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Justin Leonard- Hopeful for that bill from Dr Mo

By Helen Ross, PGATOUR.COM

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — Justin Leonard joked that he hasn’t gotten an invoice from either one. Yet.

But if Leonard keeps playing the way he did on Friday at the Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals Classic, Dr. Morris Pickens and Dave Stockton Jr. will surely be sending their bills to his Texas home.

Leonard fired a 63 on the Palm Course, which was his low round of the season, to seize a share of the lead in the final event of the PGA TOUR’s Fall Series. He’s tied at 12 under with Bio Kim and Henrik Stenson, two strokes ahead of Nick O’Hern.

Leonard has won 12 times on the PGA TOUR, including the 1997 British Open, but he has yet to finish in the top 10 in a decidedly sub-par 20111 season. He even missed the PGA TOUR Playoffs for the FedExCup for the first time in his career.

“It hasn’t been a good year,” Leonard acknowledged. “I’m looking forward to the year being over.  But it’s nice to have a chance this week to finish it off on a good note.”

Leonard credits the turnaround to some chances he made in the last few months. He sought the advice of Pickens, a sports psychologist based in Sea Island, Ga., and Stockton, a putting whiz, as well as putting in the hours with his long-time swing coach Randy Smith.

Leonard first met with Pickens on Sunday at the British Open, then the two continued their work at Greensboro and spent a day together in Dallas about a month ago. Under his guidance, Leonard has changed the way he practices to include more targeted drills rather than randomly ramming putts into the hole.

“I’m kind of moving around and each one kind of has a finish, whether it’s making 90 percent in order to be done,” Leonard said.

As far as the invoice is concerned, “I haven’t gotten it yet,” Leonard said. “We were supposed to chat about it last week, and he was very sympathetic to how I played (Leonard missed the cut). So I think he’s waiting for a good week and then it’s going to come.”

This certainly appears like it could be the week.

Complementing Leonard’s new practice strategy is Stockton. The two hooked up after the Frys.com Open and  spent several hours together in San Diego 10 days ago.

Leonard, who used just 26 putts on Friday, felt the time has paid dividends as well. He made seven birdies and holed a wedge from 114 yards at the 14th hole for eagle in the 63.

“The things we talked about really resonated with me,” Leonard said. “I mean, getting back to being more natural and getting my hands a little more forward and really speeding up my routine, which has been great, because I’m kind of getting out of my own way a little bit. So it’s good.

“Haven’t gotten that bill yet either, but hoping for another phone call on Monday or Tuesday

Rookie McGirt – Walking the Line

This season, Dr Mo has been working with PGA Tour rookie William McGirt.  McGirt who has quickly become a fan favorite is just happy to be playing golf for a living.

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A few weeks ago, Williams McGirt found himself walking the line.   The autograph line.

He was just loading his car. But every time he made the roundtrip from the TPC Boston locker room to the parking lot, a new bunch of kids were waiting with programs, flags, tickets, whatever. And, yes, they wanted his autograph.

Another week, another new experience. McGirt chuckled.

Yep, he signed them all.

“I signed anything that was put in front of me,” said the 32-year-old rookie. “It’s something I decided I’d do. As a kid I was snubbed a few times and I knew how it felt.”

One more thing. His signature is legible. Not just two initials and lines.

“One thing I wanted to make sure of is they could read my signature,” he said. “Why are you going to take the time to sign something if they can’t read it when you hand it back?

“At the Deutche Bank (Championship), I handed a flag back and the lady said, ‘Hey, this is the first one I can read.’ The flag was full.”

A little thing? Maybe. But McGirt knows that each piece of this PGA TOUR puzzle has a point and a purpose. Like his brain coach Dr. Morris Pickens preaches, “Play every round, every shot, every tournament for all its worth.”

McGirt has done just that this year. His rookie year. After six years playing every mini-tour imaginable and a year on the Nationwide Tour, McGirt has embraced his first season in primetime. And, while it hasn’t been without its bumps and bruises, he’s heading into the Fall Series with a new-found celebrity and a solid chance to keep his card.

Chances are you couldn’t have picked McGirt out of a lineup a month ago. You’d figure he was from the Carolinas when he spoke, but other than that? Not really.

He had missed 13 of 25 cuts and was ready to head from the Wyndam Championship in Greensboro to Knoxville for a Nationwide event when Justin Leonard missed a putt and McGirt grabbed the final spot in the PGA TOUR Playoffs for the FedExCup. People noticed.

Then he played so well at The Barclays, he made it to the Deutsche Bank. More people noticed. Don’t forget about his wife, who once went four months seeing him just 8 days during the stretch, signaling his position — he needed to move up one spot — from the gallery, too.

He didn’t make it past Boston, but he didn’t stop playing. Last week, he played anyway, finishing T42 at the Albertsons Boise Open. Now, it’s four huge weeks in a row, starting at this week’s Justin Timberlake Shriners Hospitals for Children Open.

McGirt enters this stretch run at 137th on the money list. By the end of it, he hopes to be nestled inside the magic top 125 — hey, 125th will do — and planning his 2012 schedule.

“It’s more excitement than anything,” he said before heading out for a practice round. “If you go into it dreading it, you’re setting self up for failure. I’ve gone in embracing it every week. ”

So why change it? When he did forget that for a bit earlier this year? He had to snap himself back.

Like every rookie, McGirt has faced the challenge of having just a day or two to learn new courses. He’d only played five of the courses on the PGA TOUR schedule prior to this year, so since he had the chance to get to Vegas early? He jumped on it, arriving at TPC Summerlin last Thursday afternoon. Of course, that came on the end of a Boise-Vegas-Atlanta-Vegas trip, so… he’s pacing himself.

He might just play nine holes today. Depends. The point is, he finally has the luxury. Good planning.

“I kind of struggle with desert golf, mountain affect,” he said. “At altitude the ball goes so much farther out here. All of a sudden you’re hitting irons, 20, 25 yards longer.”

And there’s the terrain. “When I miss fairways at home, I’m in trees,” he said. “When miss them here, you’re down in the rocks with rattlesnakes and scorpions.”

This season has been an adventure. His game has been thisclose and this . . far. . away. He’s embraced it all and one reason is Sarah — the two met at Wofford College and have been married seven years — has, for the first time, been traveling with him.

“Last year she was still working and I couldn’t wait to get home,” McGirt said. “Now, we go home and after two days we’re ready to go again. We’ve both had a blast.”

Sometimes it has been little things, other times, big things like playing — and winning — a pro-am with Carlton Fisk as a partner or watching buddy Keegan Bradley throw out the first pitch at a Red Sox game. Yes, McGirt is a serious fan, too.

“I went to a game up there seven or eight years ago and I was hooked first trip up,” he said. “Been a huge Red Sox fan since. It’s just the whole atmosphere. Everyone is so into the game.”

And Bradley? “I could see him the whole time,” he said. “I told (the people he was sitting with) he’s so nervous. It would be easier for him to hit a 6-footer for par than throw out this pitch.”

He was right.

This year, McGirt has made an effort to play practice rounds with veterans like David Duval, Jerry Kelly and Rory Sabbatini. He likes to pick their brains and learn. “You can’t,” he said, “put a price on that.”

Until the Playoffs, McGirt’s season was up and down. The best example was at the Waste Management Phoenix Open where he made his first PGA TOUR cut. He was looking at a top-10 finish, too, until the last two holes. And two 3-wood shots.

At the 17th, he wanted to get it in front of the green and hit the perfect shot. “Then it bounces left, really hard, rolls off the green and off the front left part into the water,” he said.

At 18, the 3-wood doesn’t turn over. “So I fall from right around top 10 to 24th and ended up making half what I would have if par-par,” he said.

“…The thing is, I’ve played a lot better every single week than where I finished and how I’ve scored.”

What cost him at Deutsche Bank? A triple at the 14th in the final round. His tee shot hit and bounced into the rough. The marshal moved to avoid it and they never found the ball.

McGirt, who has only skipped one tournament he’s been eligible for this year, can’t do anything about the past, but he can bear down on his future. Four weeks, four chances to work his way into the top 125.

“Going in, I know what I need to do,” he said. “I probably have to make little over $200,000, but that’s just one good week out here. If can play well for a couple weeks, then everything will be fine.”

He’s already entered q-school, just in case. He’s prepared. But, like last year when he skipped a stage, he’s hoping to make a nice call at the end of the year.

“Trust me, nothing more that I would enjoy than calling the TOUR office and saying, ‘Hey, I need a refund.’

“I know how much I enjoyed calling them last year for a $500 refund. I’d love to call them for a $5,000 refund.”

Melanie Hauser is a columnist for PGATOUR.COM and can be reached at melaniehauser@gmail.com. Her views do not necessarily represent the views of the PGA TOUR. Follow her on Twitter @melaniehauser.

Tour Championship – Nick Watney & Jonathan Byrd

 

Two of Dr Morris Pickens PGA tour players made it into this weeks Tour Championship in Atlanta.  Nick Watney started the Playoffs ranked number 1 after having two wins in 2011 at the WGC-CA Championship and AT&T National.  Watney’s standing at No. 7 in the PGA TOUR Playoffs for the FedExCup is more about what he did in the Regular Season and less about what he has done over the three Playoff events. Watney began the year with five consecutive top-10 finishes, including his first of two wins in 2011 at the World Golf Championships-Cadillac Championship at TPC Blue Monster at Doral. Following that victory, Watney never fell below No. 7 in the FedExCup standings and rose to No. 1 after his second victory of the year at the AT&T National at Aronimik. Watney led through the remainder of the Regular Season and into the first event (The Barclays) of the PGA TOUR Playoffs. A T10 at The Barclays kept him inside the top 5 in the standings, but a final-round 80 at the Deutsche Bank Championship resulting in a T61 finished moved him back. He finished T22 at the BMW Championship

No one started his season better than Byrd. After becoming the first player to hit a “walk-off” hole-in-one to win the 2010 Justin Timberlake Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in his final event of last season, Byrd won the first event of the 2011 season with a playoff victory at the Hyundai Tournament of Champions at Kapalua.  Byrd had an up-and-down season the remainder of 2011 with five top-10 finishes, including a playoff loss at the Wells Fargo Championship, but he also missed nine cuts. After spending most of the year in or close to the top 15 in the standings, Byrd entered the Playoffs in his lowest position of the year at No. 24. A T5 at The Barclays moved him back into the top 15.

Almost Famous – Nick Watney takes backseat to his cousin Heidi in Boston

Dr Morris Pickens works with PGA Tour superstars such as Nick Watney, Jonathan Byrd, Stewart Cink, Lucas Glover, Zach Johnson, John Rollins, Chris Stroud, Kyle Stanley, William McGirt and Justin Leonard.  On the Nationwide Tour he works with Josh Broadaway, Matt Davidson, Elliott Gealey and Kyle Reifers.  His NFL players include Oakland Raiders, Richard Seymour and San Diego Chargers own  Nate Kaeding. 

 

Courtesy PGATOUR.COM

By Mike McAllister

NORTON, Mass. — Although Nick Watney is the best golfing Watney at TPC Boston this week, he may not be the most famous.

His cousin Heidi Watney is an on-field reporter for the Boston Red Sox. Given her association with Boston’s most beloved team, her fame extends throughout New England — which cousin Nick quickly realized during Thursday’s pro-am.

“I heard her name probably 100 times,” Watney said. “I think she’s got that title (most famous Watney) sewn up.”

The golfing Watney, however, is hoping to sew up a spot in the top five in FedExCup points by winning the Deutsche Bank Championship. He took a nice first step by shooting a bogey-free 4-under 67 in Friday’s first round.

The highlight of his round was an eagle at the par-5 18th when he hit a 4-iron with his second shot to inside 10 feet and drained the putt.

“I saw Matt (Kuchar, one of his playing partners) was definitely right behind me and he hit a 4-iron,” Watney said. “He was a few yards behind me, so I figured it was a perfect club and I was finally able to make a putt. It was the longest one I made all day.”

Watney produced the best score in his threesome, which consists of the top three players in FedExCup points. Watney is third in points, while No. 2 Kuchar shot a 2-under 69 and FedExCup points leader Dustin Johnson shot a 3-under 68.

Johnson bogeyed two of the three par 5s during his round, but got back those two strokes with an eagle on the 18th.

A win by any member of the top three players would basically wrap up a top-five spot going into the TOUR Championship by Coca-Cola, no matter what happens at the next event, the BMW Championship.

PGA Tour playoffs for Fedex Cup – Nick Watney Top Seed – Hurricane Irene

The Baclays starts the Fedex playoffs with Hurricane Irene shortening it to a 54 hole event.    Nick Watney who works with Dr Morris Pickens currently sits as the top seed.   Courtesy of pgatour.com, here are answers to many of the questions circulating Plainfield Country Club.

1. When will the third — and final round — of The Barclays be broadcast on TV?The airtimes on the Golf Channel (1-2:30 p.m. ET) and CBS (3-6 p.m.) will remain the same. On Sunday, CBS will show the final round of the 2010 Barclays, as well as some taped coverage from Saturday’s final round.

2. What happens to the Live@ coverage on PGATOUR.COM? Well, it will be tape delayed on Saturday beginning at 12:30 p.m. ET and running through 5:30-6 p.m. There will be no Live@ on Sunday.

3. Can I still listen to the PGA TOUR Live coverage on Sirius/XM? Absolutely. That coverage will air from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. on Saturday. There will  be no coverage on Sunday.

4. Is there any possibility that The Barclays would be extended to next week in order to complete 54 holes? Definitely not. The tournament will conclude one way or another on Saturday.

If the entire field can complete the full 54 holes, the man who leads at the end will be the champion. If play is curtailed by weather, the tournament reverts to the 36-hole leaderboard and the FedExCup points will be distributed accordingly.

Either way Matt Kuchar has a great chance of successfully defending his title at The Barclays. He currently owns a one-stroke lead over Dustin Johnson and Vijay Singh.

5. Would the win be an official win?If 54 holes are completed, yes. If  the tournament has to revert to 36 holes, the win would be unofficial but the FedExCup and money earned would be official.

6. What is the forecast for Saturday?Well, it isn’t good. Showers and isolated thunderstorms are expected in the morning and steady rain with more electricity in the afternoon. Players will be sent off Nos. 1 and 10 in threesomes from 7-9 a.m. on Saturday in hopes of completing play before the worst of the weather arrives around 2 p.m.

7. What if two players are tied at the end of 54 holes? Weather-permitting, there will be a playoff.

8. What about the ticket situation?All four competition days at The Barclays were sold out. So Saturday’s tickets will be honored for the final round. Anyone holding a ticket for Sunday will receive good-any-day passes to the 2012 Barclays, which will be held on the Black Course at Bethpage State Park.

9. When was the last 54-hole tournament on the PGA TOUR?That would be the 2009 AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. Interestingly, that event was won by Dustin Johnson, who starts the final round of The Barclays one stroke off the lead held by Matt Kuchar. This will be the 26th 54-hole event on the PGA TOUR since 1990.

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