NEWS

PGA Tour Notebook: Holmes takes over as new king of driving distance

By Doug Ferguson
Published on
PGA Tour Notebook: Holmes takes over as new king of driving distance

J.B. Holmes is the new king of the long ball on the PGA Tour.

Holmes, who did not compete in the FedExCup playoffs because of brain surgery, led the tour in driving distance with an average of 318.4 yards. It’s the first time he led that category. Robert Garrigus had led in driving distance the past two years, at 315.5 yards in 2010 and 312.3 yards in 2009. It’s the longest average to lead the tour since Bubba Watson averaged 319.6 yards in 2006.

Joe Durant won the accuracy award for the fourth time, hitting 75.7 percent of his fairways. Boo Weekley was tops in greens in regulation at 71.7 percent.

And this should come as no surprise -- Luke Donald was No. 1 in putting, based on the tour’s new “Strokes Gained” statistic. Donald also was No. 1 in another key putting statistic. He had only 15 three-putts out of 1,206 holes he played this year.

DONALD HONORS: The PGA Tour Player of the Year won’t be decided until December, although Luke Donald already can bank on a couple of awards. By winning at Disney, he clinched the PGA of America award as Player of the Year over Webb Simpson. That honor is based on a points system.

The other is more obscure, but meaningful in one small respect.

Donald has clinched the Mark H. McCormack Award for being No. 1 in the world ranking for the most weeks in a calendar year. Donald took over at No. 1 on May 29, and now has a whopping 3.27 lead over Lee Westwood.

Donald will be only the second player to have his name on the award. It began in 1998, when Tiger Woods was No. 1 in the world. Since then, no one has been No. 1 for longer than 26 weeks -- Vijay Singh in 2004, but that was toward the end of the year. Woods regained No. 1 the next spring and kept it for the next five years.

After a few years, the tour stopped making the annual presentation to Woods at Bay Hill.

MAJOR ROOKIE: Louis Oosthuizen was a major champion before joining the PGA Tour. He still felt like a rookie, and hopes he can learn from his mistakes next year -- not on the golf course, but in scheduling. Trying to juggle two tours proved difficult for him, and he wound up missing the FedExCup playoffs.

Oosthuizen had to play the Fall Series just to reach the minimum 15 tournaments required for PGA Tour members. At least he went out in style, finishing two shots out of the playoff at Sea Island and finishing fourth. He ended his rookie year at No. 117 on the money list.

It was a tough experience, but not a bad one.

“I’m liking it out here,” Oosthuizen said. “Next year I’m doing both tours again, but I think the schedule will look a bit differently. I’m definitely coming back. I knew it was going to be a hard year traveling, and I wanted the golf to be better than it was.”

It will be a busy start to next year. His wife, Nalmarie, is expecting their second child toward the end of January.

DIVOTS: Dustin Johnson will be using TaylorMade rep Keith Sbarbaro as his caddie in the Australian Open and the Presidents Cup, finishing out the year at the Chevron World Challenge before he hires a full-time looper. Sbarbaro also worked for him briefly in Europe when he was last between caddies. … Nigel Edwards will return as Walker Cup captain for Great Britain & Ireland in the 2013 matches at National Golf Links. Edwards led GB&I to victory over the Americans in September at Royal Aberdeen. … Boo Weekley, Brandt Snedeker and Gary Woodland will represent the PGA Tour in the Wendy’s 3-Tour Challenge, to be played Nov. 8 at Rio Secco in Las Vegas, and televised Dec. 13. … The European Tour made it official Tuesday by announcing the Volvo Golf Champions, which Paul Casey won last year in Bahrain, will be played Jan. 19-22 at Fancourt in South Africa, site of the 2003 Presidents Cup. … Charlie Sifford, inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2004, was to be inducted Tuesday into the Southern California Golf Association Hall of Fame. He won the 1969 Los Angeles Open at Rancho Park.

STAT OF THE WEEK: Dustin Johnson hit the longest drive on the PGA Tour this year, 463 yards on the par-5 seventh hole at the TPC Boston in the final round of the Deutsche Bank Championship. He made par.

FINAL WORD: “It never stopped being a challenge.” -- Arnold Palmer, on what he found so appealing about golf.