Long
hitters Koepka and Johnson love lush TPC Sawgrass
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[March 14, 2019]
(Reuters) - Long hitters Brooks
Koepka and Dustin Johnson are licking their lips at the prospect of
being able to unleash their drivers at the Players Championship
starting in Florida on Thursday.
After being staged in May since 2007, the PGA Tour flagship event
returns to its old March timeslot, which means different grass and
more likely different weather will greet a field that includes all
top 50 in the world in Ponte Vedra Beach.
Firm and fast conditions in spring turned the venerable TPC Sawgrass
almost into a pitch and putt course the past few years, taking
driver out of the hands of many players and rewarding precision more
than power.
But the lush overseeded rye, a winter grass that dies out in spring,
has given the course this year a greener tinge and presented it in a
softer condition for the world's best players.
"I think you're definitely going to have to have a few more drivers
in hand," three-times major winner Brooks Koepka told reporters on
Wednesday.
"Being soft widens the fairways a little bit. I think it's
definitely going to play into a longer hitter's hands."
World number one Dustin Johnson agreed.
"Last few years I've struggled around here," said the American.
"Never could get it going (when the) course played firm and fast.
"It brought the whole field into (contention). Now the course plays
completely different -- softer, longer."
Johnson has never had a top-10 finish, though he came close the past
two years, while Koepka also flirted with top-10 the past two years.
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Brooks Koepka plays his shot from the 18th tee during the final
round of The Honda Classic golf tournament
at PGA National (Champion). Mandatory Credit: Jasen Vinlove-USA
TODAY Sports
If quiet self-belief counts for anything, Koepka could be the man to
beat.
"I'm trying to treat it like a major (but) I'm trying to treat every
event like a major," he said.
"I've got a lot more confidence now than I've ever had. Sometimes
the game comes easy to me."
A glance at winners when the tournament was played in May reveals a
few long hitters - Phil Mickelson (2007) and Jason Day (2017) to
name two - but also several who will never enjoy that moniker, among
them Tim Clark (2010) and Webb Simpson (2018).
"I had to relearn the course the last few days, based on past events
in May, making sure I'm clear on what we're doing off the tees,"
said Simpson.
"I'm trying to treat it like a new golf course, since it is a lot
different."
But no matter how the course is presented, quality never goes out of
style: Just one man has won the event in both March and May - Tiger
Woods, in 2001 and 2013.
(Reporting by Andrew Both in Cary, North Carolina; Editing by Hugh
Lawson)
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