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PGA takeaways: TPC Boston isn’t that easy, Dustin Johnson just made it seem that way

PGA takeaways: TPC Boston isn’t that easy, Dustin Johnson just made it seem that way :

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PGA takeaways: TPC Boston isn’t that easy, Dustin Johnson just made it seem that way :

PGA takeaways: TPC Boston isn’t that easy, Dustin Johnson just made it seem that way : PGA takeaways: TPC Boston isn’t that easy, Dustin Johnson just made it seem that way :   TPC Boston in Norton is not really as simple as a golf course. Dustin Johnson has just made this the first event of the FedEx Cup playoffs.  Consider these numbers: -15, -22, -13, -23, -19, -9, -13 and -21. These are the winning scores since the return of the PGA from June 11 to 14 at the Charles Schwab Challenge. The outlier is -9. Jon Rahm pulled this to win the Memorial at Muirfield Village, which played as loud and fast as an airport runway.  Johnson not only dismantled TPC Boston, he also destroyed the land. Had he decided to stay home and help his alleged friend Brooks Koepka heal his injuries, the winning score would have been -19 for Harris English. Johnson is a different guy. Does anyone remember that he looked lost in an 80-80 shot at the Memorial a month ago, and then retired next week at the 3M Open after a 78?  Of course he found something, and winning by 11 shots is impressive. He was 18 years old on the nine-year-old alone for the week. He should take advantage of it.  RELATED: EXCLUSIVE: Brooks Kopka answers our questions - did his comments on Dustin Johnson backfire?  Some points to remember from the Northern Trust:  ▪ Tiger Woods shot a stress-free 66 Sunday, finishing 24 shots behind Johnson. Woods needs more repetitions and it's hard to play more when you have grief back. Woods probably won't qualify for the tour championship and it's hard to see an unhealthy wood being a factor for the rest of 2020. ▪ Let's leave it to Phil Mickelson to make the surprise announcement of the week, saying he will participate in the Champions Tour event on Monday. The 50-plus tour will take place at the Ozarks National Golf Course in Ridgedale, Missouri, for the second week in a row. The event takes place in an unusual slot from Monday to Wednesday. Mickelson said he wanted to stay sharp for the U.S. Open in September. ▪ Joel Dahmen missed the cup at TPC Boston, but he wasn't done playing golf this weekend. He went on Twitter looking for a friendly gambling. He ended up at Thorny Lea GC's house in Brockton. Dahmen will resume his usual work at this week's BMW Championship. ▪ Collin Morikawa, Scottie Scheffler, Cameron Champ and Maverick McNealy qualified for the BMW. All played in the powerful 2017 US Walker Cup team. Another member of this team, Doc Redman, missed out on qualifying for the BMW by one place.  ▪ A pro assistant wears several caps. For Eric Ledbetter, an assistant at TPC Boston, one of those hats was a bib. Ledbetter's pinch struck when Scheffler's youngest, Scott McGuinness, injured his leg on the ninth hole and had to be evacuated from the golf course.

TPC Boston in Norton is not really as simple as a golf course. Dustin Johnson has just made this the first event of the FedEx Cup playoffs.

Consider these numbers: -15, -22, -13, -23, -19, -9, -13 and -21. These are the winning scores since the return of the PGA from June 11 to 14 at the Charles Schwab Challenge. The outlier is -9. Jon Rahm pulled this to win the Memorial at Muirfield Village, which played as loud and fast as an airport runway.

Johnson not only dismantled TPC Boston, he also destroyed the land. Had he decided to stay home and help his alleged friend Brooks Koepka heal his injuries, the winning score would have been -19 for Harris English.
Johnson is a different guy. Does anyone remember that he looked lost in an 80-80 shot at the Memorial a month ago, and then retired next week at the 3M Open after a 78?

Of course he found something, and winning by 11 shots is impressive. He was 18 years old on the nine-year-old alone for the week. He should take advantage of it.



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Some points to remember from the Northern Trust:

Tiger Woods shot a stress-free 66 Sunday, finishing 24 shots behind Johnson. Woods needs more repetitions and it's hard to play more when you have grief back. Woods probably won't qualify for the tour championship and it's hard to see an unhealthy wood being a factor for the rest of 2020.
▪ Let's leave it to Phil Mickelson to make the surprise announcement of the week, saying he will participate in the Champions Tour event on Monday. The 50-plus tour will take place at the Ozarks National Golf Course in Ridgedale, Missouri, for the second week in a row. The event takes place in an unusual slot from Monday to Wednesday. Mickelson said he wanted to stay sharp for the U.S. Open in September.
▪ Joel Dahmen missed the cup at TPC Boston, but he wasn't done playing golf this weekend. He went on Twitter looking for a friendly gambling. He ended up at Thorny Lea GC's house in Brockton. Dahmen will resume his usual work at this week's BMW Championship.
▪ Collin Morikawa, Scottie Scheffler, Cameron Champ and Maverick McNealy qualified for the BMW. All played in the powerful 2017 US Walker Cup team. Another member of this team, Doc Redman, missed out on qualifying for the BMW by one place.

▪ A pro assistant wears several caps. For Eric Ledbetter, an assistant at TPC Boston, one of those hats was a bib. Ledbetter's pinch struck when Scheffler's youngest, Scott McGuinness, injured his leg on the ninth hole and had to be evacuated from the golf course.

interested in  pga - pga championship - pga golf - uspga - viktor hovland - pga st jude - jason day pga - pga draftkings - draftkings pga - ryan armour pga.

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