Friday, May 24, 2013
FAIRFIELD-SUISUN, CALIFORNIA
99 CENTS

Langley debuts with 62, leads PGA Sony Open by 1 shot

Scott Langley

Scott Langley putts on the 11th green during the first round of the Sony Open golf tournament, Thursday, Jan. 10, 2013, in Honolulu. (AP Photo/Marco Garcia)

HONOLULU — Scott Langley made a rookie debut on the PGA Tour he won’t soon forget.

Russell Henley wasn’t too shabby, either.

Langley thrived on a penetrating ball flight and a pure putting stroke Thursday for an 8-under 62, giving him a one-shot lead over Henley in the first round of the Sony Open. Henley played in the same group as Langley, and they put on quite a show at Waialae Country Club.

Henley made five birdies on the back nine, holing 15-footers with confidence. But the Georgia grad couldn’t keep on the par-5 18th hole when his chip from short of the green came out hot and he had to settle for a two-putt par from 30 feet.

“I’m a young guy, but I’m old enough to know that we have a lot of golf left. We’ve barely started, and I’m excited about the next few days,” Langley said.

Langley, a former NCAA champion from Illinois, played bogey-free in a steady wind — nowhere near the gusts of Kapalua last week — and made a couple of long putts.

He holed from 55 feet across the green for eagle on the par-5 ninth, and then took the outright lead on the 16th when a fairway bunker shot landed on the front part of the green, and he rapped in a 30-footer for birdie.

His final birdie came on the 18th with a tough flop shot over a bunker that settled about 6 feet away. He made that for birdie, just like he made putts from similar length for par to keep his round intact.

Scott Piercy had a 64 in the morning, and Tim Clark matched that in the afternoon.

Dustin Johnson, trying to become the first player in 10 years to sweep the Hawaii swing after his win last week at windy Kapalua, finished with a pair of bogeys for a 70.

Langley was not entirely new to big-time golf. He qualified for two U.S. Opens and tied for low amateur — with Henley, no less — at Pebble Beach in 2010.

But considering the nerves he felt on the first tee, and going around this tight course without a bogey, he didn’t hesitate to call this round his best ever as a pro.

Adding to the dream day was being alongside Henley, one of his closest friends.

Henley also has a strong pedigree, having won on the Nationwide Tour as an amateur and twice more last year to earn his card.

As they walked up the 16th fairway late in the afternoon, the sun starting to slide toward the Pacific horizon and the skinny palms swaying in the wind, they couldn’t help but think back to one year ago.

They were playing in a Hooters Tour event in Florida, Henley missing the cut and Langley barely making it.

“We were on the range trying to help each other find it,” Langley said. “We were just walking up 16. You could see the ocean behind, PGA Tour signs everywhere. We looked at each other and realized this is pretty cool. To look back one year ago and to know that we weren’t here … we were in a far different place.”

And now they’re the top names on the leaderboard after one round of the first full-field tournament of the year.

They also had company.

Morgan Hoffman, another rookie, opened with a 66 in the morning. Ben Kohles, who turned pro last summer and won his first two starts on the Web.com Tour, had a 67.

There was room for veterans, too.

Piercy made it look like a breeze, especially compared with the vicious gusts last week at the Tournament of Champions that didn’t start until Monday and ended 29 hours later on Tuesday. In a more gentle breeze, and on more traditional greens of Waialae, he played bogey-free and had a pair of two-putt birdies from inside 12 feet for a 66.

Clark was the runner-up at the Sony Open two years ago, the last time he was fully healthy. He suffered a mysterious elbow injury that effectively knocked him out for a year. He showed up with minimal expectations at the first tournament of the year for him, and was pleasantly surprised to get around in a bogey-free 64.

“It’s going to be an exciting year for me because I do feel like I’m healthy again and can play a full schedule,” Clark said. “I’m obviously doing a lot better than I was last year.”

But even Clark couldn’t help but notice the names on the leaderboard, mainly because he didn’t know who they were. There’s always a few rookies to get off to a quick start at the Sony Open. It was rare to see them leading, and with such low scores.

There was a comfort level in Langley’s group, however. He and Henley became fast friends after leaving Pebble Beach as low amateurs and flying to Northern Ireland together for the Palmer Cup. Also in their group was Luke Guthrie, who was Langley’s roommate at Illinois.

“I think there was a lot of nerves for me the first few holes and I think playing with Scotty and Luke was huge for me, and watching them play well kind of gave me a goal to try to keep up with them, so it was definitely fun feeding off them,” Henley said.

One group failed to finish before darkness. Seventy players in the 144-man field broke par, a group included a pair from the Champions Tour. Russ Cochran, who won the Senior British Open in 2011, had a 68 and Fred Funk was at 70.

Piercy, the Canadian Open champion, was among 20 players who started their season last week on Maui, even though it took until the fourth day — when the Tournament of Champions was supposed to end — that the tournament actually began.

Then, he was at the course Wednesday for more than eight hours, mostly on the putting greens. “Seven three-putts and a four-putt last week,” he said before leaving.

No two courses are more different in consecutive weeks on the PGA Tour than these two — the Plantation Course at Kapalua build on the side of a mountain, with dramatic changes in elevation and fairways some 80 yards wide, the other built along the shores of Oahu, with tight fairways that wind through skinny palms.

And then there was the wind.

“The wind wasn’t even blowing today compared to last week,” Piercy said. “I just played solid today, hit it in a lot of fairways, hit a lot of greens, made two fairly key putts and took care of the par 5s.”

The Associated Press

The Associated Press

LEAVE A COMMENT

Discussion | No comments

The Daily Republic does not necessarily condone the comments here, nor does it review every post. Read our full policy

.

Solano News

Solano Repertory tackles love, Maine style

By Amy Maginnis-Honey | From Page: B1

 
Six Flags debuts ‘Cirque Dream Splashtastic’

By Amy Maginnis-Honey | From Page: B1

 
Vacaville Christian Schools send off kindergartners

By Ian Thompson | From Page: A1 | Gallery

Graduates take center stage at Solano College

By Susan Winlow | From Page: A1 | Gallery

 
Health exchange details emerging for Solano

By Barry Eberling | From Page: A1

Local artist chosen for Western States Horse Expo art show

By Amy Maginnis-Honey | From Page: B2

 
Artys will be awarded Sept. 8

By Amy Maginnis-Honey | From Page: B2

 
“Mini Film Festival’ June 29 in Benicia

By Amy Maginnis-Honey | From Page: B2

Music festivals remembered . . . sort of

By Tony Wade | From Page: A2

 
Plan promotes walking to school

By Barry Eberling | From Page: A3

District names new assistant superintendent

By Danny Bernardini | From Page: A3

 
Pink fire truck ‘Christine’ ready to hit the road in Solano County

By Amy Maginnis-Honey | From Page: A3 | Gallery

Travis district board to review superintendent

By Danny Bernardini | From Page: A4

 
Solano County celebrates EMS Week at NorthBay

By John Glidden | From Page: A4 | Gallery

Three-alarm fire burns old water treatment area

By Amy Maginnis-Honey | From Page: A5 | Gallery

 
Prosecution starts in child abuse case

By Jess Sullivan | From Page: A5

Accused Fairfield burglar in court

By Jess Sullivan | From Page: A5

 
Our Music Year No. 144: Sigur Rós, ‘Valtari’

By Nick DeCicco | From Page: B5

Weather for Friday, May 24, 2013

By Daily Republic staff | From Page: B12

 
.

US / World

Health reform plans, pricing released in Calif.

By The Associated Press | From Page: A1, 1 Comment

 
Obama sees narrower terror threat, defends drones

By The Associated Press | From Page: A1 | Gallery

Calif. gov cites safety in possible bridge delay

By The Associated Press | From Page: A5

 
No fatalities in I-5 bridge collapse in NW Wash.

By The Associated Press | From Page: A5, 2 Comments

5.7-magnitude earthquake shakes Northern California

By The Associated Press | From Page: A5

 
Distraught mom becomes face of Oklahoma storm

By The Associated Press | From Page: A6 | Gallery

Report: Nation’s kids need to get more physical

By The Associated Press | From Page: A6 | Gallery

 
Kids, teachers from devastated school reunite

By The Associated Press | From Page: A6

IRS replaces official in tea party controversy

By The Associated Press | From Page: A6

 
Jurors deadlock on Jodi Arias penalty; retrial set

By The Associated Press | From Page: A6

Latest deadly tornado tests Oklahoma town’s mettle

By The Associated Press | From Page: A6, 1 Comment

 
Israel says Iran unaffected by world pressure

By The Associated Press | From Page: A10

Clashes in Lebanon feed fear of Syria spillover

By The Associated Press | From Page: A10

 
Military calls UK attack victim a model soldier

By The Associated Press | From Page: A10 | Gallery

Q&A: What is known about London attack

By The Associated Press | From Page: A10

 
Muslim hard-liners ID suspect in London attack

By The Associated Press | From Page: A10 | Gallery

Boy Scouts approve plan to accept openly gay boys

By The Associated Press | From Page: A12, 5 Comments | Gallery

 
.

Opinion

 
Scandals reminds us civil rights movement still important

By Letter to the Editor | From Page: A11

Networks serving up schlock

By Maureen Dowd | From Page: A11

 
Editorial Cartoon for May 24, 2013

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A11

Is Bay Bridge debacle a harbinger?

By Dan Walters | From Page: A11

 
In Iran’s presidential race, reformers get cut

By Scripps Howard News Service | From Page: A11

.

Living

Today in History for May 24, 2013

By The Associated Press | From Page: A2

 
Community calendar Friday, May 24, 2013

By John Glidden | From Page: A2

Horoscopes for May 24, 2013

By Holiday Mathis | From Page: A9

 
My daughter loves her teaching job but she’s being bullied by other teachers

By Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar | From Page: A9

.

Entertainment

Week in preview May 24 – 30, 2013

By John Glidden | From Page: B1

 
Lisa Ling discusses new motherhood, baby Jett

By The Associated Press | From Page: B2 | Gallery

Review: ‘Fast & Furious 6′ is more of everything

By The Associated Press | From Page: B3

 
Review: ‘Hangover’ trilogy ends on a dark note

By Christy Lemire | From Page: B3

Entertainment calendar May 24, 2013

By Amy Maginnis-Honey | From Page: B4

 
6 Wyeth paintings fetch $2M at NYC auction

By The Associated Press | From Page: B5 | Gallery

Rolling Stones exhibit opening in Cleveland

By The Associated Press | From Page: B6 | Gallery

 
TVGrid

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B6

.

Sports

Ringle leads Lee to NAIA softball nationals

By Paul Farmer | From Page: B7

 
Quick’s LA Kings put Sharks on brink with 3-0 win

By The Associated Press | From Page: B7

Francona manages at Fenway for 1st time since 2011

By The Associated Press | From Page: B7

 
Affeldt has grown to love open-minded Bay Area

By The Associated Press | From Page: B7

 
Stanford’s Appel prepares for draft a second time

By The Associated Press | From Page: B8

Kingston leads BMW PGA Championship

By The Associated Press | From Page: B8

 
Colonial member Palmer has 1st-round lead with 62

By The Associated Press | From Page: B8

Jay Haas, Duffy Waldorf top Senior PGA leaderboard

By The Associated Press | From Page: B8

 
LPGA to use as much of flooded course as it can

By The Associated Press | From Page: B8

Coded goal: RG3 still aiming for Redskins’ opener

By The Associated Press | From Page: B8

 
Sports on TV for Friday, May 24, 2013

By Daily Republic staff | From Page: B9

Local sports for Friday, May 24, 2013

By Daily Republic staff | From Page: B9

 
Krzyzewski returning to coach USA Basketball

By The Associated Press | From Page: B10

James, Bryant voted to All-NBA first team

By The Associated Press | From Page: B10

 
Record-tying 4 women in the field for Indy 500

By The Associated Press | From Page: B10

Nadal favored, but not seeded No. 1 at French Open

By The Associated Press | From Page: B10

 
Interview: Rogge praises wrestling’s changes

By The Associated Press | From Page: B10

.

Business

Newest Ford C-Max comes with a plug

By Ann M. Job | From Page: C1

 
New Chevy Sonic is RS hatchback

By The Associated Press | From Page: C2

Tesla Model S gets Consumer Reports’ top score

By The Associated Press | From Page: C2

 
New rules for labeling meat go into effect in US

By The Associated Press | From Page: B11

Applications for US unemployment aid fall to 340K

By The Associated Press | From Page: B11

 
Wyden: FracFocus a ‘constructive’ tool on drilling

By The Associated Press | From Page: B11

Why worry? Less aid by Fed would point to recovery

By The Associated Press | From Page: B11

 
Procter & Gamble brings back A.G. Lafley as CEO

By The Associated Press | From Page: B11

87-year-old woman loses to Trump in civil case

By The Associated Press | From Page: B11

 
Gap back in style as 1Q profit jumps 43 percent

By The Associated Press | From Page: B11

Stocks edge lower as investors reassess Fed fears

By The Associated Press | From Page: B11

 
.

Obituaries

Marcius ‘Ed’ Gates

By John Glidden | From Page: A4

 
Charles E. Brooks Jr.

By John Glidden | From Page: A4

Maurice E. Epps

By John Glidden | From Page: A4, 2 Comments

 
Jeffrey E. Woodhouse

By John Glidden | From Page: A4, 1 Comment

.

Comics

Blondie

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A8

 
Pickles

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A8

Frank and Ernest

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A8

 
Beetle Bailey

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A8

B.C.

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A8

 
Rose is Rose

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A8

Baldo

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A8

 
Get Fuzzy

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A8

Zits

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A8

 
For Better or Worse

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A8

Wizard of Id

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A8

 
Sally Forth

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A8

Fort Knox

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A8

 
Dilbert

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A8

Garfield

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A8

 
Peanuts

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A8

Cryptoquote

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A9

 
Crossword

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A9

Bridge

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A9

 
Word Sleuth

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A9

Sudoku

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A9