Ace boosts Kirk to lead at start of FedEx playoffs
MEMPHIS—Chris Kirk aced the par-3 14th hole on his way to grabbing a one-stroke lead after Thursday’s first round of the PGA St. Jude’s Championship.
The 39-year-old American, seeking his seventh PGA triumph, fired a six-under par 64 at TPC Southwind to get his bid off to a strong start in the FedEx Cup playoff opener.
Sharing second after shooting 65s were Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama—playing without his regular caddie and coach after a London restaurant robbery—plus Canada’s Taylor Pendrith and France’s Matthieu Pavon.
On a hot day, Kirk had the most sizzling shot of all when he played a 6-iron with a high draw from 205 yards at 14 that landed 10 feet right of the flagstick, then bounced and rolled into the hole.
“I was just trying to hit it left of the hole and make a three,” Kirk said. “Didn’t quite come off where I was looking. I was like, ‘Oh my God.’
“Just trying to hit it in the middle of the green. I was just swinging really good and the ball sensed it, just found its way in the right direction.”
The hole-in-one, the fourth of Kirk’s PGA career, gave him a three-stroke lead but a closing bogey brought him back near the pack.
Kirk, the 2014 playoff runner-up, captured the PGA season-opening tournament of champions in Hawaii after winning last year’s Honda Classic.
No coach, no problem
Matsuyama, the 2021 Masters champion, was robbed in London on a stopover on his way to the United States from the Paris Olympics, where he took the bronze medal.
While Matsuyama only lost his wallet, his caddie, Shota Hayato, and coach, Mikhito Kuromiya, lost their passports and visas and returned to Japan in hopes of getting new paperwork and returning to Matsuyama before the playoffs end in two weeks at East Lake in Atlanta.
“It was an unfortunate situation,” Matsuyama said. “Luckily I only lost my wallet … we’re trying hard now to get their visas back in line.
“We’re pushing hard, looking toward East Lake. Shota will make it, I think, but my coach probably won’t.”
The robbery has not thrown off Matsuyama, who says, “I’ve forgotten it completely” and notes he talks by phone to his coach every night.
“We didn’t even know it happened,” he said. “We were just having a friendly dinner and Shota was the first one—hey, where’s my bag? Of course it was frustrating, but we really didn’t know it happened. It was just kind of all of a sudden. We had already paid the check.”
Taiga Tabuchi, the regular bagman for Ryo Hisatsune, is Matsuyama’s caddy this week.
AFP is one of the world's three major news agencies, and the only European one. Its mission is to provide rapid, comprehensive, impartial and verified coverage of the news and issues that shape our daily lives.