PGA TOUR RBC Canadian Open

Furyk, DeLaet, Kuchar an impressive threesome at RBC Canadian Open

MONTREAL – It was almost as if Jim Furyk, Graham DeLaet and Matt Kuchar were a team when they went on a birdie spree in the second round of the US$5.7 million RBC Canadian Open on Friday.

The threesome were all smiles after they combined for 22 birdies (and only three bogeys), while Furyk and DeLaet tied the course record with 63s in near-perfect scoring conditions at Royal Montreal’s usually daunting Blue course.

Furyk, who birdied four straight holes early in his round, emerged with a share of the tournament lead at 10-under 130 with veteran Tim Petrovic, who shot 66.

Weyburn, Sask., native DeLaet in was in a tie for third at 8-under 132 with Kyle Stanley, who had 67.

“They’re fun to play golf with,” Furyk said of DeLaet and Kuchar. “We chatted a lot out there.

“And then to have everyone play well, you’re seeing birdie putts going in, it’s a lot of fun. And I think you can feed off that a little bit. Those guys are making birdies, you feel like putts are going in, it’s a good vibe.”

In a way they are a team. They are among the 10 PGA Tour players sponsored by RBC that includes Graeme McDowell, who had five birdies of his own for a 65 to sit at 7-under 133 along with Justin Hicks (67), Scott Brown (66) and Andrew Svoboda (66).

Kuchar’s 65 put him in a group at 6-under 134 that included first-round co-leader Michael Putnam, who shot 70.

Forty-four-year-old Furyk had extra motivation. He won the event back-to-back in 2006 and 2007. One more win would put him in a tie for the second-most Canadian Open titles with Tommy Armour, Sam Snead and Lee Trevino. Leo Diegel won four in the 1920s.

“Winning any event is special,” said Furyk, who has 14 career victories. “I’ve had a lot of success (in Canada) and really a lot of support here.

“But we’re only at the halfway point.”

Furyk came into the tournament off a sizzling 65 at Royal Liverpool on Sunday that got him fourth place in the British Open. He hopped on a charter after that round to get to the RBC Canadian Open in time to readjust to the Eastern time zone and get reacquainted with the course, which he played while on the U.S. team that defeated the Internationals at the 2007 Presidents Cup.

With the fairways and greens softened by heavy rain on Wednesday, Royal Montreal was ready to be taken.

“The golf course is soft and receptive, and they have it set up where we can attack and fire at pins, so scores are going to be good,” he said. “It would be a totally different scenario if these greens were firm.”

DeLaet isn’t short of motivation either. Canada’s top-ranked player at No. 31 in FedEx Cup standings is seeking his first PGA Tour win and would like nothing more than to become the first home grown player to win the Canadian Open since Pat Fletcher in 1954.

He started the second round at 1-under, then posted five birdies on the first eight holes and nine on the day to go with a pair of bogeys.

“I felt I was in control of my game all day, with a couple of little hiccups,” the 32-year-old said. “I mean, all three of us played great.

“I never saw so many putts rolling in. It was a lot of fun. We were feeding off each other. When you see putts rolling in from everywhere like it was in our group, you just feel like putting’s easy or something and you just start holing them.”

Tying the course record was a particular thrill for the Canadian. It was set in the second round the last time the Canadian Open was played at Royal Montreal in 2001 by David Morland IV and Scott Verplank, the tournament winner.

“To share a course record here is pretty special and to have two guys in one group do it is pretty amazing,” said DeLaet.

Petrovic has been a surprise. The 47-year-old was on a family vacation when he got the call on Tuesday that he was in the RBC Canadian Open as the seventh alternate when another player withdrew. He arrived the next day and barely had time to look at the course.

Then he opened with a six-under 64 and followed with a 66 to take a share of the lead.

I have been hitting the ball really well for about the last three weeks,“ said Petrovic, who missed the cut at his last five tournaments. ”I’ve seen signs of some good rounds coming.

“Am I surprised? Maybe a little.”

It was a rough day for amateur Taylor Pendrith of Richmond Hills, Ont., who stole the show in Thursday’s opening round with a 65. The 23-year-old Team Canada member gave back all his strokes by shooting five over par.

“It was a disappointing round,” said Pendrith, who had a double bogey, four bogeys and only one birdie. “To play well yesterday and come out and not play my best, I didn’t hit many greens – only six – and didn’t give myself too many chances for birdies.

“My short game was pretty good – I had a few nice saves – so I can’t be too disappointed about that. The ball striking was off today.”

PGA TOUR RBC Canadian Open

Tough day for Canadian amateurs hoping to make the cut at RBC Canadian Open

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Taylor Pendrith (Charles Laberge /Getty Images)

MONTREAL – Canadian amateur golfers came close to making a splash at the RBC Canadian Open on Friday.

Ultimately, of the five Canadian amateurs competing in the second round, only 23-year-old Taylor Pendrith made the cut.

Despite shooting a 5-over 75 in the second round to erase the stellar 5-under 65 he shot on Thursday, Pendrith squeaked into the next round at even par, 10 strokes behind leaders Jim Furyk and Tim Petrovic.

“It was a disappointing round today,” said Pendrith, who finished one stroke off the lead after the first round of play. “To play well yesterday and come out and not play my best (today) … I didn’t hit many greens and didn’t give myself too many chances for birdies. That’s the main thing. My ball striking was off today.”

Meanwhile, amateur Adam Svensson of Surrey, B.C., narrowly missed the opportunity to golf throughout the weekend.

The 20-year-old had a birdie on 16, and another on 18, to finish at 1-over 171 after two days, missing the cut by one stroke.

“I’m a little rattled right now,” said Svensson. “I’m pretty disappointed. I know I can make the cut easily if I play well. My putting wasn’t there this week. It happens. My game can beat a lot of pros, and I can definitely make the cut at the Canadian Open.

“It’s always good experience. But I don’t need experience anymore, I just need to go out there and play my game.”

Corey Conners and Kevin Carrigan finished 5-over after 36 holes, while Chris Hemmerich, after a tough first round on Thursday, finished 8-over 148 overall.

Pendrith, at No. 18 in the World Amateur Golf rankings, is Canada’s top male amateur. A recent graduate from Kent State University in Ohio, Pendrith is a hard-hitting golfer who could make the move from amateur to professional as early as this fall.

Since 1984, only six amateur Canadian golfers had made the cut at the Canadian Open: Chris Baryla in 2003; Richard Scott and Victor Ciesielski in 2006; Nick Taylor in 2008; and Albin Choi in 2012.

“It’s a great experience,” said Pendrith of his first tournament playing versus the pros. “I’m having a great time out here. To get a round of 65 in my first PGA Tour is pretty awesome. The whole atmosphere was amazing. I’m hoping to be back here in a couple of years.”

Making the cut alongside Pendrith were five other Canadians – David Hearn (3-under 137), Adam Hadwin (1-under 139), Brad Fritsch (even par), veteran Mike Weir (even par), and Graham DeLaet (8-under 132).

On the heels of an impressive first-round performance in which he sunk five birdies, Hearn finished the day at even-par thanks, in part, to an eight-foot putt for birdie on the eighth hole.

“If you look at the card, that’s kind of the way I played,” said Hearn, who finished 32nd in last week’s British Open. “I made some good saves when I needed to, and I just never really got the ball quite as close as I did yesterday. But I hit the ball great from tee to green. If I can continue to do that for the rest of the week, I know I’m going to play well.”

Hadwin sunk three birdies on Friday to finish at 1-under 69 on the day, while Fritsch’s birdie on 18 gave him a 2-under 68, good for even par after two rounds.

Weir, the 2003 Masters champion, came close to bettering his score from the green on several occasions. The crowd favourite two-putted for par on the par-4 fourth hole, and again on the par-5 sixth hole, narrowly missed the cup with his first putt both times.

“They call it a game of inches, right?” said Weir, who is playing in his 24th Canadian Open. “There were a lot of things that, if they fall the other way, it could have been a good score. It just didn’t happen today. A lot of really good putts with nice speed on the correct side of the hole looked like they were going to go in, but for whatever reason they just didn’t.

“I had great crowd support out there and I was hoping to just make a few birdies and get some momentum going and get some roars going, but it just didn’t happen today.”

Four-time PGA Tour-winner Stephen Ames of Calgary finished at the bottom of the pack, shooting 10-over 150 for the tournament’s fourth-worst result.

Going into the weekend, Canadian hopes now rest on Graham DeLaet, who moved into third at 8-under after two rounds. DeLaet, ranked 38th in the world, tied the Royal Montreal course record on Friday after sinking nine birdies for 7-under 63. He also became the first Canadian since Weir in 2004 to finish in the top-3 after 36 holes.

Canadians Robbie Greenwell (2-over 142), Eugene Wong (2-over 142), Dave Levesque (3-over 173), Benjamin Silverman (4-over 144), Michael Gligic (4-over 144), Beon Yeong Lee (5-over 145), Bill Walsh (7-over 147) and Kevin Stinson (13-over 153) did not make the cut.

PGA TOUR RBC Canadian Open Team Canada

Pendrith impresses on opening-day at Royal Montreal

PGA TOUR RBC Canadian Open Team Canada

Putnam and Petrovic grab opening-round lead at RBC Canadian Open

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Michael Putnam (Golf Canada/ Bernard Brault)

MONTREAL – Michael Putnam and Tim Petrovic mastered the afternoon winds to shoot six-under-par 64s and take a share of the first-round lead at the US$5.7 million RBC Canadian Open on Thursday.

But the surprise of the day was big-hitting amateur Taylor Pendrith of Richmond Hill, Ont., who shot five-under 65 for a share of third place with Kyle Stanley.

Putnam and Petrovic played bogey-free golf at the 7,153-yard par-70 Blue Course at Royal Montreal on a near perfect day for scoring, with sunny weather and soft greens from heavy rains the previous day.

A gust wind came in for the those with afternoon starts, but it didn’t stop Putnam or Petrovic from shooting the low scores of the day, which set the course record for an opening round.

“It was tough ball-striking, but somehow I was able to keep it in the fairway and take advantage of the soft greens to hit a couple of shots close and make a couple of five-to-ten-foot putts,” said Putnam, who has been playing his best golf of the season of late with top-35 finishes in his last three outings.

The 47-year-old Petrovic didn’t know he would play until he got a call on Tuesday saying he was in as the seventh alternate. The former PGA Tour regular, playing only his eighth Tour event this season, didn’t even have his name on the program.

There was no rust in his game, however.

“I didn’t set my expectations high because I got in late, so this was kind of my practice round,” said Petrovic. “I walked the back nine (Wednesday).

“It wasn’t that I played conservative. I was just trying to hit fairways and greens, trying to see the golf course and see if I could make a few putts. I drove the ball pretty good overall.”

There were 11 players tied at 4-under 66, including Nick Watney and Charl Schwartzel, and another 16 at 3-under 67, including David Hearn of Brantford, Ont., and two-time Canadian Open champion Jim Furyk.

Another dozen were at 2-under 68 and there were 23 at 1-under 69, including top-ranked Canadian Graham DeLaet of Weyburn, Sask., and defending champion Brandt Snedeker.

Another sunny day is forecast for the second round on Friday, with a possibility of wet weather on the weekend.

The 23-year-old Pendrith, Canada’s top amateur, had a dream day in his first round of his first Canadian Open. He recently graduated from Kent State University and hopes to play in the world amateur championships this summer before likely turning pro in the fall.

Although it’s early, he’s one stroke off the lead of a tournament no Canadian has won since Pat Fletcher in 1954.

“I never expected that,” said Pendrith. “I was playing good golf coming in here, so I just played golf.

“Five-under is pretty nice. Everybody has some nerves. If you didn’t have nerves on the first tee something would be wrong with you. But after I played the first hole, I felt calm and felt I should be here.”

He played in the last threesome to tee off in the afternoon, when the worst of the wind was up, but used his long drives to cut through the tree-lined fairways and get close to the greens. He had seven birdies, including one on a putt that trickled in on the 18th, and two bogeys.

“The front nine suits my game a lot,” he said. “I can shoot driver nearly every hole.

“I had four birdies on the front nine, all with wedges.”

Pendrith is 18th in world amateur rankings, tops among Canadians. He and fellow national team members Adam Svensson of Surrey, B.C., who shot even-par 70, and Corey Conners of Listowel, Ont., who was at 4-over 74, were given entries into the Open.

Stanley’s 5-under was the best among the early tee times.

“I love this golf course,” the Gig Harbor, Wash., native said. “It’s similar to the one I grew up with in Washington, so I felt pretty comfortable.

“I hit the ball well on my first nine today. I was able to make a few of the long range putts that got the round going for me.”

The soft greens made for ideal scoring conditions, but Stanley said the course is still a challenge.

“That front nine is pretty difficult,” he said. “There’s a couple of mid-irons into the par-3s and a 500-yard par-4 (the fourth), so it’s a kind of sneaky-demanding course.”

Stanley is best known for posting his only PGA Tour win a week after a memorable collapse.

In 2012, he blew a six-shot lead in the final round of the Farmers Insurance Open and lost in a playoff to Snedeker, then bounced back with a victory at the Phoenix Open.

This season has been trying for the 26-year-old. He sits 164th in FedEx Cup standings with only one top-25 finish, which was in October.

He said it was premature to think about turning the season around after one good round.

“There’s a ton of golf left,” he said. “It’s nice to get a round like this because it shows I’m working on the right things.”

Hearn had a great round going until he bogeyed the 14th and 15th on his back nine. He recovered with a birdie at the 16th.

“Any day you come off the course and shoot 3-under and feel you left a few out there, you feel it’s a good day,” said Hearn. “I’m not overly disappointed with the way I played.

“I hit the ball great from tee to green. If I can continue to do that for the rest of the week I know I’m going to play well.”

It was a rough opening round for some. Both Stephen Ames of Calgary and one of the tournament favourites, Dustin Johnson, shot 4-over 74. John Daly had 6-over 76, Scott McCarron turned in a 78 and Erik Compton shot 79.

PGA TOUR RBC Canadian Open

Kyle Stanley takes advantage of prime conditions for early RBC Canadian Open lead

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MONTREAL – Kyle Stanley took advantage of sunny weather and soft greens to take the early clubhouse lead with an opening round of 5-under 65 at the US$5.7 million RBC Canadian Open on Thursday.

Stanley was 5-under over his first nine holes, which was the back nine at Royal Montreal’s par-70 Blue Course, and held that score to take the lead with half the field still on the course.

“I love this golf course,” the Gig Harbor, Wash., native said. “It’s similar to the one I grew up with in Washington, so I felt pretty comfortable.

“I hit the ball well on my first nine today. I was able to make a few of the long range putts that got the round going for me.”

Six players were tied at 4-under 66, including Justin Hicks, Charlie Wi, Greg Chalmers, Nick Watney, Robert Allenby and Troy Merritt. Another 10 were at 3-under.

Heavy rains the previous day made for ideal scoring conditions, but Stanley said the 7,153-yard layout is still a challenge.

“I’m surprised that 5-under is leading right now,” he said. “But you can take advantage of a lot of these holes if you drive it in the fairway.

“That front nine is pretty difficult. There’s a couple of mid-irons into the greens and a 500-yard par-4, so it’s a kind of sneaky-demanding course.”

Stanley is best known for posting his only PGA Tour win a week after a memorable collapse.

In 2012, he blew a six-shot lead in the final round of the Farmers Insurance Open and lost in a playoff to Brandt Snedeker, then bounced back with a victory at the Phoenix Open.

This season has been trying for the 26-year-old. He sits 164th in FedEx Cup standings with only one top-25 finish, which was in October.

He said it was premature to think about turning the season around after one good round.

“There’s a ton of golf left,” he said. “It’s nice to get a round like this because it shows I’m working on the right things.

“It hasn’t been my best year by any means but I’m starting to play a little bit better and that’s nice.”

Watney, who has also had a trying season, was glad to get in a solid opening round.

“You’re not playing behind the 8-ball to make the cut,” the 33-year-old said. “It’s only one round, but I’d much rather play well in the first round than not.”

It was a rough opening round for some. Both Stephen Ames of Calgary and one of the tournament favourites, Dustin Johnson, shot 4-over 74. John Daly had 6-over 76 and Scott McCarron turned in a 78.

PGA TOUR RBC Canadian Open

Thursday RBC Canadian Open tee-times

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Graham DeLaet (Golf Canada/ Bernrad Brault)

Tee times for Thursday’s opening round of the RBC Canadian Open, held at the Royal Montreal Golf Club (all times Eastern):

Begins on Hole 1

7 a.m. – Andres Romero, Argentina, Nicholas Thompson, U.S., Justin Hicks, U.S.

7:10 a.m. – Stephen Ames, Calgary; John Daly, U.S. Tim Wilkinson, New Zealand.

7:20 a.m. – Troy Matteson, U.S.; Richard H. Lee, U.S.; Danny Lee, New Zealand.

7:30 a.m. – Matt Bettencourt, U.S.; Pat Perez, U.S.; Jeff Overton, U.S.

7:40 a.m. – Mark Wilson, U.S.; Johnson Wagner, U.S.; Y.E. Yang, South Korea.

7:50 a.m. – Nick Watney, U.S.; Tim Clark. South Africa; Retief Goosen, South Africa.

8 a.m. – Scott Brown, U.S.; Carl Pettersson, Sweden; U.S. John Huh, U.S.

8:10 a.m. – Ken Duke, U.S.; Sang-Moon Bae, South Korea; Jhonattan Vegas, Venezuela.

8:20 a.m. – Tim Herron, U.S.; Andrew Svoboda, U.S.; D.H. Lee, South Korea.

8:30 a.m. – Heath Slocum, U.S.; Nathan Green, Australia; Mark Calcavecchia, U.S.

8:40 a.m. – Alex Prugh, U.S.; Jamie Lovemark, U.S.; Timothy Madigan, U.S.

8:50 a.m. – Miguel Angel Carballo, Argentina; Kevin Tway, U.S.; Kevin Carrigan, Victoria.

9 a.m. – Alex Aragon, U.S.; Oliver Goss, Australia; Kevin Stinson, Mission, B.C.

12:15 p.m. – Chad Campbell, U.S.; David Duval, U.S.; Steve Marino, U.S.

12:25 p.m. – Camilo Villegas, Colombia; David Hearn, Brantford, Ont.; Kevin Kisner, U.S.

12:35 p.m. – Ricky Barnes, U.S.; Josh Teater, U.S.; David Lingmerth, Sweden.

12:45 p.m. – Sean O’Hair, U.S.; Aaron Baddeley, Australia; Erik Compton, U.S.

12:55 p.m. – Derek Ernst, U.S.; Martin Laird, Scotland; Charlie Beljan, U.S.

1:05 p.m. – Matt Kuchar, U.S.; Jim Furyk, U.S.; Graham DeLaet, Weyburn, Sask.

1:15 p.m. – Graeme McDowell, Northern Ireland; Luke Donald, England; Mike Weir, Bright’s Grove, Ont.

1:25 p.m. – D.A. Points, U.S.; J.J. Henry, U.S.; Ted Potter, Jr., U.S.

1:35 p.m. – Joe Durant, U.S.; James Driscoll, U.S.; James Hahn, U.S.

1:45 p.m. – Tim Petrovic, U.S.; Jason Allred, U.S.; Michael Gligic, Burlington, Ont.

1:55 p.m. – Billy Andrade, U.S.; Will Wilcox, U.S.; Joel Dahmen, U.S.

2:05 p.m. – Edward Loar, U.S.; Josh Persons, U.S.; Eugene Wong, Vancouver.

2:15 p.m. – Jim Herman, U.S.; Adam Hadwin, Moose Jaw, Sask.; Taylor Pendrith, Richmond Hill, Ont.

Begins on 10th Hole

7 a.m. – Charlie Wi, South Korea; Chad Collins, U.S.; Jim Renner, U.S.

7:10 a.m. – Jeff Maggert, U.S.; Brian Davis, England; Greg Chalmers, Australia.

7:20 a.m. – Scott McCarron, U.S.; Kevin Chappell, U.S.; Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano, Spain

7:30 a.m. – John Rollins, U.S.; Jerry Kelly, U.S.; Trevor Immelman, South Africa.

7:40 a.m. – Kyle Stanley, U.S.; Lucas Glover, U.S.; Jonathan Byrd, U.S.

7:50 a.m. – Ernie Els, South Africa; Stewart Cink, U.S.; Justin Leonard, U.S.

8 a.m. – Dustin Johnson, U.S.; Brandt Snedeker, U.S.; Hunter Mahan, U.S.

8:10 a.m. – Scott Piercy, U.S.; Geoff Ogilvy, Australia; Robert Allenby, Australia.

8:20 a.m. – Bryce Molder, U.S.; Daniel Chopra, Sweden; Tag Ridings, U.S.

8:30 a.m. – Martin Flores, U.S.; Luke Guthrie, U.S.; Troy Merritt, U.S.

8:40 a.m. – Eric Axley, U.S.; Andrew Loupe, U.S.; Adam Svensson, Surrey, B.C.

8:50 a.m. – Kevin Foley, U.S.; Patrick Rodgers, U.S.; Corey Conners, Listowel, Ont.

9 a.m. – Wes Roach, U.S.; Bronson La’Cassie, Australia; Bill Q. Walsh, Canada.

12:15 p.m. – Cameron Beckman, U.S. Chris DiMarco, U.S. Brice Garnett, U.S.

12:25 p.m. – Bo Van Pelt, U.S.; Dicky Pride, U.S.; William McGirt, U.S.

12:35 p.m. – Robert Garrigus, U.S.; Michael Putnam. U.S.; Robert Streb, U.S.

12:45 p.m. – Ryuji Imada, Japan; Roberto Castro, U.S.; Russell Knox, Scotland.

12:55 p.m. – Woody Austin, U.S.; Brian Gay, U.S.; Ben Curtis, U.S.

1:05 p.m. – Ben Crane, U.S.; Seung-Yul Noh, South Korea; K.J. Choi, South Korea.

1:15 p.m. – Charl Schwartzel, South Africa; Stuart Appleby, Australia; Vijay Singh, Fiji.

1:25 p.m. – John Merrick, U.S.; Tommy Gainey, U.S.; Charley Hoffman, U.S.

1:35 p.m. – Jason Bohn, U.S.; Morgan Hoffmann, U.S.; John Peterson, U.S.

1:45 p.m. – Tyrone Van Aswegen, South Africa; Thomas Aiken, South Africa; Eli Cole, U.S.

1:55 p.m. – Doug LaBelle II, U.S.; Peter Malnati, U.S.; Robbie Greenwell, Georgetown, Ont.

2:05 p.m. – Hudson Swafford, U.S.; Benjamin Silverman, Thornhill, Ont.; Dave Levesque, Montreal.

2:15 p.m. – Brad Fritsch, Edmonton; Chris Hemmerich, Kitchener, Ont.; Beon Yeong Lee, Montreal.

To follow live scoring, click here.

PGA TOUR RBC Canadian Open

Weir, DeLaet look to end 60 year drought of home grown Canadian Open champions

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Graham DeLaet (Golf Canada/ Bernrad Brault)

MONTREAL – It was 60 years ago that Pat Fletcher won the Canadian Open.

No other Canadian has won the national open golf tournament since then, but that could change when the PGA Tour event returns this week to Royal Montreal, the tree-lined course that played host to the 2007 Presidents Cup.

Mike Weir, Graham DeLaet and David Hearn are among the 19 home-grown players looking to end the losing run.

“It’s hard to believe it’s been 60 years,” Weir said Wednesday after playing only nine holes of a rain soaked pro-am event. “We have more capable players in the field now and I think we’re going to see it going forward.

“It’s going to end at some point, so hopefully, if not myself, it’s another Canadian that gets it done this week. It would be nice to get the streak over so we don’t have to talk about it any more.”

For Weir, an eight-time Tour winner, winning at home would be a dream.

“This is my 24th Canadian Open, so I’ve been at it a long time,” the 44-year-old Weir said. “But ever time you come back it’s special.

“It was the first professional event I watched live as a kid. I still remember doing a junior clinic with Andy Bean and Tom Kite and being one of the kids on the range that got to walk up there and get close to those guys. That really spurred my interest in professional golf.”

A strong showing would boost Weir’s chances of making the FedEx Cup playoffs. He is 128th with four weeks left in the playoff race and needs to get into the top 125.

It is also a special event for Hunter Mahan.

The American was the 36-hole leader of last year’s RBC Canadian Open when he got the call that wife was about to give birth to their first child, a daughter. Mahan immediately withdrew to fly home to Dallas to attend the birth.

Snedeker fired a 63 in the third round and held on to win.

“It’s one of those things you talk about with golfers, what if you were in the lead and you had to go home on Saturday or Sunday,” said Mahan. “It’s one of those crazy things you talk about and discuss with your family or your wife, but most of the time, it never happens.

“It’s kind of neat that we have the video of it all happening and then the newspaper clippings and all that, so it will be a fun story to show her and tell her about how she entered the world.”

Snekeder said he was on the seventh hole at Glen Abbey when he saw Mahan’s name come off the leader board.

“I started putting two and two together,” he said. “I was playing a great round of golf. It was a fortunate break for myself. Hunter was playing great. He would have been a tough guy to catch over the weekend.

“I did follow through and we made sure we sent a coupe of nice gifts to the Mahan’s for baby Zoe. It’s something we’ll probably both remember the rest of our lives.”

Mahan said he was happy to be back in Canada, especially at Royal Montreal where he and Furyk were part of a U.S. squad that thrashed Weir and the International team. Returning Internationals include Els, Vijay Singh, K.J. Choi, Geoff Ogilvie and Stuart Appleby.

The Bodog gambling site has Johnson, Furyk and Kuchar as the betting favourites at 12-1, with DeLaet of Weyburn, Sask., as the eighth favourite at 25-1.

DeLaet’s pro career may have been saved by a victory on the Canadian Tour in 2008 at St-Raphael, a short drive from Royal Montreal. Now he hopes to get a PGA Tour title in the same neck of the woods.

“My game feels a lot closer (to top form) than it probably looks,” said DeLaet, currently 31st in FedEx Cup standings. “You always know deep down when you’re playing well, and hopefully I can just clean that up a little and this can be the breakout week.”

Furyk, who won in 2006 and 2007, is coming off a 65 on Sunday to finish fourth in the British Open, but now has to play on a different continent and a very different course.

While Royal Montreal is often called “traditional,” Furyk said that only fits the tees and the fairways. The recently redone greens he considers modern and could be a key factor once play begins.

With heavy rain on Wednesday, the course will be soft and scores may be low.

“What this golf course requires of you is the dead opposite of what you’d see in links golf,” said Furyk. “And the rain is going to spread the gap even farther.”

PGA TOUR RBC Canadian Open

Video: Previewing the 2014 RBC Canadian Open

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Graham DeLaet (Golf Canada/ Bernrad Brault)

PGA TOUR RBC Canadian Open

How Brandt Snedeker won the 2013 RBC Canadian Open

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Brandt Snedeker (Golf Canada/ Bernard Brault)

Brandt Snedeker began the final round of the 2014 RBC Canadian Open with a one-stroke lead over David Lingmerth at 14-under-par. After making three birdies and two bogeys through the first 15 holes of the final round, he would go on to make birdie at the par-5 16th to reach 16-under par, a score that Dustin Johnson had previously reached before making a triple bogey at the par-4 17th to fall out of contention. Snedeker safely made par at the final two holes for his sixth career PGA Tour victory and his second of the 2013 season (AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am). His win moved him to third in the FedExCup standings, where he would finish the Regular Season before going on to finish 12th.

More on Brandt Snedeker

  • The 2013 RBC Canadian Open was the sixth time Snedeker has held at least a share of the lead heading into the final round, and the third time he converted the lead into victory.
  • In 19 starts so far in 2014, Snedeker has made 16 cuts and has 16 top-25s and two top-10s.
  • The 2014 RBC Canadian Open will be Snedeker’s third consecutive start at Canada’s national open and his first at Royal Montreal. Prior to his 2013 win, he finished T-34 in 2012. Snedeker also missed the cut in 2010 and posted a pair of top 10s in 2009 (T-5) and 2007 (T-7).

Notes on the field

  • Three players that finished inside the top 10 at last week’s Open Championship: Jim Furyk (4th), Charl Schwartzel (T7) and Graeme McDowell (T9).
  • Six of the top 30 in the current FedExCup standings led by No. 3 Dustin Johnson and No. 4 Matt Kuchar and, who both finished tied for second at the RBC Canadian Open in 2013 along with William McGirt and Jason Bohn.
  • Matt Kuchar will be looking to make it an RBC sweep after claiming the RBC Heritage in April. Kuchar has eight other top-10 finishes in 2014 ncluding a tie for fifth at The Masters and a playoff loss at the Shell Houston Open.
  • Five of the top 20 in the Official World Golf Ranking and 10 of the top 50: Matt Kuchar (7), Jim Furyk (10), Dustin Johnson (15), Graeme McDowell (16), Luke Donald (24), Charl Schwartzel (22), Brandt Snedeker (35), Kevin Na (37), Graham DeLaet (38), and Hunter Mahan (44).
  • Ten past RBC Canadian Open champions; Brandt Snedeker (2013), Scott Piercy (2012), Sean O’Hair (2011), Carl Pettersson (2010), Nathan Green (2009), Jim Furyk (2006 & 2007), Mark Calcavecchia (2005), Vijay Singh (2004), John Rollins (2002), Dudley Hart (1996).
  • Team RBC members in the field: Brandt Snedeker, Graeme McDowell, Graham DeLaet, Ernie Els, Jim Furyk, Graham DeLaet, Luke Donald, Mike Weir, Stephen Ames, Hunter Mahan and David Hearn.
  • Hunter Mahan returns to the RBC Canadian Open one year after taking the 36-hole lead, then withdrawing before the third round with his wife Kandi going into labor. The Mahans welcomed a baby girl, Zoe, before Sunday’s final round. In nine starts at the RBC Canadian Open, Mahan has never missed the cut and has two top-five finishes (T4, 2004 and T5, 2007).

RBC Canadian Open and the FedExCup

With just four weeks remaining before the start of the FedExCup Playoffs, the RBC Canadian Open will once again play a pivotal role in the shaping of the Playoff fields:

  • 2013 winner Brandt Snedeker solidified his spot in the FedExCup standings, moving from No. 3 to No. 4 and qualified for all four Playoff events including the season-ending TOUR Championship by Coca-Cola.
  • 2012 winner Scott Piercy jumped from No. 36 to 13 in the standings and qualified for all four Playoff
  • events.
  • 2011 winner Sean O’Hair jumped from No. 147 to No. 43 and qualified for the first three Playoff events.

2007 Presidents Cup team members in the field

11 participants from the 2007 Presidents Cup, which took place here at Royal Montreal Golf Club, are in the field this week. Below are the members of the United States and International teams from 2007.

Player                          Team 

Ernie Els                       International (South Africa)
Vijay Singh                   International (Fiji)
Geoff Ogilvy                 International (Australia)
Retief Goosen               International (South Africa)
Trevor Immelman       International (South Africa)
Stuart Appleby             International (Australia)
Mike Weir                     International (Canada)
Jim Furyk                      United States
Stewart Cink                 United States
Lucas Glover                 United States
Hunter Mahan              United States

Tournament notes

  • Prior to the 2013 RBC Canadian Open, the tournament had been decided either by one stroke or in a playoff for four consecutive seasons and 10 of the last 11. Snedeker’s three-stroke margin of victory was the largest since Scott Verplank won in 2001 by three over Bob Estes and Joey Sindelar.
  • Since 1997, just two players have made the RBC Canadian Open their maiden victory on the PGA TOUR: Nathan Green (2009), Chez Reavie (2008) and John Rollins (2002).
  • 2014 marks 60 years since a Canadian won the RBC Canadian Open (Pat Fletcher, 1954).
  • Since Sam Snead in 1940 and 1941, Jim Furyk is the only player to successfully defend his title at the RBC Canadian Open, doing so in 2006 and 2007. Here are how defending champions have fared since 2000:

Year                          Defending Champion                  Finish

2013                             Scott Piercy                                          T52
2012                             Sean O’Hair                                          CUT
2011                             Carl Pettersson                                     CUT
2010                             Nathan Green                                       T37
2009                             Chez Reavie                                          CUT
2008                             Jim Furyk                                              T14
2007                             Jim Furyk                                              WON
2006                             Mark Calcavecchia                               T29
2005                             Vijay Singh                                            T7
2004                             Bob Tway                                              T26
2003                             John Rollins                                         CUT
2002                             Scott Verplank                                      CUT
2001                             Tiger Woods                                          T23

Canadians in the RBC Canadian Open field (19):

PGA TOUR members from Canada:

  • Graham DeLaet – Weyburn, Sask. native is in his fifth season on the PGA TOUR and the highest Canadian in the Official World Golf Ranking at No. 38.
  • Mike Weir – Bright’s Grove, Ontario native is making his 24th start at the RBC Canadian Open and finished second here in 2004
  • David Hearn – Brantford, Ont. native is making his 12th start at the RBC Canadian Open and coming off his first career start at The Open Championship and fifth career major.
  • Stephen Ames – Calgary, Alta. resident is making his 17th RBC Canadian Open start and owns two top-10s. Ames is making his 18th start of the 2013-14 PGA TOUR season but also made his Champions Tour debut at the 2014 Senior PGA Championship.
  • Brad Fritsch – Manotick, Ont. native is making his 7th RBC Canadian Open start and his 16th PGA TOUR start of the season, coming off his second top-25 result of the 2013-14 campaign at the John Deere Classic (T-13)

Players in the field with Quebec connections:

  • Beon-Yeong Lee – Montreal resident moved to Canada from South Korea eight years ago and is in his second year on PGA TOUR Canada, where he is currently 23rd on the Order of Merit. Lee was the medalist at a regional qualifier.
  • Dave Levesque – Montreal native was offered an exemption after his victory at the PGA Championship of Canada.

Other Canadians:

  • Adam Hadwin – Abbotsford, B.C. native won his first Web.com Tour event at the Chile Classic this season and will make his fourth RBC Canadian Open start. Finished T4 at Shaughnessy in 2011.
  • Michael Gligic – PGA TOUR Canada member from Burlington, Ont. won a regional qualifier to earn his second RBC Canadian Open start.
  • Eugene Wong – Two-time PGA TOUR Canada winner and former Jack Nicklaus Award winner at the University of Oregon will make his fifth RBC Canadian Open start. Currently top Canadian on PGA TOUR Canada’s 2014 Order of Merit.
  • Billy Walsh – Markham, Ont. native earned an exemption as the No. 1 player on the PGA of Canada rankings following the PGA Championship of Canada.
  • Taylor Pendrith (a) – Richmond Hill, Ont. native won the prestigious Porter Cup this summer and recently finished a standout career at Kent State University. Currently 15th in World Amateur Golf Ranking.
  • Corey Conners (a) – Semi-finalist at 2013 U.S. Amateur also recently finished collegiate career at Kent State. Currently 28th in World Amateur Golf Ranking.
  • Adam Svensson (a) – Barry University student and Golf Canada National Amateur Team member was named the Jack Nicklaus Award winner as NCAA Division II player of the year. 30th in World Amateur Golf Ranking.
  • Chris Hemmerich (a) – University of Guelph Gryphon will make first RBC Canadian Open start. Recently won 2014 Ontario Amateur Championship.
  • Kevin Carrigan (a) – Full-time financial planner from Victoria, B.C. won his second Canadian Mid-Amateur Championship in 2013 to gain entry.
  • Robbie Greenwell – Georgetown, Ontario native played his way into the field through open qualifying with a 5-under 67.
  • Kevin Stinson – Mission, British Columbia native played his way into the field through open qualifying with a 5-under 67. Has successfully Monday qualified three times on PGA TOUR Canada this season
  • Ben Silverman – Thornhill, Ontario native played his way into the field through open qualifying with a 5-under 67. Has three top-15 finishes on PGA TOUR Canada this season to sit 30th on the Order of Merit.
PGA TOUR RBC Canadian Open

Allred, Stinson, Silverman and Greenwell earn exemptions into 2014 RBC Canadian Open

MONTRÉAL (Golf Canada) – Jason Allred of Ashland, Oregon; Kevin Stinson, of Mission, B.C.; Ben Silverman of Concord, Ont.; and Robbie Greenwell of Georgetown, Ont. have all earned spots into this week’s RBC Canadian Open at The Royal Montreal Golf Club via Monday’s Final Qualifier at Club de golf St-Raphael.

Allred, 34, topped the leaderboard at the Monday qualifier thanks to a 6-under par 66. The Web.com Tour member who has two top-25 finishes on the PGA TOUR’s development circuit this season carded an eagle, six birdies and two bogeys en route to earning medalist honours.

Canada’s Stinson, Silverman and Greenwell finished in a 3-way tie for second after firing matching 5-under 67s.

After Monday’s Final Qualifier, a total of 19 Canadians are set to compete in the 2014 RBC Canadian Open.

A full list of Final Qualifier scores is available by clicking here.