The Northern Advocate

Fox gearing up to tackle ‘big boys’ course’ at PGA Championsh­ip

- Christophe­r Reive

One of golf’s cliches is that the sport isn’t about how good your good shots are, but how bad your bad shots are.

Through 12 events on the PGA Tour this season, that cliche has largely dictated Ryan Fox’s year; when the bad shots aren’t quite so bad, the Kiwi has been able to put things together.

That was evident last week when Fox earned a share of fourth at the Myrtle Beach Classic, finishing the tournament at 15-under-par. It was his best four-round performanc­e by score this season by seven shots and a strong way to head into this week’s PGA Championsh­ip — the second major of the season.

“It was nice to feel like I could play golf again and not be fighting something; to go out, hit some shots and try to make a score, not try to make a golf swing and hope I don’t hit it too far in the crap,” Fox told the Herald.

“There was still some iffy stuff last week, but it was certainly a lot better; the bad shots were a lot better, which is the thing that’s been killing me the most this year. When I’ve hit bad shots, they’ve been really destructiv­e. Last week they weren’t, which was nice. I took advantage of my good shots, started to get some confidence again, and that’s always nice going into a major.”

“It was certainly nice to put four rounds together and have a good result, and good timing heading into the PGA Championsh­ip this week.”

Heading into the event at Myrtle Beach, Fox noted that it was an opportunit­y for him to put a result on the board as the tournament was an opposite-field event, with players ranked higher in the FedEx Cup standings competing for a chunk of the US$20m purse at the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip.

“It’s just go out and try to play the best that I can. I know my good golf is competitiv­e, and that’s the goal this week — just to go out and continue to play some good golf after last week and hopefully that puts me in the mix come Sunday.”

Fox finished in a tie for 23rd in his PGA Championsh­ip debut last year when the tournament was played at Oak Hill Country Club in New York. This year, Valhalla Golf Club in Kentucky plays host and serves up a testing stage for the world’s best golfers.

“It’s a big-boy golf course this week,” he said. “You do have a few chances with a wedge if you drive the ball well, and I feel like it’s going to be one of those weeks where the scoring’s pretty spread out. You can shoot a low score around here, but you can shoot a high score pretty quickly if you’re a little bit off — especially around the greens; the rough is pretty nasty so it’s going to be a bit tough to get the ball up and down.”

He won’t be the only Kiwi teeing it up at Valhalla this week, with rising star Kazuma Kobori also earning a place in the field. It will be the 22-yearold’s debut at a major championsh­ip, securing his invitation to join the field by claiming last season’s Challenger PGA Tour of Australasi­a Order of Merit.

Fox played nine holes with Kobori — who turned profession­al only in November last year — at Valhalla on Tuesday (NZ time), and said this week would be a great opportunit­y for the young golfer to experience the top level.

“It’s pretty amazing to see. What? Six months into being profession­al.”

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Ryan Fox heads into the PGA Championsh­ip off a tie for fourth at the Myrtle Beach Classic last week.
Photo / Getty Images Ryan Fox heads into the PGA Championsh­ip off a tie for fourth at the Myrtle Beach Classic last week.

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