Backspin April_2018 | Page 24

Olympic Medalists Rose and Stenson to team All the 2016 Olympic golf medals will now be represented in the 2018 Zurich Classic. Olympic gold medalist Justin Rose and silver medalist Henrik Stenson have teamed up again for the 2018 Zurich Classic and will be competing against bronze medalist Matt Kuchar and his partner Bubba Watson, announced Steve Worthy, CEO of the Fore!Kids Foundation, producer of the tournament. “Justin has been a fan favorite for years at the Zurich Classic and is a former champion,” said Worthy. “He and Henrik were among the first teams to commit to our new team format last year, which helped launch our field to be one of the strongest in our tournament’s history,” added Worthy. The Rose/Stenson team has a prestigious record of accomplishment beyond their Olympic success two years ago. Rose won the Zurich Classic in 2015 and the U.S. Open in 2013. Stenson won the 145th Open Championship at Royal Troon in 2016 just prior to his success at the Summer Olympics that year. Rose is currently ranked fifth in the world, and Stenson is ranked 14th. Both have represented Europe in the Ryder Cup four times. Rose has won eight times on the PGA TOUR and has claimed another 11 international victories. His titles include two World Golf Championships, including this year’s WGC-HSBC Champions, when he came back from eight shots behind on the final day to win with a closing round of 67. Other top finishes this season include a third in the Arnold Palmer Invitational, a fifth in the Valspar Championship and a tie for eighth in the Farmers Insurance Open. In fact, Rose has finished in the top 10 in four of the five tournaments he 24 has played this season to rank third in FedExCup points to date. He ranks 12th in all-time winnings on the PGA TOUR with more than $43 million. In addition to qualifying for the Ryder Cup four times, he has also made three World Cup teams, two Seve Cup squads and at age 17 played in the Walker Cup, becoming the youngest player in that event’s history. He won the Silver Medal as leading amateur in the 1998 Open Championship and turned professional the next day. Stenson has won six times on the PGA TOUR, including a World Golf Championship title, The Players Championship and the 2013 TOUR Championship presented by Coca Cola to win the FedExCup that season. He has also claimed 13 international wins. This year he tied for second in the WGC-HSBC Champions that Justin Rose won and earned a fourth in the Arnold Palmer Invitational. In addition to playing on four Ryder Cup teams, he also made four World Cup teams and three Royal Trophy squads. Justin Thomas and Fellow Bama Alum Bud Cauley enter; Berger and Woodland team Justin Thomas, 2017 PGA TOUR Player of the Year and currently ranked second in the world, will team again with fellow University of Alabama alum Bud Cauley to play the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, announced Steve Worthy, CEO of the Fore!Kids Foundation. “We welcome Justin and Bud back to our tournament after their successful performance last year and excellent starts to the current season,” said Worthy. “Daniel Berger and Gary Woodland will also be a formidable team, as both are highly ranked and are explosive players,” Worthy added. Thomas is off to a torrid start this season after posting a historic year in 2016-17, when he won five tournaments, including the PGA Championship. So far this season, he has already won twice and finished second in a playoff for the WGC- Mexico Championship after he holed a 119-yard pitch on the 18th hole Sunday to take the lead. He sat 11 strokes behind the lead on Friday, then went 16-under on the weekend to match the 36-hole record for the tournament. He finished last season ranked first in both FedExCup points and money winnings, and currently holds the same position at the top of both lists this season. His second place at the WGC- Mexico Championship moved him up to second in the world. In the eight tournaments he has entered this season, he has placed in the top 25 in every one. During the Sony Open in 2017, he became the youngest player in TOUR history to break 60, when he carded a 59 in the first round on his way to a seven-stroke victory. A native of Louisville, KY, he led the University of Alabama to the NCAA championship in 2013, his sophomore year. He was named a first-team All-American in 2012, when he won the Phil Mickelson Award as the top collegiate freshman to go with the 2012 Haskins Award and 2012 Nicklaus Award, presented annually to the top college player. As an amateur, he played on the 2013 Walker Cup and the 2012 World Amateur Team Championship. He made the 2017 Presidents Cup team after his third year on the PGA TOUR. Thomas, who will turn 25 during the Zurich Classic, finished tied for fifth with teammate Cauley in last year’s tournament, the first time the team format had been played in a