Tony Finau, ProjectProtect joins forces to produce 5 million hand-stitched masks

It’s an ambitious goal: Aligning 10,000 volunteers to sew more than five million medical-grade masks that can go to frontline health workers.

It’s an ambitious goal: Aligning 10,000 volunteers to sew more than 5 million medical-grade masks for frontline health workers in the battle against the global coronavirus pandemic.

That’s exactly why Tony Finau is joining forces with ProjectProtect.

In conjunction with Intermountain Healthcare, University of Utah Health and Latter-day Saint Charities in Utah, ProjectProtect aims to assist those who need personal protective equipment to combat COVID-19.

Organizers says it’s shaping up to be the largest Utah-based volunteer effort since the 2002 Olympic Winter Games.

“It means everything to us,” Finau said. “We wanted to get involved in the most meaningful way possible in our community. Our attention turned to helping those on the frontlines as I felt like the utmost importance at this time and during this pandemic. This ProjectProtect was the perfect initiative to support and to help, so it means everything for me and our foundation to be involved in this capacity to know that we are doing our part as a community, and putting our best foot forward as a community is a big deal.”

ProjectProtect also aims to produce more than 50,000 face shields as well as reusable isolation gowns.

ProjectProtect says: “The Relief Society organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has tapped into its network of thousands of volunteers from around the world.”

“My eyes have truly been opened to this whole pandemic, but to who the true heroes are during this time,” Finau said. “Not only today, but every day. Those on the frontlines are saving lives every single day, and we owe it to them as a community to do our part now.”

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Brandel Chamblee Q&A Part III: Advice for Bryson; talking classes of 2011 & ’19, and the Tour’s next breakout star is …

Brandel Chamblee spoke to Golfweek for an exclusive Q&A on all parts of the professional golf landscape, from teachers to top players.

It seems in every infomercial there’s eventually a moment when the host says, “But wait … there’s more!”

We’ve reached that point in the Q&A with Brandel Chamblee, which took place at the Waste Management Phoenix Open before Sungjae Im or Viktor Hovland won. If you missed Part I or Part II, click the links to catch up. Trust us, Part III with Chamblee is better than The Godfather III.

GW: If Bryson DeChambeau came to you for advice, what would you tell him?

BC: (Laughing) What would I tell him? There’s a lot of things I like about Bryson’s game. I guess I would tell him to go back and look at the records of John Schlee, Mac O’Grady and Bobby Clampett (note: they won a combined four PGA Tour titles, or one fewer than DeChambeau on his own). I would say you go look at those records. And you just tell me if that led to the kind of career that you want. Because that’s where you’re headed.

All those players were highly technical, very conscientious players, very sharp intellectually, but is that the kind of career you want? And then it’s like, “What kind of career do you want?” There is room for curiosity in the game, but the game is more art than it is science; it’s more abstract than it is linear. And you’re completely linear and that’s great if you want to be an engineer, but this game, the beautiful thing about golf is engineers can make money out here, you know, but artists make more money.

Seve made a hell of a lot more money than Mac O’Grady, and the thing is that those engineers are all sure they’re right. Because math adds up and they go down and they look at all these numbers and it absolutely has to work. You look at the way DeChambeau looks at a miss, he looks at it with such an incredulous hatred last week when his ball goes left, he’s like, “How does that go left?” It makes no sense to him because two and two is four. But not on a golf course it’s not. Two and two, to quote “The Big Short,” two and two equals fish. Can’t remember the character’s name that said that but two and two equals fish. Golf is not like that. So I would tell him to go look at those players and then look at their careers. It’s like, “Do you want a career like that? Because that’s where you’re headed.”

GW: The class of 2011 had its “quarter-life crisis” last year. Jordan Spieth was winless, Justin Thomas was injured for a stretch, but he’s bounced back. Daniel Berger was out, too, and looks to be on solid footing again. Patrick Rodgers still hasn’t won yet and struggled to keep his card. And Ollie Schniederjans lost his while Michael Kim is lost in the wilderness and hardly has made a cut since his lone win at the 2018 John Deere Classic. Xander Schauffele was the unheralded guy of the group and was the best of the bunch last season. What do you make of them?

BC: It’s beautiful that Xander is taught by his father, Justin Thomas is taught by his father. Those two have gone on. So, the others did what? They went and started talking to every teacher there was, or their teachers started changing the way they taught them. Again, you cannot overstate the fact that both Justin Thomas and Xander were taught by their fathers who were there, not for their own benefit as teachers, but purely for their son and they enjoy watching their sons invent and create and get better. Experience will make you better.

Schniederjans has this incredibly sharp angle of attack, lowest launch angle on the PGA Tour. When you start seeing people with a launch angle of six, they’re in trouble. That’s way too much angle. They’re not going to have great proximity to the hole and it’s going to creep into their putting.

Not quite sure what happened to Daniel Berger. Growing a superstar is fraught with issues. You get, you know, lured away by equipment contracts, you get lured away by teachers who have only their best interests in mind. Yeah, they’re trying to make you a better player but they’re also trying to use you as their guinea pig for their ideas. You make a little bit of money, maybe you get a little complacent. There are all kinds of potholes out there. Injuries, there’s all kinds of things. You go to the gym and hurt yourself, things like you look at Camilo Villegas and Anthony Kim, they were going to be superstars but they go into the gym, they hurt themselves, existential hurdles, nocturnal issues. There are all kinds of things that get in the way of growing a superstar.

GW: Which of the Class of 2019 – Viktor Hovland, Collin Morikawa and Matthew Wolff – would you want to caddie for, to have as your meal ticket, for the next decade or two?

BC: That’s a tough one. You would be happy if you got any of those three. It may just be that 20 years from now, all three of them have comparable careers the way Phil (Mickelson) and Ernie (Els) did, who came out at the same time and the question would have been asked, “Who is going to have the better career, Phil or Ernie?”

To the degree that Phil beat Ernie is only because Phil is smart enough not to let anybody mess with his golf swing, and he had multiple teachers and none of them changed his golf swing one iota. If Ernie had stuck with the golf swing that he had in 1992, he would have probably annihilated Phil. You look at Ernie Els’ golf swing in 2000-2001, he goes up to the top and casts. Els was nowhere near the driver of the golf ball that he should have been because he cast the club. He threw away all his power on his angle in the transition. The reason Ernie Els couldn’t beat Tiger Woods was not because Tiger Woods was better at golf, it was because Ernie Els was being taught to cast the club. He couldn’t drive the golf ball like Tiger Woods. And he was winning majors when Phil couldn’t win majors. It took a bizarre set of circumstances for Phil to start winning majors, like a solid core golf ball turning everybody into inaccurate drivers that put them in the rough and all of a sudden Phil could beat people in the rough.

But to answer your question, I guess probably Viktor Hovland. If you’re a caddie, you would never have to stray very far from the fairway, you’re not going to get mud on your shoes very often. He’s got the smallest miss of just about anybody out there and he’s just a delightful young man. He hits as many or more solid shots than anybody in the game. He hits it right on the meat of the club. Tony Finau and Hovland, those are the two who could at any moment just go off.

GW: What do you think is holding Finau back?

BC: Nothing. I mean, is he a great putter? No. But statistics lie a lot and win totals lie a lot. He is more on the cusp of breaking out than any other player in golf right now. He may only win one time this year, but he may win four or three, he may do what David Duval did. He is, as we sit here and speak, he’s second in Strokes Gained: Tee to Green, only Rory is better than him. He’s seventh in Strokes Gained: Total, in spite of the fact that he’s a below-average putter. He’s an extraordinary golfer. Any minute, any minute he could go off.

If you look who in the top, say, 200 in the world, who is poised for a breakthrough, there’s Sungjae Im, Ben An, Joaquin Niemann and Matt Wolff, Collin Morikawa. There’s Doc Redman, but there’s nobody more poised to break out than Tony Finau. There’s Victor Hovland, good gracious, it’s Finau and Hovland who are the two that are most poised in my opinion. But Collin Morikawa is right there. Those are the players who are most poised to break out.

Tony Finau remains upbeat despite playoff loss at Waste Management Phoenix Open

Anyone who expected Tony Finay to be angry or despondent that he came up short at TPC Scottsdale doesn’t know him very well.

Tony Finau dearly wanted to win the Waste Management Phoenix Open, but anyone who expected him to be angry or despondent that he came up short Sunday at TPC Scottsdale doesn’t know him very well.

Finau led by 2 shots with two holes to play and lost in playoff to Webb Simpson, which is the same thing that happened to Rickie Fowler in 2016.

That loss left Fowler in tears but Finau took his near-miss as a positive sign.

“I learned that my game is in a great place early in the season,” he said. “I feel good. I had a chance, a great chance to win this week. Unfortunately, it didn’t happen, but my game’s better than it’s ever been.

“And if you know anything about me, I’ll persevere through anything. I’ll knock it off soon and I’ll be on my way.”

What made it easier to take was his close friendship with Simpson.

MORE: Scores | Photos | Trophies | Money | Winner’s bag

“I love that guy and that’s one hell of a finish,” he said of Simpson making birdies on his last two holes of regulation and the first playoff hole. “He’s a great champion and hats off to him. I’m a huge fan. He’s one of my best friends out here, and I love that guy.”

Webb Simpson shakes hands after beating Tony Finau on the first playoff hole to win the 2020 Waste Management Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. Photo by Michael Chow/USA TODAY Sports Network

Finau recently moved his family to Scottsdale from his native Utah, and Sunday marked the third time that a Valley resident has come up short in a playoff at TPC Scottsdale, joining Billy Mayfair and Chez Reavie, who grew up in the Valley.

Mayfair lost in a playoff to Vijay Singh in 1995 and Reavie was edged by Gary Woodland in 2018.

This event has been won nine times by Valley residents, including three by Mark Calcavecchia. One of Phil Mickelson’s three victories came when he lived in the Valley.

Tom Purtzer was the first Valley resident to claim the title, when the Open was played at Phoenix Country Club, in 1984. Other local winners were Steve Jones, Tom Lehman, Jonathan Kaye and Aaron Baddeley.

The ‘next’ Phil?

Jon Rahm has made it clear in the past that he doesn’t like being called “the next Seve,” in comparison to the late Seve Ballesteros, who came from the same area of Spain where Rahm grew up and was his idol.

But if fans at the Open want to consider him “the next Phil,” he is just fine with being compared to fellow Arizona State alumnus Mickelson.

Jon Rahm and caddie Adam Hayes look on at the second tee during the second round of the 2020 Waste Management Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. Photo by Joe Camporeale/USA TODAY Sports

“I hope I am,” Rahm said after completing the final round Sunday. “Every time Phil plays here, I am completely overshadowed and I’m OK with that, but with him not being here this year, I guess was kind of the guy, which is fine.”

Rahm, who could have climbed to the No. 1 ranking in the world with a win this week, closed with a score of 70 and broke par all four days of the event to finish at 11-under, which was tied for ninth, 6 shots off the lead.

“(I played) great tee to green but can’t make a putt to save my life, simple as that,” he said. “I don’t know if it was misreads or mis-hits with the putter, but it led to frustration, and affected the rest of the game the last two days.”

Mickelson has played in this event 30 times, winning it three times, and clearly became the people’s choice, particularly with ASU fans. This year, he decided instead to play in the Saudi International in Saudi Arabia.

His 16 tournament titles are the most in ASU golf history and Rahm is second on that list with 11. Both golfers played in the Open for the first time as amateurs on sponsor exemptions. Mickelson is credited with helping attract the largest crowds in golf at this event.

“It’s fun, so I hope I’m next in line for that,” Rahm said of the comparison. “When you can feed off the crowd, you can use it to your advantage.”

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Webb Simpson beats Tony Finau in playoff to win Waste Management Phoenix Open

Webb Simpson birdied the last two holes of regulation and the first hole of a playoff to win the 2020 Waste Management Phoenix Open.

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Don’t change the channel to the Super Bowl just yet.

The Waste Management Phoenix Open went to a playoff for the fourth time in the last five years on Sunday at TPC Scottsdale.

Webb Simpson rallied from two strokes down with two to go with birdies on 17 and 18 to catch Tony Finau and force the extra action.

Simpson then birdied the first playoff hole to win it, his sixth PGA Tour victory and first since the 2018 Players Championship. He’s now 2-5 in playoffs.

Simpson will take home a first-place check for $1,314,000.

Finau led by two going to the 17th and led by one on the 18th tee box.

He then drilled his drive 366 yards and made a great approach to eight feet but after watching Simpson make his birdie putt, Finau couldn’t match, forcing the playoff.

On the first playoff hole, Finau drove it left into the church-pew bunkers, while Simpson put it right down the fairway.

Both got on the green in two. Finau putted first but missed his birdie try left. Simpson then made his from 10 feet to win.

PHOENIX OPEN: Leaderboard | Photos

The round of the day came from Justin Thomas, who shot a 65 to finish at 14 under. He finished T-3 along with Bubba Watson, who posted a 66, and Nate Lashley, who shot a 68.

Max Homa and Scott Piercy finished T-6 at 13 under. Adam Long bogeyed the last to finish solo eighth.

Jon Rahm came into the week with a chance to claim the World No. 1 ranking with a win but finished T-9.

Meanwhile, Xander Schauffele was 3 over on Sunday, dropping from T-5 to finish T-16. J.B. Holmes, who has won the tournament twice, took a one-shot lead after Friday’s second round but shot a final round 75 to also finish T-16.

The PGA moves on to the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am next week.

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PGA Tour honors Kobe Bryant with flag at 16th hole at TPC Scottsdale

The 16th hole location at TPC Scottsdale will be 24 paces on and 8 left in honor of Kobe Bryant on Sunday.

SCOTTSDALE — The tributes to Kobe Bryant keep coming at the Waste Management Phoenix Open. On Sunday, the PGA Tour said it plans to get into the act, too.

There have been shoes and hats decorated with Bryant’s number by the likes of Gary Woodland and Bryson DeChambeau, stamped wedges by Justin Thomas, who also sported a white-and-red Lower Merion No. 33 jersey, Bryant’s high school jersey, while playing the par-3 16th every day.

Tournament leader Tony Finau has rocked Bryant’s Los Angeles Lakers jersey while playing 16 in 2 under this week. He nearly aced it in the third round.

On Saturday night, the PGA Tour tweeted out the hole location for Sunday’s final round, 24 paces on and 8 from the left, highlighting the two numbers that Bryant wore during his illustrious career. Bryant was killed along with his daughter, Gianna, and seven other people in a helicopter crash one week ago.

PHOENIX OPEN: Scores | Updates | Photos

The flag is embroidered with No. 8 on one side and No. 24 on the other.

Finau said he will definitely don the Bryant jersey, which he has put on in the tunnel leading to the 16th tee each day, on Sunday as he tries for his first win since 2016.

“I’m pretty happy with being a couple under in that Kobe jersey,” Finau said. “Looks like I’ll be wearing it tomorrow.”

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Stage is set for thrilling final round at Waste Management Phoenix Open

With a crowded leaderboard, a picture-perfect weather forecast and a risk-reward finishing stretch, the stage is set for Sunday.

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With a crowded leaderboard, including some established PGA Tour winners, a picture-perfect weather forecast and a risk-reward finishing stretch, the stage is set for yet another thrilling final round in the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

Tony Finau, with a brilliant third round of 9-under 62, grabbed the lead Saturday but has plenty of company, including former U.S. Open and Players Championship winner Webb Simpson, who is just one shot behind.

“I’m in great position,” said Finau, whose bogey-free round was highlighted by an eagle on the par-5 13th hole. “There’s a lot of golf to be played out there. … but I’m going to have a chance to win and that’s exciting for me.”

Also in the hunt are two-time Phoenix Open winner J.B. Holmes and Hudson Swafford, who are two shots back, and three others who are three behind, including Xander Schauffele.

Phoenix Open: Updates | Scores | Photos | Tee times, TV info

“It’s going to be challenging, but guys I think are still looking at it as plenty of birdie opportunities,” said Simpson, whose round of 64 included a hole-in-one on the 12th hole, the third ace recorded this week. “This course is playing short so we’re having shorter clubs in, even though the greens are more firm.”

Dressed as Lloyd and Harry from Dumb and Dumber, Jared Amason and Dan Gittemeier cruise around the 2020 Waste Management Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. (Photo: USA TODAY Network)

More birdie opportunities could make for a super finish on Super Bowl Sunday. Finau predicted a winning score of 20-under, which would be the lowest since TPC Scottsdale underwent a renovation in 2014 to toughen it up.

Prior to that, the course yielded some of the lowest scores in PGA Tour history, but since then, the best has been 18-under 266 by Gary Woodland in 2018.

“20-under has got a great chance,” Finau said. “You could take a lot of guys out of the equation. They would have to shoot something ridiculous. That (20-under) seems like a good number.”

With course conditions that players have raved about all week and a forecast calling for sunny skies, calm winds and temperatures in the high 70s, Schauffele thinks that might actually be a conservative guess.

“Tony’s just being nice,” said Schauffele, who is considered one of the tour’s brightest upcoming young guns. “If he puts together a nice mid-60s round I think it will be lower than 20-under. He’s more than capable of it. I just have to keep my head down (and not at look at leader boards). I’m chasing so it’s kind of a comfortable spot I would say.”

Finau has just one tour victory, which came in 2016, but has flirted with many others. He played on the U.S. Ryder Cup team in 2018 and the Presidents Cup last December. He is 13th in the world rankings.

Nike Air Max 97 G Waste Management limited edition shoes are worn by Kristi Morgan at the 2020 Waste Management Phoenix Open. (Photo: USA TODAY Sports Network)

Simpson has five tour victories with the last one being the Players Championship in 2018.

Holmes, the leader heading into Saturday’s play, had an up-and-down round and wound up shooting 1-under 70.

“Yeah, I mean I caught some bad breaks today,” he said. “On 9 I hit a spike mark on about a 5-footer that was right in the middle and kicked it left. I hit the middle of the green with a 6-iron on 12 and it somehow rolls in the water. So I just hung in there and towards the end made a couple birdies, so gave myself a chance for (Sunday) and that’s really what we’re shooting for.”

For those no longer in contention, like defending champion Rickie Fowler – a 2-under day left him at 5-under 208, 11 shots off the lead – there’s still plenty to look forward to.

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“I know I got another low round in me, at least mid- to low-60s, and it will be a little quieter out here (Sunday),” he said. “There will some people nursing a hangover and getting ready for the Super Bowl, so we’ll go see if we can get a good (score) and then saddle up and watch the football.”

Simpson likes the 49ers to win the Super Bowl, and Finau said he is picking the Chiefs. While that might make for a good discussion in the final pairing Sunday, the focus will be squarely on winning a golf tournament, which will require plenty of concentration and low scores with eight golfers within 4 shots of the lead.

“I understand what it’s like to win out here now and that it’s getting harder,” Simpson said. “So no matter who wins, they’re going to have to shoot a special round.”

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Tony Finau shoots 62, takes Phoenix Open lead with ‘most enjoyable round of my career’

Tony Finau vaulted up the leaderboard behind seven birdies and an eagle as he tries to win for the first time since 2016.

SCOTTSDALE – Two weeks ago, Tony Finau moved his family from his native Utah to just up the road from TPC Scottsdale, approximately a 6-minute drive door-to-door. He will head into the final round of the Waste Management Phoenix Open sleeping in his own bed on a one-stroke lead after tying his career-low round on the PGA Tour with a blistering bogey-free 9-under 62.

“That’s about as good as you can play out here,” said Jon Rahm, who played in Finau’s threesome at TPC Scottsdale.

Finau got off to a quick start with birdies at the first and third and then drilled a 21-footer at No. 8 and a 9-footer at No. 9 to turn in 31. His putter stayed hot on the back as he rolled in a 27-foot birdie putt at 12 and then surged into a tie for the lead with an eagle at the par-5 13th.

“That was the first time he hit a driver into the fairway this week,” said Finau’s caddie Greg Bodine. “That made all the difference in the world.”

Phoenix Open: Updates | Scores | Photos | Tee times, TV info

Finau, who has power to burn averaging 309 yards off the tee, hit 12 out of 14 fairways, a day after hitting only six and he took advantage. He drilled a 5-iron to 20 feet and rolled in the eagle putt. Finau smoked his approach from 230 yards even closer at the par-5 15th, but missed the 6-foot eagle putt and settled for birdie.

He had one more birdie left in his arsenal, his seventh of the day, sticking a sand wedge from 129 yards to 5 feet at the par-3 16th hole while donning a Kobe Bryant jersey in homage to the NBA legend he idolized.

“Damn near made it,” Finau said. “That would have been pretty sweet with the Kobe jersey on. But I like that shot. That was pretty nice.”

As was signing for 62 and becoming the first player this season with three rounds of 62 or better. Finau posted a 54-hole total of 16-under 197 and one stroke better than Webb Simpson, whose 64 on Saturday included an ace at the 196-yard 12th hole. Hudson Swafford (66) and J.B. Holmes (70), who is seeking his third WMPO title, are tied for third another stroke behind.

Bryant’s death on Jan. 26 hit Finau, who lost his mother to a car crash and is the father of four, particularly hard. For three days, he has been channeling the “Mamba Mentality,” which he described as “hard work and love for your craft.”

“I think that’s his lasting legacy,” Finau added.

Finau’s coach, Boyd Summerhays, said that his star pupil found something in his swing three weeks ago — he’s 43-under in his last 11 rounds — and credited it for Finau’s strong showing the first three rounds. When asked to explain what he found on the range, Finau demurred.

“It’s helped, no question,” he said. “I think I need to keep that to myself for now, but sometimes one swing thought seems to work for a while and this one has worked for three weeks and we’ve got one more day and hopefully it’s still there.”

The question for Finau is can he close the deal on Sunday? Despite being ranked No. 13 in the world and representing Team USA in the last Ryder Cup and Presidents Cup team competitions, Finau has only one career victory on the PGA Tour at the 2016 Puerto Rico Open. (He’s 0-2 with the 54-hole lead.)

When asked to identify what has held Finau back, Golf Channel commentator Brandel Chamblee didn’t hesitate: “Nothing,” he said. “At any minute he could go off. He is more on the cusp of breaking out that any player in golf right now. He may do a David Duval and win three, four times this season.”

Finau has been vocal that a good season for him has to include ending his victory drought, and he didn’t shy away from addressing its importance in his post-round press conference.

“If I want to accomplish the things I feel like I can accomplish, I have to put those type of expectations on myself,” Finau said. “So, I look forward to tomorrow. My game’s in a good place and I always tell myself whatever happens, you’re going to learn from it and get better and stronger. As long as it doesn’t kill you, you know, I’m still standing here punching and I’m going to do that for the rest of my career. So, I got 18 holes to try and win this golf tournament and my expectation is exactly that.”

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Justin Thomas, Tony Finau, Max Homa honor Kobe Bryant at Phoenix Open

Several golfers took the opportunity to pay tribute to Kobe Bryant at the Waste Management Phoenix Open’s first round.

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Several golfers took the opportunity to pay tribute to Kobe Bryant during the Waste Management Phoenix Open’s first round.

Justin Thomas wore his Lower Merion High School Kobe Bryant jersey on the 16th hole.

Max Homa wore his No. 24 Los Angeles Lakers gold jersey, also on the 16th hole.

Tony Finau played his round in Lakers purple-and-gold golf shoes.

Thomas arrived at TPC Scottsdale this week with his wedges stamped with tributes to Bryant: “Mamba mentality,” “Black Mamba,” “Kobe Bean Bryant” and “81 points.”

Justin Thomas honors the Kobe Bryant at the 2020 Waste Management Phoenix Open. Photo by Rob Schumacher/The Republic via USA TODAY NETWORK

Thomas was asked how it felt to wear the Kobe jersey on the 16th hole.

“It felt great. I’ve played a lot of golf in that, believe it or not, so it felt pretty comfortable.

“He had such an impact on me and he was such a person that I looked up to and tried to kind of have my mental approach like that, I felt like it was very fitting. There’s only one tournament all year you can put a jersey on and hit a shot. Just the timing worked out to be here, so it was a no-brainer for me.”

Finau’s shoes were mostly purple with a gold Nike swoosh and the numbers 8 and 24, in reference to the two numbers, both since retired, that Bryant wore for the Lakers.

Tony Finau wears Kobe Bryant-inspired golf shoes during the first round of the 2020 Waste Management Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. Photo by Joe Camporeale/USA TODAY Sports

Finau spoke to reporters last Sunday after the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines.

“I’m a huge Kobe fan and a Laker fan single-handedly because of Kobe Bryant,” Finau said. “To have that happen to one of the greatest ever to play the game of basketball and one of the greatest athletes in sports is so tragic.”

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Tony Finau says Kobe Bryant’s death reminds him of mother’s passing

Finau has made it known on his social media that he’s a big fan of Kobe Bryant and once wore Lakers purple and gold golf shoes.

Sports fans spent Sunday struggling to process the tragic death of NBA legend Kobe Bryant and his 13-year-old daughter Gianna.

For Tony Finau, Bryant’s death is more than the death of an icon or a personal hero, it invokes feelings he’s felt before.

Finau spoke to reporters Sunday after his final round at the Farmers Insurance Open about the death of the 41-year-old Bryant. Finau honestly answered that he was still processing it all.

“I’m a huge Kobe fan and a Laker fan single-handedly because of Kobe Bryant,” Finau said. “To have that happen to one of the greatest ever to play the game of basketball and one of the greatest athletes in sports is so tragic. I’ll be mourning with the NBA and just anyone who knew him or was impacted by him. I definitely was, and very sad, sad day for sports and just people in general…

Tony Finau during the final round of the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines (South Course). (Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports)

“I’ve experienced something like this in my life before. My mom passed away in a tragic car accident in 2011. It’s crazy that some of those feelings that I had at that time are back. That’s how much Kobe meant to me at a different magnitude. The love of a mother is one that I think you can’t replace, but to have some of those feelings come back when I heard the news makes me quite sad and I’ll be mourning for him.”

Bryant and Gianna were among nine who died Sunday morning in a helicopter crash in Calabasas, California. Bryant was flying on his personal helicopter when it crashed about 30 miles northwest of downtown Los Angeles.

The investigation into the cause of the crash is ongoing. The identities of the seven other victims have not yet been confirmed.

Bryant stands among one of the greatest athletes of all time. A Los Angeles Laker for 20 seasons, Bryant appeared in seven NBA Finals, winning five. He also won back-to-back NBA Finals MVP Awards, two Olympic gold medals and an Academy Award in 2018. Bryant ranks fourth on the NBA’s all-time leading scorers list with 33,643 points— a feat that was passed by LeBron James Saturday evening.

Apart from the accolades Bryant accumulated, his trademark dedication and intensity, known as the “Mamba mentality”, are what many— including Finau— associate with the icon.

A detail of the shoe Tony Finau wore during round one of The Northern Trust at Glen Oaks Club on August 24, 2017 in Westbury, New York. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

“His work ethic I think is something that will be talked about, that’s what his legacy is I think,” Finau said. “The Mamba Mentality is a book that I’ve read. I remember actually wearing his shoes out here in 2016 just giving him props for the Mamba mentality and kind of what he taught a lot of athletes in pursuing your dreams. I think his legacy for sure is one of hard work and commitment to your craft.”

On his social media through the years, Finau has made it known he’s a big fan of Bryant’s. Finau, whose cousin is Atlanta Hawks forward Jabari Parker, once wore Lakers purple and gold golf shoes during a round of the Northern Trust.

Finau finished the Farmers Insurance Open on Sunday T-6 at 10 under.

Steve DiMeglio contributed to this report.

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Rickie Fowler, Tony Finau bring star power to American Express leaderboard

Tournament officials have to be happy with the star-studded names atop The American Express leaderboard.

When tournament officials of the American Express announced in December that several big-name players would play their event this week, there was excitement for the added names. But there was no guarantee that those players would be part of the title chase, either.

But after 36 holes of the American Express, tournament officials are likely smiling broadly that two of those big names, Rickie Fowler and Tony Finau, are not just playing well but are in the title mix.

Fowler, who hasn’t played in the desert tournament since 2014, fired an 8-under 64 on Friday to share the 36-hole lead at 15-under 129 with Scottie Scheffler. Finau, who has been hit or miss with the desert event over recent years, carded a 62 in the second round to move up to 13-under for the tournament and alone in fourth place. The 62 was the best round of the week.

Leaderboard: The American Express

“It was nice to get a little work in, get some good practice and play out here in the desert to get used to being back in the desert,” Fowler said after his round. “I grew up playing a lot of junior golf out here in the summers, so I played a lot of courses around Palm Desert, Palm Springs, La Quinta, Indio, all over. So I know I can play well out here and obviously in a very comfortable place.”

Birdie run spurs Finau

Finau’s 62, including birdies on five of his last six holes, came on the same Nicklaus Tournament Course at PGA West that Fowler played Friday. At No. 15, Finau is the highest-ranked player in the Official World Golf Rankings in the tournament field. Fowler, at 22nd, is one of four players in the top 25 of the rankings playing in the Coachella Valley this week.

“I don’t really know,” Finau said of his strong play after a stretch of traveling 30,000 miles to play four weeks in a row. “You’re just playing and sometimes you get over a golf ball and it’s nice to have the feeling of knowing where it’s going. And then I was able to hit some putts that started on my line, and you’re at the mercy of the greens, and today the putts fell.”

For the star power that Fowler and Finau bring to the field – including their recent performances for the winning United States team in the Presidents Cup – they are still bunched with plenty of accomplished but lesser-known players at the midway point of the $6.7 million tournament.

Playing in the same course rotation as Fowler and Finau, Scheffler matched Fowler’s 65-64 start to share the lead despite a double bogey in his Friday round. Landry, who lost the tournament title in a four-hole playoff with Jon Rahm two years ago, shot a 64 at La Quinta Country Club to reach 14 under. Then comes Finau at 13 under, Bud Cauley at 12 under and six players tied at 11 under.

Another big-name player in the field, Paul Casey, managed to get to 9 under with a 67 on the Nicklaus Tournament Course on Friday. But tournament host Phil Mickelson was just even-par Friday and 2 under for the tournament. Francesco Molinari is at 1 under through 36 holes.

Fowler loves playing the desert

While Fowler played plenty of golf in the desert in his youth, he hasn’t played much on the Stadium Course at PGA West. But Fowler, Finau and Scheffler will get quite familiar with the Stadium Course and Pete Dye’s devilish design over the next two days. Landry will move to the Nicklaus Tournament Course on Saturday, then to the Stadium Course for the final round.

“I don’t think these golf courses necessarily are ones that you need to see prior, in a way, driving around is enough,” Fowler said. “It’s more about control and hitting your lines. Really that can be the case for 90 percent of the golf courses, but these golf courses I think do a really good job of telling you where you need to hit it and with the greens being so small you get it on a lot of the surfaces, and you’re going to have a pretty good look.”

Finau said he was excited at the prospect of consecutive rounds on the Stadium as one of the leaders.

“That’s what you got to do. You got to make a lot of birdies out here,” Finau said. “You know that starting the week. Sometimes emotionally and mentally that can be tough, but I’m happy with that round today. It put me right in the mix.

“Thirty-six holes on the Stadium, a golf course I’m very familiar with. I got through here in qualifying school in 2013, so I’ve got some good vibes on that golf course and hopefully I can show that this weekend.”

For Fowler, the first two rounds showed his game is trending well for starts in San Diego and Phoenix the next two weeks. But there is still work to do on his game, he said.

“I looked at this two-week stretch and playing here as a way of getting the season started off right, getting into a good spot with the game and ultimately going into Farmers and Waste Management, two places where I know I can go play well and win,” Fowler said. “Because I think we’re right where we want to be.”

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