Golf game thriving, Tony Finau back
to defend Mexico Open title
Send a link to a friend
[February 22, 2024]
Tony Finau has every reason to be confident entering the next
stop on the PGA Tour.
Not only is he the only top-25 player in the world in the field this
week, but Finau also has a sterling track record at the Mexico Open
at Vidanta, which begins Thursday in Vallarta, Mexico.
After tying for second in 2022 in the national open's first year as
a PGA Tour event, Finau returned last year and shot a 24-under 260
to win the event by three strokes.
Now Finau returns to the par-71 Vidanta Vallarta with a head of
steam building. He's 5-for-5 in made cuts in 2024, including a T6
finish at the Farmers Insurance Open and a T19 at last week's
Genesis Invitational.
"I said it last year after we left, our family's really fallen in
love with this place," said Finau, No. 24 in the Official World Golf
Ranking. "And to be back defending this year is pretty special.
We're really happy to be back, I'm really happy to be back on a golf
course that I love."
Finau -- who once had a reputation for frequent top-10 finishes
without breaking through for a victory -- has earned four of his six
PGA Tour wins inside the past 20 months. He said he feels ready to
go on another run.
"I look forward to competing. I feel like the game's in a good
place," he said. "I've had a couple nice finishes on the West Coast.
... It's nice to have the juices going already and being at a golf
tournament that I really enjoy."
Finau isn't the only player on the property who has shown
comfortability with the 7,456-yard track.
Brandon Wu placed third last year after a T2 in 2022. And
Argentina's Emiliano Grillo, ranked 40th in the world, shot a
final-round 65 in 2023 to tie for fifth. He sees opportunity in the
course's wide fairways as well as the ideal weather, as the
tournament is being played two months earlier than it was last year.
[to top of second column] |
"It's in absolute perfect condition. I would say
it's the best I've seen," Grillo said. "Greens are rolling fine,
fairways are just probably the best you'll find on tour. Considering
it's a different date, I think it's going to be less windy, so it's
going to be a lot of birdies, that's for sure."
The most notable player on a sponsor exemption is Chile's Cristobal
Del Solar. Earlier this month, Del Solar shot a 57 on the Korn Ferry
Tour -- the lowest 18-hole score ever in a PGA Tour-sanctioned
event.
Eight players from Mexico are in the field, three of them amateurs.
PGA Tour rookie Raul Pereda got into the event last season, opened
with a 65, made the cut and tied for 60th.
"It is huge for the growth of the game, it is huge to keep showing
the generations that we have coming in the near future to pursue the
game of golf," Pereda said. "Definitely having the Mexico Open,
having a PGA Tour event or two PGA Tour events in Mexico, it means a
lot for the sport in general, for the country, being able to put
more kids out there and showing them being able to be in the big
league, it's possible."
--Field Level Media
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely
responsible for this content.
|