Kelly’s 19th Hole was rocking
July 8th, 2012 by cstarkKelly’s 19th Hole in Chico was golf central as close to 100 fans and regulars packed into the place to cheer on Troy Kelly during the final round of the PGA Tour’s Greenbrier Classic.
Kelly appeared cool and calm on the outside, but you know his insides had to be churning. After shooting a 62 on Saturday, he came back with a 4-under 66. Ted Potter unleashed some magic on the greens, making a long birdie putt on 15, another long putt on 17 for eagle and a birdie on 18 to shoot 64 and force a playoff.
Potter won on the third playoff hole.
Kelly should feel good because he didn’t give it away. His consolation prize: $6 58,800, and a trip to the British Open. He won $81,644 in his first 15 tournaments. His previous best finish? A tie for 37th.
Pretty cool stuff. I’ll have more later, but here’s the Associated Press story.
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W.Va. (AP) — Ted Potter Jr.’s first
PGA Tour victory means a lot more than a big paycheck. The
28-year-old rookie can take a trip to August National off his wish
list.
By making a 4-foot birdie putt on the third hole of a playoff
Sunday to beat Troy Kelly in the Greenbrier Classic, Potter earned
a spot in the Masters, something he listed as career goal.
Simply winning, though, had been the top priority for a player
who first joined the former Nationwide Tour in 2004 and didn’t have
much success until last year.
“When you’re missing cuts every week, you get down on
yourself,” Potter said. “I mean, it’s hard to pick yourself back
up. But the plus side for me is I was still young. I just knew I
had plenty of time and just be patient and it will come back around
again.”
Potter finished second on the Nationwide money list last year
to advance to the PGA Tour. He tied for 13th in his first event of
the year but had missed five straight cuts entering the
week.
His fortunes changed Sunday.
“It was just a big relief,” Potter said. “All the struggles the
last few weeks, knowing that now I’ve got a couple years to try to
improve on my game and win some more tournaments.”
The left-hander became the sixth first-time winner on the tour
this season. He earned $1,098,000 and jumped from 173rd to 51st in
the FedEx Cup standings.
He also gets a two-year exemption on the PGA Tour. And
Potter, Kelly and Marc Leishman — who won two weeks ago at the
Travelers Championship — can pack their bags for the British Open,
which starts July 19 at Royal Lytham and St. Annes.
Ranked 218th in the world, Potter overcame a four-stroke
deficit with four holes to play, finishing with his second straight
6-under 64 to match Kelly at 16 under. Kelly closed with a
66.
It marked the third straight year of close finishes on the Old
White TPC course. Scott Stallings beat Bob Estes and Bill Haas on
the first hole of a playoff last year, and Stuart Appleby shot a 59
to beat Jeff Overton by a stroke in 2010.
Webb Simpson lost a one-stroke lead on the back nine at the
tournament for the second straight year. The U.S. Open champion
made three straight bogeys, shot 73 and tied for seventh at 11
under.
During the fourth round, Potter made long putts for a birdie at
No. 15 and an eagle at No. 17, and his 5-footer for birdie at No.
18 tied Kelly, who could have avoided the playoff but missed birdie
putts on the final two holes.
Both made par on the first two playoff holes, with Potter
missing a 5-footer at No. 17 that would have won it on the second
extra hole. Moments before, Kelly made a 22-footer for par after
finding trouble from the greenside bunker.
Playing the par-3 18th for the third time on the day, Kelly’s
tee shot was short of a steep ridge in the middle of the green,
while Potter sent his 9-iron onto the top of the ridge and it
trickled close to the pin.
Kelly missed his 45-foot birdie putt, then watched Potter close
out the win as thunderstorms moved in.
Despite the disappointment, Kelly earned his best career
finish. He previous one was a tie for 37th.
“I had a lot of fun,” Kelly said. “And looking forward to kind
of getting in that position some more.”
Kelly underwent hip-replacement surgery in September 2010 after
being diagnosed with arthritis. He resumed playing golf five months
later and was 11th in Nationwide winnings last year.
Charlie Wi and rookie Charlie Beljan tied for third at 14
under. Wi shot a 65, and Beljan had a 67.
Daniel Summerhays finished fifth at 13 under after a 64. Martin
Flores (67) was another stroke back.
Simpson, the third-round leader, had gone 50 consecutive holes
without a bogey but made three of them in a row starting at the
par-5 12th.
“I felt really confident and then just got on a bad run there,”
Simpson said. “I’m probably going to learn something from it. Have
to learn the hard way.”
Joining him at 11 under were Robert Castro (63), Kevin Na (65),
Sean O’Hair (66) and Ken Duke (70). Duke was within a shot of the
lead on the 14th hole before fading with a pair of double
bogeys.
Simpson can now focus on family — his wife, Dowd, is due to
give birth to the couple’s second child within three weeks. That
means skipping the British Open.


Scripps Interactive Newspapers Group
July 8th, 2012 at 8:46 pm
It was fun to watch!
July 9th, 2012 at 7:58 am
Great job, Troy! This was even better than Wig Wam and Trilogy (Grey Goose) when Karen and I enjoyed walking the course watching you play. Keep up the good work. You provide great entertainment.
Grant Plummer, Trophy Lake
July 9th, 2012 at 12:26 pm
WAY TO GO TROY!! AWSOME FINISH TO A GREAT TOURNAMENT!!!