10
Players to Watch: CJ Cup @ Nine Bridges
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[October 18, 2017]
By Tom LaMarre, The Sports Xchange
1. Xander Schauffele, United States -- Picking up right where he
left off after becoming the first rookie to capture the Tour
Championship last month at East Lake in Atlanta, Schauffele was in
the hunt almost all the way in his first start of the new season in
the CIMB Classic. He started with scores of 65-67-67 in Malaysia
before closing with a pedestrian even-par 72 to finish in a tie for
third, seven strokes behind runaway winner Pat Perez. After tying
for fifth in the U.S. Open at Erin Hills, Schauffele went on a run
at the end of last season, with eight top-25 finishes in his last 10
tournaments, including his first PGA Tour victory in the Greenbrier
Classic. That helped earn the 23-year-old the PGA Tour's Rookie of
the Year Award for the 2016-17 season, but he has been on a fast
track to stardom since claiming the 2011 California High School
Championship and the 2014 California State Amateur Championship, and
winning three times at San Diego State.
2. Justin Thomas, United States -- When he got to Malaysia last week
for the CIMB Classic at TPC Kuala Lumpur, the 2016-17 Player of the
Year admitted he wasn't quite ready physically and mentally to start
the new season in the tournament he won the previous two seasons.
After opening with so-so scores of 70-71, Thomas rebounded to shoot
69-67 on the weekend to salvage a tie for 17th and should be ready
this week for the first regular season PGA Tour event in South
Korea. Starting with his first major victory in the PGA Championship
at Quail Hollow in August, he recorded four top-six finishes in his
last five events of the season, including a victory in the Dell
Technologies Championship. He finished one stroke behind Schauffele
in the Tour Championship to walk off with the FedExCup. Thomas won
five times in a Tiger Woods-like season and finished in the top 10
on 12 occasions in his breakthrough campaign, and seems to be on the
verge of superstardom.
3. Jason Day, Australia -- Following what mostly was a disappointing
2016-17 season, Day begins the new campaign, and although he plans
to enjoy the sights on his first trip to Jeju Island, South Korea,
he said his primary goal is to claim his first victory since the
2016 Players Championship. Slowed by injuries and his mother's
battle with cancer last season, he slipped from No. 1 in the
Official World Golf Rankings early in 2017 to No. 9. Day still had a
season many players would envy, with five results in the top 10,
including a best of solo second in the AT&T Byron Nelson. He came on
strong at the end of the season, starting with a tie for ninth in
the PGA Championship. During the playoffs Day tied for sixth in the
Northern Trust, tied for 25th in the Dell Technologies Championship,
finished solo fourth in the BMW Championship and tied for 17th in
the Tour Championship to finish 18th in the FedExCup standings.
4. Paul Casey, England -- Although he has been unable to break
through for his first PGA Tour victory since his only one in the
2009 Shell Houston Open, Casey continues to knock on the door and
he's good enough that he should break through sometime soon. He
opened the new season with a 5-over-par 77 last week in the CIMB
Classic, but then battled back with scores of 63-69-65 to finish in
a tie for seventh at TPC Kuala Lumpur. That came after he finished
in the top 10 on nine occasions last season, including solo sixth in
the Masters, while also finishing 26th in the U.S. Open at Erin
Hills, tying for 11th in the Open Championship at Royal Birkdale and
tying for 13th in the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow. Then the
Englishman went through the playoffs with a solo fifth in the
Northern Trust before tying for fourth in the Dell Technologies,
tying for 33rd in the BMW Championship and finishing fifth in the
Tour Championship to wind up 11th in the FedExCup standings.
5. Marc Leishman, Australia -- The second-highest ranked Aussie in
the world at No. 16 -- yes, ahead of Adam Scott -- Leishman makes
his first start of the new season after claiming two of his three
career PGA Tour victories during the 2016-17 season. After winning
only the 2012 Travelers Championship, earlier this year he captured
the Arnold Palmer Invitational and the BMW Championship, claiming
the third event of the playoffs by a whopping five strokes. Leishman
had seven top-10 finishes and 16 in the top 25 during the season,
including a tie for third in the Dell Technologies in week two of
the playoffs on his way to winding up sixth in the FedExCup
standings. He also played well in the last two majors of the year,
tying for sixth in the Open Championship at Royal Birkdale and tying
for 13th in the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow. Leishman also
played better for the International team than his 0-3-1 record in
the Presidents Cup might indicate, halving his singles match with
Kevin Chappell.
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6. Brendan Steele, United States -- After winning the Safeway Open
for the second straight year to open the new PGA Tour season two
weeks ago, Steele followed that up with a solid tie for 13th after
making the long plane flight to Malaysia for the CIMB Classic. He
also tied for sixth in the Players Championship and tied for 13th in
the U.S. Open at Erin Hills after dropping out of the top 10 with a
73 in the final round. That probably cost him a spot in the Tour
Championship at East Lake in Atlanta last month, as he wound up
three spots out of the top 30 in the FedExCup standings. Steele said
he might have become complacent after his success early last season,
which included ties for sixth in the SBS Tournament of Champions and
the CareerBuilder Challenge, and he promised that it won't happen
again this season. Steele, whose only other PGA Tour victory came in
the 2011 Valero Texas Open, is the early FedExCup points leader and
hopes to add to his margin this week in South Korea.
7. Tony Finau, United States -- Coming back after a week off
following his runner-up finish to open the season in the Safeway
Open, Finau is riding a streak of three top-10 finishes after he
tied for seventh in both the BMW Championship and the Tour
Championship last month. Those results gave him eight results in the
top 10 for the 2016-17 season and he wound up 19th in the FedExCup
standings. In the Safeway Open, Finau made a strong run at adding to
his only victory on the PGA Tour in the 2016 Puerto Rico Open, as he
was tied for the lead with eventual winner Brendan Steele on the
back nine in the final round. However, he stumbled to a double-bogey
6 on the 14th hole and finished two strokes behind Steele. Finau,
who made a birdie on the third playoff hole to beat Steve Marino in
Puerto Rico, also won the 2014 Stonebrae Classic on the Web.com Tour
by three strokes, and is honing his raw talent, so more victories
should be coming on the PGA Tour.
8. Keegan Bradley, United States -- The 2011 PGA champion at the
Olympic Club in San Francisco finally seems to be regaining that
form after he finished solo second, four strokes behind Pat Perez
last week in the CIMB Classic at TPC Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia.
Bradley, the PGA Tour Rookie of the Year in 2011, hasn't won since
the 2012 WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, but finally seems to be
getting past the ban of his anchored putter at the beginning of last
year. He was a winner often before that, with nine victories in his
pro career, including the 2011 HP Byron Nelson Championship and the
2011 PGA Championship on the PGA Tour. Last season, Bradley recorded
five top-10 finishes and 10 in the top 25 on the circuit, including
a tie for fourth in the Farmers Insurance Open, a tie for fifth in
the Quicken Loans National, a tie for sixth in the CIMB Classic and
a tie for seventh in the Shriners Hospital for Children Open. He
could be on the verge of making it all the way back to the top.
9. Pat Perez, United States -- Even though he said his ball-striking
wasn't all that great, Perez claimed his second PGA Tour victory in
as many seasons and third overall last week by four strokes over
Keegan Bradley in the CIMB Classic at TPC Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia.
He posted scores of 66-65-64-69 to finish at 24-under-par, and said
a red-hot putter carried him to the victory. Perez was playing on a
major medical extension when he came back from shoulder surgery last
year, but regained his PGA Tour card when he won the 2016 OHL
Classic at Mayakoba by two strokes over Gary Woodland, and now he
has ensured his playing privileges on the circuit for two more
seasons. He is playing the best golf of his career at the age of 41,
posting six finishes in the top 10 last season, including a tie for
second in the Wells Fargo Championship. Perez finished the playoffs
strong with a tie for sixth in the Dell Technologies Championship, a
tie for 12th in the BMW Championship and solo 16th in the Tour
Championship to wind up 15th in the FedExCup standings.
10. Adam Scott, Australia -- Scott's plan to adjust his schedule in
recent seasons in an effort to peak for the majors hasn't worked out
so well. The 2013 Masters champion has finished in the top 10 only
once in his last nine starts in the Grand Slam events -- a tie for
ninth at Augusta National last year -- and his performance during
the regular season hasn't been up to his standards either. Scott
played only 16 times during the PGA Tour regular season last season,
posting four finishes in the top 10, including a tie for sixth in
the Players Championship. He didn't make it past the second round of
the playoffs after missing the cut in the Dell Technologies
Championship and finished 79th in the FedExCup point standings.
Scott played well early last season, finishing in the top 15 in his
first four outings, but that didn't lead to strong results in the
majors after the Masters, including a missed cut in the U.S. Open
and a tie for 61st in the PGA Championship.
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