot from the third tee during the first round of the U.S. Open golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: John David Mercer-USA TODAY Sports

In 2019, Stallings missed an Open cut with an 80-74 at Shinnecock Hills while he made the cut in 2013 at Merion Golf Club and finished tied for 53rd. This year, he’s hoping to compete on the weekend.

“You obviously have places throughout your season and career that you tend to focus on and want to be ready for and this has definitely been one of them,” Stallings said. “I did the work to get here. We’re not just here to participate. We’re here to compete.”

“This is going to be a wild weekend and I hope Scott is there to experience it because I think the crowd will get around him being a hometown kid,” O’Keefe said.

Stallings starts his second round on Friday at Hole No. 1 with a 1:14 p.m. tee time.

Tommy Cassell is a senior multimedia journalist for the Daily News. He can be reached at tcassell@wickedlocal.com. Follow him on Twitter @tommycassell44.

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Harold Varner III, Tommy Fleetwood among sleeper picks for the 2022 RBC Heritage

In a surprisingly loaded field, here are some sleeper picks this week at the RBC Heritage.

It’s Masters hangover week, there’s no way around it. However, the field for this week’s RBC Heritage is loaded, especially considering where this event lands on the schedule.

Justin Thomas, Collin Morikawa, Players champion Cameron Smith and Jordan Spieth are just some of the names who have made the short trip from Augusta, Georgia to Hilton Head, South Carolina to take on the Pete Dye-designed Harbour Town Golf Links.

It’s the third consecutive year the tournament has had five or more top-10 players in the field. Not once in the in the previous 18 years did the tournament have five or more top-10 players.

Thomas is the betting favorite at +1200, followed closely by the 2021 Champion Golfer of theYear Morikawa, who is available at +1300.

Further down the odds list, however, there are some big names who offer great value. Let’s start with Tommy lad.

Twilight 9 podcast: Masters recap, RBC Heritage preview

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Justin Thomas, Sam Burns betting favorites heading into weekend at Valspar Championship

Will Thomas win for the first time since the 2021 Players?

Matthew NeSmith played like Tiger Woods in his prime on Friday. Almost every putt he looked at fell in, and at the end of the day he signed for a 10-under 61 which tied the Copperhead course record. He leads the Valspar Championship heading into the weekend at 14 under.

Past champion Adam Hadwin sits two shots back at 12 under, looking for his first win on the PGA Tour since conquering Valspar in 2017 (his lone victory). With him at 12 under is Scott Stallings and last year’s champion Sam Burns.

Justin Thomas is doing Justin Thomas things and sits at 10 under after consecutive 66s.

After rain early in the week, the golf course looks to be drying out, making for perfect conditions over the weekend.

Here is an updated look at how the betting odds stand heading into Saturday in Palm Harbor, Florida.

Valspar: PGA Tour Live on ESPN+

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Gannett may earn revenue from Tipico for audience referrals to betting services. Tipico has no influence over nor are any such revenues in any way dependent on or linked to the newsrooms or news coverage. See Tipico.com for Terms and Conditions. 21+ only. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER (NJ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO).

2022 Valspar Championship weekend betting odds

Player Odds
Justin Thomas (+320)
Sam Burns (+320)
Adam Hadwin (+410)
Matthew NeSmith (+410)
Scott Stallings (+1200)
Xander Schauffele (+1300)
Webb Simpson (+2400)
Louis Oosthuizen (+2500)
Matthew Fitzpatrick (+2600)
Brian Harman (+3900)

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‘Kids play free?’ They do in much of Tennessee thanks to Scott Stallings, who is raising awareness at Valspar

“We have to use our opportunities to influence the game and let people know we are trying to grow the game.”

PALM HARBOR, Fla. – For the second straight year, the Valspar Championship is allowing players to get creative with their name on their caddie bibs. Some are playful such as “Kick me” or “24karat” and others are simply promoting their social media handle or, in the case of Lanto Griffin, trying to make sure his name is pronounced correctly – “It’s Lawn-Toe.”

Then there is Scott Stallings, who saw an opportunity to bring awareness to a cause near and dear to his heart. “Kids Play Free” adorns the bib of his caddie, John Yarbrough, this week. The Scott Stallings Kids Play Free Initiative is a program that Stallings started in his home state of Tennessee with the support of the Tennessee Golf Foundation.

Several years ago, Dick Horton, who retired in 2018 after spending 45 years with the Tennessee Golf Association, asked Stallings how he was going to pay it forward to the junior golfers coming behind him. After much debate, they agreed that time, cost, and accessibility are the three primary barriers keeping more young people from playing.

“Our program is designed to eliminate all three at once,” Stallings said.

The mission is simple: Provide Tennessee’s youth with unrestricted, free access to the game of golf at multiple facilities, 365 days a year.

“All you have to do is physically show up,” Stallings said.

After a soft-opening of the program in 2015 during which 100 free rounds were used, Stallings said the program began in earnest in 2017 at one course. It’s grown beyond that — all kids under the age of 17 can play any of the metro courses in Memphis at Beverly and Concord Park Golf Courses in Knoxville — and more than 10,000 rounds will be played this year. More than 20,000 rounds in all have been played by kids ages 3-17.

“We’ve had 5,000 kids touch a club for the first time,” he said.

Most of the supporting courses typically are owned by municipalities, which means it’s necessary to raise money to underwrite the free rounds and pay the municipalities.

“Scott donates a lot of the money himself and he helps us raise the funds that affect these programs as it spreads across our state,” said Whit Turnbow, president of the Tennessee Golf Foundation.

The program is funded by private donations and fundraisers. Next week, he’s set to host a fundraising whiskey dinner. Stallings also has involved all of his sponsors in this important cause.

Scott Stallings always has Kids Play Free on the side of his golf bag. (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

If Stallings had his way he would have Kids Play Free on the back of his caddie bib every week.

“Absolutely, who cares who I am,” he said. “Golf’s given me more than I deserve, and I’ve got an opportunity to make it better than it was when I got here. If we’re truly going to be ambassadors for the game and try to make the game better, we have to use our opportunities to influence the game and let people know we are trying to grow the game in any way, shape, or form. If putting that on the back of my bib brings awareness to our program in Tennessee so be it.”

With rounds of 65-66 through 36 holes, Stallings is tied for third with defending champion Sam Burns and should get plenty of TV time for his caddie bib. Turnbow already reached out to Yarbrough with one request.

“Whatever you do, don’t turn in that bib,” Turnbow said. “We’re going to put it in our Tennessee Hall of Fame.”

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A beautiful mind: Remember Hunter Stewart? He went from top amateur to top number cruncher for PGA Tour pros

“There’s not many stats guys that were No. 1 in the world as an amateur.”

LA QUINTA, Calif. — Scott Stallings isn’t a numbers guy, but when he saw PGA Tour rookies Harry Higgs, Maverick McNealy and Robby Shelton qualify for the 2019 BMW Championship by finishing in the top 70 in the FedEx Cup and he didn’t yet again, Stallings realized those three players shared one common trait: a stats coach.

“I need to know what you did with them that’s going to help me,” Stallings told the man behind the curtain.

Hunter Stewart smiles when this story about how Stallings became one of his clients is relayed to him and says simply, “Scott was pushing it when he shouldn’t and not pushing it when he should.”

To Stallings, who is in his 12th year on Tour, it’s easy to fall into a rut of doing the same things over and over – such as missing the cut at the Fortinet Championship at Silverado Resort’s North Course. That’s before he hooked up with Stewart, who changed how Stallings approached four of the holes, specifically off the tee. 

“When I tell him, ‘Hey man, I hate this hole,’ he says, ‘OK, let’s play around it. Let’s pick our spots to be aggressive.’ At those opportunities, he says, ‘OK, gas pedal is on the right,’ ” says Stallings, who finished T-6 at Napa in September and earned $220,600. “My bread and butter is 150-175 yards and he said, ‘Let’s shoot your best weapon the most times. I’m going to try to give you four more 9-irons a day based on the hole locations,’ and he did. ”

And then Stallings adds this kicker that is as indisputable as some of the information Stewart digs up: “You know what I like about him? There’s not many stats guys that were No. 1 in the world as an amateur.”

A force in amateur, college ranks

If the name Hunter Stewart rings a bell, it should to Golfweek readers. Stewart, 28, was a force to be reckoned with on the amateur and college circuit. He became the first player from Vanderbilt to be chosen Southeastern Conference Player of the Year in 2015, winning three individual titles his senior season. After claiming the Northeast Amateur that summer, he rose to No. 1 in the Scratch Players World Amateur Ranking. 

“I don’t think anyone deserved to be No. 1 over me at that time,” Stewart says. “I didn’t think anyone was really better than me in amateur golf.” 

Before turning pro, he went undefeated at the Palmer Cup and earned a spot on the 2015 U.S. Walker Cup team, where his teammates included Bryson DeChambeau, Denny McCarthy and McNealy, all of whom have banked millions on the PGA Tour, including DeChambeau, who won the 2020 U.S. Open.

Vanderbilt senior Hunter Stewart took medalist honors at the season-opening Carmel Cup in 2014.

Stewart made eight starts during the 2015-16 PGA Tour season after turning pro, including a T-10 finish at the OHL Classic at Mayakoba. He seemed to be making a quick adjustment to the play-for-pay ranks, pocketing $137,433 for a week’s work.

“I loved the rush of playing in front of crowds on the PGA Tour,” he says.

But it was a start at the 2016 Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines, where he shot 73-78 and missed the cut, that left the most indelible impression. 

“I just remember Monday morning (during a practice round) and pulling a drive and having a 6-iron out of U.S. Open rough and thinking, I’m not so sure about this one,” Stewart says. “And that wasn’t even a long hole.”

He began retooling his unorthodox swing in an attempt to hit it farther and higher, a skill set shared by the golfers collecting the most trophies and the biggest checks. He succeeded in adding speed, but he became crooked off the tee. 

“Before long he lost touch where home base was,” says Scott Limbaugh, Stewart’s coach at Vanderbilt.

Hunter Stewart
Hunter Stewart gleans information from ShotLink data that he hopes will help PGA Tour pros gain at least a stroke per event. (Photo: Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports).

In December 2017, Stewart was involved in a skiing accident in Colorado and damaged cartilage in his right knee. He wasn’t able to turn through the ball in the same way and lost clubhead speed. He played PGA Tour Canada for three seasons, earning a total of $72,000, and kept failing at Q-Schools for the Korn Ferry Tour and European Tour. 

“I just couldn’t get off that tour,” he says of the Canadian developmental circuit, the equivalent of Double A baseball. “My game was stale. It got to the point that I showed up at the first event of the season and I couldn’t get motivated.

“In college I found a way, and as a pro I did not,” he says matter-of-factly.

He played two Korn Ferry Tour events in 2019 and received a sponsor exemption into the Barbasol Championship, a PGA Tour opposite-field event played two miles down the road from where he grew up in Lexington, Kentucky, but missed the cut. Stewart concedes he didn’t handle the setbacks well.

“If there is anything I do regret it would be I felt too sorry for myself when I didn’t get it done,” he says. “Instead of being inspired to work harder I definitely sulked too long. That’s not a fun thing to say but it’s the truth.”

Stewart took a hard look in the mirror and knew it was time to find another way to earn a living. An economics major at Vanderbilt, he could have put his degree to use in a variety of ways, but he still wanted to be around the energy of golf at the highest level.

“I love racing, and PGA Tour pros are like really fast cars,” Stewart says. “If I can’t drive really fast, then I want to be on a team that is going fast.” 

So he combined two things he was good at: golf and the strategy side of the game. To Coach Limbaugh, who considered Stewart an extension of his coaching staff during his time as a student-athlete, this came as no surprise. 

“He’s got as high of a golf IQ as anyone I’ve ever been around,” says Limbaugh, who is in his 18th year coaching.

This is a golden age for golf analytics – “Money Ball” for golf – and a cottage industry has formed around it. But as Stallings noted, there hadn’t been a player of Stewart’s caliber to exploit this new arena.

“I have a lot of friends that went into strategy consulting and work for Deloitte and Bain and worked at private equity firms analyzing billion-dollar companies,” Stewart says. “I view myself as a one-man Deloitte for PGA Tour players.”

To see if he could gain traction, Stewart offered his services for free to a few players with a simple sales pitch: What if I could save you a shot a tournament? 

He received enough positive responses that he decided to carve his own niche at the highest level of the professional game. And that’s how he happened to be at the Greenbrier in West Virginia for the kickoff tournament of the 2019-20 Tour season.

Walker Cup 2015
Hunter Stewart (left) and Maverick McNealy of the United States Walker Cup Team at Royal Lytham and St Annes Golf Club in England. (Photo: Clint Hughes/Getty Images)

Not even Mark Broadie, who studies financial markets and has taught at the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University since 1983, could have imagined that “stats guys,” who parse statistics to create better training plans and arm golfers with game plans for each week, would become as important to tour pros as swing instructors and fitness trainers. 

Broadie’s contributions to the language of golf can be heard every time an announcer mentions “strokes gained,” Broadie’s statistical innovation that had its debut in 2011 and was quickly accepted as the most accurate way to measure overall performance on the PGA Tour. Broadie even penned a popular book titled, “Every Shot Counts,” which struck a chord with Stewart.

“Mark Broadie has been the biggest influence on what I do,” says Stewart, giving credit where credit is due to “the Godfather of golf stats.”

Broadie’s statistical approach allowed a golfer to more effectively understand where he gained or lost ground on the leaderboard. And with that math-based approach came new insights on how to attack a course.

“There’s a strategy to everything I do out here,” says Brandt Snedeker. “It’s like a hand of blackjack. The odds change after every shot.”

Snedeker, a fellow Vanderbilt grad, was the first Tour pro to hire someone to crunch his numbers. On the eve of the 2011 RBC Heritage, a numbers whiz nicknamed The Accountant approached Snedeker on the practice green and predicted he would win that week. Snedeker shrugged off the comment until he hoisted the trophy after beating Luke Donald in a playoff. Then he found the numbers ace, Mark Horton, a retired executive for the British grocer Tesco, and demanded to know what was his secret sauce. 

“I said, ‘Explain it to me like I’m an infant.’ He used data and analytics to prove why he thought I’d win at Harbour Town,” Snedeker recalls. “I thought, ‘Why am I not doing this?’ ”

Horton developed a system for mining the data collected every week on ShotLink, the PGA Tour’s real-time scoring system that uses sophisticated devices to track every shot. That data can reveal a player’s strengths and weaknesses, provide structure to practices and evaluate how
a player’s game stacks up with a particular Tour venue.

The first year Snedeker hired Horton to be a full-time analyst, his earnings jumped from $1,602,690 in 2010 to $3,587,206 in 2011. In 2012 he had official earnings of $4,989,739, including his victory in the Tour Championship. On top of that, he cashed a $10 million bonus for winning the FedEx Cup. Horton achieved a similar feat in 2014 with Billy Horschel. Other stats guys soon followed, though few are able to make a full-time living doing it.

Could Stewart be one of the few to do so in this budding business?

‘I loved his approach’

Maverick McNealy remembers the U.S. Walker Cup practice sessions at Frederica in St. Simons Island, Georgia, in the fall of 2014. “The first time I played with Hunter, I laughed so hard my stomach hurt,” he says. “… I loved his approach to the game, his demeanor and how he worked hard but managed to keep it light.” 

McNealy and Stewart paired together in a foursome match as Great Britain and Ireland trounced the U.S. at home by the score of 16½ to 9½. A bond was formed, but the teammates didn’t stay in touch after they turned pro. Which explains McNealy’s response when he bumped into Stewart at the Monday pro-am at Greenbrier ahead of his first event as a card-carrying member of the PGA Tour. “What are you doing here?” he asked. Stewart was there on behalf of their fellow Walker Cup teammate Robby Shelton. Stewart sat down and showed McNealy how he planned to help Shelton save a stroke.

“I was blown away,” McNealy recalls. “I was all in from the start.” 

Hunter Stewart
Hunter Stewart (middle) works with Maverick McNealy during a practice round at Torrey Pines ahead of the 2022 Farmers Insurance Open. (Photo: Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports)

McNealy was an obvious candidate for Stewart to aid. After all, McNealy tracked his own strokes gained data in college, seeking any edge on the field he could find. 

“Mav is driven from the data side. He always wants to know why,” says Travis McCallister, McNealy’s caddie. 

Take, for instance, at the 2020 Rocket Mortgage Classic in Detroit, where Stewart’s statistical knowledge helped McNealy make birdie to a front left pin on the par-4 12th on Sunday. 

“He said there was a very low make rate from the quadrant to this pin. I hit a couple putts and noticed a subtle slope that I hadn’t before. I knew what the putt does, changed my read by about half a ball and drilled it dead center and ended up finishing eighth,” McNealy says. “That’s a putt I wouldn’t have made if we hadn’t practiced it.”

To those who may look at Stewart and think, ‘Didn’t he give up on his own dream too soon?’, McNealy counters: “The next option for him is such a good option. …I don’t see him moving away from playing as quitting. I see it as him acting on an opportunity and exploiting it.” 

McNealy knows it is no accident that his game has been trending in the right direction and his runner-up finish at the Fortinet Championship suggests it’s only a matter of time before he claims his first Tour title. Just how much McNealy values Stewart’s contribution may have been best summed up when he adds: “I don’t want him to work with too many other players because I want this advantage for myself.”

Hunter Stewart

Hunter Stewart works with Maverick McNealy during a practice round at Torrey Pines ahead of the 2022 Farmers Insurance Open. (Photo: Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports)

So far, Stewart has a modest stable of players. McNealy and Stallings are his show ponies, but he also works with Matthew NeSmith and recently began a relationship with Tyler Duncan. There are also players on different tiers, such as Vince Whaley, who enjoyed a run of 10 made cuts in a row last season and who utilizes Stewart’s packets that break down how to play a tournament course. 

Stewart attended 27 Tour events in 2021, walking individual practice rounds and roughly 30,000 steps a day with McNealy and others. Once the tournament begins, he catches a flight home and is glued to ShotTracker to glean more information. He complains that TV doesn’t show his players enough. He does most of his prep work at home, generating tournament reports several weeks in advance and assembling 10-12 statistical plays throughout the week based on each of his client’s unique skill sets. 

“I’m just using history to predict the future,” he says. “I’m just saying that
guys who hit it over here, whether intentionally or not, here’s what happens versus over there. There’s a lot of information out there.”

Stewart produces a PowerPoint presentation, giving every hole of that week’s tournament its own slide. Off the tee, he may suggest opting for a club other than driver should there be a significant difference between scoring averages from the right and left rough. When the pin sheet comes out the night before the round, he will send an update. He also produces a tournament recap on Monday, which has a dual purpose. He also views it as an invitation to dig deeper.

“The guys who ask better questions will get better answers,” he says.

NeSmith started working with Stewart last summer. The two grew up playing junior and amateur golf against each other and NeSmith hired him in part because Stewart knows what his game used to look like, where he’s shown improvement, and where he still needs to get better.

“I watch F1 racing and all the drivers have a plan,” NeSmith says. “I didn’t have a strategy based on data on how I should play the course or how I’ve played the course in the past. He has data going back several years. It makes it like I’ve played these courses for 10-15-20 years.”

Stewart uncovered some valuable trends in NeSmith’s data that helped him better understand his tendencies: If he makes a bogey before a birdie, his scoring average is a shot and half to two shots higher. And this: If he makes his first bogey after the fifth hole, it’s usually from taking too aggressive a line and being short-sided.

And Stewart has developed a reputation for being blunt with his students. NeSmith’s strength is his irons, and he recalls Stewart telling him, “The problem is you drive it like garbage.”

“I was like, ‘You’re right but you didn’t have to put it like that,” NeSmith says.

“He’s backing up what he says with facts,” Limbaugh says. “Here’s who you are. It’s not what I think, it’s what I know. When you can come to guys at that level with that kind of knowledge it’s pretty powerful.”

Hunter Stewart (right) poses for a photograph with Maverick McNealy and caddie Travis McAllister at Torrey Pines ahead of the 2022 Farmers Insurance Open. (Photo: Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports).

“You’re crazy if you don’t have someone like Hunter,” says swing instructor Scott Hamilton, whose students include Stallings and Whaley. “For a guy like me, he’s telling me where my player needs to get better. I’m like, ‘Alright, let’s go work on that instead of sitting out here trying to hit perfect 4-irons for an hour when you hit three of them a tournament.’ I really enjoy it because I feel like I’m really doing something for a guy rather than just calibrating them to hit a straight shot.”

Hamilton also recalled that by analyzing Whaley’s ShotLink data, Stewart has been able to detect equipment variables, including a shot pattern for Whaley that defied explanation between 150-175 yards. Stewart suggested checking his 8- and 9-irons. It turned out Whaley’s 9-iron was 1-degree flat and 2-degrees strong. 

Stewart is the first to admit that there’s “nothing sexy” about what he’s doing. 

“I’m not going to say I’m the best at math, because I’m not. I’m not going to say I can code, because I can’t. But the questions that I ask players lead to a discussion that then leads to useful information that will change the way they play the game,” he says. “That’s a lot of the time where the best fruit is. That would never come from someone who can only do data crunching because they don’t know what it’s like to be between a 6- and a 7-iron and need to make a decision. I know what’s going on in the back of their minds.”

But Broadie contends that Stewart is likely an outlier, a golfer that also has a beautiful mind, and that data analytics for golf isn’t a burgeoning second career for former pro golf dropouts.

“If you’re just a former player with no data science skills, I’d be skeptical,” Broadie says.

In five years, how many card-carrying members of the Tour will have someone like Stewart on their payroll? Stewart guesses it already is more than many fans might suspect. 

“Probably half,” he answers. “I never plan to send my stuff en masse. It’s not fair to the guys I work with.”

And what about a comeback? Stewart, after all, is only 28. Couldn’t he use his own information to jump-start his career?

“You’re never going to turn a nickel steak into a prime ribeye,” he jokes. But he does get asked this question all the time. He says he played just six rounds in 2021, including a member-guest at Peachtree Country Club in Atlanta, where he showed he still has game.

“The caddie was asking me if I was nervous. I told him, ‘Shop credit doesn’t move my needle,’ ” says Stewart. “Sure, I’d be lying if I said I didn’t want to be successful out here, but seeing what some of those guys I played Walker Cup with were good at and what I was at that time it makes a lot more sense why I’m standing where I am and they’re where they are. Bottom line: I don’t have an itch to do it.”

But there could be a return-to-golf scenario equally appealing. He has regained his amateur status, and there is an event that he concedes could move his meter: the 2025 Walker Cup at Cypress Point.  

Until then, the one-man Deloitte for PGA Tour players will keep crunching
their numbers.

Correction: Keith Mitchell does not work with Hunter Stewart. An earlier version of this story said Mitchell worked with Stewart, but Mitchell works with Scott Fawcett. 

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Sebastian Munoz shoots 60 on day when you had to ‘step on the pedal early’ at RSM Classic

Sebastian Munoz made eight birdies and an eagle en route to shooting 60 as several pros flirted with 59.

ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. – Sebastian Muñoz didn’t see any reason to hit the range after his opening round at the RSM Classic. And why would he? The 28-year-old Muñoz went out in 30 and came home in 30 to shoot a career-best 10-under 60 at the Seaside Course at Sea Island Resort.

So how exactly will Muñoz pass the time?

“I’m just going to get lost in video games and wait for tomorrow,” he said.

The Colombia native played something that resembled video golf, making four birdies in a five-hole stretch starting at No. 5 and a 9-foot eagle at 15. His round included three deuces and no score higher than 4 on the card, something he said he always strives for dating to his college days.

“That’s when I know I play my best, when I don’t make a 5,” he said.

His 10-foot birdie putt for a 3 at 18 meant he tied the course record.

“Really? I didn’t know that,” Muñoz said. “I knew I was hitting it good, and I just let it happen.”

Muñoz leads by one over Zach Johnson, who shot 9-under 61 at the par-70 Seaside Course, and Mackenzie Hughes, Scott Stallings and Chez Reavie, who shot 9-under 63 at Seaside’s sister course, the par-72 Plantation. It’s Muñoz’s sixth career 18-hole lead or co-lead on Tour, but he’s winless in the previous five events.

Benign conditions made it a day for record-low scoring. The scoring average of 66.308 at Seaside Course was the second-lowest scoring average on a single course in a single round on Tour since 1983. (The lowest was 66.28 at Indian Wells Golf Club at The American Express in 2003.) As a result, the ‘59 Watch’ started early, with Hughes, Corey Conners and Johnson all flirting with 50’s.

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“I was watching the board, watching all my buddies, and then all of a sudden you see 7 under, like holy cow, we’ve only played nine holes,” said Davis Love III, the tournament host who grew up at Sea Island and renovated the Plantation Course two years ago. “You know they’re going to go low on a day like this on any golf course no matter where it is. You give guys no wind and good greens, they’re going to shoot low scores.”

“I was honestly surprised someone didn’t shoot lower,” Stallings said. “Like to be honest, I was surprised someone didn’t shoot in the 50s.”

Johnson, who is one of the local residents in the field, didn’t look at the leaderboard until the 15th green and that was by accident.

“I birdied that hole and I was like, I’m 8 under at T-4?” said Johnson, whose threesome combined to shoot 19 under without a single bogey.

But the weather forecast for the remainder of the week is calling for cooler, windier conditions, and scoring should rise as the temperature falls.

“When it’s windy, which it usually is windy, you’ve got to pucker up and hit some good shots,” Johnson said of the two Sea Island courses. “Today is the anomaly. Today is the Chamber of Commerce. You knew you had to get after it.”

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Scott Stallings withdraws from Barbasol Championship

Scott Stallings withdraws from Barbasol Championship.

The Barbasol Championship is taking place Jul 15–18 at Keene Trace Golf Club (Champion Trace Course) in Nicholasville, Kentucky.

Local East Tennessee PGA Tour golfer Scott Stallings has withdrawn from the 2021 Barbasol Championship.

From Oak Ridge High School in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, Stallings played collegiately at Tennessee Tech.

Stallings has appeared in 282 career PGA Tour events. He turned professional in 2011.

Stallings has three career victories: 2011 The Greenbrier Classic, 2012 True South Classic, 2014 Farmers Insurance Open.

The East Tennessee native has recorded 23 top-10 and 56 top-25 finishes during his career. He has made the cut 147 times.

Stallings has recorded two top-10 and four top-25 finishes in 2021. He has made 13 cuts in 23 events played this season.

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