What it’s like to play in the Sentry Pro-Am (and why it might be the best pro-am experience on the PGA Tour)

I made birdie at 18, my pro was Sepp Straka and my team didn’t win.

KAPALUA, Hawaii – I made birdie at 18, my pro was Sepp Straka and my team didn’t win.

Now that I’ve gotten the answers to the three most common questions I’ve had from friends on hearing I played in the pro-am of the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions allow me to tell you what it was like playing in what just might be the best pro-am on the PGA Tour – especially now that the American Express and AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am have been watered down to fewer days and no longer have their celebrity appeal.

Call it my first hot take of 2024 but the Sentry Pro-Am starts with some pretty electric ingredients – a star-studded field of winners and anyone who qualified for top 50 on the FedEx Cup point standings in the preceding year coupled with the other star of the show – Kapalua’s Plantation Course – in one of the most beautiful settings for golf and you have the makings of a delicious recipe.

Before we go any further, let’s just take a moment to reflect on how insane it is to think that regular golfers can fork up some coin – some serious coin that I hear starts around $10K and is dependent on the hospitality package you pick – but in doing so be allowed to play the same course that a field of 59 of the most successful golfers in the world from the previous season are going to play the next four days for $20 million and you’re going to play alongside one of them (actually two as of this year — more on that later). What other sport can you do that? [Editor’s note: Golfweek was a special invite by Troon Golf, which manages the courses at Kapalua, and Golfweek made an exception to its policy as it was the only opportunity to play the Plantation Course during our visit for a separate travel story that was part of the assignment. We made a charitable contribution to a local non-profit, Spare for Change, which recycles donated golf clubs and distributes them to new players.]

On Tuesday, beginning as early as 8 a.m., participants began showing up at the Kapalua Golf Academy to pick up their tee prize. Every pro-am gives out some swag but this was next level. Last year, your gift bag began with a portable speaker and a TaylorMade driver head cover. From there, it was a veritable choose-your-own-adventure. In one room, you decide whether to get fit for a TaylorMade Stealth2 driver or custom-made jeans from Delta. Then you explored the rest of the Academy where you chose two of the following from Hawaiian favorites – Tommy Bahama apparel, Maui Jim sunglasses, Olukai shoes and sandals and this year Aloha Collection Bags – or you could go on a whale watching expedition or snorkeling trip – and if you were a conservationist or just had a big heart you could plant a Koa tree in the Pu’u Kukui Preserve. In short, really nice mix of swag between golf stuff and stuff that screams Hawaii. The food truck parked outside was a nice touch. During the day, participants get to play in the Am-Am at Plantation’s Bay Course, an Arnold Palmer design which is every bit as scenic and possibly more fun to play. I had to skip this round to do my day job but everyone I talked to said it was the perfect warm-up for the main event.

Mark Rolfing served as emcee of the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions pro-am draft party at Kapalua’s Golf Academy. (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

That evening, pro-am participants met at Taverna Restaurant and the Academy’s putting green out back with NBC/Golf Channel’s Mark Rolfing serving as the emcee of the Draw Party. I met my team for the putt-off. This is what sets the Sentry pro-am experience apart. Thirty-two teams of three players were broken into pods of four and you had a putting contest to determine the drafting order to select one of four pros. Each player got to hit one putt from about 40 feet and the closest putt from your team determined your pick. My pod of four pros consisted of: Jon Rahm, Max Homa, Mackenzie Hughes and Sepp Straka. Not too shabby. My team got to putt last but it didn’t give us an advantage because you didn’t know how good or bad the other teams had done, couldn’t take a practice putt and you had to face the other way while your opponents took their turn, so, no help with the break or speed. We could tell by the audible reactions that someone nearly holed it. When my first partner hit his putt barely halfway, I knew we were in trouble. My second partner hammered it and still was 8 feet short. It was all up to me and I did get it to the hole but yanked it 4 feet left. I figured, OK, we’re not getting Rahm but maybe Homa. Nope, we were dead last and ended up with Straka, the burly Austrian with the Georgia accent, who would go on to have a pretty sweet year that included a pick to Europe’s winning Ryder Cup team. As I told him the next day, we were picking him first had we made the putt.

You can’t do this putting contest format with a pro-am at a full-field event – it would take too long – but it’s perfect for this limited-field event and is predicated on golf skill not just luck – most draw parties tend to have a lottery process and often the marquee names are reserved for the bigger sponsors. The food at the party after the putt-off was prepared by two-time Maui Chef of the Year Taylor Ponte and was outrageously good and the bar was open but I assume that is standard fare based on attending a few of these shindigs along the way. ESPN’s Chris Berman joined me for a glass of wine while I enjoyed some tuna poke and having grown up on his nicknames, 2-minute drill of highlights and calls such as “Back, Back, Back, Gone!” that was a rare treat. He’s a regular and The Kid, Ken Griffey Jr., also held court adding just enough celebrity buzz to the occasion.

Night putting at the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions draft party. Baseball legend Ken Griffey Jr. lines up his putt at the draft party. (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

That night, I kept waking with anticipation to play in my first PGA Tour pro-am. That morning, I had a story to file so I wasn’t able to soak in the all-access pass at the range and the feast of food at the VIP tent but more than one tour pro who has had a beef with one of my articles along the way took great pleasure in critiquing my putting and short game on the practice green. I guess I had that coming to me, but for regular Joes I have to imagine it’s an unforgettable experience to rub shoulders with the pros.

Sentry tournament director Max Novena tells me they added a few new wrinkles to make the event even better this year. Most notably, with a larger field they instituted the nine-and-nine format popular at many other Tour pro-ams, where participants get to play with not one but two pros, who tag in and tag out at the turn. Pros and cons: if you don’t like your pro because he’s not helpful reading putts and disengaged, you may luck out with a more affable, charismatic pro who gets that you’ve ponied up big time for a special occasion. But you also don’t get as much quality time to create a lasting relationship, which can happen over 18 holes. I learned more about Straka, who had his twin brother caddying for him that week, during the wait on the tee than I ever have in one of his few press conferences in the media center. I had one beef with my pro-am experience – we basically played the red tees to avoid a six-hour round. That said, it was fun to hit the famous downhill 18th, measuring 677 yards for the pros, in two with a gap wedge. I usually leave out that we played the hole from 200 yards up when recounting this story.

When the round ended, we convened at a VIP tent and enjoyed a celebratory beverage or two. Not even two squalls during our round, the only liquid sunshine I experienced on my entire trip, could dampen my mood, and the rainbow over Kapalua made it worth it. Playing the course before the tournament only increased my appreciation for Jon Rahm’s closing 63 to erase a six-stroke deficit and win the Sentry on Sunday.

This year’s pro-am experience wrapped up with an awards party at Merriman’s Kapalua, which was my favorite meal of 2023. The setting on the point of Kapalua Bay looks like a movie set or a Zoom call backdrop – it has to be fake. But no, it’s so majestic that while my wife was snapping a family selfie, a guy to our right dropped to one knee and proposed to his girl. (She said yes!)

And if you ever get a chance to play in the Sentry Pro-Am you better do the same.

[lawrence-auto-related count=1 tag=451204219]

Could Jon Rahm play on the PGA Tour after his LIV Golf move? He sure thinks so

Rahm has some ambitious goals and hopes to leave his mark on the game like his idol, Seve Ballesteros.

The speculation is over, and the news is official: Jon Rahm has left the PGA Tour to join LIV Golf.

The world No. 3 is a massive loss for the PGA Tour and an equally important acquisition for LIV Golf, and the root of his move will branch out with many a discussion to follow: What does this mean for the Tour? How much will this grow LIV? What impact will it have on the framework agreement between the Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund?

But how about what this all means for Rahm himself? The 29-year-old Spaniard is a two-time major champion who still has a deep respect and appreciation for both the PGA Tour and DP World Tour, where he has 11 and 10 wins, respectively. His passion for the Ryder Cup burns as hot as his fiery personality. In fact, Rahm even said the biennial bash against the Americans was the biggest hurdle in his way on the path to LIV. While speaking with reporters Thursday evening, Rahm gave a look into the future and discussed playing on both tours, as well as in the Ryder Cup.

“My position with the Ryder Cup stands as it’s always been. I love the Ryder Cup. I’ve explained many times how meaningful it is to me, and I surely hope I can be in future editions of the Ryder Cup,” he said. “That’s not up to me right now, but if it was up to me, I’ll be eligible to play so I surely hope I can keep up the good golf, keep playing good golf and give them a reason to have me on the team.”

MORE RAHM: What he’s said about LIV in the past | Reaction

“I can say that I do want to maintain my PGA Tour and DP World status. I will not give that up, and hopefully with the freedom that LIV Golf gives me I can play in both of those tours as well,” Rahm added. “I’ve expressed how important the Spanish Open is to me in the past, and if we ever reach that point there are certain PGA Tour events I still want to go and play as long as my schedule allows. So if possible, we’ll see what we can make happen.”

But how soon could we see Rahm back on Tour? LIV Golf’s 2024 season opener at Mayakoba in Mexico is Feb. 2-4. Rahm is a past winner of three PGA Tour events – The Sentry, American Express and Farmers Insurance Open – that will all be held before LIV Golf Mayakoba. If the framework agreement goes through by the Dec. 31 deadline, that may open the door for Rahm to play (though he wasn’t on the early commit list for the AmEx, where he’s the defending champion).

Rahm said he’ll miss the signature events he has won, like the Memorial and Genesis Invitational, “but what’s even better than that is hopefully being a pioneer and being the ones that create the legacy that other people speak of in the future,” he explained. “That’s something that, again, as ambitious as it may be, we have the opportunity to do right now, and that’s something really exciting.”

Legacy was a key talking point for Rahm as he explained his decision Thursday, and his move to LIV is a pretty big gamble (even with a reported 600 million “chips” now in his possession). Being a team owner and captain – details still to come on that front – was enticing for Rahm. He thinks LIV is his chance to make his mark on the game.

“My position is to play golf. That’s what I strive to do, play golf to the best of my abilities and hopefully leave the game in a better position than I found them when I started playing golf, which I’ve said has been my goal for quite a while now,” Rahm said. “I always idolize (Seve Ballesteros) and how much he grew the game of golf in Spain, and indirectly worldwide, so hopefully I can do half as much as what he did, and that’ll be a success.”

“If I can do my part and leave golf in Spain and many other parts of the world in a better state and more improved, it would be a great accomplishment for me, even if it’s just 50 percent of what Seve did, which is already very ambitious because he was a very unique, polarizing man,” he added. “I think that would be a very successful achievement, and that’s my goal, so hopefully we can keep working towards that.”

Is he ambitious or naïve? Only time will tell.

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 category=451198867]

Conversations with Champions: 2022 QBE Shootout winners Sahith Theegala, Tom Hoge

Conversations with Champions is presented by Sentry.

“Conversations with Champions presented by Sentry” is a weekly series from Golfweek. This week: Sahith Theegala and Tom Hoge.

Theegala and Hoge won the 2022 QBE Shootout at Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, Florida, after rallying late after being down two shots entering the final round.

Theegala, who hit his best drive of the day on 18, drilled a birdie putt to give him and Hoge a one-shot lead. Ryan Palmer and Charley Hoffman, who led after the first and second rounds, each had looks for birdie but both missed their putts.

Here’s everything the Theegala and Hoge duo said after winning the 2022 QBE Shootout.

Q: You guys kind of made it hard on yourselves coming down the stretch there by not birdieing 17. Was there any sort of conversation going to 18 to pump each other up?

Sahith Theegala: No, I think we’ve been playing so well all week and vibing off each other, I mean, it’s to be expected to have one or two bad holes and it just happened to be 17. But we’ve been playing well all week. Like we said at the start of the round, we just need two chances and we gave ourselves two really good changes on 18. Yeah, it was kind of unspoken I think that like let’s go and get this last hole.

Q: Tom, I think when you holed that long birdie put at the par 3 12th, I think you guys were either tied for the lead or got to the lead for the first time. Did you have a conversation then about let’s go, let’s go, or were you just sort of getting into the mix of it right then and you turned it on?

Tom Hoge: Really the only conversation we had today was in the scramble and we were like 5 under through 12, which was probably our worst start of all three formats. It was a bit of an issue at that point, but we were playing well. Like you said, nothing really needed to be said, just kind of get on to the next hole and keep trying to make birdies. I mean, you just felt like you had to birdie every hole out there for the way that the rest of the field’s been playing, so it was very simple what we had to do.

Q: Sahith, talk about that little problem you had on the first?

ST: Yeah.

Q: What happened?

ST: It’s funny, I was just telling my mom at breakfast, knocked on wood how healthy I’ve been for the last four, five years, and testament to my trainer, Josh. I literally have played every tournament seemingly 100 percent. First swing of the day on hole 1, I got under it and I knew I had to save it, and I saved it and I just pulled the left side of my, it’s like my oblique, I think. It’s not even my back really. I was trying to massage my back to free this up, but as I kept swinging and I think a little bit of adrenaline too, it got a lot better on the back nine. It feels much better now. I think it’s just something I need to take three or four days off and it’ll be good. But I’m going to take more than that off. Yeah, no worries at all.

Q: Speaking of adrenaline, that putt you holed on the last to make that birdie first and force them to make theirs, which they didn’t, how good a feeling was that for you?

ST: Oh, that felt great. It just felt great to contribute a little bit. Tom was really holding me up pretty much all around, he made so many really big putts. Again, I think it’s just a testament to having two good looks. I was just a little bit away, but I knew Tom’s been putting well and it kind of freed me up a little bit to be like all right, let’s give this thing a great run. To have that go in, it felt so good, can’t even explain how good it felt.

Q: How good did it feel for you when you saw it go in?

TH: Felt great watching, yeah. It was an interesting day because I don’t think either one of us played our best for 18 holes, but we kind of timed it right. I got off to some good starts to both nines and then Sahith kind of brought me home. You know, kind of the ham and egg worked really well for us and holed the timely putts when we needed to, for sure.

Q: You guys are a true rookie team this year. I think the only other time a rookie team has won was 2011, Keegan Bradley and Brendan Steele, apart from the first event way back in ’99. How meaningful is that for you guys to pull this off in your first go-round here?

ST: It means a lot, it’s awesome. I think we got along really well out there. We’re both pretty chill and pretty level headed and don’t go to extreme either way and I think we just fed off each other’s energy. We were talking about it, I think our games are just really good for like partnering in this format. Tom was striping his irons yesterday and that was huge in alternate shot, he left me a lot of kick-ins for birdie, and I was able to get it down there a little bit further than I normally with my tee shots. It was just a good, it just worked out great. And definitely a little bit ham and egg today, which is great.

Q: I know it’s not an official win, but it’s your first, and you already won this year, Tom. Nice way to finish off the year, I’m guessing.

TH: It was fun to be in contention. I don’t care what you’re playing for, it’s always fun coming down the stretch there. I had a great week here this week. The weather’s perfect, I wanted to come back so I was like, we’ve got to get a win so hopefully we can come back in the future.

2022 QBE Shootout
Sahith Theegala celebrates with Tom Hoge after winning the 2022 QBE Shootout at Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, Florida. (Photo: Douglas P. DeFelice/Getty Images)

Q: What was the thought process when you watched Ryan on 17 hit the chip back to himself and then chip it in?

TH: I guess you’re always expecting that. Charley still had a good look there as well that he could have made birdie. You just expect that you’ve got to make birdies coming down the stretch. I think that we were 32 or 33 under and just felt like you had to birdie 17 and 18 coming in to take care of business ourselves. Sahith made his putt, I still was expecting to go to a playoff there with the two looks that those guys both had. So certainly felt very fortunate to get the win right there.

Q: 2022 for both of you guys has been a very much a breakout season. When you look back on it, each of you, what are your sort of takeaways for the year?

ST: Yeah, I just, I got my PGA Tour card last year and my only goal or expectation was to keep my PGA Tour card. I’ve said it a lot, my dreams never really got past getting a PGA Tour card, so I’d be lying if I said I didn’t exceed my own expectations. I haven’t really thought about it too much, I’ve just tried to let my momentum keep rolling and try and get better and enjoy the whole thing. It’s been an unbelievable year and to cap it off this week with Tom is just a cherry on top. It’s been a really good year and I’m very grateful for it.

TH: I think for me, my eighth year on Tour wrapped up, I just look back, you get in more situations like today where you’re near the lead coming down the stretch and you get a little more comfortable helps out in the future. So I was able to put myself there a few times this year and was able to come up with a win finally. So that felt great and made it easier today drawing on that a little bit. You look at Sahith’s career, to be in these situations at his age, certainly expect he’ll be doing a lot of these winner’s interviews coming up in the future.

[vertical-gallery id=778310670]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=none image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Conversations with Champions: 2022 Hero World Challenge winner Viktor Hovland

Conversations with Champions is presented by Sentry.

“Conversations with Champions presented by Sentry” is a weekly series from Golfweek. This week: Viktor Hovland, winner of the 2022 Hero World Challenge.

Viktor Hovland has done something only Tiger Woods accomplished: win the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas in consecutive years.

The victory at Albany was his seventh worldwide victory and first since January.

He credits his improved putting for his success, especially with Scottie Scheffler hot his heels.

VH: I thought I had a very nice start, hitting the ball well and giving myself chances. Scottie [Scheffler] just had a phenomenal start and kind of pushed me to keep going. I mean, I think I was 3 under through five holes and I was only leading by one. I was thinking before the day started, if I get off to a nice start, I can really build a good lead. So hats off to him, he played some great golf. Then kind of middle portion of the round I just kept making pars and kind of put it to him to try to come back. Yeah, it was a little up and down overall, but glad to finish it out.

Q: How long was the shot after the drop on 18? How many yards did you have?

VH: I had 109 meters, so about 120.

Q: What was going through your head at that point?

VH: Not many positive thoughts. It’s like when you’re standing there with a two-shot lead, it’s like that’s the last thing you can do. Basically just do anything else but hit it in the water on the second shot. So as soon as that happened, I was pretty frustrated. But I knew that he didn’t have a gimme par, so if I can wedge up there close, I can still make a putt and win the tournament. And if not, he still has to make a par to force me to a playoff. But it was a lot more stressful than it should have been.

2022 Hero World Challenge
Viktor Hovland plays his shot from the first tee during the final round 2022 Hero World Challenge at Albany Golf Course in Nassau, Bahamas. (Photo: Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

Q: Last year, you denied Collin Morikawa from becoming world No. 1 and this year you did the same thing to Scottie Scheffler. You’re getting pretty good at this.

VH: I like this place, but I would like to do it a bit more often.

Q: I wanted to ask you about your putting, especially because at the start of the week, you came here, you spoke about putting and how hard you’ve been working on it. That’s one area of the game that you were not happy with. Then this week you just putted the lights out of this golf course, 23 putts [Saturday], 24 [Sunday]. The kind of putts that you made, can you just tell us about that and what you really made happen this week with that putter of yours?

VH: It was frustrating the first two days because I did not putt very well. I missed a lot of short putts, but it was very hard to putt in the 30-mile an hour wind. The greens are really fast and they’re pretty grainy, so you have to hit those putts very softly and there’s so much that can happen with the wind. The last two days it’s been still windy but fairly calm and I was just able to rely on my feet a lot more. As soon as you see a couple putts go in, it’s just easy to get confidence from that. The difference from just like feeling you’re going to make every putt and the first couple days, it was more like, oh, I could still miss this putt, you know, even if it’s two and a half feet just because of the wind. It just makes you feel so uncomfortable. Trying to just switch the mindset a little bit.

2022 Hero World Challenge
Viktor Hovland lines up a putt on the 18th green during the final round of the 2022 Hero World Challenge at Albany Golf Course in Nassau, Bahamas. (Photo: Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

The putt on the last was pretty sweet. The putt on 17 was big as well. I don’t know, I didn’t make too many long putts. It was just like I made a decent amount of putts from 15 to 20 feet. When I hit a lot of good approach shots in there and you’re hoping to make them, I just started making them a lot more over the last two days.

Q: What changed in these five days? And … you seem to love Hero. You won the Hero Challenge in Abu Dhabi and now two in a row here.

VH: I think it’s just one of those things that’s easy in practice to, I set very high goals for myself and when I don’t hit it the way that I want to hit it in practice, I get very frustrated. I feel like I’m just way more out of it than maybe I truly am, because when I haven’t been hitting all that great and the tournament starts, all the technique and frustration just kind of goes out the window and you kind of just have to play the game. I just kind of just stayed within myself, I didn’t try to hit any shots that I knew I didn’t have. So one example that I was struggling with was that I was spinning the ball a lot and if I hit a full shot, my face would turn to shut and I would just kind of hit pull draws, which is not good if you’re trying to hit pull cuts all day. So what I ended up just basically doing was I just kind of chipped everything. I felt like I was going to have a Tommy Fleetwood kind of finish, if you will, because I know where that’s going to go. Frankly, it helped in the left-to-right winds because I can just kind of hit that pull draw up against the wind and it will come back. And on the right-to-left winds, well, I either have to aim it pretty far right or I just have to lean the shaft really hard to make sure that that face doesn’t turn over. That’s just like how I figured out how to play golf this week.

VH: I remember joking with Dr. Munjal that that was my first professional win at the Abu Dhabi Hero Challenge. I played in the pro-am with him in Dubai earlier this year and obviously won this event two times. I told him I’ve done well when he’s been around.

Q: How would you characterize your 2022 and does this change the way you’re going to think about this year?

VH: Definitely feels a little bit better ending up with a win. I think it was a step in the right direction even though I feel like I should have won more tournaments this year. There’s a couple that stings or a couple just tournaments that I just didn’t play well enough. There were too many weeks where I just kind of had to grind and get through the round instead of showing up and attacking and feel like I was going to shoot 7, 8 under. It was just too many times where it was, ‘OK, if I play well, maybe I can shoot a couple under’. That’s been a little frustrating. I feel like I still have some work to do there, but this is obviously a huge step in the right direction.

Q: It’s been a great start to the European Ryder Cup qualifying process. Shane winning, yourself winning, Jon Rahm winning in Dubai. How important is that going into the new season next year and how delighted do you think Luke Donald would be?

VH: It’s a year until the Ryder Cup, but if the whole team keeps playing well and getting a lot of momentum going into the week, I think that’s great. The American players last year certainly had an amazing year and they kind of knew going into the tournament that they were the favorites. So I think we have a chance to kind of push it the other direction. The more Europeans that win, I think we can maybe change that narrative a little bit to next year. Yeah, but it’s just, it’s cool to see fellow Europeans do well.

Q: You just said a little bit ago it was a lot more stressful than I thought it would be, but you handled stress well. When you get in these situations, it doesn’t seem like you’re necessarily looking stressful. How do you handle it and what’s the mindset?

VH: I’ve obviously been in this situation a little bit more than when I first came out on Tour, so I think the more you put yourself in that situation, you’re going to handle it better. I think just kind of throughout my childhood, not to, I’ve had a very good upbringing, but it’s, you know, whether it’s getting, taking the bus to school with a golf bag and my books and gym clothes and it’s packed on the bus, I’ve got to stand there for an hour to school and then back home and then to practice, I think those little things just makes you a little bit tougher. Growing up in Norway, it’s not necessarily great for golf and I think you have to just make do with what you have. I think those things just build character a little bit and makes you handle stress a little better than, you know, if you just had everything on a silver platter.

2022 Hero World Challenge
Viktor Hovland poses with the trophy and tournament host Tiger Woods after winning the 2022 Hero World Challenge at Albany Golf Course in Nassau, Bahamas. (Photo: Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

Q: Viktor, what do you feel you learned most about yourself in the past 12 months that pleases you?

VH: I don’t know, I don’t really think like that. I just kind of, I go throughout the day and just think have I had a good day, have I done everything I needed to do today to get to where I want to be tomorrow or next year or five years down the line. I think as long as I do the things that I need to do, I think that makes me go to bed content and I think the results are going to come from that. If they don’t, well, then I have to reevaluate and reassess. Just because I haven’t gotten better or maybe I’ve worked on some bad things, I kind of look at it as a learning experience. I just try to get a little bit better every day, as cliche as that sounds.

Q: The new Hero Cup next month … do you see that being an important part for Europe’s preparation for Rome.

VH: I think so. Not quite the same thing obviously, but growing up in junior golf in Europe, we would always have the European boys team championships and all these match play tournaments where you have to play with a teammate. Then when I came to college I didn’t really do that all that much. Especially in pro golf, you don’t really play all that team and match play tournaments. So I think that’s just a unique opportunity to just have all the guys play match play and team up. I think it’s great.

Q: I know you said you weren’t all that happy with your putting, the first two days had a lot to do with wind, but when you look at statistically how much you improved really over the last year, you talked about it earlier in the week, how rewarding is that to get the payout, I guess?

VH: How rewarding. … to kind of summarize, when I first came out, I feel like I was, my ball-striking, the quality of the ball-striking wasn’t as good, but I hit it super, super straight and it felt like I could shoot 2 to 3 under every single day without really making putts. That was nice in one way, but as soon as I was a little bit off, I would shoot over par. Whereas this year it’s kind of been a little bit of the opposite where my ball-striking’s been off and I’ve been putting really well just to shoot a couple under par. That’s almost more frustrating, but at the same time it kind of takes some pressure off your back where, ‘OK, I don’t have to stripe it to shoot under par, I can actually rely on my putting to hang in there’. Over 72 holes you’re not going to hit great shots all the time, I hit plenty of terrible shots today, but it’s making those key putts and kind of keeping yourself in it. That’s been the reason why I’ve been able to be in contention without really hitting it all that well this year.

Q: Which was more fun, coming from six back or doing this?

VH: I think coming from behind is more fun because you’re more attack mode, you’re more relaxed. To be honest, this was kind of a stressful week just being in contention from the get-go and even getting — having a five-shot lead at the turn with nine holes to play. It’s five shots, it’s hard to mess that up, but you see how close it can get on the final hole. So you just always have to hit the next shot, you can’t relax. As soon as you do, boom, that’s a bogey. Suddenly Scottie makes a birdie and he’s right back there. It takes a lot out of you and I’m pretty tired.

Q: The sixth hole was very interesting in terms of where you put it off the tee, him chipping in and that putt you made was pretty big. I wonder if you can just kind of go through that.

VH: I hit a terrible tee shot left, right behind the bush. I basically just had to lay up with a pitching wedge. I’m way back there, hit an 8-iron from the rough to kind of a nasty short left pin with the wind off the left. So I hit a great shot to just kind of 12, 15 feet right of the hole, did kind of what I was supposed to do, but then Scottie chips in and that changes things. But I remember just kind of getting a flashback to playing with Rory [McIlroy] in the last group at the Open where he made a bunker shot on No. 10 and I still had a putt for birdie from probably 15 feet and I was able to make that putt on top of his eagle to, I think I still had the lead at that time. It just kind of, instead of in the moment thinking ‘Man, that was a sick shot, he just made eagle and he’s creeping up from behind’, but at the same time it’s like, ‘OK, this is a putt, I can make this putt, every shot matters, just kind of refocus’. It’s nice when you can kind of make those putts on top.

Q: I saw you practicing AimPoint in putting … how do you make a game plan and everything within your team?

VH: When I first started working with my coach, Jeff Smith, he came to Karsten Creek where I practice and we just went out and played a few holes. He just watched me putt a couple out on the course and I would misread 15-footers by probably two feet, and I would hit good putts. My reading ability was just really, really bad. It was at a golf course I play at every single day I’m home, so I should know the greens. And he had some experience with AimPoint, so he basically said ‘OK, you need to really learn this’. So the rest of the nine holes he just basically read the greens for me, told me where to aim and I just started making everything. So that really kind of clicked in my head that ‘OK, I really need to master this’. Obviously, it’s not a perfect system, I’m not going to make every single putt, but it gives me a framework to where I can trust that read and most of the time it’s going to be fairly close. So what I do every single, what you saw on the practice green, I just kind of get some tees up, hit short putts, get the level out just to make sure that my feet of calibrated, yeah, and then ready to go.

2022 PGA Championship
Fans of Viktor Hovland of Norway show their support on the ninth hole during the second round of the 2022 PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Oklahoma. (Photo: Matt York/Associated Press)

Q: So many of us associate Norway with winter sports, I’m sure you’re not offended by that. I just wonder, the more you do in this game and the more you win and the higher you go, has it got a reaction towards you back in Norway changed? Have you noticed it’s become a bigger deal?

VH: That’s a good question. You know, I don’t look at social media all that often and I spend most of my time in the United States, so it’s hard for me to really see what’s going on back home, but I get a bunch of text messages and people seem to be paying close attention. That’s kind of one thing about Norwegians is that we’re very patriotic. We only have five, six million people, but it seems like when Magnus Carlsen is winning, everyone tunes in and starts playing chess, or if it’s Thor Hushovd in Tour de France, everyone just started biking that summer, or, you know, what Erling Haaland’s doing is incredible and obviously with Casper Ruud in tennis. People love their sports and I think they root for their fellow countrymen when they do something well.

[vertical-gallery id=778309622]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=none image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Conversations with Champions: 2022 RSM Classic winner Adam Svensson credits a return to Korn Ferry Tour for finding discipline to win on PGA Tour

Conversations with Champions is presented by Sentry.

“Conversations with Champions presented by Sentry” is a weekly series from Golfweek. This week: Adam Svensson, winner of the 2022 RSM Classic.

A slow start Thursday, a late eagle Friday and the lifting of a trophy Sunday.

It was a high-wire act of sorts for Adam Svensson at the 2022 RSM Classic.

The first-time PGA Tour winner shot a 1-over 73 in the first round and it turned out to be the highest opening-round score by a winner in more than two years.

An eagle on the 15th hole Friday assured him of making the weekend and that’s when started heating up in the chilly temperatures at Sea Island’s Plantation Course in St Simons Island, Georgia.

A round of 62 vaulted him up the leaderboard Saturday and a Sunday 64 brought the 28-year-old his first Tour title.

This is everything Svensson said after claiming his maiden victory.

AS: The first round I was playing great, I just got nothing out of it. And going into Friday I was like keep doing what I’m doing. To be honest, I don’t even know. I was playing so good, I knew if I just kept doing what I’m doing and I will work my way up. But to come out on top, it’s unbelievable.

Q: Our second Canadian winner of the season, you move up to No. 6 in the FedEx Cup standings. Just talk a little bit about how this changes your goals going forward.

AS: Yeah, it definitely changes my schedule a lot. Obviously, I’ll be into more events now. I’ll have more time at home to work on my game and prepare for obviously bigger events now, so I’m excited.

2022 RSM Classic
Adam Svensson holds the trophy after winning the 2022 RSM Classic in St. Simons Island, Georgia. (Photo: Stephen B. Morton/Associated Press)

Q: Can you talk about the birdies on 16 and 17 that helped pull you over the line?

AS: I looked on the leaderboard on 15, the par 5 there, and hit a poor wedge shot and made par. But I knew there’s a couple good birdie chances on 16 and 17 with a front flag. And the shot on 16, it kind of spun back but it was kind of an easy putt uphill left to right and I just knew I hit it hard enough and it went in. And the one on 17, I didn’t think it was going to go in and somehow it just dove in, I don’t know.

Q: Was there any frustration at all thinking that, because you started on the Plantation course, it’s the easier of the two courses, what was your mindset?

AS: I was very frustrated. I just knew like I just keep doing what I’m doing. I flushed it on Thursday and I just got nothing out of my round, and going into Friday I just was grinding. I don’t even know, I just was putting great, hitting it great and I just kept hitting the fairway, hitting it on the green and just kept doing what I’m doing. I don’t really know. I just knew if I just keep playing great, good things will happen. Last week I found something in my golf swing and just kind of took it into this week.

Q: What do you think the difference was between Thursday and the rest of the week?

AS: Putting, for sure. I kind of tweaked, I changed my stroke a little bit on Friday and then it was feeling really good. I just kind of stuck with it, yeah.

Q: Adam, on Friday do you watch the leaderboard enough to know how far behind you were behind what you thought the cut might be?

AS: I figured on Thursday I needed to shoot about 4-under par, I told my caddie that. We just had a game plan to shoot that and make the cut and just keep moving up.

Q: The money’s good and the two-year exemption is good, but how soon after the last putt did you start thinking Kapalua, Masters, Players, things like that?

AS: I didn’t even think about it until it was brought up to me 15 minutes ago. I’m more proud of what I’ve accomplished from the direction I was to the direction I’ve gone now, it’s more fulfilling than money to me. I’m more just proud of myself for things I’ve been doing.

Q: When did you start thinking, I could actually win this tournament?

AS: When I teed off. I don’t know, I knew I was playing great, I just had to stay out of my own way. At the start of the day, I told myself just don’t make a bogey and I’m putting well and I just had to keep myself under control.

Q: How long have you been working with John Graham?

AS: About a year now, just over a year.

Q: And was the something you changed in your putting Friday something he suggested or something you just came up with?

AS: We really work on flow in my stroke and sometimes on the long ones, especially this week, it’s fast so just having a little bit more flow has helped me with speed control, because I do get a little jabby sometimes. Just having a lot of, a little bit more flow in the backstroke.

Q: What did you change in yourself between the first time you were on the PGA Tour and this second go-round you’ve had?

AS: I relied mostly on talent when I was younger. I didn’t put enough work in, I wasn’t that disciplined. Like I said, two years ago I decided to give it 100 percent and I’ve been super disciplined on, you know, I don’t drink anymore, I go to the golf course every day, I’m up at 6, I give it 100 percent now. That’s the reason.

2022 RSM Classic
Adam Svensson reacts to his putt on the first hole during the final round of the 2022 RSM Classic in St. Simons Island, Georgia. (Photo: Stephen B. Morton/Associated Press)

Q: You mentioned in the Golf Channel interview that a couple years ago you were thinking about quitting golf. What was that point?

AS: Every Tour player wants to quit golf once in a while. You say that, but you obviously don’t. It’s just a feeling because you’re so down and you’re not playing well. I just made a choice to give it 100 percent and there was no, after I lost my Tour card, that’s when I decided to do that.

Q: What were the like conversations like? Like was there anyone you relied on in particular to like set a course or was it kind of self-planning of the change?

AS: It’s all self. You can say you can work hard, but in the end you’ve got
to actually do the work. I’m just proud of myself for doing that.

Q: You hadn’t made a cut yet at this tournament before this week. Was that a product of the course not setting up well for you or playing poorly this week? What do you attribute that to?

AS: This golf course, you know, Seaside, it’s tough, the greens are fast. So I think before, you know, just my putting wasn’t quite there, a couple loose shots here and there. I’m getting better and better and better and that’s, you know, probably the reason.

Q: You mentioned the birdie on 17. Were you aware of the scoreboard at that point, kind of where just, all right, so you hit that. What are you feeling, up two strokes after making that birdie and off to the tee box on 18?

AS: I was pumped, I was super excited. I knew if I could just hit the fairway on 18, I could just get it up there and make par or bogey.

Q: Any sort of nerves knowing, like you said, you just basically have to not mess it up to be able to pull out the first win for you?

AS: Yeah, I was just like swing 50 percent because that 50 percent is probably 80 percent. That was kind of my mindset coming in the last couple holes, just swing 50 percent, yeah.

Q: We’ve seen a few rounds of 62, 63s out of you over the last few years, obviously you went low the last three rounds here. What is it do you think about your game or mentality that allows you to go low fairly often?

AS: I think it’s ball-striking consistency, hitting fairways, hitting greens, giving yourself opportunities, not short siding yourself. I’m definitely getting better at playing away from flags now. Before, I was firing at all the flags. When the putter’s hot, you can shoot low numbers doing that.

Q: How do you think going back to the Korn Ferry Tour in 2020-21 benefitted you most as you kind of look back kind of at that part of the journey in your arc?

AS: Realizing I wasn’t as good as I actually was and realizing how hard everyone works on this tour and what it takes to get here. It was a blessing, to be honest. It kind of changed my path and everything.

Q: What’s one area where you worked harder in this second stint of your career since that kind of readjustment?

AS: I would say putting, especially probably the last six months I’ve put in a lot of work with putting. But I try and like even it out chipping, putting, hitting. Just the everyday, you know, putting that work in, you just slowly, slowly get better.

2022 RSM Classic
Adam Svensson shakes hands with Patrick Rodgers after winning the 2022 RSM Classic in St. Simons Island, Georgia. (Photo: Stephen B. Morton/Associated Press)

Q: What was the toughest part of putting at first in your career before these improvements?

AS: For me, it was the short putts with confidence, kind of steering it here and there. When you have confidence when you’re putting, you feel like you can make everything and those two-, three-footers, you just bang them in.

Q: The fact you’ve led the field statistically in strokes gained putting this week, what does that mean to you?

AS: I didn’t even know that. Cool. It means the work I’m doing’s paying off with John, and it’s nice.

Q: When did you decide to quit drinking?

AS: Two years ago. I’ve probably had maybe five drinks, but I quit drinking, I mean like going out with the boys and having drinks and stuff.

Q: Is that for tonight, too?

AS: Well, I’m supposed to drive home tonight, so yeah. Maybe I’ll have one.

Q: The fact no one could ever take away you’re a PGA Tour winner, like that’s something you’ll have on your resume and your mind and memory forever. What does that knowledge mean to you that you’ve accomplished that goal?

AS: It’s been dreams of mine since I was 10 years old, eight years old. It’s just incredible. I don’t think the money does, I don’t think money really does anything. It’s the feeling of coming down the stretch and winning and all that stuff, you just can’t beat it.

Q: Can you paint the picture, tell me a little bit where you were when you had this kind of come-to-Jesus moment that I’m going to really commit and make golf my job and not just rely on the talent?

AS: I can’t remember. It was just one day I woke up and I was like, that’s it,
that’s it. Just kind of went from there.

Q: Was it after a certain tournament where you had a bad result or after a hangover?

AS: Probably a hangover, probably a hangover. I don’t know, I can’t
remember.

[vertical-gallery id=778307925]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Conversations with Champions: Tony Finau had ‘a little bit of don’t screw it up’ mindset en route to winning 2022 Cadence Bank Houston Open

Conversations with Champions is presented by Sentry.

“Conversations with Champions presented by Sentry” is a weekly series from Golfweek. This week: Tony Finau, winner of the 2022 Cadence Bank Houston Open.

After a long stretch on the PGA Tour without a victory, Tony Finau now has three wins in his last seven starts and four in his last 30.

His most recent win was a dominant one at the 2022 Cadence Bank Houston Open, where Finau blistered Memorial Park Golf Course with scores of 65-62-68-69 to win by four shots. His lead was as big as eight at one point.

But even after matching the tournament’s 54-hole record and holding a four-shot lead Saturday night, he admitted things didn’t feel tip-top come Sunday morning.

“I think I said it on air [on Golf Channel] right after I finished, when I teed off this morning I felt a little off, honestly,” he said. “It’s not easy sleeping on the lead. I just, I didn’t know if I had it in me, but you just take it a shot at a time.

“I was able to make some big putts on 8 and 9 just to kind of open up this tournament. Really pleased with the performance overall and especially my putting.”

Here’s everything Finau said after winning the 2022 Cadence Bank Houston Open.

Q: The 3M Open win was special where you had all your family in attendance, but what did it mean to you to have wife and son come out and join for this?

TF: “I think they see the hours put in and they’re very supportive. They always have been. My son’s like my biggest fan. He’s also my biggest critic. Anytime if I make a double bogey or something, he’ll be the first one to point that out, doesn’t matter if it’s a 65; what happened on this hole, you just made a 7. He’s my biggest fan, my biggest critic, it’s amazing to have him here. And of course my wife. You know, she’s been so supportive of my career since we’ve been married. They’re very special to have in my life, but especially just to be supporting me and to have them here with me this week.”

Q: Speaking of your family, did she come in just for the final round today?

TF: “Yeah, they flew in, I think they got here like when I made the turn or something like that. They got here like just in time to watch the back nine. Apparently she must have had a good feeling about today. I’ll tell you what, she felt a lot better than I did if that was the case.”

Q: You obviously didn’t make a whole lot happen on the back nine, but you obviously did not need to make a whole lot happen. Were you just trying to say don’t do anything stupid going in?

TF: “It’s a place I’ve never been before. I’ve never had an eight-shot lead on the final round on Tour. It’s an interesting mindset. A little bit of ‘don’t screw it up’, or maybe ‘if we hit some good shots we can extend this lead’. … I will say on 14 and 15 I got a little impatient. We were waiting on the group in front of us and I just felt like we had been out there forever. It literally felt like this tournament wasn’t going to end, like were we ever going to get to 17 or 18. I tried to muster up as much patience as I could. Think that short putt I missed on 15, I just didn’t take the time I needed to hit the putt and I missed a short one. But overall this was a special week. You know, I won this golf tournament from start to finish. I don’t know if I’ve done that in my career, maybe at Rocket Mortgage, but to have played that well for four straight days, that’s what it’s all about and all the hard work is starting to pay off, which is fun.”

Q: You were thinking thoughts out there today that you might not have been thinking five years ago, right?

TF: “No question. You know, when I say I don’t know if I thought I had it in me, I just, sometimes you just don’t know what the day’s going to bring. Those emotions you just have to fight throughout the day and I was able to fight them and just execute when I needed to. I definitely have the confidence to win and I showed that out there today.”

2022 Cadence Bank Houston Open
Tony Finau acknowledges the crowd after making a birdie putt on the 18th hole during the second round of the 2022 Cadence Bank Houston Open. (Photo: Erik Williams-USA TODAY Sports)

Q: How is this one different than the two during the summer?

TF: “Every one is special in its own way. I took quite a bit of time off over this fall. I wanted to be with my family and I knew after the Presidents Cup that I was going to shut it down until last week in Mexico. I committed to that, but when I did pick the clubs back up after a little break, I was eager to compete and that’s a nice feeling to have having played so many tournaments. This is my ninth season now. To actually have that real excitement to compete, I felt that over the last couple weeks. After missing the cut last week, I was disappointed but I was very eager to just get back out and play again, have that opportunity. I feel like I live a very blessed life. I can play whatever golf tournament on the PGA Tour I want. Obviously has a lot to do with my play, but I just feel very blessed. I approached it this week kind of with that mindset and things just went my way and it was a week to remember.”

Q: Going back to what you said about maybe just things were a little off today, how did you kind of combat that when you got to the golf course, got into your warmup and then out on the golf course as well?

TF: “You just try and talk yourself into positive thoughts as well as, as good as you can. I had a little bit of a short warmup. I had to go to the restroom in the middle of my warmup, so I didn’t get to hit as many balls as I think I would have liked. But I knew I was playing well and I thought just in my mind I had it at the end of the day, if I just keep hitting good shots, I’m going to be really hard to catch. I really calmed myself down there right through the middle of the front nine, hit some fairways and made some putts for birdie and then I was just kind of on my way.”

Q: You led the field in both driving accuracy and greens hit. Where did this rank for weeks as far as feeling in control of your ball?

TF: “Yeah, probably the best driving week I’ve had in my career, at least that’s how I felt. Yesterday for the first time in my career I hit all 13 fairways, 100 percent of fairways in regulation. I’ve never done that in my career, so definitely drove the ball. And it’s a lethal combo when I feel like this is the best putting week I’ve had as well. So you combine those two and you can get kind of a runaway win like I had. It’s very encouraging for me as I move forward throughout the season.”

2022 Cadence Bank Houston Open
Tony Finau hits a tee shot on the tenth hole during the final round of the 2022 Cadence Bank Houston Open. (Photo: Erik Williams-USA TODAY Sports)

Q: I saw you were 40th in driving distance last year. Is that a continuous theme of dialing it back a little to have more control?

TF: “I never looked at anything as dialing back, it’s just more of accuracy. I’ve become a very precise, precision player. I always have enough in the tank when I feel like I need it. On a golf course like this there were a couple times that I can open up a little bit, like notably on 16 today there was a hazard on the right about 295, I just give it a little extra to make sure if I push that ball, the one mistake I can’t make is hit it in that water, so little things like that. But it’s a luxury to have speed. At the end of the day, it’s always been a luxury for me. So being as precise as I am now off the tee, it’s a fun game hitting from the fairway a lot. I didn’t hit a lot of fairways growing up. I hit it very, very far, but that occasional hook, duck hook or slice was right around the corner and it’s nice to have the type of control that I had over the driver this week for sure.”

Q: Three wins in your last seven starts. … is this the most that all parts of your game have been clicking in your career?

TF: “This is definitely the most all parts of my game have been clicking, but I would say I’ve played a lot of good golf for a while. I didn’t have a lot of  wins to show for it, but I’ve pieced together a game and that’s what you have to do out here. You know, with my experience, again as I alluded to, trying to be more of a precision player, because I don’t lack speed, so learning how to drive it in the fairway, working on my wedge game, working on my putter, those are all things that I worked extremely hard on. And I feel like I’ve been a very solid player for a long time, but it’s exciting for me that I’m getting better and that’s all I can ask of myself is try and get better in the areas that I really need to. And then remember why you are where you are. I think I don’t go too far away from the DNA of my game and how I see the game and I think I’m kind of bearing the fruits of how I see the game now and I’m able to hit the shots that I can see, which is pretty cool.”

Q: In a similar vein, mentally, is this the best you’ve felt knowing that you have the ability to finish off these tournaments?

TF: “I’ve always felt like I’ve been very mentally strong. Sometimes I feel like once my game matches up to my mental attitude, I feel like I can be a great player. I feel like I’ve been a good player, showed some — showed some brilliance in spurts, but being consistent, to be consistently great takes a full game both mental and physical and I feel like honestly my physical game is starting to match up to my mental. I’ve always been tough, I’ve always been strong mentally. Having a game that matches that is I think a great combination and I’m starting to see that with myself.”

Q: Tony, you were holding that trophy up quite a few times getting a lot of pictures taken and you can tell the crowd really appreciated you, you’re a real good champion, but could you feel the support of the crowd and the gallery all day?

TF: “It was very overwhelming in my favor. I heard a lot of chants, Tony chants. It’s pretty humbling really. I’m a little bit obnoxious [sic] to it sometimes when you’re out there playing because I can’t open up and acknowledge everybody because I’m trying to stay as in the moment as I can. But it is pretty humbling to hear I have so many fans, especially here in H-town and it was special to have those fans out there cheering for me.”

[vertical-gallery id=778306799]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Conversations with Champions: ‘I don’t know how Tiger did this 80-some times,’ Russell Henley said after winning 2022 World Wide Technology Championship

Conversations with Champions is presented by Sentry.

“Conversations with Champions presented by Sentry” is a weekly series from Golfweek. This week: Russell Henley, winner of the 2022 World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba.

Russell Henley snapped a five-year winless drought at El Camaleon Golf Course in Riviera Maya, Mexico, on Sunday.

His four-stroke win at Mayakoba put an end to a string of near-misses for the 33-year-old.

Henley at one point led by six shots, the largest on the PGA Tour since Jon Rahm at the 2020 Memorial. Players holding a six-shot lead entering the final round in last 15 seasons have now won 23 of 25 times.

Here is everything Henley said Sunday after his win:

“A lot of these events that I haven’t come through on, like I was telling [caddie] Todd [Gjesvold] earlier, just means so much more. I tried to learn from those situations where I didn’t get it done and didn’t come through down the stretch, just tried to keep working on my game and keep practicing hard and keep believing that I can do it. Took a little longer than I wanted, but I’ve been playing some good golf for a few years and it’s nice to get a W.

2022 World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba
Russell Henley celebrates with his caddie Todd Gjesvold celebrate after winning the 2022 World Wide Technology Championship at Club de Golf El Camaleon in Playa del Carmen. (Photo: Hector Vivas/Getty Images)

Q: It’s different when it’s a six-shot lead. I can imagine the last 24 hours were interesting in terms of just blinders, strategy and just going out there and taking care of business?

RH: Yeah, it’s tough. I don’t sleep well on a lead. I need a lot more practice. I have no idea how Tiger did this 80-some times. It’s tough for me just to kind of calm down. You definitely don’t feel the same as when you’re practicing at home, but that’s the fun of it, that’s why we play. We want to see what we’re made of out here and get tested under pressure.

Q: What were those calming moments for you today? What was the key to you in that round? The bogey at 5, but you hop right back at 6. What were some of the moments that kind of stand in your mind as to what helped you get it across the finish line?

RH: I kind of had it in my mind today I needed to get under par, for sure. I figured that somebody would shoot a low one and so, you know, making a bogey on 6, I kind of got a mud ball and just misplayed it with my hybrid and ended up missing a short putt. Just kind of a disappointing way to start the day because I hit every shot really nice and gave myself a lot of birdie putts before that. Andy just said, just shake it off and let’s just keep doing what we’re doing. And hit a great drive on the next hole and kind of felt like I can do this, I can keep playing well, that’s just one hole. So it was nice to come back from that.

Q: Easy to say these weeks are a springboard of something. You thought you were going to have this moment many times over the last couple weeks, but what can this week do for you moving forward?

RH: Yeah, I mean, I hope just keep giving me confidence. It’s just so hard to get in contention out here, first part, and then to close it out, it’s a really hard deal. I feel like it gets harder every year. I’m just going to try to just pull from the fact that when I didn’t feel super comfortable and I had a lead that I executed and I got it done.

Q: Twenty-five birdies and just two bogeys, incredible. With that, just a few thoughts on clutching your fourth career PGA Tour title.

RH: It’s surreal to hear you say that. You know, you always have doubts, am I going to win again. I’ve had a lot of tournaments where I haven’t gotten it done, so this one’s really special. To be leading by six, which is my largest 54-hole lead, I’m sure, and to just play solid today and get it done gives me a lot of confidence. I’m really excited, really thankful. Yeah, I don’t know what to say, it’s just surreal.

Q: This was your fifth start here at Mayakoba and haven’t had an entirely successful past four starts. Was there something different? Was it just you and how you were playing? Did the course feel different? What was the difference that you could maybe put a finger on?

RH: I’ve always felt like I could play well here. I think I’ve been in a little bit of an interesting spot with my game other years. One of the years I was playing pretty well after two days and ended up getting basically disqualified, so the track record may look a little better if you add that week in. I think golf’s just really hard. This week I felt like I was confident off the tee and I felt like I had — my putting stroke was working well. So just kind of rode the wave and here we are.

2022 World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba
Russell Henley plays a shot on the sixth hole during the third round of the 2022 World Wide Technology Championship at Club de Golf El Camaleon in Mexico. (Photo: Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)

Q: Nice weekend to be a Georgia Bulldog, I guess. Did you watch the game last night? What did you get up to last night as you were preparing for today knowing obviously you had such a big cushion?

RH: I was playing while the game was going on, so I didn’t get to see it. I heard on No. 13 or so that we were winning 21-3, so I was very happy to hear that. It was actually a little bit surprising that we bet them so handily. I guess they got a little closer at the end. The Dawgs are playing great. I’m still kind of living off of last year’s National Championship, though. It’s a fun time of the year to be a Georgia fan.

Q: In terms of your 54-hole leads, obviously you haven’t been able to convert one in a while, but you did this week obviously. Did you feel like this was a bit of a monkey off your back scenario?

RH: I do. I’ve just choked, you know. The nerves have gotten to me and I’ve made bad mistakes, bad mental mistakes and just haven’t gotten it done on Sunday. So put myself in position a decent amount, just haven’t gotten it done. So to come out and kind of do everything pretty well today tee to green and keep it pretty clean and just play steady was what was nice. I think, I don’t think I would have done it unless I had kind of failed so many times.

Q: When that final putt dropped on 18 and you won, what was the emotion like for you?

RH: Yeah, I mean, kind of walking up 18 I kind of felt like I wanted to cry a little bit. It was almost like just a little bit of emotion, just so much happiness looking back at the times where I kind of choked. I remember at Greensboro a couple years ago, just should have easily won the tournament, was just playing great and didn’t get it done. It was such a tough feeling because I put in a lot of work like we all do and just, you know, choked. So it was just a lot of emotion thinking about how those moments have kind of, I’m still here, I’m still fighting and I just can’t believe that I got it done. I don’t know, I don’t know if that helps.

Q: I want to know if you feel best like revenge on this course? Do you feel like this is revenge for you to come here again?

RH: Absolutely. I love being here, I love the golf course, I love the resort, the food is awesome, the people are so nice and this is always one that I get excited about coming to. I can’t say that about every event. Now every Tour event is great, but this one’s very special. Amazing location, very beautiful, so really fun.

Q: Did you consider that you get your revenge because of what happened in 2019?

RH: I never really thought about it, to be honest. I just felt like that was just some, just some weird stuff happening. But I definitely don’t regret turning myself in. I mean, I think that’s, you know, what we’re all supposed to do. But it was kind of, in my opinion, a little bit of a stupid situation considering I didn’t know that I had played a different ball. So it’s not like I was intentionally doing anything wrong, but you should always turn yourself in if you do do something against the rules. I did and I’m happy for that, and now I’m very happy.

2022 World Wide Technology Championship
Russell Henley lines up a putt on the green of the third hole during the third round of the World Wide Technology Championship at Club de Golf El Camaleon at on Nov. 5, 2022. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images)

Q: Could you tell us a little bit about what happened in that tournament in 2019? How was it that you hit a different ball?

RH: Yeah. So Titleist makes a lot of different balls, prototype balls. How they mark them, they’ll put a little dot or a little dash next to where it says Pro V1x on the ball. So when I was signing my scorecard, I just looked down at the ball and for some reason, the Pro V1x was facing me and it had a little dot beside the Pro V1x. I thought, do all my balls have that dot? I haven’t even, I don’t remember them having a dot. So then I started comparing them to the other eight balls I had and it was the only one with a dot. Turns out it’s a prototype ball that they make. I just play the 17 Pro V1x. So I told the rules official I changed balls about four times that day. They said since you don’t know when you played it, we’re going to give you a four-hole penalty, so it’s two shots a hole, eight shots, trip back home to Columbus, yep.

Q: You hit a great second shot on No. 6 after a not-so-good second shot on No. 5. Can you take us through that moment in the round, 5 and 6?

RH: You know, No. 5, I hit a good drive, I was happy with the drive. Had some mud on the right side of the ball and I tried to aim out to the right to give myself some room, because typically when the mud’s on the right side of the ball, it goes left. I didn’t aim far enough to the right, maybe I didn’t put a great swing on it, it’s tough to know, but the ball just went left the whole way. And I don’t really hit a shot like that too often, or I haven’t been lately, so it was frustrating. I feel like I maybe should have played a little more conservative than I did. I thought I made the right decision at the time. But then after that, my caddie, Andy, just said, “Shake it off, let’s just keep doing what we’re doing,” because the first four holes and then the tee shot on 5 I hit a fairway, a green and I gave myself a birdie putt and was playing well. So he said, “Let’s just keep doing what we’re doing,” and I said OK, going to keep fighting, keep trying to hit fairways and greens and it was nice to come back with a birdie on 6.

Q: After your fourth win on the PGA Tour, what would be the next goal? Do you have the majors in sight? Obviously, you contended in the 2021 U.S. Open and the other majors, but making a Ryder Cup team? What would be the goal for next year?

RH: I think I’ve always dreamed of winning a major and always dreamed of making a Ryder Cup team or Presidents Cup team. Those are high on the list. I would love to do those things. I mean, it’s so hard to make one of those teams and to win a major. It’s just so hard to win out here, everybody is so good and it’s so competitive. I definitely would like to do that. I’d like to just keep putting myself in position to win any Tour event because it’s just so difficult and it’s so much fun to put yourself and kind of see what you’re made of, see what your game’s made of and see if the hard work you’ve put in has paid off and that’s kind of why we play.

Q: Were you looking for perfection knowing that you didn’t bogey in the three rounds? Were you looking for perfection this Sunday?

RH: Absolutely. I mean, I thought I could do it, I thought I could do it. I was close to doing it, to having no bogeys, but in reality, you know, it’s pretty hard to do over the course of 72 holes, especially with how much water and hazards there are out here. So I was definitely — I definitely thought about it, but didn’t quite work out.

Q: Do you think this win can be like a new part in your career knowing that you started with three wins at a very young age in 2013, you were I think 23, 24, and now with this win you can have like another part in your career?

RH: I don’t know, I’m getting old. Everybody’s so young on the Tour now, everybody’s in their early 20s and coming out ready to win majors. I’m not really sure what the future holds. I feel like I have some great golf ahead of me, but I’m just going to try to keep doing what I’m doing and take care of my body and, Lord willing, I can just keep playing some good golf.

Q: Russell, are you kind of bummed that there’s only two events left in this part of the season or are you kind of ready for a break and can kind of lean into the holiday season?

RH: Yeah, I haven’t played a ton this year. I had some family stuff going on this summer and I’ve only played twice this season, so I’ve been kind of excited to play. Just, yeah, I mean, every tournament we play out here is a fun event, every one is run so well like this one. I’m always excited to play, it’s just you can play too much. Yeah, I mean, I think if I had it my way, every event would be at an awesome location like this and super exciting. Yeah, I’m excited to keep playing, I love playing on the PGA Tour.

Q: Your thoughts on the trophy creation?

2022 World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba
The trophy for the 2022 World Wide Technology Championship at Club de Golf El Camaleon in Playa del Carmen, Mexico. (Photo: Hector Vivas/Getty Images)

RH: Yeah, it’s awesome. My wife, Teil, is an artist and she’s going to appreciate it a lot more than I can.

It’s beautiful. I definitely don’t have any trophies like this one, that’s for sure.

I’m excited to put it in the house.

[vertical-gallery id=778305426]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Conversations with Champions: Seamus Power is ‘absolutely over the moon’. Here’s everything he said after winning the 2022 Butterfield Bermuda Championship

Conversations with Champions is presented by Sentry.

“Conversations with Champions presented by Sentry” is a weekly series from Golfweek. This week: Seamus Power, winner of the 2022 Butterfield Bermuda Championship.

Seamus Power was 34 before he broke through for his first PGA Tour win. Now, 15 months later, he’s got another one.

He had 28 birdies over four days at Port Royal Golf Course, breaking the old mark by one. Three of those came on the 16th hole on each of the first three days; his bogey Sunday on the par-3 ended that streak.

The highest-ranked player in the field, he was No. 48 before the action got started. On Monday, Power found himself in the No. 32 spot.

Here’s everything Power said after his win Sunday in Bermuda.

SP: “It was an interesting day. I felt great all day, played very nicely for the first, honestly, for the first 14 holes, played very, very nice golf, but it’s so tough coming in. I was able to hang on somewhere close to Ben there. He made quite a few birdies there through 11, but I was able to just do enough coming in. But it was tough going. It was a kind of day full of all sorts of emotions because, again, same as yesterday, you knew once you get to 12 tee that the next hour and a half was going to be really tough going. So I was able to make a couple birdies on the front and then kind of hang on there coming back in. I’m absolutely over the moon. The first one was amazing but to be able to win again, it’s fantastic. I get whatever, it’s pretty much a three-year exemption and all the kind of cool things that come with it. It’s just you’re kind of so proud and it’s amazing to be able to do it again.”

Q: Three-year exemption, plus you’re now No. 5 in the FedEx Cup and No. 32 in the Official World Golf Ranking. All those things combined, what does this do for you going forward?

SP: “The thing when you don’t have the exemption is like every year is year to year and it’s tough going, so an extra couple years is fantastic. To be able to focus on just practicing and improving and just playing my own game and not really worrying about all that stuff. I noticed that last season having the winner’s exemption for ’21-’22, I was really able to play much more freely like when you’re up near the lead and I think that’s a nice thing to be able to do. That’s also a goal to be doing anyway, but sometimes it’s a little harder than normal. So it’s going to be great. It gets a lot of bonuses. I mean, one of my favorite memories in golf was in Maui last year and being able to go back there year again, and having a three-year exemption is just fantastic. It opens doors as you get higher in the world rankings, all those kind of things are just all positives. So yeah, once it sinks in, I think some of the other stuff will kind of hit me like in probably the next few days, but for now just over the moon, just delighted to get the win.”

Q: You have a pretty solid fan base here, cheering and a lot of people out following you. Give us some info on that.

2022 Butterfield Bermuda Championship
Irish fans pose with a flag in support of Seamus Power during the final round of the 2022 Butterfield Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Course on October 30, 2022 in Southampton, Bermuda. (Photo: Andy Lyons/Getty Images)

SP: “It’s amazing. I had such a good experience in Bermuda. It’s one of my favorite places I’ve ever been and just I’ve been lucky enough to make some really good friends here. It’s just even at Bay Hill, like I have friends here who also have a house at Bay Hill and like Simon [Keelan, Power’s caddie] stayed with them for there, and we had like my birthday’s around that time and a big group of them were there and had a birthday party. Just really like good friends that I just kind of clicked with. Mick works for Butterfield and obviously he’s connected to the tournament. It’s just been kind of a special, kind of unusual, kind of unexpected thing that I’ve kind of stumbled across. But absolutely love coming here. Simon and I talk about this event like months in advance. It’s one of those weeks you look forward to, there’s something about the island that’s nice and obviously I played decently here before and obviously getting the win now, I just can’t wait to come back.”

Q: How would you describe how the last hour and a half of this tournament played out?

SP: “Obviously it’s very up and down, but it it’s kind of what I expected. It’s the same as yesterday, like once you get to, even 12 today was playing tough. I’m hitting, I have 100 yards to the pin and you’re guessing if it’s a pitching wedge I hit 145 yards or if it’s a gap wedge, and it’s just pure guessing. That goes slightly over and you’re standing on the next and it’s dead into the wind and you’re probably talking about, I thought I hit a good shot and it came up short of the green. It’s a good 30 yards short, probably 25 yards short. Fourteen is tough, the wind’s off the right whipping, and then 15 and 16 are just brutal today. So you know that stretch is coming and it’s just there’s only so much you can do. I think the toughest thing for me in that stretch is trying to putt, you’re trying to putt on 15 and 16. I had a putt on 16 and I’ll never understand what just happened to the ball. Just you’re getting wind gusts, the wind’s up and down. I missed the hole from I don’t know what it was, four and a half, five feet, and I felt like I hit a good putt. I just saw Ben before me do the same thing. It’s tough going out there, but I was able to do just enough. You know, birdie on 17 was nice. Made a bit of hard work of 18, but just did enough. But kind of what you’d expect. It seems it’s reasonably easygoing for the first, kind of the first 11 holes barring maybe No. 8. You’ve got a lot of good chances. I got a couple, not as many as I would have liked, but same as yesterday, you’re just trying to hold on for dear life.”

Q: When things kind of started to go a little bit south for Ben [Griffin], are you just kind of focused on what you’re doing? Do you see what’s kind of going on?

SP: “It’s a bit of both. You obviously are trying to focus on your own thing. Ben was in some trouble [on 14] on the left and before I kind of get into my routine, you just have to give a conscious effort to get back into your own thing. I hit a really good shot and made the putt for birdie and that ended up being a big birdie. It’s tough, but he didn’t do a ton wrong. It’s just, as I said, he hit a shot on 16 on the wrong side of the wind and it’s the only ball I’ve seen go left on 16. I didn’t think he hit that bad a shot, but it’s just one of those days, it’s so exposed and it’s just a little small golf ball floating around there. If you get a wrong gust, you’re in trouble. I hit a really good shot I thought into 16. Three-quarters of the way through the flight you get a huge gust, it gets stood up and it’s a good 20 yards short. But you couldn’t convince me to hit one extra club on the tee. It’s difficult. You know it’s coming and you’re just kind of trying to do your best. But that birdie on 17 was nice. It was playing really short, but still to get one there, give myself a (indiscernible) up the last.”

2022 Butterfield Bermuda Championship
Seamus Power plays a shot during the final round of the 2022 Butterfield Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Course in Southampton, Bermuda. (Photo: Andy Lyons/Getty Images)

Q: Getting that first win, was it harder getting the first one or chasing that second win? Now you have that second win, do you maybe have an answer?

SP: “I thought it was a little easier today. It’s never going to be easy, but I certainly felt very comfortable right from the get-go. My three shots on the first hole were three of my nicer shots this week and I think that showed I was in a very good place mentally. Certainly a little easier even down the stretch even though I didn’t kind of play that way, but I felt more comfortable. So I think it’s probably a little bit easier. Knowing that you’ve done it before just helps.”

Q: You didn’t take the lead in the final round until the 14th hole when you made birdie and Ben made bogey. Did you feel like an experienced veteran out there compared to Ben’s experience and playing with him, and what was that dynamic like for you?

SP: “Yeah, I just kept reminding myself I know this course well enough. I wasn’t making many mistakes and I was very confident. He birdied 10 and 11 to get two ahead again and I had a couple chances there that I just missed. But again, I just kept reminding myself if I could just stay in there. I knew that that stretch, there’s very few people not going to drop shots there. I knew if I had a chance standing on 12 tee, I thought a little bit more experience having been there before, having played this tournament a few times before, I thought it would stand to me and it just about did in the end.”

Q: You were coming in this week 48th in the world ranking. With this win you get that likely invitation to the Masters. What’s it kind of feel like to get that, to come here, get that win, take care of that and not worry about the top 50?

2022 Butterfield Bermuda Championship
Seamus Power hits his first shot on the 17th hole during the final round of the 2022 Butterfield Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Course on October 30, 2022 in Southampton, Bermuda. (Photo: Andy Lyons/Getty Images)

SP: “Yeah, it’s really nice. It’s kind of a funny thing. I didn’t really pay attention to world rankings until I got into like the top 10 in the world and now it becomes very, very relevant. Even close to the match play and then obviously the cutoff for some of the majors starts approaching. So it’s nice, as you said, to be able to kind of get a bump away from that 50. It’s nice. It opens up so many doors. All of a sudden like you’re looking at changing your schedule and you’re going to add Maui and tournaments like that, and even knowing that you’re going to be in the Playoffs and all this kind of stuff. It makes things a lot simpler, that’s for sure. You’re not looking — not as if you’re doing it all the time, but you’re sometimes looking over your shoulder a little bit, especially because I was up maybe in the 30s and just hadn’t played great since like the middle of the summer. So, as you said, just slipping down, down. And you know the cutoff for the top-50 is coming up soon, there’s not much golf left in the year, so it’s nice to get away from that, for sure. It’ll definitely like clear your thoughts, clear your mind going forward.”

Q: On 14, what did you hit off the tee and what did you hit?

SP: “2-iron.”

Q: And what did you have left in and what did you hit?

SP: “I had 148 or 9 yards, 148 yards. I hit gap wedge, landed about pin high and probably just rolled to the back edge maybe 25 feet past, yeah.”

Q: Simon said you guys were talking about how you wanted more wind when you were here Friday. Was it ever a case of like be careful what you wish for?

SP: “No, I was absolutely fine with the wind the last couple days because I’ve been lucky enough to play here a few times and I’ve seen this course in a lot of different wind directions and I’ve seen how — just a bit of experience. Even on 16, like I hit a very, very good shot aimed at the left hazard line. I’ve done it before here and it ended up online with the pin. It’s having a little bit of extra confidence knowing that my ball was going to come back and do what it’s supposed to do versus other guys, it’s hard to aim in the ocean and hit a shot. When you’re not used to doing it, you haven’t done it before, it’s hard to trust that it’s going to come back, but I’ve played it before. I played here last year and the tee was back and you’re hitting a long iron starting out into the ocean, same thing. You just learn to trust it a little bit more. Same with No. 8 today, you’re very sheltered on that tee box, but I’ve played in that westerly wind before. Once it gets out past the tee it gets hammered and it gets hit hard and it goes left. So I hit a very confident shot starting to a right pin, starting probably 10 steps right of the pin, which normally I wouldn’t be comfortable doing, but I’ve been able to do it before here and just I knew the ball would come back if you just kind of trust it.”

Q: Back in Ireland, you play a lot of junior golf with Simon?

SP: “I would have, yeah. Simon’s from like an hour away from me so we would a played, yeah, a bunch of different like championships and all that stuff. More so against each other, more junior golf and championships and stuff like that, yeah.”

Q: When you turned pro, were you one of those guys that said, ‘Okay, I’ll give myself three years, four years, five years’, or were you in it for no matter what?

SP: “I don’t know, to be honest. I always said like if I thought that I was good enough to win on the PGA Tour, I was probably going to keep playing. If I thought for a second I wasn’t, I would have stopped. Honestly, if I thought it in six months, I would have stopped in six months. That was my mentality going into it. I didn’t have any interest in playing not at the highest level for a long time. I wanted play at the highest level and I thought if I didn’t think I could win, I would have stopped probably early on.”

Q: A lot of Irish players have been playing really well lately.

SP: “Yeah.”

2022 Butterfield Bermuda Championship
An Irish flag on the bag of Seamus Power during the final round of the 2022 Butterfield Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Course on October 30, 2022 in Southampton, Bermuda. (Photo: Andy Lyons/Getty Images)

Q: Rory recently and Shane in…

SP: “Wentworth, and Padraig. Yeah, it’s been great. You know, it’s one of those things that you just, you know, whatever there’s some sort of once you see like other guys you know win, it just gives you a little bit of a boost knowing that you can get back there yourself. Yeah, it’s huge. Like Rory and Shane have played amazing golf this year. Rory’s play since this summer has been incredible. And then like Shane as well, he didn’t get the win out of Wentworth but he was up there at a lot of big tournaments. He was high in the Masters, he played well in so many other big tournaments. So it was great that both those guys got the win. Padraig, yeah. I mean, Padraig absolutely smashed his way through Champions Tour there. It’s great for Irish golf. We have Leona Maguire on the LPGA as well. It’s a good time for Irish golf and hopefully, you know, you’re always hoping it’ll kind of inspire some more junior golf in Ireland.”

Q: We talked earlier in the week about the Ryder Cup and Luke Donald. Did you get a chance to chat with him this week at all?

SP: “I did briefly on Wednesday night at that party in the hotel. Yeah, we just chatted briefly. There’s a new event, he was just telling me some of the details about it, GB&I vs. Europe team event and just some of the options I might have. As I said to him, like my, before this week, like how I played in that was going to affect some of my schedule, so obviously this helps a lot, gives me more flexibility going forward. So something I’m going to talk to him about it again now that I have a little bit more freedom to play where I want. So it’s going to be, yeah, I’m going to talk to him and see what he recommends. You might as well see. You know, if it doesn’t match up, it doesn’t match up, but I certainly want to ask his opinion and I don’t want to come next September and finding out if I would have done this, I would have been on it. So it’s something, this certainly helps, but I’m going to talk to Luke and see what happens.”

Q: You had 28 birdies this week, which set a tournament record.

SP: “Nice.”

2022 Butterfield Bermuda Championship
Seamus Power putts on the 16th hole during the final round of the 2022 Butterfield Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Course in Southampton, Bermuda. (Photo: Andy Lyons/Getty Images)

Q: Can you comment on that?

SP: “As I came here on Tuesday, it’s the best I’ve seen the greens. I was excited because I putted well here in the past and as soon as I’d seen the surface, I knew I was going to be able to make some putts and that’s what I did. I felt my wedge play was good, I had some easy putts, and you kind of do, I did the things that you need to do to make birdies. I putted well, hit some wedges close and I played the par 5s well.”

[vertical-gallery id=778304050]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]