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    Saturday, April 27, 2024

    Rookies are the rage at PGA Tour opener

    Honolulu - Tim Clark's timing could not have been worse.

    He played in the last group, closed with a 63 and still finished four shots behind. He made seven birdies over the last 11 holes - including four straight at the end - and made up only one shot on the leader. The 72-hole record at the Sony Open had stood for 12 years. Clark beat it by one shot and still had to settle for second place.

    All because of a rookie.

    "Yeah, I'm thinking about that," Clark with a grin. "They should maybe make these guys play somewhere else for a little bit more."

    Rookies were all the rage in the first full-field event of the year on the PGA Tour, starting with Russell Henley, who made a rookie debut like no other. The 23-year-old from Georgia set or tied four records at the Sony Open, and when he closed the victory with a fifth straight birdie on the 18th, his 24-under 256 was the second-lowest score at a 72-hole tournament in PGA Tour history.

    It even impressed Johnny Miller, who called it "a performance that makes you think this guy might be the next really, really top player."

    Henley had some company along the shores of Oahu.

    Scott Langley began his rookie season on tour by making more than 190 feet of putts in the first round for a 62, which tied the tournament record. There had not been an opening round that low at Waialae since 1997. Langley also shares the 54-hole record at the Sony Open (17-under 193) with Henley.

    And if not for Clark making a 7-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole Saturday, another rookie - Scott Gardiner of Australia - would have joined them in the final group.

    Langley fell back with a bogey on the opening hole and three birdie chances from 5 feet that he failed to convert on the front nine. The left-hander from St. Louis kept within two shots at the turn, and even after he fell back with three bogeys late in the round, he finished with two birdies that earned him a tie for third with Charles Howell III.

    "The more and more you can put yourself in this position, the better off you're going to be," said Langley, who won an NCAA title at Illinois. "I've never been in the final group, and I got to play in it on Saturday and Sunday. That experience is invaluable, and the fact that I got in my first event is just awesome."

    It's even better for Henley.

    He now is exempt on tour through the 2015 season. His play on the Web.com Tour last year - two wins, No. 3 on the money list - allowed him to move to No. 50 in the world ranking. After one week in his rookie season, he is likely to get into all four World Golf Championships, the PGA Championship, The Players Championship and the one tournament that he tried not to think about Sunday - the Masters.

    "It's been my goal to make it to the Masters my whole life," he said.

    Henley is from Macon, Ga., and used to go to the Masters each April with the twin sons of a man who had tickets.

    "I remember we would walk up to the ropes and we'd touch the grass with our hands," Henley said. "I remember seeing these rolling hills of green and seeing the guys hit the shots and just being so amazed at the whole experience. The smell, the environment. And being so close to home, it was just the biggest deal for me to get to go."

    It's easy to get caught up in the rookies after just one week, and Henley knows that from experience.

    He remembers waking up in Bogota, Colombia, for the opening event of the Web.com Tour, ready to rush into the first of 26 tournaments over eight months, looking at that first round in February like the last round in October. He shot 79-71 and missed the cut.

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