10
Players to Watch: Greenbrier Classic
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[July 05, 2017]
By Tom LaMarre, The Sports Xchange
1. Patrick Reed, United States -- Since he finally has his season
going in the right direction, Reed is playing for the fourth
straight week and could be on the verge of winning for the first
time since last August at the Barclays. After struggling early this
year, including three straight missed cuts, he has posted seven
finishes in the top 25 in his last eight starts, including a tie for
fifth in the Travelers Championship and a tie for 13th in the U.S.
Open. With five victories in the last four seasons on the PGA Tour,
he obviously hasn't forgotten how to get it done and would love to
make it happen this week at the Greenbrier Classic. He is making his
fourth start on the Old White TPC Course and after shooting 70-72 --
142 to miss the cut by three strokes in 2013, he tied for 26th the
following year and tied for 29th in 2015, posting scores in the 60s
in seven of the eight rounds but simply not going low enough.
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2. Kevin Kisner, United States -- Putting together a big season with
six top-10 finishes, including his second PGA Tour victory in the
Dean & DeLuca Invitational, Kisner is seventh in the FedExCup
standings. He also has finished second twice this season, giving him
six runner-up results over the last three years and should start
finding himself in the winner's circle more often. Kisner posted one
of those second-place finishes in the 2015 Greenbrier Classic, in
which he closed with a 6-under-par 64 but lost out to New Zealand's
Danny Lee, who won the tournament with a par on the second playoff
hole. Kisner, who is 0-4 in playoffs on the PGA Tour, is making his
fifth start on the TPC Old White Course and missed the cut in the
first four, failing to break the par of 70 in any of his six rounds
while recording an aggregate score of 22-over-par. He seemingly
figured out how to play the layout two years ago.
3. Danny Lee, New Zealand -- This essentially will be Lee's title
defense in the Greenbrier Classic, since the tournament was canceled
last year after torrential rain in West Virginia caused flooding and
damage to the Old White TPC Course. Two years ago, he earned his
only PGA Tour victory by opening with a 7-under-par 63 and closing
with a 67 before beating Kevin Kisner, David Hearn of Canada and
Robert Streb in a playoff with a par on the second extra hole. Lee,
who shot 72-71 -- 143 to miss the cut by four strokes in his first
appearance in the tournament in 2012, got off to another strong
start with a 65 the next year and closed with a 66 to tie for 16th.
He has been playing very well of late with a tie for fifth in the
AT&T Byron Nelson, a solo sixth in the Dean & DeLuca Invitational
and a tie for third in the Travelers Championship, and has eight
results in the top 25 this season.
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4. Bill Haas, United States -- Following three straight missed cuts,
Haas has reeled off four consecutive finishes in the top 25,
including a tie for fifth in the U.S. Open and a tie for 13th in the
Quicken Loans National last week. His best results this season are
third in the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play and a tie for fourth
in the WGC-HSBC Champions, so he has played his best golf against
strong fields. Haas, who claimed the last of his six PGA Tour
victories in the 2015 Humana Challenge, is making his sixth
appearances in the Greenbrier Classic and posted his best result in
his first in 2011. He finished with 67-65-67 and eventually lost to
a birdie by Scott Stallings on the first playoff hole. Haas also
tied for ninth on the Old White TPC Course in 2013, but missed the
cut in 2016 when he opened with a 66 but followed that with a 74 to
fall two strokes short of playing on the weekend at 140.
5. Phil Mickelson, United States -- Lefty is playing for the first
time since missing the U.S. Open at Erin Hills last month because
his daughter, Amanda, graduated from high school on the same day as
the first round. He also has parted ways with caddie Jim "Bones"
Mackay after a 25-year partnership and his brother Tim Mickelson,
former golf coach at the University of Arizona, will be on the bag.
Phil Mickelson has said all season that his game is close and the
results bear that out, as he has recorded 10 finishes in the top 10,
including a tie for fifth in the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play
and a tie for seventh in the WGC-Mexico Championship. He and his
family enjoy the Greenbrier Resort so much that they bought a home
there, but Mickelson has not done well in the Greenbrier Classic. He
missed the cut in all three of his appearances on the Old White TPC
Course in 2011-12-13 and broke 70 only when he posted a 2-under-par
68 in the second round four years ago.
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6. David Lingmerth, Sweden -- Leading after each of
the first three rounds of the Quicken Loans National last week,
Lingmerth was unable to finish off what would have been his second
PGA Tour victory. In fact, after opening with 65-65 at TPC Potomac
at Avenel Farm, he struggled to 73-73 on the weekend and wound up in
a tie for fifth, three strokes out of the playoff in which Kyle
Stanley defeated Charles Howell III. However, it was his best result
of a season that includes six finishes in the top 25. Lingmerth,
whose only PGA Tour victory came in the 2015 Memorial Tournament, is
playing in the Greenbrier Classic for the fourth time and has played
quite well on the TPC Old White Course. He shot 6-under-par 64 in
the third round last year on his way to a tie for sixth, tied for
ninth in 2013 and tied for 16th the following year. In 12 rounds on
the course, Lingmerth has broken 70 on 10 occasions and is a
cumulative 26-under.
7. Russell Henley, United States -- Henley has not
played up to his standings since claiming his third PGA Tour victory
in the Shell Houston Open in April and following it up with a tie
for 11th the following week at the Masters for his best result in a
major championship. His best result in seven events since was a tie
for 26th in the RBC Heritage and he has missed the cut three times
during that span. However, Henley hopes to take the momentum from a
closing 3-under-par 67 in the final round of the Quicken Loans
National last week and build on it when he plays in the Greenbrier
Classic for the third time. He was tied for second after opening
with 67-65 on the Old White TPC Course in 2013, but played the
weekend in 72-71 to wind up in a tie for 30th. He came back in 2015
and played the last three rounds in 66-69-63 to record a solo fifth
place finish.
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8. Sung Kang, South Korea -- After being in the hunt much of the way
in the Quicken Loans National last week before finishing in a tie
for fifth, Kang will try to keep it going when he makes his second
start in the Greenbrier Classic. The 30-year-old, who won three
times on the Korean Tour and captured the 2013 Order of Merit title
as leading money winner, came close to breaking through for his
first PGA Tour victory in the Shell Houston Open in April, when he
took a three-stroke lead into the final round. However, he closed
with a 72 and wound up second behind Russell Henley, who shot
7-under-par 65. Kang also finished in a tie for fifth in the Valero
Texas Open late in May and has eight top-25 results in his best
season on the PGA Tour. In his only appearance in the Greenbrier
Classic, he shot 71-79 -- 150 on the Old White TPC Course in 2012 to
miss the cut by 11 strokes, but is a much more accomplished player
now.
9. Keegan Bradley, United States -- The 2011 PGA champion struggled
with the ban of his anchored putter since it went into effect at the
beginning of last year and finally seems to be getting the hang of
his more conventional wand. Bradley, who claimed the last of his
three PGA Tour victories in the 2012 WGC-Bridgestone Invitational,
has posted five results in the top 10 on the circuit this season,
including a tie for eighth in the Travelers Championship and a tie
for fifth in the Quicken Loans National in his last two outings. He
will try to make it three in a row this week when he plays in the
Greenbrier Classic for the fifth time, with his best result on the
Old White TPC Course a tie for fourth in 2014, when he posted four
rounds in the 60s. Last year, he finished with his best score on the
course, a 6-under-par 64, and salvaged a tie for 29th. He was in
position for a top-10 result in 2012, but finished with a 74 to tie
for 46th.
10. Si Woo Kim, South Korea -- Since winning the Players
Championship in May for his second PGA Tour victory, the 22-year-old
Kim has missed the cut twice and withdrew midway through the
Memorial Tournament because of an ankle injury after opening with
76-71 --147. However, in the only tournament in which he played the
weekend, he was in the chase most of the way in the U.S. Open at
Erin Hills before closing with a 3-over-par 75 to tie for 13th and
barely missed his first top-10 finish in a major. Kim, who also
captured the 2016 Wyndham Championship by five strokes over Luke
Donald of England when he shot 10-under-par 60 in round two, claimed
his only other pro victory in the 2015 Stonebrae Classic on the
Web.com Tour. The youngest of the rising South Korean stars on the
PGA Tour, who earned his card when he was 17 years, 5 months, 6 days
old and had to wait until he was 18 to play, is making his debut in
the Greenbrier Classic.
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