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Justin Rose Wins Pebble, BUT will he continue on this winning track?

Justin Rose ends four-year drought with win at 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Justin Rose is starting to make an early case for the 2023 Ryder Cup.

The former World No. 1 ended a four-year winless drought Monday with his three-shot win at the 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am after a wild week of the weather delayed the PGA Tour’s annual stop on the Monterey Peninsula.

Rose completed his final-round front nine before play was called due to darkness Sunday night and began Monday morning with a two-shot lead at 15 under. The 42-year-old Englishman cruised to three birdies over his final nine to sign for a 6-under 66 and finish at 18 under for the tournament, three clear of Brendon Todd (65) and Brandon Wu (66), who finished T-2 at 15 under. Keith Mitchell (68) and Peter Malnati (69) finished T-4 at 14 under.

“I think overall, if I had to think about one thing it was just knowing I’m trending, just sometimes when you’re trending you kind of try a little too hard,” said Rose of the win, the 11th of his PGA Tour career. “I let my good golf come forward.”

A five-time member of Team Europe at the Ryder Cup, Rose has struggled to get in the mix over the last few years. Before Monday his last victory came at the 2019 Farmers Insurance Open, but Rose has been rounding back into form so far in the early goings of the 2022-23 PGA Tour season. The 2013 U.S. Open champion has finished inside the top 30 in five of six starts but did post a T-9 at the Cadence Bank Houston Open. With the European squad fractured due to key members joining LIV Golf, the re-emergence of Rose could be key come time for the matches this fall in Italy.

“One thing I have realized is obviously I haven’t been playing enough great golf,” he explained, “but when I do play half decent I do give myself chances to win.”

Source:golfweek

This Players Success has gone unmatched & continues on for more!

Bernhard Langer hoping to continue making history at Chubb Classic

Bernhard Langer has already amazed the golfing world with an extended run of success unmatched on the PGA Tour Champions.

And he doesn’t plan on slowing down any time soon.

“I believe I have a few more wins in me,” Langer said.

With 44 career victories on the senior circuit, the 65-year-old needs just one to tie Hale Irwin’s mark. Considering Langer’s won at least two Champions tournaments in 10 consecutive seasons, it’s likely only a matter of time before the record changes hands.

It also wouldn’t be much of a stretch to circle next month’s Chubb Classic as a likely setting for Langer to make history. He’s won the Naples, Florida, event a record four times at three different courses, including last year’s wire-to-wire victory at Tiburon Golf Club’s Black Course, which also allowed Langer, then 64, to break his own mark for the oldest tour champion. He did so again in November after turning 65 when he captured the TimberTech Championship in Boca Raton.

While the prospect of unseating Irwin atop the all-time victory list is “very much on the radar screen now,” Langer said he doesn’t feel any additional pressure being on the precipice of achieving that goal.

“I just try to be the best I can be and play the best golf every day that I can,” he said. “…Deep down, I think I know I can still win tournaments, even though there’s a lot of younger guys.”

Langer said when he first joined the Champions tour, he regularly finished among the top 10 in driving distance; last year he was 63rd. Now he tries to make up for that shortcoming with accuracy, putting, and course strategy, strengths that give him an advantage at a venue like Tiburón’s Black Course, which Langer said is one of the tightest on the Champions Tour.

“Tiburon is not a golf course necessarily for the big bombers that spray it around because if you hit it offline you’re going to be in the jungle and you’re going to take a penalty drop,” Langer said.

Langer opened the 2023 Champions season at the Mitsubishi Electric Championship in Hawaii. Tied for fourth place entering the final round, he ran into trouble on the 5th hole after hitting a shot into the water and finished tied for 10th.

“Top 10 is not bad but I’m always hoping for better,” he said.

Langer will play next at the Trophy Hassan II, set for Feb. 9-11 in Morocco, giving him one opportunity to tie Irwin’s record before the Chubb Classic.

A longtime resident of Boca Raton, Langer said playing at the Chubb feels like a home game for him, one that he can drive to and have family and friends on hand to support him.

“There you usually play on wonderful golf courses at a good time of the year and the field is always strong as well,” he said. “When you win there, you know you’ve beaten the best.”

As for the future, Langer said as long as he’s healthy, has fun playing, and can remain competitive, he’ll remain a full-time participant on the Champions tour.

“As long as those three things are there, I’m going to probably continue,” he said. “If one or two of those have gone missing, then it’s probably time to pack it up.”


 Source: GolfweekUSA

Nonaburg Super Bowl Shootout

2023 NONABURG Super Bowl Shootout

This tournament will be hosted Saturday, February, 11th, 2023 with a shotgun start at 12 NOON.

 

The cost will be as follows:

            $50.00 - Premier Members – Paid in Cash • $60.00 - Non-Premier Members – Paid in Cash • $70.00 - Guests of Members – Paid in Cash

 

The format of this tournament will be:

• Team Low Net (Team size will depend on number of entries)

• Individual Low Net (2 Flights)

• Teams are based on Blind Draw

•Make your own foursome

• Points will be based on USGA Course Handicap

 

Schedule Of Events:

SATURDAY

•Kitchen will be open 8 AM - 6 PM

• Orders for Sunday take home can be place

• Bar will be open from 8 a.m. - end of tournament

SUNDAY

• Kitchen will be closed in order to fulfill take home and pick up orders.

• Club will close at 6:00 p.m.

 

TEES

•White Tees - Below 65

•Gold Tees - 65 and over

•Red Tees - Ladies

Tournament Prizes in CASH & much more

For more information or to register please click here.

 

Super Bowl Party Packs Available To-Go

Super Bowl Party Packs To-Go! 🏈🍗

WE ARE WELCOMING ALL TO PLACE ORDERS!

If you are not a club member, you will be given a time for pickup and a parking place number to use, and we will bring your party packs out to your vehicle spot.

We will start taking orders starting 2/1/23 up until Sunday, 2/12/23, at 12:00 PM.

Curbside pickup will be available in front of the clubhouse. You'll just need to call when you get here for pickup.

Pickup is available from 3:30-6:40 on game day. There will be NO ORDERS FULFILLED AFTER THE CUT-OFF DATE AND TIME.

PACKS:

Bone-In Wings: BBQ, BUFFALO, OR LEMON PEPPER & A DIPPING SAUCE 50 PC. $40 | 100 PC. $80

Boneless Wings: BBQ, BUFFALO, OR LEMON PEPPER & A DIPPING SAUCE 50 PC. $50 | 100 PC. $90

Chicken Tenders & Two Dipping Sauces: 25 PC. $40 | 50 PC. $80

Spinach Dip & Chips: Feed 10 $25 | Feed 25 $50

TO PLACE AN ORDER: PLEASE CALL 423-568-3403 OR This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. ASK FOR KIM OR LEAVE A VOICEMAIL FOR KEN.

Making arguments with another win!

Best in the world? Jon Rahm makes argument with another win at 2023 American Express

Is Jon Rahm the best golfer in the world?

The computers at the Official World Golf Ranking may say no, but it’s difficult to argue for anyone other than Rahm at the moment. With four wins in his last six worldwide starts, including a one-shot victory at The American Express on Sunday, Rahm seems to be moving from a great player to a dominant one.

Chased all day by rookie Davis Thompson and a flock of other players, Rahm managed to steady a shaky back nine with a birdie on the 16th hole to regain sole possession of the lead on the Pete Dye Stadium Course at PGA West. Solid pars on the final two holes gave Rahm a 27-under winning score for his second win in The American Express in the last six years. It also was the Spanish star’s second victory on the PGA Tour in three weeks and his ninth overall PGA Tour title following his win at the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions.

“Body’s been feeling great. My swing’s been feeling really, really good. And it shows, right?” said Rahm, who is expected to move from fourth to third in the new world ranking on Monday. “Even when I’m saying I may not be as comfortable as I would like, I’m shooting 64s because everything is just firing when it needs to.” 

Rahm, who started the day tied with Thompson, shot 68 on Sunday to earn the $1,440,000 first-prize check from the $8 million purse. Rahm also moved to No. 1 in the year-long FedEx Cup points race, the first time he has ever led that race at any time during a year.

Rahm was so happy and comfortable with the win that he could even take a jab at himself.

“I’m just going to say that I’m glad I came back and won the putting contest this year. That’s all I can say,” Rahm laughed, a reference to a viral comment he made at the 2022 American Express that the event was nothing but a putting contest.

As low as Rahm’s scoring was with rounds of 64, 64, 65 and 68, he still finished one shot off the tournament scoring record for a 72-hole event that Patrick Reed set in 2014.

Thompson, the first- and second-round leader, fought his driver much of the day but was tied with Rahm on the back nine. A critical missed birdie putt on the 14th hole and an 8-foot Rahm par putt stopped Thompson from taking the lead outright. When Thompson parred the 16th after a poor drive into a bunker and Rahm birdied the hole, Thompson fell one shot behind.

“I had a great week. Competing against the best in the world is my dream, and I did that today and proved that I can hang with them. It was a lot of fun,” the 23-year-old Thompson said. “A lot of nerves and I hit a lot of quality golf shots under pressure, which was really cool.”

Rahm was impressed with the rookie who played college golf at the University of Georgia.

“First time in this situation, teeing off with the lead on Sunday in a PGA Tour event, I think he did a great job,” Rahm said. “He played good golf. It was just, I would say, two bad swings at the wrong time. And that was 5 and 16.

“One could say it was two holes where he was maybe trying to hit it a little bit hard, trying to get some extra distance,” he said. “One cost him at least one shot and the one on 16 cost him half a shot. And that was the difference at the end.”

Rahm and Thompson added some drama in the closing holes. Thompson’s 40-foot birdie putt on the 17th hole hit the pin and bounced a few inches away.

“I usually always leave the stick in from a long distance. I feel like it helps me with my speed,” Thompson said. “I’ll probably play the “what if” game in my head for a long time, unfortunately.”

Rahm then hit his drive into a fairway bunker on the par-4 18th, but when his next shot found the middle of the green, with Thompson already over the green, Rahm pumped his fist in victory.

Xander Schauffele had the round of the day among the leaders, a 10-under 62 that included a rare albatross on the par-5 fifth hole. Schauffele finished tied for third at 25-under with Chris Kirk, who like other chasers on the day made his move early but couldn’t seem to make a critical putt down the stretch in a round of 64.

A final-hole birdie for a 66 allowed Taylor Montgomery to finish alone in fifth at 24-under.

Rahm jumped to a quick lead Sunday with kick-in birdies on the first and second holes, but then made six straight pars, showcasing a wedge game he said was as good as he’s had in a tournament.

“The amount of tap-ins that I’ve had these four days is unlike anything I’ve ever had,” Rahm said. “If I had to put a MVP to something, it’s that 56 and that 52 degree wedges were key.”

Thompson made a birdie on the fourth hole but then started a day-long battle with his driver by hitting a lake on the par-5 fifth hole on the way to a bogey.

“I had a few tee shots off line. I mean, didn’t really give myself a chance to go for it on 5 and 16 due to poor tee shots. As well as I played the par-5s all week, I kind of didn’t really do that well today,” said Thompson, who had five eagles on par-5s in the first two rounds combined.

Rahm then started making par after par despite hitting good putts.

“I can tell you there’s a few, I mean, on 5, 7, 8, 10, 15, 17 and 18, all of those putts were good,” Rahm said. “All of them looked like they were dead center with two feet to go and just at the end they just missed.”

The par for Thompson on the 16th after a drive into a bunker hurt more because Rahm was short of the green in two, chipped up to 8 feet and then made the birdie putt that gave him the lead for good. The birdie on the 16th came moments after another big 8-foot putt, this one for par on the 14th hole. Rahm missed the green long and chipped onto the green, then watched Thompson miss a 10-foot birdie putt for the lead before making his own clutch putt for par.

For Schauffele, the third-place finish was important coming off a withdrawal from the Sentry Tournament of Champions two weeks ago with back pain.

“It’s a good week back. I’ve never had to withdraw from a tournament,” Schauffele said. “Bit scary for me and my team. Fortunately, I have a really good team that put me back into playing shape pretty quickly. So a lot to build on this week. Definitely looking forward to the next few events.”

Schauffele’s albatross on the fifth came on a 4-iron from 226 yards and sparked his rise up the leaderboard.

For Rahm, the win was the continuation of a great stretch of golf. But it isn’t where he hopes he can take his golf in the coming months or coming years.

“In my mind I feel like I can get a lot better,” Rahm said. “I feel like that’s the mentality I should have. Again, I work very hard to do what I do. I could find mistakes in every single round I’ve played. Very few times I would say I’ve played a flawless round.”


 Source: golfweek.usatoday

PRO SHOP & GOLF COURSE:

Monday - CLOSED (unless otherwise announced)
Tues. - Sun. - 8:00 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. (Carts in by 7:45 p.m.)

POOL HOURS:

May 29 - July 31:
Tuesday - Saturday- 10:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Sunday - 1:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. 

August 1 - September 4:
Not open during the weekdays
Saturday - 10:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Sunday- 1:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.

OFFICE:

Monday - CLOSED
Tues.- Fri. - 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Saturday - Closed
Sunday - Closed

*Note: As the days get longer, hours will change.

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