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Hudson Swafford lost control of the tournament without ever losing any confidence he could hit the right shot when it counted. Standing in the 13th fairway Sunday in the Corales Puntacana Resort and Club Championship, he had a four-shot lead. ''Honestly, I one bad golf shot all day,'' Swafford said of his 9-iron that he didn't finish and led to the bogey on the 15th.
Cobra Tour rep Ben Schomin joined GOLF's Fully Equipped podcast to talk all things Bryson, including his most "unusual" gear quirk. The post Bryson DeChambeau is the only pro with this ‘unusual’ equipment quirk appeared first on Golf.
Four players each shot 7-under 65 to hold a one-shot lead after the first round at the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship. The post 3 things to know after Round 1 at the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship appeared first on Golf.
This week's event in the Dominican Republic represents an opportunity for several of the PGA Tour's rank-and-file to earn an all-important win.
Is it Sepp Straka's time to shine? The former University of Georgia golfer is tied for the lead at the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club (...)
PUNTA CANA, Dominican Republic -- Tyler McCumber was the only player to reach 8-under par Thursday in the Caribbean breeze until he dropped a shot on his 17th hole and fell into a four-way for the lead in the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship. Sepp Straka was the only one at 7-under 65 who kept a clean card. He was joined by Hudson Swafford, who made two tough par saves late in his round, and Scott Harrington, who made bogey on the second-easiest hole at the Corales Golf Club. They were one shot clear of Xinjun Zhang and Joseph Bramlett, while former Southern California star Justin Suh got his season off to a happy start and was among those at 67. RELATED: Leaderboard | Bhatia, Zalatoris are under par | Suh, 23, making most of sponsor exemption Straka's round was highlighted by a 5-wood to 5 feet for eagle on the par-5 fourth hole early in his round. He also was the only player at 65 who played in the morning before a stiff ocean breeze kicked up late in the afternoon. "This course is not really one where you can push it," Straka said. "You can shoot a low round out here, but it's got to be a consistent low round." Rob Oppenheim would appreciate that. He was 4 under through six holes, only to make a pair of bogeys and then take a double-bogey 7 on the par-5 12th hole. He wound up with a 72. Nearly two-thirds of the 144-man field broke par. McCumber, the son of 10-time PGA TOUR winner Mark McCumber, also made eagle on No. 4 and his birdie on the par-5 seventh took him to 8 under. But his approach on the next hole went long, along the rocks. He tried to play from there and moved it sideways, and he kept the damage to a bogey by making an 8-foot bogey putt. Harrington never feels more relaxed than on resort courses along the ocean, and such was the case as he motored his way into a share of the lead. But toward the end of his round, he hit a tee shot so wild the ball was deemed lost and he had to return to the tee to play his third shot. He managed to make bogey. He rolled in a birdie putt on the next hole, and then hit his tee shot to 8 feet on the par-3 ninth, only to burn the edge of the cup on his birdie attempt to finish the round. Swafford had four birdies in five holes to start the back nine, but then it was a matter of hanging on. From a fluffy lie left of the 16th green, his pitched stopped quickly and he made a 12-foot putt for par. Then, he found a front bunker on the par-3 17th along the Caribbean, blasted out to 7 feet and made that. He finished with a birdie to join a share of the lead. Suh was featured last summer as part of a strong college class turning pro, holding a press conference at the Travelers Championship with Collin Morikawa, Matthew Wolff and Viktor Hovland. Morikawa won three starts later and captured the PGA Championship last month. Wolff won a week later and finished second to Bryson DeChambeau last week at Winged Foot in the U.S. Open. Hovland won in Puerto Rico earlier this year. Suh missed nine out of 11 cuts on sponsor exemptions in PGA TOUR events since turning pro, though he played well on the PGA TOUR Latinoamerica. "They really got their game together just right off the bat turning pro," Suh said. "Unfortunately, on the first few starts that I had I was facing a wrist injury and just kind of had to battle back. Kind of changed my swing a little bit just so I wouldn't have to face that anymore." He's healthy now. Suh said he played with Morikawa a few weeks ago and beat him in a friendly match. "So the game's there," he said. "It's just a matter of putting it together at a tournament."
The Tour planned to allow 650 spectators per day for the Rolex Series tournament, which has been rescheduled from its usual July date to Oct. 1-4. "A robust and thorough plan had been put in place, in close collaboration with the Scottish Government, to welcome a limited number of spectators over the weekend," the European Tour said in a statement.
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