PUNTA CANA, Dominican Republic – Enough was enough, Graeme McDowell said. There was to be no more messing up.
After meetings with his team to talk about his efforts, poor finishes to tournaments, and just lackluster results for a guy who was once ranked in the top-10 in the world, the monkey came off his back Sunday in Punta Cana.
McDowell shot a 3-under-par 69 in the final round of the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship to win by one over Chris Stroud and Mackenzie Hughes – his fourth PGA TOUR win.
The 39-year-old came into the week wanting to play well, earn some much-needed FedExCup points, and hoped to get some momentum heading into a busy summer stretch as he tries to qualify for this year’s Open Championship at Royal Portrush – in his hometown in Northern Ireland.
This win checks all three of those boxes.
“I said that I was here on a mission, I was here motivated, and the attitude was going to be very, very important this week,” said McDowell. “This one's a pretty sweet victory. It feels a bit like the victory at Mayakoba… it comes at the end of a long grind. This one's been coming.”
This win, he said, has given him the confidence he needs to continue to play with some of the world’s best. He said with his playing privileges secured and with a big jump in the FedExCup standings, he’s going to playing much looser moving forward.
“That's when I play my best, when I'm loose, when I'm just trying to compete every week rather than needing it as badly. I've been needing it too much lately and this is going to go a long way to helping me stop needing it and just going out there and just playing golf to try and compete every week. That's what I'm looking for,” he said. “This is a huge relief, this win. I've got to be honest, massive relief.”
McDowell has long admitted that life got in the way of him playing some good golf since his win in 2015 at the Mayakoba Golf Classic. He finished 160th on the FedExCup standings in 2015, 136th in 2017, and 144th in 2018.
He had to take all of January off as he battled a wrist injury. Up to this point he had no top-10’s on the year, and was just plodding along without much to show for his efforts. He’s missed only one cut, but there hasn’t yet been a tournament when he strung four solid rounds together.
That changed in a big way this week.
He was lights out both Friday and Saturday – shooting matching 64’s and needing only 20 putts on Saturday – and seemed to continue that run early Sunday, as he was 4-under through seven holes.
McDowell bogeyed No. 9 and made seven-straight pars before birding the par-3 17th. It was a key two-shot swing, as Stroud made bogey.
McDowell’s longtime caddie, Ken Comboy, said there had been signs McDowell was close to breaking out.
McDowell said Comboy was the one who suggested there might be a couple shot swing in the final three holes at the Corales Golf Course, which were playing to a different wind than the first three days, and Comboy said he was happy to see it all come together this week for McDowell.
The win Sunday was a culmination of a lot of hard work over a long period of time, he said.
“It’s been coming; it’s just not come soon enough,” Comboy, who has been with McDowell for 13 years, told PGATOUR.com. “Every week we’ve been in with a shout we’ve kept messing it up and it’s just been really frustrating. He’s not walked away from a golf tournament in the last 12 months like he’s got anything out of it. It’s been a frustrating time for him."
“It’s just a question of keep doing it, keep doing it, and it will turn. This week is proof is does turn around.”
McDowell is still hoping for another TOUR win to come when he can celebrate by having his three kids run on to the green, but he enjoyed a call with his youngest after the trophy ceremony.
“He said, ‘Daddy won,’” said McDowell with a small break in his voice. “He's obviously got no concept what just happened, but that is the visual, that is my dream is to win with my kids there.”
Last year McDowell came to Punta Cana to try to earn some valuable FedExCup points and left with nothing but the taste of Dominican rum on his breath, he said.
This year, the only rum he’ll be drinking will be in celebration.
“It's relief right now, but this will not only be kind of a satisfying win, but it will be a springboard win as well,” said McDowell. “At some point I was going to get tired of messing up, and this week I got tired messing up.”
Scots trail after first round of Valero Texas Open
Martin Laid shot a one-over 73 and is tied 64th at the end of the first round of the Valero Texas Open at San Antonio.
Russell Knox had a 74 to bt T87.
American Grayson Murray leads by one with a 67.
San Antonio, TX April 19-22, 2018 FedExCup Points: 500 Purse: $6,200,000
TPC San Antonio – AT&T Oaks Course Par/Yards: 36-36—72/7,435
First-Round Notes – Thursday, April 19, 2018
Weather: Partly cloudy, with a high of 78. Wind E 15-25 mph, with gusts to 30 mph.
First-Round Leaderboard
Grayson Murray 67 (-5)
Matt Atkins 68 (-4)
Keegan Bradley 68 (-4)
Chesson Hadley 68 (-4)
Billy Horschel 68 (-4)
Ryan Moore 68 (-4)
Asian players scores
Sangmoon Bae 71 (-1)
Si Woo Kim 71 (-1)
Zecheng Dou 71 (-1)
K.J. Choi 73 (+1)
Anirban Lahiri 76 (+4)
Shubhankar Sharma 76 (+4)
Sung Kang 76 (+4)
Xinjun Zhang 77 (+5)
Grayson Murray
In his first start at the Valero Texas Open, Grayson Murray offset a double-bogey five at No. 7 with seven birdies, good for a 67.
Before this week, Murray’s best position after 18 holes on the PGA TOUR was T2 at the 2017 Wells Fargo Championship. He finished T63.
Murray, winner of the 2017 Barbasol Championship in his rookie year on the PGA TOUR, is making his 14th start of the 2017-18 season. He finished inside the top-10 at the Safeway Open (T9) and AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am (T8).
This week’s Valero Texas Open marks Murray’s fourth start in a US PGA TOUR event in the state of Texas: 2017 Houston Open (T55), 2017 AT&T Byron Nelson (T27) and 2018 Houston Open (T14).
Murray, a Greensboro, North Carolina native, hit nine of 14 fairways in regulation and 13 of 18 greens. He needed 26 putts to complete round one.
First-Round Lead Notes
Since 2000, there have been only two first-round leaders of the Valero Texas Open to hang on for the win. Justin Leonard claimed his fifth PGA TOUR win in 2000 after holding a share of the opening-round lead at LaCantera, and Robert Gamez achieved the feat in 2005.
This season, six of 23 first-round leaders/co-leaders have held on for the win, most recently being Brice Garnett at the Puntacana Resort & Club Championship.
Billy Horschel
2014 FedExCup champion Billy Horschel, who opened with a 4-under 68, has had mixed success at the Valero Texas Open since 2013; 2013/T3, 2014/MC, 2015/3rd, 2016/T4 and 2017/MC.
Horschel is making his eighth start in the Valero Texas Open this week.
Horschel, a four-time winner on the PGA TOUR, is in search of his first win since the 2017 AT&T Byron Nelson in Dallas.
Horschel has made just five cuts in 11 starts this season, but comes to San Antonio this week after a T5 showing at last week’s RBC Heritage.
Chesson Hadley
Making his fourth start in the Valero Texas Open, Chesson Hadley made five birdies and one bogey to open with a 68. Hadley finished T56 in 2014, T4 in 2015 and missed the cut in 2016.
Hadley, who won twice on the Web.com Tour last year (LECOM Health Challenge, Albertsons Boise Open), made a strong return to the PGA TOUR this season. In his first three starts of the season, he finished no worse than fourth; T3/Safeway Open, 2nd/Sanderson Farms Championship and T4/Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. A fourth top-5 finish came at the Waste Management Phoenix Open in February (T5).
Hadley comes to this week’s Valero Texas Open on the heels of a T7 finish at last week’s RBC Heritage, his fifth top-10 showing of the season.
Matt Atkins
PGA TOUR rookie Matt Atkins, 27, made five birdies against one bogey to open with a 68.
Atkins, who has made just two cuts in 10 starts this season, made his way onto the PGA TOUR by virtue of his 28th-place finish on the 2017 Web.com Tour priority list.
A native of Aston, Pennsylvania, Atkins won the 2017 El Bosque Mexico Championship on the Web.com Tour.
Tiger Woods finishes T18, rises in Official World Golf Ranking
FROM THE GOLF CHANNEL WEBSITE
By Jim McCabe
Not that it will be greeted by a massive celebration within the cozy
confines of Team Tiger Woods, but for the first time in four months,
forward progress can be documented. Drum roll, please . . . Tiger Woods has improved to No. 262 in the Official World Golf Ranking. Stunning, yes, to think that moving up four spots to 262nd is seen as
progress for a guy who was once so cemented into the No. 1 position,
but this is Woods’ golf in the summer of 2015. His share of 18th place in the Quicken Loans National
was embraced as positive stuff, especially shooting in the 60s three
times and closing with a 68, and while he was still a whopping 10 behind
the winner, Troy Merritt, it at least allowed Woods to stop this slide
that has been weekly for four months. The last time Woods actually improved in the OWGR was April 12 when he jumped from 111th to 101st. There remains a multitude of ways to digest exactly how far the
greatest player of his generation has tumbled, but consider the
happiness that seems to exist given Woods’ T-18 at Robert Trent Jones
Golf Club. Back in the day a T-18 would leave him disgusted, but it’s
actually his second-best finish since 2014, behind only the T-17 at this
year’s Masters. A tie for 17th is his best? Crazy. Take four of his most productive seasons — 2000, 2004, 2007, 2008,
for instance — and in those he played in a combined 63 PGA Tour
tournaments, never missed a cut, and finished better than T-17 a
whopping 56 times, 21 of them wins. Then Tiger Woods would have laughed at a T-18, but given his current
state of affairs, he’ll take it. Consider it part “of the process.” What the T-18 didn’t do, however, was make a significant dent in his
FedEx Cup standings. Woods improved just 12 spots, but at 185th he’s
still miles from being within the top 125 and he’s not qualified for the
WGC-Bridgestone Invitational — a proverbial FedEx Cup and cash giveaway
— for the first time ever. So unless Woods has a rousing PGA Championship (and he’s been T-24 and T-28 in two trips to Whistling Straits) or possible Wyndham Championship (and he’s never played the event), he’ll miss the FedEx Cup playoffs for a second straight year and three of the past five. Elsewhere in the OWGR, Quicken Loans winner Troy Merritt jumped from
180th to 99th (and earned himself a trip to Akron, Ohio, for the
Bridgestone in lieu of a start in Reno, Nev.), while Rickie Fowler moved
back into fifth, matching his best career position in the ranking. Here's a look at the top 10 (with average points):
Graeme McDougall shares RBC Heritage Round 1 lead as Jordan Spieth struggles
FROM SKY SPORTS.COM Matt Every and Graeme McDowell shared the lead
after the first round of the RBC Heritage at Hilton Head, with Jordan
Spieth eight shots off the pace as he came back to earth following his
Masters win. In
difficult conditions, with strong winds and a distinct chill in South
Carolina, birdies were hard to come by but Every carded six before a
bogey on the 18th, while McDowell matched him only in reverse after
bogeying the first. "I hit a lot of fairways which I haven't really been doing enough of this year and I felt great on the greens," McDowell told Sky Sports 4. "The wind was tough to pick on the back nine, but I controlled my flight, made some good putts and I’ll take that for an opener." Given the way the course was playing, staying at the top of the leaderboard was as much about survival as anything. "I was greasy today," Every said. "It wasn't my best ball striking, it wasn't easy out there, but I got the best out of it. "It
was blowing. Back in the trees, when it's coming from the north and
banking off the trees going the other way, it's dicey, but for the most
part I did a good job."
First Round leaders
-5 Graeme McDowell (Nirl) -5 Matt Every (USA) -4 Sangmoon Bae (Kor) -3 Cameron Smith (Aus) -3 Scott Langley (USA) -3 Morgan Hoffmann (USA) -3 Matt Kuchar (USA) -3 Kevin Kisner (USA) Selected Others -2 Ian Poulter (Eng) +1 Billy Horschel (USA) +2 Zach Johnson (USA) +3 Jordan Spieth (USA)
Sangmoon
Bae is alone in third place, one shot back, ahead of a five-way tie for
fourth which includes Kevin Kisner, Scott Langley, Morgan Hoffman, Matt
Kuchar and Cameron Smith. Smith could have been much better
placed but for a bogey on the third and a double bogey on the seventh,
where his tee shot put him in the trees and he faced a long road back.
He had earlier carded five birdies in six holes between the second and
seventh holes. Kuchar's round was highlighted by a 35ft putt for
birdie on the par-five 15th, which was the only hole on which his
playing partner Spieth enjoyed any luck. The world
No 2 could only post a three-over 75 in his first round since winning
last week's Masters, joining Boo Weekley and Jason Dufner in the group
facing a battle to make the cut. Watch day two of the RBC Heritage live on Friday from 8pm on Sky Sports 4 - your home of golf.