Low scoring pushes Lee Hodges, Paul Barjon to American Express lead heading into final round

Tom Hoge and Seamus Power know they may have let a better chance at winning the tournament slip away.

Tom Hoge and Seamus Power have played well enough through three rounds of The American Express to be among the leaders at the tournament. But both Hoge and Power know they may have let a better chance at winning the tournament slip away Saturday afternoon.

“I would have liked a few more for sure, but there were quite a few tough holes out there,” Hoge said after a 4-under 68 that included just one birdie and no bogeys in his final 11 holes. “A couple tough par-3 that we had to deal with, a few tough tee shots, and there’s just enough wind and it’s moving around just enough that it was kind of tough to get the right yardage on all the approach shots coming in.”

With Hoge leading at 17 under and Power at 16 under in the clubhouse, they could only watch as Paul Barjon and Lee Hodges shot low scores on the tougher Pete Dye Stadium Course at PGA West on a breezy day to pass them up.

Playing together in the last group of the day at the Stadium Course, Hodges regained a share of the lead he had in the first round with an 8-under 64. Barjon shot 65, and the pair finished the day at 18-under 198. Hoge is alone in third at 199.

“It was tough early and (the wind) kind of died on our back nine a little bit,” said Hodges, who played his final nine holes in 6 under. “It was off and on, but it was a good wind for, like the easy holes were playing a little easier but the hard holes were hard. So you just had to make a couple pars and then get to those downwind holes.”

More: American Express: Let’s get to know the unfamiliar names atop leader board

Hodges opened the tournament with a 62 at La Quinta, but was hitting the ball just as well Saturday, he said.

“It was a great day. Hit the ball really well. I know it was really nice to see some putts fall on that back nine,” Hodges said. “I made three nice putts in a row there from like 10 to 12. And then just kind of really hit some quality shots coming in to give myself some easy birdies.”

Playing side by side with Hodges, who is ranked 312th in the world to Barjon’s 313th, Barjon played the final nine holes Saturday in 4 under to get a share of the lead. A rookie on the PGA Tour, Barjon is looking for his first win on tour, as are six of the top 10 players on the leader board. Barjon also played his way into the final threesome Sunday, where he will play with Hodges for the fourth consecutive day.

Paul Barjon plays his shot from the ninth tee during the third round of the American Express golf tournament at Peter Dye Stadium Course. Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports

“It was great playing with Lee again for the third day. He played really good the first day, really kind of set the tone by making pretty much everything he looked at on the green,” Barjon said. “So that’s always good to see and just kind of get inspired by that and trying to make as many putts as we could the last three days and we made quite a few. So we’re going to try to keep it going tomorrow.”

The tricky back nine at La Quinta Country Club and trickier winds that hit the tournament Saturday prevented Hoge and Power from separating themselves from the field late in the day.

Taking advantage of the early scoring holes on the front nine at La Quinta, Hoge was 4 under through seven holes Saturday and Power was 6 under through six holes. But Hoge was just 1 under in his closing 11 holes and Power was even through his last final 12 holes to finish at 16 under and alone in fourth place.

“It was an interesting round. It was very fun on the front there,” Power said. “It was one of those rounds you just kind of made everything I looked at for an hour and a half. But, yeah, had a little bit of a hiccup there, three-putted 9 from really nowhere at all and didn’t take advantage of 11 or 13.”

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That allowed other golfers playing on the tougher Pete Dye Stadium Course at PGA West to stay in touch with the leaders. Six golfers, including 2017 American Express champion Hudson Swafford and former British Open champion Francesco Molinari, are at 15 under with one round to play. The others are Harold Varner III, Harry Higgs, Lanto Griffin and Cameron Young.

Some of the biggest names in the field failed to take advantage of the relatively high scoring among the leaders at La Quinta. Patrick Cantlay, who led the second round at 14 under, finished at that number with an even-par round on the Stadium Course. World No. 1 Jon Rahm did shoot a 67 at the Stadium Course, but he is 13 under and within striking distance of less-experienced players.

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American Express: Let’s get to know the unfamiliar names atop leaderboard

The top 10 players heading into the final day include six players looking for their first-ever PGA Tour victory.

With one round remaining in the 2022 American Express golf tournament, the leaderboard includes a lot of names that are probably new to even avid golf fans.

That’s okay, and not altogether surprising. Six of the last 15 champions here had never won a PGA event before a victory in the desert.

So with that in mind, here is everything you need to know about the contenders at the top of the leaderboard. There are 10 players at 15-under or better.

Of this group, there is one major champion, one former champion in the desert, three international players, three players playing this event for the first time, and six players looking for their first career PGA Tour win.

Paul Barjon (-18)

Age: 29

From: Born in Bordeaux, France; resides in Fort Worth, Texas

College: TCU

Number of PGA Tour wins: Zero

Best finish at this event: First appearance

Current World Golf Ranking: 313

Notable: With a win, Barjon would be the seventh international winner in the tournament’s 62-year history. It marks the first time the desert’s golf tournament would have back-to-back international winners as Si Woo Kim of South Korea won last year.

Lee Hodges (-18)

Age: 26

From: Born in Huntsville, Alabama, resides in Athens, Alabama

College: UAB and Alabama

Number of PGA Tour wins: Zero

Best finish at this event: First appearance

Current World Golf Ranking: 312

Notable: Hodges is from an athletic family. His cousin, Logan Stenberg, is an offensive lineman in the NFL for the Detroit Lions (as of 2021).

Tom Hoge (-17)

Tom Hoge tees off on hole one during the third round of The American Express at the La Quinta Country Club in La Quinta, Calif., Saturday, Jan. 22, 2022.

Age: 32

From: North Carolina, but resides in Fargo, North Dakota

College: TCU

Number of PGA Tour wins: Zero

Best finish at this event: Tied for 6th in 2020

Current World Golf Ranking: 115

Notable: For starters, his name is pronounced exactly like the word Hoagie. This is the seventh time Hoge has played here and he missed the cut, four of the previous six, so this effort on these courses is a bit of a surprise.

Seamus Power (-16)

Age: 34

From: Tooraneena, County Waterford, Ireland

College: East Tennessee State

Number of PGA Tour wins: 1 (2021 Barbasol Championship)

Best finish at this event: Tie for 11th in 2018

Current World Golf Ranking: 49

Notable: Power won the Barbasol event last year on the sixth playoff hole over J.T. Poston. In doing so, he became the fifth player from the Republic of Ireland to win a PGA event, joining Pat Doyle, Peter O’Hara, Padraig Harrington, and Shane Lowry.

Lanto Griffin (-15)

Age: 33

From: Born in Mount Shasta, California, resides in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida

College: VCU

Number of PGA Tour wins: 1 (2019 Houston Open)

Best finish at this event: Played twice and missed cut both times

Current World Golf Ranking: 117

Notable: Once on the Web.com Tour, Griffin won an event after making the cut on the number, the only time that has ever happened on that tour.

Harry Higgs (-15)

Harry Higgs tees off on the 13th hole of the Pete Dye Stadium Course at PGA West during the American Express in La Quinta, Calif., on Saturday, Jan. 22, 2022.

Age: 30

From: Born in Camden, New Jersey, lives in Dallas, Texas

College: SMU

Number of PGA Tour wins: Zero

Best finish at this event: Played here once (2020) and missed the cut

Current World Golf Ranking: 141

Notable: He’s not nervous when the bright lights are on. Higgs has only played in one major tournament in his career, the 2021 PGA Championship, and he finished tied for fourth.

Hudson Swafford (-15)

Age: 34

From: Born in Tallahassee, Florida; resides in Sea Island, Georgia

College: University of Georgia

Number of PGA Tour wins: Two (2017 CareerBuilder Challenge, 2020 Puerto Rico Championship)

Best finish at this event: Winner in 2017

Current World Golf Ranking: 166

Notable: Hudson Swafford won this event in 2017, notably edging out Adam Hadwin, whose week included a 59 at La Quinta Country Club.

Cameron Young (-15)

Age: 24

From: Born in Scarborough, New York; resides in Jupiter, Florida

College: Wake Forest

Number of PGA Tour wins: Zero

Best finish at this event: First appearance

Current World Golf Ranking: 134

Notable: Cameron Young is the only player currently on the PGA Tour whose last name begins with a Y.

Francesco Molinari (-15)

Francesco Molinari of Italy walks on the 14th hole during the third round of The American Express at the Stadium Course at PGA West on January 22, 2022, in La Quinta, California. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images)

Age: 39

From: Born and lives in Turin, Italy

College: University of Turin

Number of PGA Tour wins: Three (2018 Quicken Loans, 2018 British Open, 2019 Arnold Palmer Invitational)

Best finish at this event: Tied for 10th in 2015

Current World Golf Ranking: 249

Notable: Molinari is one of 13 major champions in the field at The American Express this week. He won the 2018 British Open, outlasting a star-studded group of chasers that included Rory McIlroy, Justin Rose, and Xander Schauffele.

Harold Varner III (-15)

Age: 31

From: Born in Akron, Ohio; resides in Charlotte, North Carolina

College: East Carolina

Number of PGA Tour wins: Zero

Best finish at this event: Tied for 18th in 2019

Current World Golf Ranking: 95

Notable: Varner does not have a PGA Tour win, but he does have a win on the European Tour. He won the Australian PGA Championship in 2016.

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2022 American Express fantasy golf power rankings, odds, and picks

Jon Rahm highlights a stacked field in the desert. We have a list of players to target in fantasy.

After two weeks in Hawaii, the PGA Tour is back on the U.S. mainland. The boys are headed to the California desert for the American Express, a tournament hosted by the coffee-drinking stallion, Phil Mickelson.

One thing that won’t change this week: the amount of birdies.

After two events in a row that produced 34 and 23 under winners, expect the same again.

World No. 1 Jon Rahm, whose last appearance was the Sentry Tournament of Champions (runner-up to Cameron Smith), is in the field as a past champion of the AmEx (2018) and the betting favorite (+550).

Three courses will be used throughout the week, with PGA West Stadium Course hosting the final round after a 54-hole cut.

Odds provided by Tipico Sportsbook; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds a full list.

Fantasy golf top 10

Jon Rahm (+550)

Sentry Tournament of Champions 2021
Jon Rahm plays a second shot on the fourth hole during the third round of the Sentry Tournament of Champions at the Plantation Course at Kapalua Golf Club on January 8, 2022 in Lahaina, Hawaii. (Photo by Cliff Hawkins/Getty Images)

This is a chalk pick, no way around that. But it’s impossible to ignore what this man is doing right now. Every time he tees it up he’s near the top of the leaderboard with a chance to win. He’ll be expensive in lineups, but if you can afford him he’ll be worth it.

Patrick Cantlay (+900)

Another chalk pick, but another guy absolutely golfing his ball. He shot 61 in the final round here last season, nearly stealing the win from Si-Woo Kim. Cantlay is coming off a top-5 finish at the Sentry.

Scottie Scheffler (+2000)

The Texan is still looking for his first PGA Tour win, and this may be a great spot to grab it. Scheffler finished third here in 2020 and is coming off a fantastic fall season. Watch out for the Ryder-Cupper.

Russell Henley (+3000)

After having him for a top 20 and outright win last week, only feels right to come back to him. It hurt the soul to see him once again stumble down the back-nine at the Sony, but it’s easy to see he’s playing great golf.

Abraham Ancer (+3000)

Honest Abe is coming off a couple tough weeks in a row. After nearly coming in last at the Sentry TOC, Ancer missed the cut at the Sony Open. However, he loves it in the desert: in the last three seasons, Ancer owns the lowest cumulative score at the American Express.

Matthew Wolff (+3000)

Mathew Wolff celebrates after hitting a hole-in-one on the par-3 ninth hole during the final round of the Houston Open. (Photo: Thomas Shea-USA TODAY Sports)

Whenever there’s going to be a lot of birdies needed to win, it’s tough not to look Wolff’s way. He’s 11th on Tour in birdie average and first in scoring average.

Will Zalatoris (+5000)

This will be the PGA Tour Rookie of the Year’s first start of 2022. The ball-striking machine should work his way around the three tracks with ease, but it’ll all come down to the flat stick. Can he put the yips away and make some putts?

Seamus Power (+3000)

The Irishman is coming off two solid weeks in Hawaii, T-15 and T-3, and is off to a fantastic start to the new season. In eight starts, Power has six finishes of T-21 or better (that includes five top 15s).

Tony Finau (+2000)

The big man likes himself some desert golf. Finished solo fourth last season and tied for 14th in 2020. In Maui he played decently, eventually tying for 19th.

Si-Woo Kim (+5000)

Tough not to put the defending champion on the list. Kim is coming off two mediocre performances on the islands, but if he’s able to get the putting going, watch out for the South Korean.

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RSM Classic: Talor Gooch, leads by 3, seeks to prove he can close the deal on Sunday

Talor Gooch is in unfamiliar territory, holding his first 54-hole lead as he seeks his maiden victory at the RSM Classic.

ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. – Talor Gooch is 18 holes away from achieving a lifetime dream of winning on the PGA Tour. He fired a 3-under 67 on Saturday to build a three-stroke lead heading into the final round of the RSM Classic at Sea Island Golf Club. The question remains: Will he be able to handle the pressure?

To hear Gooch tell it, he thrives in moments like this. On Sunday, if he gets in a tough spot, he’ll flash back to the second stage of PGA Tour Q-School in 2016. Playing at TPC Craig Ranch, his third trip to the grueling multi-stage process to earn playing privileges, Gooch, whose bank account had just about been depleted, entered the third round on the number.

“I was 3 over through four walking off the par 3 and I thought to myself, I don’t know why this came up, but Best Buy, ‘I’m going to have to go work at Best Buy, I’m going to have to go do something to make a few bucks unless you like get it together,’” Gooch recalled. “Yeah, I think just as a sportsman, if you don’t have that little bit of grit to go prove people wrong, you’re not going to make it.”

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Gooch showed plenty of grit on Saturday. It was a chilly, windy day that was better suited for sipping a cup of hot cocoa, or something stronger, and curling up with a book around a log fire. When Tom Hoge, who shot 3-under 67 on Saturday, was asked what he was most satisfied with from his day, he answered, “That we finished and we’re in a warm building here.”

Gooch rolled in two birdies on the front nine and led by as many as three strokes, but Sebastian Munoz tied him for the lead with birdies at Nos. 7 and 9 and a bogey at 10 by Gooch. A three-putt from 19 feet at the par-3 12th slowed Munoz’s momentum – his second bogey in a row – but he birdied 15 to finish at 13 under and is tied for second.

“On 12 Talor gave me a good line and I just wanted to bury it like in front of him and I got a little greedy, got myself like a six-footer coming back and I missed it,” Munoz said.

Ireland’s Seamus Power, who knows a thing or two about playing in the wind, also shared the lead briefly with Gooch on the back nine. He chipped in for eagle at the par-5 15th and signed for a 3-under 67 to share second with Munoz.

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“It was a pretty straightforward shot, but obviously with the wind nothing is that easy,” Power said of his eagle chip in. Power noted that he has lived in the U.S. for 15 years and made it sound like he had become just another Irishman who had sought warmer climes and whose blood has thinned.

“I’ve gotten kind of like pick and choosy with my weather,” he said.

Every time someone mounted a charge to catch Gooch, he had an answer. Gooch made birdies on two of the last four holes to give himself his first 54-hole lead. For the week, he leads the field in Strokes Gained: Around the Green and ranks fifth in Strokes Gained: Tee to Green. It’s a continuation of strong play for Gooch, who has shown steady progress since turning pro and has been knocking on the door all fall to earn his first PGA Tour title.

“Over the last two months, I have a hard time thinking anyone is hitting the ball any better,” said Gooch’s swing instructor Boyd Summerhays.

Gooch’s stinger drive, a product of his upbringing in Oklahoma, has been a weapon in the wind. Sunday, A.K.A. payday, is a different day, and Gooch always has been the pursuer rather than the pursued in the trophy hunt. Power finally broke the victory seal a few months ago at the Barbasol Championship and already booked his ticket for the Sentry Tournament of Champions, while Sebastian Munoz last won at the Sanderson Farms Championship in 2018. Gooch said he’s ready for the pressure of trying to close out his first win in his 104th Tour start.

“If you don’t enjoy pressure, you’re in the wrong sport, you know,” he said. “I’ve been fortunate since I’ve been five years old to have a group of buddies that when we’re together we’re always competing at something, we’re always doing something to put some pressure and try to break each other basically. So, it’s just what I’ve always known is just try to enjoy the pressure and try to prove people wrong.”

Gooch expects to hear from his five buddies tonight in some form or another. What will they discuss? Likely, their golf buddies trip, which is always scheduled for the first week of January in Scottsdale, Arizona. That happens to be the same week as the PGA Tour’s next tournament at Kapalua in Maui, and reserved for winners only.

“I’m hopeful that we’re going to have to adjust that,” he said. “So that’s what will be talked about.”

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Winner’s Bag: Seamus Power, 2021 Barbasol Championship

See a complete list of the golf equipment Seamus Power used to win the PGA Tour’s 2021 Barbasol Championship

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A complete list of the golf equipment Seamus Power used to win the PGA Tour’s 2021 Barbasol Championship:

DRIVER: Ping G410 LST (9 degrees), with Accra Tour Z shaft (From $297 at carlsgolfland.com)

FAIRWAY WOOD: Ping G425 Max (15 degrees), with Accra TZ6 shaft (From $297 at carlsgolfland.com and $299 at golfgalaxy.com)

IRONS: TaylorMade P-790 UDI (2) with Project X HZRDUS Black 100 X shaft, Ping iBlade (3), Blueprint (5-PW), with Project X 6.5 shafts (Ping Blueprint irons from $212.50 each at carlsgolfland.com

WEDGES: Ping Glide 3.0 (50, 54, 58 degrees), with Project X 6.5 shafts (From $147 at carlsgolfland.com and $149 at dickssportinggoods.com)

PUTTER: Ping PLD

BALL: Titleist Pro V1x (From $50 per dozen at titleist.com and $49.99 per dozen at carlsgolfland.com)

GRIPS: Golf Pride Z-Grip

Seamus Power wins 2021 Barbasol Championship

Seamus Power wins 2021 Barbasol Championship.

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

Seamus Power (-21) defeated J.T. Poston in a six-hole playoff to win the 2021 Barbasol Championship. The win is Power’s first in his career on the PGA Tour.

Power has a background in East Tennessee. He played at East Tennessee State University and turned pro in 2011.

Power has competed on the PGA Tour since 2017, appearing in 106 events. He has finished in the top-10 10 times and the top-25 on 24 occasions.

The 34-year old has made the cut 64 times.

Power came to East Tennessee from Waterford, Ireland.

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Seamus Power earns first PGA Tour win at Barbasol Championship after six-hole playoff

Power won with par after six playoff holes.

For the third time in the last four weeks a PGA Tour event ended with a playoff. A long one.

After Cam Davis and Harris English’s marathon wins in back-to-back tournaments, this week’s Barbasol Championship at Keene Trace Golf Club in Nicholasville, Kentucky – held opposite the British Open won by Collin Morikawa – was won by Seamus Power in six extra holes over J.T. Poston.

Poston appeared to be cruising to victory on Sunday before a wayward drive and piece of string flipped the final round on its head.

In search of his second PGA Tour win to go with the 2019 Wyndham Championship, Poston had a one-shot lead at 19 under entering the day and got as low as 24 under thanks to a front-nine 4-under 32 aided by a trio of birdies on Nos. 2, 7 and 8 and an eagle on the par-3 5th.

Momentum changed on the par-5 15th when Poston’s tee shot was ruled out of bounds by mere inches. He wound up making double-bogey seven, followed by a bogey on the par-3 16th, which brought Power into play.

The Irishman was three shots back after 54 holes but posted the clubhouse lead at 21 under after a second consecutive weekend round of 5-under 67.

On the first playoff hole, No. 18, Power chipped-in for birdie from just off the green and Poston answered with a birdie putt from 10 feet. Again on the 18th, Each found the green in regulation and flirted with birdie on the second playoff hole, but a pair of pars pushed the playoff to a third hole.

After each made par yet again, this time on the par-3 ninth, they played the hole again to the same result to send the playoff back to No. 18 for the fifth extra hole. Two more pars meant a sixth playoff hole, No. 18 for a fourth time, where Power prevailed after Poston’s tee shot found the water and his approach missed the green.

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