10
Players to Watch: Quicken Loans National
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[June 22, 2016]
By Tom LaMarre, The Sports Xchange
1. Rickie Fowler, United States -- The highest-ranked player in the
field this week at No. 6 in the world, Fowler has struggled with
three consecutive missed cuts in the Players, the Memorial and the
U.S. Open. He's too good for this to continue and could be ready to
snap out of it at Congressional. Last year in the Quicken Loans
National, he posted four rounds in the 60s and finished second,
three shots behind winner John Merrick at Robert Trent Jones Golf
Club in Virginia. He also tied for 21st in 2013 at Congressional and
tied for 13th in 2011 at Aronimink. Before his recent slump, Rickie
posted six top-10 results this season, including a playoff loss to
Hideki Matsuyama of Japan in the Waste Management Phoenix Open.
2. Patrick Reed, United States -- Although Reed was another one of
the top players who missed the cut in the U.S. Open at Oakmont, he
leads the PGA Tour with nine finishes in the top-10 this season,
including seconds in the Hyundai Tournament of Champions and the
Valero Texas Open. He is making his third start in the Quicken Loans
National. Two years ago, he held the 54-hole lead before closing
with a 77 at Congressional to slide to a tie for 11th. Reed is the
fifth and odd-man-out for the U.S. Olympic team right now and needs
a victory to close the gap on Jordan Spieth, Dustin Johnson, Bubba
Watson and Rickie Fowler if he wants to land on the team that goes
to Rio in August.
3. Marc Leishman, Australia -- The third-best Aussie in the world
behind Jason Day and Adam Scott, Leishman finished in a tie for 18th
in the U.S. Open at Oakmont, dragged down only by a 77 in the third
round. It was his third straight finish in the top 20, as he also
tied for 13th in the Dean & DeLuca Invitational and tied for 11th in
the Memorial Tournament. Leishman, whose only victory on the PGA
Tour came in the 2012 Travelers Championship, held the 36-hole lead
in the 2014 Quicken Loans National at Congressional after a 66 but
played the weekend in 73-74 and slid to a tie for eighth. He also
tied for seventh in 2010, closing with 67-68, when the tournament
was played at Aronimink in Pennsylvania.
4. Jim Furyk, United States -- The 46-year-old Furyk showed that his
game is coming around in his fifth tournament back from left wrist
surgery when he closed with a 66 last week to tie for second in the
U.S. Open before his home state (Pennsylvania) fans at Oakmont. That
was his first top-10 result since a tie for fourth in the Deutsche
Bank Championship last September during the FedEx Cup playoffs, a
week before he went out because of the injury in the BMW
Championship. Furyk, who claimed his 17th PGA Tour victory last year
in the RBC Heritage, tied for third the first two years of what is
now the Quicken Loans National and tied for seventh in the third
playing of the event, all at Congressional, but has not cracked the
top 30 in four appearances since.

5. Charley Hoffman, United States -- Making his ninth start in the
Quicken Loans National, Hoffman finally finished in the top 10 in
the tournament two years ago at Congressional when he shot 68-69
during the weekend to tie for third, one stroke out of the playoff
in which Justin Rose of England beat Shawn Stefani. That was his
best result in the tournament since he tied for 19th in 2007, its
first year, when he shot 69-67 in the middle rounds. Hoffman
captured the Valero Texas Open in April for his fourth victory on
the PGA Tour during a stretch in which he finished in the top 20 in
four of five tournaments. However, he missed the cut in the Players
and tied for 37th in the U.S. Open, so he's trying to find that
earlier form this week.

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6. Byeong Hun An, South Korea -- Trying to turn his Temporary
Special Membership on the PGA Tour into full-time playing
privileges, An will tee it up in the Quicken Loans National for the
first time this week. The youngest U.S. Amateur champion at 17 when
he won in 2009, he nearly earned a two-year exemption on the PGA
Tour earlier this year when he lost in a playoff to Brian Stuard at
the Zurich Classic of New Orleans. An, who has won three times as a
pro including the 2015 BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth on the
European Tour, posted a solid tie for 23rd in the U.S. Open at
Oakmont after tying for 11th in the Memorial Tournament. He also
tied for ninth earlier this season in the WGC-Dell Match Play.
7. Brendan Steele, United States -- Steele's tie for 15th in the
U.S. Open at Oakmont was his fourth top-20 result in his last five
starts, also including a tie for 13th in the Valero Texas Open, a
tie for 14th in the Wells Fargo Championship and a tie for 20th in
the Memorial Tournament. His best result this season was a tie for
third in the WGC-HSBC Champions, coming close to adding that to his
only PGA Tour victory in the 2011 Valero Texas Open. Steele is
making his fifth start in the AT&T National and he posted his best
result in Tiger Woods' tournament two years ago at Congressional,
when he bounced back from an opening 74 with a second-round 66 and
eventually finished in a tie for fifth.

8. Kevin Chappell, United States -- Still trying to break through
for his first victory on the PGA Tour after finishing second three
times this season and five times in his career, Chappell will make
his sixth start in the Quicken Loans National. His best result was a
tie for 18th last year at Robert Trent Jones Golf Club in Virginia,
where he tied for the 54-hole lead with eventual winner Troy Merritt
by shooting 64-68-67 before closing with a 77. Chappell is 10th in
the FedEx Cup point standings this season thanks to ties for second
in the Players Championship, the Arnold Palmer Invitational and the
RSM Classic. His only pro victory came in the 2010 Fresh Express
Classic at TPC Stonebrae on what is now the Web.com Tour.
9. Bill Haas, United States -- One of Haas' six PGA Tour victories
came in what was then the AT&T National in 2013 at Congressional,
where he opened with a 70 before playing the last three rounds in
68-68-66 to win by three strokes over Roberto Castro. Last year,
when the tournament was played at Robert Trent Jones Golf Club in
Virginia, he shot 64 in round three en route to a tie for fourth.
Haas came close to adding to his victory total earlier this year
when he shot 67-67 in the middle rounds of the Valspar Championship
but couldn't hold the 54-hole lead, closing with a 72 and eventually
losing to Charl Schwartzel of South Africa on the first playoff
hole. That was one of his four finishes in the top 10 and seven in
the top 25 this season.
10. Jon Rahm, Spain -- After tying for 23rd to finish as low amateur
in the U.S. Open last week at Oakmont in his first major, Rahm will
make his pro debut this week in the Quicken Loans National. The
21-year-old, who was No. 1 in Golfweek's Men's College and Men's
Amateur rankings, had 11 victories in his career at Arizona State,
second only to Phil Mickelson's 16. Rahm, who captured the 2014
World Amateur Championship and won the Spanish Amateur Championship
the last two years, received the Ben Hogan Award as the best college
golfer in the nation the last two years. He has played in five PGA
Tour events in the last two seasons, with his best result a tie for
fifth in the 2015 Waste Management Phoenix Open, and he also tied
for 10th in the OHL Classic at Mayakoba earlier this season.
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