Golf

Missed cuts. A neck injury. A practice-round nightmare. Then a 65 to open American Express


LA QUINTA, Calif. – Ben An missed five of seven cuts in the fall portion of the season, battled a nagging neck injury earlier this week, and lost so many balls during one of his pre-tournament practice rounds that he needed to borrow golf balls from fellow South Korean native Seong-Yul Noh to play the final few holes.

So, of course, he went out and fired a bogey-free 7-under 65 at PGA West’s Nicklaus TPC Tournament Course in the first round of the American Express.

An, who started on the back nine, rolled in three birdies in a row beginning at the par-5 11th hole. He made his longest putt of the day, an 18-foot birdie putt at the par-3 12th, and said the rest of his birdies were from no more than 3 feet.

An spent his off-season at home taking care of his 11-month son, Sandy, and working on swing changes he started to make in late November with his new instructor, Sean Foley, who used to teach Tiger Woods and Justin Rose.

“Obviously it’s paying off, I’m hitting it a lot better and I’m hitting some good shots and still making some progress out there,” An said. “So yeah, we’re happy where we’re going right now and hopefully it gets better.”

The American Express: Leaderboard

An trails Brandon Hagy, who bogeyed his first hole before rattling off 10 birdies en route to shooting 8-under 64 at the Nicklaus TPC Tournament Course. Hagy was an alternate for the tournament and didn’t get into the field until Jon Rahm withdrew on Monday.

“I’ll have to buy him a bottle of wine or something,” Hagy said.

As he should if he can keep playing like he did on Thursday. Hagy has recorded just one top-10 finish in 76 previous career Tour starts (T5/2017 RBC Canadian Open).

With the exception of Tony Finau, who has some fond memories of playing here and shot 67 on the Stadium Course, the big-name players in the field this week mostly struggled. Brooks Koepka shot even-par 72, Rickie Fowler, who hasn’t recorded a top-10 on Tour since last year’s American Express, birdied the final hole for 73 and tournament host Phil Mickelson struggled to 74 and headed straight for the range. Of the 156-man field, 103 players shot par or better.

All three of those players, along with An and Hagy, head to the tougher Stadium Course on Friday, where Si Woo Kim shot the lowest score in the first round, a 66. A year ago, Kim withdrew after the first round with a back injury after shooting 15-over 87 at the Nicklaus TPC Tournament Course.

When An played his practice round there earlier this week, he dunked six balls in the water.

“I do that more often than you would think,” he said. “I had to borrow like two, three balls for the last three holes. It was my caddie’s fault. He only brought like five balls out there.”

An, 29, has been a steady yet unspectacular performer since turning pro in 2011. He hasn’t won since the 2015 BMW PGA Championship on the European Tour and still considers notching his maiden PGA Tour title his top goal this season.

“Probably same for the last five years, win the tournament and try and play in the Tour Championship, that’s my goal,” said An, who is making his 126th career Tour start.

When asked to explain what’s held him back from tasting victory, An said, “It just shows how tough it is to win out here, so, I’m not too worried about it and if I hit it like today and putt like today then I’m sure I can get a win this year.”



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