Showing posts with label Kurt Kitayama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kurt Kitayama. Show all posts

Thursday, February 1, 2024

Thursday at the 2024 AT&T Pro-Am: Detry in the lead, McNealy makes a big recovery

What a difference a day makes. Wednesday at Pebble Beach, the final practice day before competition rounds began, was a day of high winds and little rain – until the evening, when another “Pineapple Express” atmospheric river pounded the Central Coast with over an inch of rain. Thursday morning dawned with a mix of towering cloudscapes, rain showers, and patches of blue sky – a day when a jacket, an umbrella, and sunglasses would all come into play.

It was in this mixed bag of weather conditions that the first day of competition began in the “new look” Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Even with just 80 pairings and two courses in play, the traditional two-tee (#1 and #10) start was still in play; tee times ran from 8:45 to 10:33 at comfortable 12-minute intervals – still a desirable procedure when amateurs are in the mix. With the weather outlook for the weekend looking less than rosy – and positively nasty on Sunday, conversation around the lunch table in the media center touched on the possibility of play delays, one 36-hole day, a shortened event, or even the dreaded Monday finish. For today’s opening round, however, players and spectators alike enjoyed the light breezes and crashing surf, with – for most of the day – just the occasional brief rain shower bringing out jackets and umbrellas.

Big names in the mix

Ulster’s Rory McIlroy, back at Pebble Beach for the first time since the 2019 U.S. Open, rose to the top of the leaderboard briefly as he hit 6-under through 14 holes at Spyglass – before a bogey, double-bogey, bogey finish dropped him well down the leaderboard (the double-bogey on #8 involved a penalty for an improper drop.) Patrick Cantlay, meanwhile, playing three groups behind him, took over the top spot at 6-under after a birdie on #13, a string of four birdies at holes #17 through #2, and another at hole #5.

Cantlay went on to birdie his 16th and 17th holes to take over the top spot at 8-under. A late charge by Korea’s Si Woo Kim came up short, as a bogey at #9 dropped him to 6-under – but wait, there’s more…

Another “who is that guy” early leader at the AT&T Pro-Am

Late in the day, Thomas Detry of Belgium, also playing at Spyglass Hill, was 6-under through 16 holes and challenging for the outright lead. A birdie at #17 put him level with Cantlay – and then he took sole possession of the top of the leaderboard with a dramatic chip-in birdie from the right rough at Spy’s par-four 18th. With the new format dictating only one round at Spyglass Hill for all players, can Detry, an eighth-year pro still looking for his first win on Tour, follow up with three good rounds at Pebble Beach?

Maverick McNealy’s up-and-down round

Former Stanford Men’s Golf great Maverick McNealy coasted through most of the front nine on pars, with a lone birdie at #6, the par-five hole that plays up a five-story cliff on Arrowhead Point, but came to grief at holes 9 and 10. These two daunting par-four’s form part of the three-hole stretch (holes 8, 9, and 10) that sportswriter Dan Jenkins dubbed “Abalone Corner”, echoing the “Amen Corner” moniker given to Augusta National’s 11th through 13th.

After a par on #8, McNealy bogeyed #9 after going down the left side of the hole bunker-rough-green; he then flipped the script on #10, sailing his approach shot wide right, over the cliff but hanging up in the rough, luckily not falling all the way to the beach below. His recovery shot sailed over the green to the left rough, thence to the green and two putts for a double-bogey six and a mid-round score of 2-over.

After his adventure at #10, another string of routine pars got McNealy to Pebble’s picture-postcard closing hole, the par-five 18th, where in 2021 he narrowly missed a shot at forcing a playoff against Daniel Berger. That year, on the 72nd hole of the tournament, he sailed a beautiful high-draw 3-iron shot to 22 feet above the hole, only just missing the eagle putt that would have put the tournament into extra holes (after Berger did make eagle there, a few minutes later.)

In today’s round he followed a 304-yard drive to the right edge of the fairway, threading the needle between the cypress tree and the bunker complex there, with an absolutely stiffed second shot, a hybrid from 236 yards, to a scant eight feet above the hole. This time he made the eagle putt, making up the two-shot deficit from #10 to finish even for the round. A little more in the way of play of that caliber and we may see another high finish here at Pebble Beach from the young man who literally grew up on this golf course though his early teens.

The other NorCal-associated golfers in the field finished the day as follows:

  • Collin Morikawa, former Cal golfer and 2020 PGA Championship winner at Harding Park – 5-under, T5
  • Kurt Kitayama, Chico native and UNV grad – 3-under, T15
  • Max Homa, 2013 Cal grad – 3-under, T15
  • Former SJSU Men’s Golf standout Mark Hubbard – 3-under, T15
  • Patrick Rodgers, Stanford Men’s Golf star who tied Tiger Woods’s 11-victory record – 4-over, T77


Monday, February 6, 2023

Justin Rose prevails in Monday finish at AT&T Pro-Am

The two most dreaded words in professional golf are “Monday finish”, and as luck would have it, the windy conditions on Saturday at the 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am brought them into play. While for recreational golfers the prospect of playing Pebble Beach Golf Links on a clear, calm, if somewhat brisk, February morning would be a dream come true, for pros, to be pulled off the course at sunset, mid-round, and then have to come back the next morning, pick up where they left off and play for a paycheck, it’s a much less ideal situation.

As it has been so often in the history of the AT&T (née Crosby) Pro-Am, the weather was the story. On a multi-course tournament like this, where three courses have to be maintained in the same configuration over three days, making corrections to a hole placement or mowing conditions to mitigate a change in the weather is not an option, and when Saturday’s gusty winds caused balls to move on the exposed 9th and 15th greens at the MPCC Shore course, play was suspended, then ultimately called.

At Spyglass Hill, where all but three holes are sheltered amidst towering cypress and Monterey pine trees, the wind was not a factor, nor was it at Pebble—despite nine holes running along the ocean—because the wind direction left Pebble somewhat sheltered by Pescadero Point and the Del Monte Forest northwest of the course.

Unless it’s a situation where dangerous weather is the cause for a play stoppage, players are given the option of finishing the hole they are on when the horn blows. Some took the option, starting from the tee on their next hole this morning, while others marked their ball and headed in. Leader Justin Rose returned to his ball marked in good position on the 10th fairway; Keith Mitchell’s first shot on returning to the course on Monday morning was a delicate chip from the rough just off of the 12th green.

Crashing surf in Carmel Bay provided a dramatic backdrop of foam-crested waves and azure water for the television coverage of the final holes of the tournament, but the flags hung limp in still air, with nary a breeze stirring to affect the flight of a ball. Restarting the interrupted round in these pristine conditions posed no problem for leader Justin Rose, who made a hot restart with birdies at 11 and 13. The two strokes he picked up bumped Rose’s score to 17-under, maintaining his lead over Brendon Todd, who (no slouch himself) birdied 13 and 14 to get to 15-under.

The NorCal players in the field fared middling to well when play resumed this morning. Chico’s Kurt Kitayama righted the ship with a string of pars after closing out Sunday afternoon double-bogey, bogey; Brandon Wu and Joseph Bramlett each put up pairs of birdies in the first few holes after the restart.

In the meantime, Justin Rose was solidifying his lead with another birdie, at the long, sometimes punishing, par-five 14th hole, distancing himself still further from Brendon Todd. Two holes ahead, Todd, though playing well, was running out of time, and eventually just flat ran out of holes in his bid to overtake the surging Rose.

With no serious contenders ahead of him, Rose played conservatively down the stretch, leaving his driver in the bag for the last three holes. Hitting a four-iron off the tee at 18, followed by two more irons to the green, he finished up with a no-stress two-putt par to complete a three-shot victory. The win makes Rose the first European winner of this event, and only the second non-American champion. 

“Pebble is the type of golf course with the conditions and the elements that you think you could argue would suit European players a little bit more.”

  – Justin Rose

(Vijay Singh was the first, and previously only, non-American winner of the Pebble Beach Pro-Am, carding a 15-under 272 for the victory in 2004.)

The top NorCal player in the field was Stanford Men’s Golf alumnus Brandon Wu, who carded four birdies on the back nine in Monday play to record a 6-under 66, tying Brendon Todd for second at 15-under.

Wu has great memories of Pebble’s 18th green—after missing his Stanford University graduation ceremony to play in the 2019 U.S Open here at Pebble, and after a T-35/2nd-place amateur finish, Wu was presented with his diploma by then USGA president-elect Stu Francis, who got his MBA at Stanford.

Asked how he would characterize the week overall, Wu said:

 “I think it was awesome. I’m glad the weather kind of held off and we finished with a perfect morning this morning. I’m really happy to be out here and happy with how I played.”

The next NorCal finisher down the order was another Stanford alumnus, Joseph Bramlett of San José. Bramlett played well after the restart, closing out his round in 3-under 33 for the back nine, but on top of the even-par front nine he put up yesterday afternoon, it wasn’t enough to move him up on the leaderboard. Bramlett’s T-7 performance is his best finish to date on the PGA tour.

Chico’s Kurt Kitayama, playing in the final group, had a front-row seat to Justin Rose’s march to victory, but the specter of yesterday’s 5-over front-nine 41 that opened with three bogeys and finished double-bogey, bogey was too much for him to overcome. Kitayama made a single birdie this morning, at the par-four 15th hole, rolling in a 15' 9" putt from the front fringe.

With the Pebble Beach Pro-Am increasingly coming under fire from some commenters for slow play due to the amateur participants, for the logistical complexities, and for the impact that weather has historically had on the event, it was gratifying to hear Rose, in the post-round interview, characterize the tournament as an event “that really matter(s)”:

“Access to the major championships is a large part of my decision to be playing where I’m playing, for sure, (and) obviously playing in events like this that have a great history, that give access to iconic golf courses, all of those things—winning events that really matter.”

Sunday, February 5, 2023

Sunday afternoon start of final round leads to a Monday finish at AT&T Pro-Am

Despite a smörgåsbord of “Crosby weather” conditions Sunday morning, third-round play in the 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am wrapped up just before noon, setting the stage for the start of final-round play.

Conditions in the afternoon were breezy and slightly brisk, but mostly dry. Towering cloudscapes drifting downwind on northwesterly zephyrs enhanced the already picturesque views from the course across Carmel Bay and Stillwater Cove toward Point Lobos, but the afternoon was generally uninterrupted by the rain squalls that had plagued the morning’s wrap-up of third-round play.

Despite the breezy conditions, there were players from back in the pack making big moves as the day progressed. Denny McCarthy, a pro since 2015 out of Rockville, Maryland, and the University of Virginia, went out in 7-under 29 on Pebble’s front nine, climbing 16 spots on the leaderboard to an eventual three-way tie for second with only one blemish on his scorecard, a bogey five at the par-four 13th hole. Also in the tie for the runner-up spot are Peter Malnati, who remained static through today’s play, and UG grad Brendon Todd, who moved up eight places carding 5-under through twelve holes, including an eagle three at the par-five second hole.

Canada’s Taylor Pendrith made the biggest move on the day, moving up 27 spots on the leaderboard to solo 5th to sit at 8-under through 16 holes.

Smaller gains, and reversals, held the NorCal players in the field back from keeping up with the big gains that were being made ahead of them, and when play was called at 5:33 p.m., Kurt Kitayama had dropped four shots, and 27 spots on the leaderboard. His precipitous drop came as the result of opening with a trio of bogeys and making a double-bogey six at #8, the cliff-hanging par-four that opens the difficult three-hole run of par-four’s—8, 9, and 10—that famed sportswriter Dan Jenkins dubbed “Abalone Corner”.

Former Stanford golfer Brandon Wu made the strongest showing of the NorCal trio, sitting at 3-under for the round through ten holes to hold at T-5. San José’s Joseph Bramlett played even par through ten holes, birdies at 2, 4, and 6 being offset by a bogey at the par-three 5th hole and a double-bogey at #8 after flying the green to the topside bunker and taking a chip and three putts to get down. He had dropped eight spots to T-13 when play was called.

Justin Rose goes into the final holes of the round the solo leader at 15-under after posting 3-under through 9 holes. Rose had teed off at 10 when the horn blew calling play, so he marked his ball—in good position on the right side of the tenth fairway—and headed for the clubhouse.

Twenty players had completed their rounds by the time play was called, and players within the top twelve when the horn blew have anywhere from one to nine holes left to complete when play resumes Monday morning at 8 a.m.

Wild weather follows delayed third round into Sunday conclusion at AT&T Pro-Am

After an eventful day on Saturday, when high winds suspended and then stopped play, the third round of the 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-am wrapped up Sunday morning, setting up the reshuffle to get the final round underway. It was an archetypal “Crosby” day, with sun, wind, rain, and hail all within the three hours it took to finalize the third round of the tournament.

Justin Rose took over the 54-hole lead from over at a calmed-down and once again easy-playing MPCC Shore Course, where he completed eight holes at even par yesterday before the suspension of play and was then 6-under for 10 this morning, closing out 54 holes at 12-under.

When the third round wrapped up at around 11:30 Saturday morning Rose was followed on the leaderboard by Indiana native Peter Malnati and Chico, California’s Kurt Kitayama, both at 11-under. Tennessee’s Keith Mitchell went 2-under at Pebble in the third round, good for solo 4th, with bogeys at 10 and 17 keeping him out of a share of the lead.

Following Mitchell at 9-under, T-5, NorCal natives Joseph Bramlett, of San José, and Brandon Wu, of Danville—both Stanford Men’s Golf alumni—were within striking distance of the lead once play restarted. Joining the two Californians at T-5 were Floridian Brent Grant; first round leader Hank Lebioda, who has been stuck in neutral since taking the lead on Thursday with an 8-under 64 at MPCC Shore; and Norwegian Viktor Hovland. Hovland won the 2018 U.S. Amateur Championship here at Pebble Beach, earning exemptions into the 2019 Masters as well as the 2019 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, where he claimed Low Amateur honors.

AT&T-sponsored Jordan Spieth, the 2017 winner and 2022 runner-up in this event, hung on to make the cut at 1-under, maintaining a now 11-year-long streak of made cuts at this event.

Saturday, February 4, 2023

“Crosby weather” strikes on Day Three of the 2023 AT&T Pro-Am

Despite the best efforts of the PGA Tour in bumping tee times up by an hour in the face of forecast high winds, Mother Nature took the wheel today at the 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, as increasing winds led to a weather delay being called just after 12 o’clock. Conditions didn’t improve (not that any of the old Crosby hands expected them to…) and play was called at 2:30 p.m.

The current plans announced by the PGA Tour are to return Sunday morning at 8:00 to finish the third round, with final-round play expected to start at 12:30. Amateurs are not required to return for the completion of Round 3 (but are welcome to, if they choose), and only the pros will be playing in the final round. A pro-am champ will be announced after the completion of 54 holes. With the amateurs being excised from the field for the final round the cut will move to the Tour’s normal 65 and ties, from this event’s usual 60 and ties when the pro-am teams are competing.

Chief Referee Gary Young explained that the delay was predicated upon conditions experienced at holes 9 and 15 at MPCC Shore, where the exposed conditions led to instances of unacceptable ball movement on the greens. In multi-course events of this type, every effort is made to maintain identical playing conditions at each course for each round. A minor relocation of a hole, of no more than a yard or so, can be made if necessary, but conditions at MPCC were such that the amount of change in the hole locations that would have been required to mitigate the situation was deemed to be unacceptable.

Before the weather moved in with a vengeance, Saturday morning had gotten off to a good start for NorCal golf fans, as overnight leader Kurt Kitayama of Chico was quickly joined at the top of the leaderboard by two fellow Northern Californians, and Stanford Men’s Golf alums, Joseph Bramlett, of San José, and Brandon Wu, of Danville. Bramlett and Wu played at Pebble Beach Golf Links today, while Kitayama was at Spyglass Hill.

Wu quickly stepped up to the solo lead with a birdie at his fifth hole of the morning, Pebble’s long par-four 14th, and was joined there minutes later by Bramlett, who rolled in a 32-foot birdie putt at the Jack Nicklaus-designed par-three 5th hole.

Bogeys in tough, windy conditions at holes 9 and 10 (#9 is playing hardest today, at nearly half a shot over par) dropped Bramlett back to 9-under, but he got one of those shots back at #11, a strategic uphill par 4 that takes the course routing away from the ocean. He had this to say about the weather conditions after play was suspended:

Friday, February 3, 2023

Chico’s Kurt Kitayama leads after two rounds at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Pebble Beach Golf Links, and indeed all of the Monterey Peninsula, on and off the three golf courses where the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am is taking place this week, is utterly spectacular in bright, sunny weather. In gloomy, overcast weather like today, with a little bit of light rain and drizzle thrown in, it takes on an entirely different aspect—calm, quiet, and conducive to introspection and deep thoughts.

OK, enough of that—let’s talk about golf.

Today’s light rain and drizzle—though it led PGA Tour officials to launch a preemptive strike and call for “lift, clean, and place” for the first three rounds, despite Thursday being mostly clear and dry—did not impede play at any of the tournament’s three courses: Pebble Beach Golf Links, Spyglass Hill, and MPCC Shore. The 8:30 opening tee times went off without a hitch at all three, and play was never stopped or delayed over the course of the day.

The stiff onshore breeze that was bending the flagstick on Pebble’s shore-hugging 18th hole late Thursday afternoon died down overnight; only a moderate surf breaking against the rocks at the water’s edge broke the calm.

First-round leader Hank Lebioda, who opened with an 8-under 63 at MPCC Shore on Thursday, started his morning with a birdie at the daunting par-four 10th hole at Pebble Beach, solidifying his lead, while a posse of other players, including Chico, California’s Kurt Kitayama, Harry Higgs, and England’s Justin Rose, moved up to 8-under.

Rose, playing at Spyglass Hill, went out in 32 on the back nine, on the strength of two birdies and an ace—at the par-three 15th hole—with another birdie, at the 3rd hole, pulling him to within a shot of the leader, but two late bogeys dropped him to 6-under and T-11. Harry Higgs carded two birdies and an eagle, at Pebble’s par-four 4th hole, with a bogey at the par-five 6th—after excursions to the left rough, the right rough, and a right greenside bunker—marring his card, also dropping to 6-under and T-11.

The wind came up after lunch, most noticeably at Pebble Beach, but it appeared not to faze Kitayama, who closed his second round at the 9th hole, a tough cliffside par-four, after rolling in a birdie at #8 to tie Lebioda at 9-under.

After moving to 10-under and the solo lead earlier in the day after a birdie at #2, the shortish par-five which has played the easiest today relative to par, Lebioda dropped back to 8-under with a double-bogey 5 at the fifth hole. Designed by Jack Nicklaus and put into play in 1998, number 5 is a deceptively difficult par-three that is playing second-toughest in the tournament to date with an average score of 3.58. Recovering one of his lost strokes with a birdie at the long, intimidating par-five 6th hole, a bogey at #9 dropped Lebioda to 8-under, T2.

With that slip by Lebioda, Kurt Kitayama inherited the lead going into the weekend.

Kitayama’s lead headlines a strong halfway-point showing by NorCal golfers. San José native and Stanford Men’s Golf alum Joseph Bramlett went around the Shore Course at Monterey Peninsula Country Club in 4-under 67 today to close the day at 8-under, T-2; Brandon Wu, another Stanford Men’s Golf alum and a native of Danville, joined Bramlett at T-2 after completing his second round, also at MPCC Shore.

Martin Trainer of Palo Alto sits T-12 at 6-under; Maverick McNealy, who narrowly missed a win in this tournament two years ago, sits at 1-under after two rounds, T-57, as does Nick Watney of Davis. UCLA graduate Kevin Chappell, a native of Fresno, is even par going into the third round, and James Hahn of Alameda is at 3-over. Hahn, who notched his first win at the 2015 Northern Trust Open at Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, recovered from a 6-over first round at Spyglass Hill with a 3-under 69 at MPCC Shore today.

Tomorrow’s forecast is showing rain, with high winds in the afternoon prompting a one-hour bump in the starting tee times. First balls will be in the air at 7:30 a.m. at the tournament’s three courses, in hopes of concluding play before the worst weather moves in.