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Knapp said he hoped to have a full col- lege slate of events over the next four years, conceding that not every tournament (or course) works for TV. Even so, it can be hard for the average fan to keep track of
a college season, such as who is playing where.
“We’re trying to help with that to a de- gree that we can come up with a televised series that makes sense,” he said.
TIGER’S ASSISTANTS
What would a Presidents Cup be with- out Fred Couples involved? Go back to 2007 to find the last time Couples was not part of the matches.
U.S. captain Tiger Woods appointed the 59-year-old Couples to be an assistant at Royal Melbourne in December. Couples remains one of the most popular figures in golf with players and fans. He was Presi- dents Cup captain in 2009, 2011 and 2013, and an assistant the last two times.
Woods also selected Steve Stricker and Zach Johnson, and he plans to announce one more before the Presidents Cup on Dec. 12-15.
Stricker was Presidents Cup captain in 2017 and is expected to be appointed Ryder Cup captain for next year.
“Freddie and I go way back in the Presidents Cup,” Woods said. “And we’re basically coming full circle at Royal Mel- bourne. He and I teamed up in one our matches in ‘98, I was a captain’s pick in ‘11 and now we get to return as two leaders of this team. We’re going to have some fun, but we’re there to win.”
CALIFORNIA KINGS
Phil Mickelson, Tiger Woods and Billy Casper — all native Californians — now share an obscure record for most PGA Tour victories in California at 14.
But there are differences.
Woods won his tournaments on four courses — eight at Torrey Pines, three at La Costa Resort, two at Pebble Beach and one at Harding Park. Nine of his 14 were regular PGA Tour events. He won U.S. Opens at Torrey and Pebble, two World Golf Championships at La Costa (Match Play) and one at Harding Park.
Mickelson won multiple times on all the West Coast venues, except for the Safeway Open at Silverado, which has been around for only five years. Along with his five titles at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, Lefty
has won three times at Torrey Pines and twice each at the old Bob Hope Classic, Riviera and the winners-only Mercedes Championship when it was at La Costa.
Casper was the real king of California. He won the U.S. Open at Olympic Club
in 1966. He won twice at Pebble and the Hope, and twice in the Los Angeles area on different courses, neither of them Riviera. He also won seven other PGA Tour events, some of which no longer exist, such as the Bakersfield Open and Hesperia Open.
In all, Casper won his 14 titles in Cali- fornia on 12 courses. That doesn’t include the three-course rotation at the Hope.
KUCHAR’S CADDIE
The Mexican caddie for Matt Kuchar when he won the Mayakoba Classic told golf.com he was paid $5,000 the night after the victory, and that Kuchar later offered an additional $15,000 that the caddie turned down because he found it unac- ceptable.
“No thank you. They can keep their money,” David Girl Ortiz told the website.
Kuchar used Ortiz for Mayakoba when his regular caddie couldn’t make it. Kuchar earned $1,296,000 for the victory.
Michael Bamberger at golf.com spoke to Ortiz through a translator. The caddie says the original agreement was $3,000, plus an unspecific percentage of whatever Kuchar won. Ortiz says he didn’t expect to be paid like a regular PGA Tour caddie — a typical payout is 10 percent for a victory — but that he thought it was worth $50,000.
The story was panned in social media last month when PGA Tour Champions player Tom Gillis tweeted about it, saying Kuchar paid only $3,000. Asked about it at the Sony Open, Kuchar said: “It wasn’t 10 percent. It wasn’t $3,000. It’s not a story.”
According to the website, Ortiz wrote in a Jan. 24 email to Kuchar’s agent, Mark Steinberg: “I am not looking to disparage Matt or give him a bad name. Fair is fair, and I feel like I was taken advantage of by placing my trust in Matt.”
Ortiz says he wrote three emails and received one reply from Steinberg that said in part, “What Matt has offered is fair.”
WEB PRESIDENT
Alex Baldwin has been appointed president of the Web.com Tour, becom- ing the first woman to lead one of the six tours sanctioned by the PGA Tour. She
replaces Dan Glod, president the last two years of the PGA Tour’s main development tour, who is taking a role in sponsorship strategy.
Baldwin most recently was vice pres- ident of marketing partnerships for the tour.
PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan called it a “watershed moment for our organization.”
Before joining the tour in 2017, Baldwin worked at Fenway Sports Management and CAA Sports. She also was an agent at IMG, where her clients included Hall of Famer Karrie Webb and Brad Faxon.
DIVOTS
James Hahn and Kevin Kisner have been elected co-chairmen of the Player Advi- sory Council for 2019. That means they join the PGA Tour Policy Board next year for three-year terms. Hahn and Kisner were elected over Paul Casey and Justin Thomas. An international player has never served on the PGA Tour board. ... Hall of Fame pitcher John Smoltz, who won the celebrity portion of the Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions, is getting sponsor exemptions to three PGA Tour Champions events — the Cologuard Clas- sic in Arizona (March 1-3), the Mitsubishi Electric Classic outside Atlanta (April 19-21) and the American Family Insurance Championship in Wisconsin (June 21-23). ... The Web.com Tour added the Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail Championship in Alabama to its schedule, to be played April 18-21.
STAT OF THE WEEK
With his victory at Pebble Beach, Phil Mickelson joined Tiger Woods as the only players to surpass $90 million in career PGA Tour earnings. Woods, now with more than $115 million, went over the $90 million mark 10 years ago.
FINAL WORD
“The behavior is not acceptable. But what’s going on? What’s led to that behav- ior? That’s the question.” — Paul Casey, on Sergio Garcia damaging five greens out of frustration at the Saudi International.
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