Bryant seeks 3rd straight Regions Charity win

HOOVER, Ala.(AP) Brad Bryant suspects there's no better place to fix his game than this tournament. He's ready to go, heavy rain and all.

Bryant has won the Champions Tour's Regions Charity Classic the past two years since the event moved to the Robert Trent Jones Trail course from across town. He has three second-place finishes but no wins in 10 events on the year.

"I have been struggling some with my game,'' he said Thursday, a day before play begins at soggy Ross Bridge course in suburban Birmingham. "My game wasn't in great shape last year when I arrived here, but I won so I'm hoping good things happen again this year. I'm very happy to be back here at this golf course. I like this course.''

And with good reason. Bryant topped R.W. Eaks with a birdie on the third hole of a playoff to successfully defend his title in 2007 and become the event's first two-time winner. It had been the only Champions Tour event played at least 15 years without a repeat winner.

Bryant & Co. will have to contend with officials to push back Friday's starting time, with a two-tee start on Nos. 1 and 10. Tournament pro-ams were rained out.

"The course is in great shape, but I'm not sure what the rain will do to it,'' Bryant said. "We know the course is going to play really, really long. That could be to some guys' advantage - the players who hit it high and long.''

Nine players will make their Regions Classic debuts, including points leader Bernhard Langer, who has already won twice. The other newcomers include Jeff Sluman, who won the 1988 PGA championship, and former British Open and Masters winner Sandy Lyle.

The winner of the $1.7 million tournament gets $255,000


Comments

No Comments Found.

How would you rate the quality of this article?
Rating: * Poor Excellent
Your Name:
Your Email:
Your Comment: *
Verification * img

Please copy the characters from the image above into the text field below. Doing this helps us prevent automated submissions.
 

Headlines

Dan Rooney loves the game of golf. He loves his country a little more. And by combining the two loves, he’s making a difference for those who have served our country.  
Bob Tway could easily be part of the FedEx Cup's first playoff tournament, The Barclays, but the 49-year-old has different priorities this week. Instead of attempting to secure his PGA Tour card for 2009, Tway is carrying the bag of 20-year-old son Kevin at this week's U.S. Amateur Championship. 
The PGA Championship is notable for a number of things, not the least of which is its position in golf's  major championships lineup. It is the final act, the cleanup hitter, “Glory's Last Shot.” But the most astounding piece of the PGA's personality, if you are a European, is its elusiveness. The count is at 78 now, 78 years since a European-born player won the tournament. Only the Chicago Cubs, whose last world championship came in 1908, have known such frustration.

The tournament within the tournament can’t be ignored this week, much as some people try hard to do just that. The 90th PGA Championship might be the last shot at glory for those yearning to win a major this year, but it’s also a last chance for some U.S. players to lock up a Ryder Cup spot. The eight automatic bids under the new points system instituted by the PGA of America and captain Paul Azinger will be determined Sunday. Azinger then has three more weeks to select four men for wild-card positions, up from the traditional two picks.

Enough, already. We get the point. Actually, we got the point four months and 3,762 references ago, because that’s about how many times we have been subjected to this nonsense about something Ben Hogan may have said 57 years ago.
Michelle Wie was on the verge of something big last week at the LPGA State Farm Classic — her first professional win. But a rules infraction got her DQ'd on Saturday. Now she'll go after that first win on the PGA Tour, and likely won't forget to sign her card.  
From Kenny Perry to John Daly to Colin Montgomerie, from the sublime to the colorful. This is what makes the game so good. 
The wind is often going to be brutal, so deal with it. The courses are not as pristine and manicured as in the United States, so get over. This is the British Open and, whether they like it or not, the conditions are often the same for everyone. Move on if you don't like it.  
Say what you will about The Open Championship, but even without you know who in the field — and, no, not Kenny Perry — this is still a revered championship with a legacy that runs further back than when Tiger Woods made his first appearance. 
Anthony Kim was a crossroads. He could either continue down the road of laziness and late night carousing or he could shape up and start living up to his potential. He chose the latter — and he’s having way more fun.