Wednesday, March 27, 2024

Upper Midwest Connection of the Week Ending 24 March 2024

 It was another underwhelming week for Umcees on tour. Of the nine such players across three events--the PGA Tour's Valspar Championship, the PGA Tour Americas' Bupa Championship and the Epson Tour's Atlantic Beach Classic--only two (Thomas Longbella in the Bupa and Kim Kaufman in the Atlantic Beach) made it with room to spare. Two other PGA Tour Americas Umcees--Derek Hitchner and Matthew Walker--didn't know they'd be playing the weekend until Saturday because the second round was interrupted by darkness. Only when the cut reached +5 did they have assurance that they'd play on. The other five Umcees--Troy Merritt and Zach Johnson, both playing the Valspar; Wisconsinites George Kneiser and Harrison Ott, both at the Bupa; and Kate Smith-Stroh at Atlantic Beach--missed out on prize money. It's especially been a slow start for Smith-Stroh. She finished 19th in the Race for the Card last year, although she finished short of an LPGA Tour card in both that regard and Q-Series. But this year, she has made just one cut out of three events.

Of the four Umcees who did make the cut, the two who made it by the skin of their teeth failed to impress that much at the weekend. Thomas Longbella, native of Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin and a former Minnesota Gopher, showed up in the final round in particular, posting by far his best round of the week (-4/68) to surge 26 spots to a T21 finish. This sufficed to help him climb to #1034 in the OWGR, though he will still likely have to enter local qualifying for the U.S. Open, if not the Open Championship. But it's clear that he was outshined by none other than...

(Source: Epson Tour)
Kim Kaufman.

For the first time in Devilish Rake history, a woman repeats as Upper Midwest Connection of the Week! The Clark, South Dakota native and thrice winner on the Epson Tour almost pulled off a fourth win on the circuit in her career. She got off to a fast start with rounds of -4/67 and -2/69 Thursday and Friday, respectively. Even Saturday, when she bogeyed twice in her first four holes, Kaufman held in there and got back to hovering around even par the rest of the day. Only a missed birdie at the last kept her from forcing winner Briana Chacon into a playoff. As it is, Kaufman is fifth in the Race for the Card now on 404 and two-thirds points, and she has jumped to #565 in the women's world rankings! While it's too early to say she'll be back on the LPGA Tour in 2025, things are definitely looking up for Kim Kaufman as we speak.

This week is a bit quieter on the tour scene. The Korn Ferry Tour is reaching the end of its March hibernation, while the Epson Tour goes into a hibernation of its own starting this week. Moreover, on the PGA Tour, Tom Hoge is the only Umcee participating in this week's Houston Open, as he returns to competition after the disappointment of TPC Sawgrass. He likely needs at least a third-place finish to reach Augusta National for the third year running or a win at next week's Texas Open, according to the Associated Press, for such a finish would get him into the top-50 OWGR category set for the Masters. Troy Merritt and Zach Johnson are sitting out this week, while Erik van Rooyen has no incentive to participate either, having won last November's World Wide Technologies Championship to qualify.

The PGA Tour Americas, though, will roll on to the Totalplay Championship in Guadalajara, Mexico at the Atlas Country Club, and the same five Umcees who played last week on the tour will also be involved in this week's event. The tour was originally supposed to go into hibernation as well until the Brazilian Open the week of the Masters, followed by the Termas de Rio Hondo Invitational in Argentina the next week, but unrest in Argentina forced the PGA Tour group to substitute a backup event. Lastly, Hartland, Wisconsin native Emily Lauterbach passed her open-qualifying test for this week's Ford Championship with a birdie at the first playoff hole. It will be her LPGA Tour debut.

Edward the Scop

Wednesday, March 20, 2024

Upper Midwest Connection of the Week Ending 17 March 2024

 The last two weeks have finally seen elite, brand-name players fare well on the PGA Tour. Led by Scottie Scheffler, the top ranked player in the world according to the OWGR, the top players who have remained loyal to the meritocratic traditional structure of tour golf are casting aside the underdogs and comeback players who owned the first couple months of the year. While ratings are still lower than at this point a year ago, what with several stars and a few up and comers having sold their souls to the Saudi PIF, I expect them to improve as the season progresses.

But when some players benefit, others get left behind. The Umcee contingent last week had six players in two fields. The big three men's Umcees--Tom Hoge, Erik van Rooyen and Troy Merritt--all got to play the Players Championship, while Emily Lauterbach was finally able to play on the Epson Tour alongside Kate Smith-Stroh and Kim Kaufman at the IOA Golf Classic in Longwood, Florida. Unfortunately, four Umcees missed the cut, which made it a disappointing week for Upper Midwest connections. Only Hoge and Kaufman survived after 36 holes at their respective events. (Because the IOA Classic commenced a day later than the Players, its cut fell Saturday rather than Friday.)

Heading into Saturday, it seemed Hoge would repeat as Upper Midwest Connection of the Week. Sadly, TPC Sawgrass burst his bubble with consecutive rounds of +3/75. (Despite his weekend struggles, Hoge did move to #55 in the OWGR, giving him an outside chance to get a Masters bid without necessarily winning the Houston Open next week.) Meanwhile, Kaufman was coming off a near-miss for the prior honours in her own right, and after struggling to a +2/73 Friday, she jumped to -1/70 Saturday before saving her best for last with a Sunday -2/69. Her overall score to par of -1 was good enough for a T15, which means Kim Kaufman is this year's first female Upper Midwest Connection of the Week!

(Epson Tour)

After last week's slim pickings, this week should prove more remunerative. Although Hoge and van Rooyen are skipping this week's Valspar Championship, Merritt will play, and he'll be joined by Zach Johnson. On the Epson Tour, Lauterbach narrowly drops off for lack of priority unless someone else drops out before her tee time, but the other two Umcees on the tour are playing as usual in their quest for LPGA Tour status come 2025.

Lastly, the PGA Tour Americas gets going this week. As I have mentioned many times on this blog, it combines many of the events on the old PGA Tour Latinoamerica and PGA Tour Canada into a single tour with ten Korn Ferry Tour cards at the end of the rainbow, along with a number of conditional memberships. Five Umcees will be participating at the inaugural event, which is the Bupa Championship in Tulum, Mexico. Derek Hitchner (Minneapolis, MN), George Kneiser (Oconomowoc, WI), Thomas Longbella (Chippewa Falls, WI/Minnesota '21) and Harrison Ott (Brookfield, WI) are returning members of the third tier of the PGA Tour pyramid. They will be joined by Matthew Walker of Ottumwa, Iowa, who was a medallist in the First Stage of PGA Tour Q-School and earned Latin American swing exempt status as a result. Good luck to the Umcees competing on the PGA Tour Americas, taking that first step towards big-time glory!

Edward the Scop

Friday, March 15, 2024

FA Cup 2023-24: Quarterfinal Picks

 Well, last round was fun. Of the eight picks I made, seven were correct. My only miss was picking Leeds United to beat Chelsea; the Whites did score twice, as I had predicted, but conceded thrice. Let's see if I can get all four quarterfinals right this St Patrick's weekend!

Saturday, 16 March

Wolverhampton Wanderers 2-1 Coventry City (actual 2-3; 60pt)

Manchester City 3-2 Newcastle United (actual 2-0; 200pt)

Sunday, 17 March

Chelsea 3-4 Leicester City (actual 4-2)

Manchester United 1-2 Liverpool (actual 4-3, AET)

Edward the Scop

Thursday, March 14, 2024

Upper Midwest Connection of the Week Ending 10 March 2024

 Firstly, I'd like to apologize for being a day late. There's been an overload of work at my job of late and I couldn't get around to working on the blog since my daytime work took precedence. Now that the load is lightening, I can resume with my usual blog duties.

Anyway, I finally got the prehistory of the Devilish Rake up and running earlier this week. It explains what led up to the blog's creation last July. As my "What to Expect This Year" post had incorrectly predicted, I had intended to publish it earlier, around January or early February, but it never works out that way since I had THREE rounds of FA Cup picks to disseminate and Upper Midwest Connection of the Week and Month honours to designate. The next general page will be the glossary of terms, which you can expect to see the first entries for later this spring. As for the Patreon, I plan to set aside whatever I get from my tax refund to set that up and maybe support content creators I like.

But back to the golf. As I foretold last week, it was a busy four days from Thursday through Sunday for Umcees in tour golf. Firstly, let's consider the Korn Ferry Tour's Astara-Chile Classic, which involved the five Umcees who made Q-school finals last December: Frankie Capan III, Van Holmgren, Thomas Longbella, Andre Metzger and Alex Schaake. Unfortunately, four missed the cut; the only exception was, of all of them, Metzger. "Dakotas Dre" is, as the epithet I confer on him indicates, a legend on the Dakotas Tour, which is my favourite minitour in North American golf. He finished T44, good to enter the KFT points list at #139. Probably not enough to get very many starts, but it's a start.

The other developmental tour with OWGR or Rolex Ranking points to involve Umcees last week was, of course, the Korn Ferry's women's equivalent--the Epson Tour, which kicked off its season with the Florida's Natural Charity Classic. This year, the tour has switched to a points-based system for its order of merit, which means I will no longer regularly quote paychecks of prize money earned for applicable golfers. That aside, Kim Kaufman fared significantly better than Kate Smith-Stroh, especially in the last two rounds. Kaufman had a -5/67 Saturday to highlight her weekend, collecting 81 2/3 points in the Race for the Card. This year, there will be a further five cards awarded, bringing the total to fifteen spots on the 2025 LPGA Tour.

On the PGA Tour, though, there were two events! That's because last week had a signature event in the Arnold Palmer Invitational and an opposite event in the Puerto Rico Open. Of the three Umcees who participated on the Tour last week, only Troy Merritt was unfortunate to miss out on Bay Hill. He did an okay job in Puerto Rico, finishing T23 and climbing to #119 in the FedEx Cup. Back on the mainland, Scottie Scheffler's performance clearly overshadowed the rest of the field, winning by five strokes. Even so, Erik van Rooyen mustered a T25 and inched up to #18 on the points list. The big winner among Umcees, though, was...


Tom Hoge.

I was tempted to put Kaufman atop the Umcees for the week, what with her top-ten finish. But Hoge saved his best for last. Though he still has some work to do to reach this year's Masters, which would require a win in any of the remaining PGA Tour events beforehand (yes, all of them are full field) or a top fifty showing after the Houston Open in the OWGR, he took an important step towards a third straight appearance with his T12, which enabled him to crawl up to #56 in the world rankings. He also jumped to #12 in the FedEx Cup standings, putting him well on his way to the playoffs yet again. Lastly, he is now up to #15 in the Presidents Cup standings for Team USA thanks to yet another top-fifteen showing. I suppose his progress has Jim Furyk on notice by now, especially with this week being the week of the Players Championship.

Speaking of which, this week brings the big three Umcees together with 140 others as of this writing. (Tom Kim of South Korea was the 144th player, but he withdrew due to illness eight holes in.) After one round, Hoge was on his way to an UMCOW repeat, two strokes off the -7/65 lead at -5/67. Van Rooyen was less lucky, finishing -1/71 for his opening round, but was on the right side of the cutline for now. The same can't be said for Merritt, though, as he was +1/73 to start his Players.

As for the Korn Ferry Tour, it goes back into hibernation after the Southern Fortnight until the Club Car Championship in Savannah, Georgia at the start of April. I say Southern Fortnight because this is the first time that the Argentine Open and Astara-Chile Classic were contested as consecutive yet isolated KFT events, and both are in the Southern Hemisphere--the only two such KFT tourneys. But that doesn't mean that the developmental scene has run dry for Umcees. Instead, Kaufman and Smith-Stroh will contest the IOA Golf Classic on the Epson Tour, and they will be joined by Emily Lauterbach of Hartfield, Wisconsin.

Lastly, the inaugural PGA Tour Americas season launches next week with the Bupa Championship in Tulum, Mexico. As a result of the Termas de Rio Hondo Invitational getting scrapped due to economic strife in Argentina, it's part of a Mexican fortnight to open the season this year. Plenty of Umcees are expected to populate leaderboards during these two events such as Holmgren and Longbella, but also Derek Hitchner, Andre Metzger and a hopefully contrite Justin Doeden.

Edward the Scop

Wednesday, March 6, 2024

Upper Midwest Connection of the Week Ending 3 (actually 4) March 2024

 It was a busy week not only for Umcees in tour golf, but also for sports in general. The NFL Scouting Combine again took up residence at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana, and two Minnesota Gophers--safety Tyler Nubin and tight end Brevyn Spann-Ford--were among the participants. Even though he didn't do much in the way of workouts after his Senior Bowl injury, I expect Nubin to be a second-round selection, perhaps the first safety off the board who isn't primarily a cornerback. If that's not a teaser for next month's Draft Day Party Hangover blog, I don't know what is.

But back to golf. This past batch of events involved seven Umcees playing two events on the PGA Tour pyramid, as the Korn Ferry Tour commenced a brief resumption of activity with the Argentine Open. The winner, Mason Andersen, got a trip to play the Open Championship at Royal Troon this July. Meanwhile, back in the States, the event formerly known as the Honda Classic and now as the Cognizant Classic again took over PGA National. Compared with recent years, the course was relatively easygoing, even with the Bear Trap of holes 15-17. With these two events in mind, how did the seven Umcees fare?

Three of them played in Argentina. It's well-known that the election of Javier Milei as president of Argentina has anticipated austerity measures, which have sparked protests throughout the country. Incidentally, this led the PGA Tour Americas to cancel the Termas de Rio Hondo Invitational and replace it with an event at Atlas Country Club in Guadalajara, Mexico. It also gave reason for pause to many KFT players, who may have been uncertain about their safety and ability to get accommodations they could afford. Two Umcees, Dakotas Tour legend Andre Metzger and former Iowa Hawkeye Alex Schaake, may have pulled out over these concerns despite being invited. They have both joined Frankie Capan III, Van Holmgren and Thomas Longbella--all of whom did participate in the Argentine Open--in Chile this week for the Astara Classic.

Of the actual participants, two--FCIII and Longbella--missed the cut, but Holmgren excelled. He was -16/194 with one round to play and leading, but then disaster struck with two bogeys in his first three holes Sunday. Perhaps the pressure got to him, and he couldn't get back to par for the day. Still, he tied for fifth, which was an excellent showing for a second cap on the Korn Ferry Tour, and he should get more starts going forward.

As for the Cognizant Classic, all four Umcees--reigning UMCOW Erik van Rooyen, reigning Upper Midwest Connection of the Month Tom Hoge, Troy Merritt and Zach Johnson--made the weekend. Merritt, as usual, barely registered, finishing T47. At least he cracked the top fifty. Tom Hoge also missed the top 25, albeit by just one stroke (-9/275). Zach Johnson reached the top 25 but failed to convert the tricky closing par-5 for a par breaker, settling for T21. It's clear who was the top Umcee last week...


Erik van Rooyen.

Heading into Sunday, it didn't seem like anybody other than Holmgren would win Upper Midwest Connection of the Week honours. But van Rooyen rattled off six straight birdies to open his final round, along with two more in the next five holes and no bogeys and taking a one-shot lead. That's when Mother Nature decided to intervene, leading to a rain delay of three and a half hours. Van Rooyen did finish his round where he had resumed it--on -8/63 for the day and -14/270 for the tournament. Meanwhile, as mentioned before, Holmgren lost his mojo in Argentina. In the end, PGA Tour sophomore Austin Eckroat prevailed by three strokes, but van Rooyen finished jointly second with Aussie phenom Min Woo Lee (Minjee's little brother). For EVR, the implications were massive, as he jumped to #59 in the OWGR and #19 in the FedEx Cup. He's also #15 in the Presidents Cup standings for the International Team and is the top-rated South African in the OWGR, meaning he's on track for the Paris Olympics after narrowly missing out on Tokyo three years ago.

This week features TEN Umcees! In addition to van Rooyen, Hoge and Merritt, the number of KFT Umcees, as mentioned above, grows to five in Chile. Lastly, the Epson Tour--the women's Korn Ferry Tour equivalent--tees off Friday at the Florida's Natural Charity Classic, and two more Umcees--Kate Smith-Stroh (yes, she got married in the offseason) and Kim Kaufman will figure there.

Edward the Scop

Upper Midwest Connection of the Month for February 2024

 Before I get to my Upper Midwest Connection of the Week post for the batch of events that concluded Monday with the rain-interrupted Cognizant Classic in the Palm Beaches, an Upper Midwest Connection of the Month must be recognized.

Whereas consistency won the day for Erik van Rooyen as to January's plaudits, February focused on high finishes. Van Rooyen, though, was dinged for missing the cut at the Phoenix Open. This opened the door for Tom Hoge, who had finished in the top ten at the weather-shortened Pebble Beach Pro-Am, to seize an Upper Midwest Connection of the Week repeat. Furthermore, although it didn't count towards an UMCOW honour for lack of Umcee competition, Hoge added a second top ten at the Genesis Invitational before taking the Mexico Open off ahead of the Florida Swing.

EVR did finish in the top ten in Mexico, starting with an -8/63 before fading down the stretch. That earned him the weekly honours for the previous batch of events.

But of the seven Umcees playing last week, was Erik able to repeat as Upper Midwest Connection of the Week? Read on.

Memorial Tournament et al. Recap and Weekly Preview

Last week saw some Umcee noise...but not from the places you'd expect. At the Memorial Tournament in the Columbus, Ohio suburb of Dublin...