10
Players to Watch: Shell Houston Open
The Sports Xchange
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[March 29, 2017]
By Tom LaMarre, The Sports Xchange
1. Jordan Spieth, United States -- When top-ranked Dustin Johnson
withdrew from the Shell Houston Open on Monday, citing fatigue and a
need to rest ahead of the Masters next week, Spieth became the
favorite among oddsmakers and many other observers. The native Texan
also will be a fan favorite while playing in the Houston event for
the fifth time, with his best result coming when he lost in a
playoff to J.B. Holmes two years ago. Spieth took a one-stroke lead
into the final round after starting with 66-69-67, but he closed
with a 70. Holmes caught him with an 8-under-par 64, then beat
Johnson Wagner with a par on the second extra hole. Spieth dropped
out with a par on the first playoff hole, where the other two made
birdie. After starting this year with four consecutive top-10
finishes, capped by a victory at Pebble Beach, Spieth has not done
better than his tie for 12th in the WGC-Mexico Championship over his
past three starts.
2. Henrik Stenson, Sweden -- After skipping the WGC-Dell
Technologies Match Play because he doesn't like the format
introduced last year in addition to saying it didn't fit into his
schedule, Stenson will prep for the Masters by making his sixth
start in the Shell Houston Open. The world No. 5 has done everything
but win the tournament, finishing one stroke behind Jim Herman in
solo second last year, tying for second one stroke behind D.A.
Points in 2013, and tying for third two shots out of the playoff in
which Paul Casey of England beat J.B. Holmes in 2009. The big Swede
finished in the top 10 of seven consecutive events around the world,
including second in the WGC-HSBC Champions in China, the Hero World
Challenge and the Omega Dubai Desert Classic, before shooting
75-75--149 to miss the cut at the Arnold Palmer Invitational in his
last start. And that run doesn't even count a victory in the Open
Championship and tie for seventh in the PGA Championship late last
season.
3. Jon Rahm, Spain -- Coming off his eye-opening performance in the
WGC-Dell Match Play Championship, in which he took top-ranked Dustin
Johnson all the way to the last hole of the final before losing,
Rahm seems to have a lock on the 2016-17 Rookie of the Year award on
the PGA Tour even before the first major. After earning his playing
card right out of Arizona State in limited starts last year, the
Spaniard has three consecutive finishes in the top 10 and four in
his past five starts, including his first PGA Tour victory in the
Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines. Those results have lifted
him to fourth in the FedExCup standings and 14th in the Official
World Golf Ranking, perhaps validating Phil Mickelson's claim that
Rahm is one of the top five players in the world right now. The
22-year-old will be making his debut in the Shell Houston Open, but
his game plays well anywhere.
4. Phil Mickelson, United States -- Lefty has said all year that his
best game is close, and he proved it with a strong run to the
quarterfinals of the WGC-Dell Match Play Championship before Bill
Haas sent him home, 2 and 1. That result came after Mickelson tied
for seventh in the WGC-Mexico Championship, so he seems to be
peaking just in time for the Masters next week. Mickelson loves the
Tournament Course at the Golf Club of Houston, and he is making his
12th start in the event. He claimed one of his 42 PGA Tour victories
in Houston, playing the weekend in 63-65 to beat Scott Verplank and
Chris Kirk by three strokes in 2011. His only other top-10 result in
the tournament was a tie for fourth as defending champion, four
strokes behind champion Hunter Mahan, but he has not finished out of
the top 20 in his past six appearances, including a tie for 13th
last year.
5. Rickie Fowler, United States -- Another player who skipped the
WGC-Dell Match Play Championship, Fowler has been on a strong run of
form, with his worst start in his past four tournaments a tie for
16th in the WGC-Mexico Championship. Included in that surge were his
fourth PGA Tour victory in the Honda Classic and a tie for fourth in
the Waste Management Phoenix Open. Those results have lifted him to
No. 9 in the world rankings and 10th in the FedExCup standings,
giving him confidence that he can make a run at his first major
title next week in the Masters. Fowler is making his sixth start in
the Shell Houston Open and has finished in the top 10 two of the
past three years. He was sixth three years ago and tied for 10th
last year, but in his other four starts on the Tournament Course at
the Golf Club of Houston, he has failed to crack the top 60.
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6. Adam Scott, Australia -- The Aussie admittedly has
made a career of trying to figure out the best schedule formula to
prepare for a major championship, but it worked perfectly for him
only once, when he captured the 2013 Masters. This time, Scott
skipped the WGC-Dell Match Play Championship and will tee it up this
week in the Shell Houston Open for the seventh time. He claimed one
of his 13 PGA Tour titles at Houston in 2007, playing the weekend in
66-65 to beat Bubba Watson and fellow Aussie Stuart Appleby by three
strokes. That was one of his two top-10 finishes in the tournament,
as he tied for sixth in 2002, but he was solid in a tie for 14th
last year. Scott opened with a 63 in his title defense in 2008 but
struggled to a 76 in round two and withdrew because of a high fever.
He finished in the top 14 in his first five tournaments this season,
but he tied for 45th in WGC-Mexico Championship in his most recent
start.
7. J.B. Holmes, United States -- Unable to defend his title in the
Shell Houston Open last year because of a shoulder injury, Holmes
returns this week to make his seventh appearance in the tournament.
He opened with a 7-under 65 and closed with a 64 two years ago, then
beat Johnson Wagner with a par on the second playoff hole after
Jordan Spieth dropped out when he couldn't match birdies made by
Holmes and Wagner on the first extra hole. Holmes also finished
second at Houston in 2009, losing in a playoff when he took a double
bogey that allowed Paul Casey of England to win with a bogey on the
first extra hole. He has played well at times this year, making the
cut in all seven events and finishing under par each time, but he
has struggled to put four good rounds together and his best result
was a tie for 12th in the WGC-Mexico Championship early this month.
8. Justin Rose, England -- Still another player who passed on the
WGC-Dell Match Play Championship in the run-up to the Masters, Rose
played well early in the season. He finished solo second in the Sony
Open in Hawaii, seven shots behind Justin Thomas, and tied for
fourth in both the Farmers Insurance Open and the Genesis Open. He
slipped to a tie for 38th in the WGC-Mexico Championship and tied
for 13th at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, not far from his home in
the Orlando area. Rose hopes to ramp up his game this week with the
Masters looming. This will be his fifth start in the Shell Houston
Open, and the Olympic gold medalist's best result was a tie for 14th
in 2010. Two years ago, the last time he played at the Golf Club of
Houston, he started with a promising 69-68 but played the weekend in
72-72 and managed only a tie for 37th.
9. Charles Howell, United States -- The last of Howell's two PGA
Tour victories came in the 2007 Nissan Open, but he has been showing
up on leaderboards this season, and he made a nice run to a tie for
ninth in the WGC-Dell Match Play Championship last week. He also was
in the hunt all the way to the finish in the Farmers Insurance Open
before rookie Jon Rahm of Spain closed with a 65 to his 68, leaving
Howell three shots back in a tie for second. Howell, the 2001 Rookie
of the Year on the PGA Tour, is making his 13th appearance in the
Shell Houston Open, and he finished in the top 10 in three of the
past four years. He closed with a 66 to tie for 10th in 2013, opened
with a 66 on his way to a tie for fifth in 2015 and shot 68 in the
final round last year to tie for seventh.
10. D.A. Points, United States -- Since he didn't qualify for the
WGC-Dell Match Play Championship last week, Points flew off to play
in the Puerto Rico Open, an opposite-field event on the PGA Tour.
And he took advantage of the opportunity by opening with an
8-under-par 64 and then making five birdies to start a final-round
66 that carried him to a two-stroke victory over Retief Goosen of
South Africa, Bill Lunde and Bryson DeChambeau. It was the third
victory of Points' career, with the others coming in the 2011 AT&T
Pebble Beach National Pro-Am and the 2013 Shell Houston Open. He
will be making his 10th start in Houston this week, and he claimed
the title four years ago by opening with an 8-under-par 64 and
finishing with a 66. He sank a 13-foot par putt on the final hole to
defeat Billy Horschel and Henrik Stenson of Sweden by one stroke.
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