Rich Styles

Golden Award From Golden Bear

By: Rich Styles

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

Mark David Johnson Jr, lives on St. Simons Island, Ga. He decided to go to school at Western Carolina in NC.

After a couple of years, he decided that he wanted to come home and go to college. He called Coastal Georgia’s golf coach, Mike Cook, and told him he wanted to come home and play golf on the school’s team. Coach Cook said, “of course….come on.”

That was two years ago. Since then, Johnson’s golf game has exploded.

After transferring, his golf game reached new heights. He won several tournaments and earned individual honors including Player of the Year for NAIA, Coastal Georgia’s Men’s Student-Athlete of the Year and most recently, The Jack Nicklaus Award for NAIA Division. Quite a senior year.

Coastal Georgia went to a tournament in Mesa, AZ at the Las Sendas Golf Club. A course, Johnson and the other team members had not played.

They studied the course on the internet. Johnson knew the conditions of the course would be different than others he played throughout his young career.

So, he practiced on similar grass. He chipped and putted for hours. He would also play on various courses but he practiced his short game more than most. It payed off in a big way. His senior year was marked by several wins and a couple of second places until AZ.

At Las Sendas Golf Club, his team was behind by 15 strokes going into the final round.  He and his team mates knew they had to have a great day to catch up.

They caught up but fell short of the team title. Johnson finished tied for first individual honors and entered into a playoff for the title.

He had birdied the 18th hole during the first three rounds, then in the final round, a bogey. The three stepped to the tee on the playoff hole and he knew that he needed to hit quality shots. He did. The others did not.

Johnson birdied the first playoff hole to win the NAIA Individual title and became the first player in the history of Coastal Georgia’s men’s golf program to do so. Coach Cook said, “he is the best player in NAIA this year and it has been sweet to coach him.”

When I interviewed both Coach Cook and Johnson, they both smiled talking about their relationship since his transfer from Western Carolina.

Johnson’s game exploded with winning title after title and then winning the Jack Nicklaus Award for NAIA. He was one of five winners of the award, one for each college division. What does that do for him? Just an opportunity to play one of the hardest golf courses, with a slope rating of 76, for an exemption into a PGA Tour event in July.

He did not win but he did get his chance to meet and talk with 18 Major winner, Jack Nicklaus in Ohio.

As I talked with Johnson on the range at Retreat, he said he didn’t play well against the other division winners, he just could not get his game going. You have to drive the ball well and the rough was…..well let’s say very rough.

On Sunday in a crowded room, he and the others were to receive the award from Jack Nicklaus. Johnson said Jack’s wife Barbara came into the room first and greeted them.

Then the room became silent waiting for the PGA Tour legend.

In he came with his gray jacket and tie, he greeted and took photos with each winner. Johnson said he stayed and talked for over an hour. What a treat and a once in a lifetime experience that will go into his memory bank forever.

One final note, the winner of the Memorial, Patrick Cantley, was a Jack Nicklaus award winner and now a PGA Tour winner. Johnson knows that and looks forward to the challenges ahead of him after graduation.

Congratulations, Mark David Johnson. Well done and well deserved.

 

Teeing It Up For SEC Crown

By: Rich Styles

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

The SEC golf teams converged to Sea Island Resort for the 18th consecutive year to play their golf championship.

They played three days of individual and team play, then after elimination of sex teams, the remaining eight teams competed in match play. The results were surprising.

Auburn as a team smoked the other teams and led the team competition to get into the match play as the #1 seed. Auburn won by 16 shots. They shot -24 while the second-place team, Vanderbilt, shot -8.

Then followed in order by Texas A&M, +3, Kentucky +3, Georgia +6, Tennessee +6, Arkansas +15, South Carolina +16, LSU +17, Ole Miss +22, Missouri +35, Florida +35, Mississippi +38 and Alabama +42. The top 8 teams after Friday’s round advance to match play. The other teams went home.

Individual honors went to Auburn’s Jovan Rebula who beat his own mate, Graysen Huff in a playoff. Many of the past individuals who have won are now on either the PGA Tour or Web.com Tour.

Past champions include Michael Thompson (Alabama), Bobby Wyatt (Alabama), Lee McCoy (Georgia), Billy Horschel (Florida), Patton Kizzire (Auburn) and Justin Thomas (Alabama).

Several current PGA Tour players including Keith Mitchell (Georgia) and Thompson walked the par-70 Seaside course to watch their college teams.

On Friday, Seaside showed its teeth with strong winds that resulted in the 14 teams shooting a combined 214 over-par for the day. To play even par with the wind conditions was considered by many as playing under par.

To be able to play even in those conditions was nothing short of patience and determination. Many of these college golfers were being watched by their parents, friends and family and by sports agencies and club manufacturers who would like certain handpicked players to play their brand.

The crowds were about 300-400 people winding their way around the scenic course that hosts the RSM Classic in November.

Over the weekend, the top 8 teams played match play with one team being eliminated each round. That brought #1 seeded Auburn against #7 seed Arkansas on a beautiful Sunday afternoon.

The crowds watched some great golf and like many sports, where you finish in the standings sometimes does not matter. Arkansas, which was 39 strokes apart from Auburn as a team, beat them 3.5-1.5. Quite an accomplishment for a team that was not picked to win this tournament.

Yet, as a team, they won. Julian Perico, the only Razorback to win all three of his match play contests, was tied with Grayson Huff through 17 holes.

Perico struck his tee shot like it was out of a cannon, while his playing partner had to play out of the fairway bunker. Bottom line, Perico won with a par and Arkansas was on their way to the SEC Golf Championship.

The SEC is known for football but now must be known for golf.  All 14 schools received NCAA bids in 2018. Probably most will for 2019. Since 2013, the SEC has been represented in the NCAA championship match play every year.

The SEC Men’s Golf has won 3 National Championships in the last 6 years; 7 SEC teams ranked in the top 25, 8 Arnold Palmer Cup team members in 2018, most by any conference; 9 PGA Tour winners in the 2017-2018 season and 5 Major PGA Tour wins since 2000 including 2 Masters…Bubba Watson and Patrick Reed. Watson went to UGA and so did Reed however, Reed left UGA.

Great golf under some difficult conditions and greater golf over the match play earns the SEC Golf Championship to Arkansas.

The Right Mistake

By: Rich Styles

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

Matt Kuchar has spent his life and his golf career upholding doing the right thing. He holds himself to some pretty high standards. I’ve had several face to face interviews with Matt and he has always been upfront, honest and grateful.

Many of you have heard stories about Matt’s win in Mayakoba, his first win in four years.

His regular caddie, John Wood, was unable to be there. So, Matt got together with a local caddie, “El Tucan”, to carry his bag at the tournament. They made an agreement.  Matt would pay his local caddie a certain amount if he missed the cut, another amount if he made the cut, a higher amount if he placed in Top 10 and a flat fee if he won.

“El Tucan” carried the bag, which he does at the course and usually receives a few hundred dollars a week for doing that. Matt figured the yardage on each hole, read his own putts, etc. The caddie carried the bag for four days.

Well, as you know, Matt won. He paid the caddie the previously agreed amount of $4,000 plus another $1,000 for the win as a bonus. That was the deal.

I interviewed Matt’s Dad, Peter, last week, and we discussed the matter. Peter said, “a deal is a deal”. He further said, “if I hired a person to paint my house for a certain amount, that was our deal, our agreement.”  Peter said, Matt has always done the right thing all his life in everything he has done.

Well, since the tournament, social media and friends of “El Tucan”, has exploded. It has blown up. The media, “el Tucan”, his friends and family have all said he deserved more money than he was paid.

So, after the negative press from many outlets, Matt through the PGA office, agreed to give his local caddie an additional $45,000 plus an undisclosed amount to the Mayakoba Classic to use for local charities. Matt paid more than he said he originally agreed upon.

John Wood, Matt’s regular caddie, in various publications that “you do not know the real guy”. “Matt has treated me fairly during out whole relationship.”

Did Matt make a mistake? In my opinion, no. Should he have paid the local caddie more than they agreed upon. I think not.

But with the pressure from social media and discussions with the PGA Tour, the additional funds were paid to do more than the right thing. Matt went out of his way to make things right. He said, “I made a mistake, I was stubborn and hard headed.

In my mind, a deal is a deal.  After I won, it wasn’t a good deal. In the caddie’s case, he did not feel like he won in that situation, and I needed to make that right.  It’s as simple as that.”

This situation with Matt should be over. The media will probably continue to talk about it and attack his character.

I am a Kuchar fan.  I met him while he was practicing for the President’s Cup a few years ago. He was pleasant and a nice guy.

Every time I have interviewed him or seen him running on the beach on St. Simons Island early in the morning, he always says hi.

The bottom line is that sometimes you make a mistake, but in the end, he will always do the right thing to make it even righter.

Let’s move on, please

The New Clubs

By: Rich Styles

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

In January of every year, 40,000 people within the golf industry gather in Orlando, FL for the PGA Merchandise Show. I was one of those.

It is always amazing to me each year how many companies pay thousands of dollars to set up booths, bring in staff and products to show off what they have that is new for the year.

The audience walks around, when you can get through the crowds and lines, to look at all that is new in equipment, training aids, apparel, golf cars, snacks, etc. All related to golf.  It is quite overwhelming to say the least.

After spending weeks setting appointments for interviews on the back9boys golf show, there are always a a few surprises. Here are a few….

I got to spend a few minutes talking with Sir Nick Faldo, Masters Champion and currently one of the best announcers on the Golf Channel. Sir Nick wanted to talk about a course, Bella Colina, he designed and will not make it easier to play through a renovation. Sir Nick called the course “a brut”.

He talked about the athletes that now play the game. They are all built, in shape, eat right, workout regularly, have great swings and are mentally tough.  By the way, they can hit the ball a mile, sometimes more.

I asked Sir Nick why he wasn’t playing on the Champions Tour, he said he can’t play

like he did years ago, winning tournament on both continents. He would have to put in long hours practicing and basically get in “golf shape”.

He is grateful and blessed to be able to stay close to golf with his gig on the Golf Channel. He was a pleasure to spend a few minutes with but you go away with many more questions that you would have liked to ask. Next time.

Then I had another surprise….John O’Hurley, who played Mr. Peterman on

Seinfeld. Can you believe that was twenty years ago. He loves the game of golf and belongs to two country clubs in LA. He was there with his wife, who works with a travel golf company, Garmany Golf.

John was gracious to spend time with me to talk about his love for golf. He plays in a lot of Pro-Am Tournaments all over the world. He has seen good swings and I am sure not so good swings of the amateurs.

He said the Mr. Peterman role was incredible. He got to work with the staff who all were in their prime and loved being in a show about nothing. Many still call him, Mr. Peterman. He was delight and I hope we cross paths again, this time on a golf course.

Another surprise was having a few minutes with Lexi Thompson.  Winner of many LPGA tournaments. She was much taller than I thought, but I guess that means I am shorter than I thought I was.

She was being asked by many to sign autographs, pose for pictures (yes, even with me) and do interviews. She visited several booths of which she endorses their clubs, apparel, product or service. Very nice lady who can hit the ball a mile.

By the way, now members of her family, now her brother, caddie for her on tour.

Yes, I did my seventeen miles of walking from one end of the convention center to the other doing interviews and taking in all that is new in golf equipment, apparel, golf cars, training aids, energy bars, etc.

Every year I say I will skip next year. But I have gone five years in a row so I guess I will be back in 2020. After all, there will be new stuff to see, feel and touch. Yes, samples are appreciated.

 

Around The Bend

By: Rich Styles

GeorgiaSportsEdition.com news services

The 2018-19 season starts this month on the PGA Tour. Yes, there were several tournaments last fall with many of the top ranked golfers cherry picking which ones to play.

Now, after the Tournament of Champions, which will not include Tiger, Phil and Justin Rose, the tour starts in Hawaii, then the west coast swing.

There are many PGA, Web.com, PGA Tour Canada and Latin American players from Georgia or with Georgia ties. Many have won tour events and several majors over the last several years and around 30 or so live and practice in Sea Island/St. Simons Island.

One of the biggest stories was Charles Howell III winning the RSM Classic. Howell III won on the second playoff hole with a birdie, after over 83,693 shots on the tour, 333 starts and over 11 years without a win. A great and popular win for the Augusta native. He will play in the TOC in Hawaii.

He is also ranked in the Top 20 of total winnings on the PGA Tour. Quite an accomplishment with 3 PGA Tour wins and many Top 10s along his journey.

Looking to regain their games in the 2018-19 season are Patton Kizzire, who had a great first half of the season with two wins to lead the FedEx Cup standings and reached Top 30 of the Tour Championship; Chesson Hadley, who has 13 Top 25s and 7 Top 10s.

Also looking to regain form are Kevin Kisner, who did not have the year that he had planned; Brian Harman, started strong but missed the Tour Championship; Zach Johnson will start the new year with a new caddie after parting ways with Damon Green after 15-years together and 2 major wins. And many others.

A strong list of players on various tours include Anders Albertson, Cameron Tringale, Harris English, Heath Slocum, Hudson Swofford, J.T. Poston, Jason Bohn, Joey Garber, Scott Wolfes, Kris Blanks, Luke List, Michael Thompson, Ollie Schniederjans, Patrick Reed, Richy Werenski, Roberto Castro, Russell Henry, Scott Brown, Sepp Straka, Stewart Cink, Trey Mullinax, Troy Matteson, Vaughn Taylor, Wesley Bryan, Dru Love IV and Will Claxton.

The list will grow of tour players who live or have ties in Georgia with the incredibly strong golf programs at UGA, Georgia Southern, College of Coastal Georgia, Georgia Tech and others.

The AJGA, Jones Cup Jr and Jones Cup Invitational are also strong organizations with unbelievable talent that is only going to get stronger.

That means the talent in high schools to colleges to the mini tours to the PGA Tour is strong. You may not know their names now but you will in the next few years.

These players are young, strong and have an incredible will to win. They have no fear and want to play against the best on any of the above-mentioned tours. Georgia’s golf future is bright and very promising.

The Georgia Golf Trail

By: Rich Styles

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

Many states have golf trails. Which are several courses that join together to promote staying and playing golf all over their states.

And yes, Georgia has a golf trail. It has not been widely publicized. They do have a monthly newsletter which can be sent to you free by emailing them your contact info at www.georgiagolfandtravel.com.

To be part of the trail, courses have to be able to provide accommodations as well as golf.

To tee it up all over Georgia, you can travel from the mountains to the coast. There are 25 top resorts that provide first class golf and accommodations.

Doug Hollandsworth is the Director and an avid golfer. There are golf packages available by calling…855.388.4653.

In the western part of the state, there is Little Ocmulgee, a course surrounded by pines, willows and magnolias. There is also Meadow Links, a links course; Lake Blackshear, Georgia Veterans Memorial Golf Course, designed by Denis Griffiths and listed by Golf Digest as a four (4) star course; Callaway Gardens is next, a course mixed into nature.

In the northern part of the state, Old Tobacco Farm; Brasstown Valley Resort and Spa is a great mountain getaway with something for everyone; Innsbruck Golf Club nestled in the Blue Ridge Mountains in the Alpine Valley of Helen; The Orchard, designed by Don Maples.

Not far from Atlanta, there is Stone Mountain, which offers two championship courses. Chateau Elan has 3 championship layouts nestled thru lush vineyards; Reynolds Lake Oconee has 6 courses with 117 holes designed by some of the most respected architects in the game;

The Creek at Hard Labor, designed in a natural setting; Highland Walk offers 18 holes built on steep rolling hills and bordered by 9 miles of Lake Oconee; Harbor Club is surrounded by 1600 acres of wooded hills and Lake Oconee.

Then towards and on the coast, there are several great courses to play that include Web.com and PGA Tour events each year.

The Landings Club, which hosts the Savannah Golf Championship on the Intercoastal Waterway; The Club at Savannah Harbor offers a Troon managed property with great views of the marshes; Sea Island Resort offers three, two of which host PGA Tour events in November plus spa and an incredible golf performance center; The King and Prince Beach and Golf Resort offers 18 holes, 4 of which are on the salt marsh; Jekyll Island offers 63 holes on four (4) courses; Sapelo Hammock Golf Club is tucked away along the Sapelo River.

Not far from the coast are a few more courses…Brazell’s Creek, an 18-hole layout, par 71; The Lakes has three large lakes near the Okefenokee Swamp; Stone Creek winding through the South Georgia wetlands with an authentic beaver pond and bass lake.

So, there is a quick trip through the Georgia Golf Trail. Fun to travel and play in our state and enjoy all the different climates. Tee it up in Georgia with the vast variety of courses and designers that you will want to play again and again.

The Tour Championship

By: Rich Styles

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

The Tour Championship at East Lake in Atlanta is history.

Also making history is the amazing comeback of Tiger Woods. From 2008 to 2013, Tiger has dealt with family issues, injuries, surgeries….a fall from the top.

Now he is back. He has proved to his doubters that he can win, he can still play and he is ready for a full schedule for 2018-2019 season.

He is a changed Tiger. He has enabled the purses in all PGA Tour events to grow to what some would call unbelievable amounts of money, he is helped TV ratings increase and he has helped ticket sales.

Look at the crowd at East Lake on the 18th hole, I have not seen anything like that in a long time. I said Tiger has changed. He has in the following ways….he is a Dad, he is humble and he is grateful to be playing the game his Mom and Dad raised him to be playing from an early age. He is a champion again.

The Tour Championship could not have written a better script for a Sunday afternoon.

Tiger and Rory in the final group. Allison Fillmore, Tournament Director for the Tour Championship text me on Sunday when I said, “it could not be any better, Tiger and Rory, final group.”  She texted right back…”I know, right!”

Half of the final pairing lived up to the hype. Tiger played well.  Rory did not. Finishing ahead of Tiger was Justin Rose, who calmly and methodically, worked his way around the course to win the FedEx Cup and $10M. The story most will remember this year, will be that Tiger won the Tour Championship and oh yeah, another guy won the FedEx Cup.

Next year, the Tour Championship will be held in August and will have a different format.

Over the years, the average winning score was -11.  Now the leader of the FedEx Cup going into the Tour Championship will be at -10 under. Others will also begin under par based on their ranking of FedEx points.

I have talked with many golf writers, who say they do not fully understand the new format but by the time the Tour Championship rolls along to next August, it will be written about, talked about enough that it will be more clear.

Fans, writers, etc are excited for the next season of the PGA Tour which begins in California and then the first half ends at the RSM Classic at Sea Island Resort. The Top 25 of the web.com tour get to play all five of these tournaments.

Then the Tour does a reshuffle based on their performance in these five tournaments and then they can begin to schedule for 2019.

Plus several tournaments will have date changes. The Players will move to March; the Masters in April; PGA Championship moves to May at Beth Page; U.S. Open in May at Pebble Beach; The Open in July at Royal Portrush Golf Club and the Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club in August.

This should help with TV ratings since college and NFL will not have regular season games until September. That is the main reason for the changes. We will see.

Many say that the PGA Tour starts and ends in Georgia. Next year it will begin in FL and end in GA. It will be another exciting year and there are 156 tour pros who would like to win the FexEx Cup and the new prize to the winner of the Tour Championship of $15M. Not a bad way to end the Tour schedule. Not bad at all.

The Great Casper

By: Rich Syles

TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services

Now, I have had a privilege to interview some of the greats in professional

Golf; Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Fred Couples, Tom Kite, Davis Love III, Billy Casper and a few more.

I have interviewed some of the great architects of some of the outstanding courses in the world. I would like to share with you one of my favorite interviews and why.

I had the opportunity to sit with PGA Tour legend, Billy Casper, one on one, for an hour and half at a friend’s house in Raleigh, NC.

Casper was funny, down to earth and humble. He was a man with a strong faith and did not have the notoriety that the others did.

Yet, Billy Casper’s winning percentage was third behind Tiger Woods and Jack Nicklaus. He was ahead of everyone else; Palmer, Player, Trevino, etc. The statistic was figured upon number of PGA tournaments entered and number of wins.

That is a fact not many people realize about Billy Casper. He did not have a big public relations team behind him. He had his talent and his faith. Casper was a gentleman’s gentleman who loved people, his family, which included many adopted children.

I asked him specifically who was his biggest rival…..he said, “whoever I was playing at the time.” I asked him about his U.S. Open win at the Olympic Club. On the tenth

tee, he was 7 shots behind Arnold Palmer with nine holes to play. He told me about every hole, not only what he hit, but how he hit it and what Arnold got on those holes.

At the end, he tied Palmer and won in a playoff.

This was one of my favorite interviews and people. RIP Billy. To steal a line from Bob Hope…..thanks for the memories.