I’m checking in from Las Vegas, taking three weeks off after playing seven out of nine weeks to start the year. It was definitely a whirlwind of ups and downs, and some of the lowest lows and highest highs I’ve encountered as a professional. If you had told me that I would have only one finish inside the top 45 and was going to miss four cuts, I would have anticipated a disastrous first quarter. However, if you had told me that I would be leaving Florida with nearly 500 FedEx Cup points, I would have thought it was wildly successful. Luckily for me, the PGA Tour rewards high finishes, and I did just that at the AT&T Pebble Beach.
The season started out very auspiciously, as on the Nicklaus Tournament course at PGA West, I began my first seven holes of the season 6 under par, including an eagle on the 5th hole with an 8i from 177yds. After that, I cooled substantially, and really struggled on the difficult Stadium course, finishing last of those who had made the cut. This was a first in my professional career as well!
The following week at Torrey Pines, I battled with another bout of a cold putter, and missed the cut there by a few shots as well.
After a week off in Las Vegas, I returned to Pebble Beach where I had my previous best ever finish on the PGA Tour, an exciting t5th after a great 68 in the wind on Sunday. I got off to a very solid start, and was hanging around the top 10 all week despite, again, a quiet week with the putter. However, after a very soft bogey on the opening hole on Sunday, I adopted a much more aggressive mindset. I didn’t take on undue risk, but played more aggressively to the spots I wanted to. This spring boarded me to birdie the second, sixth, and seventh holes. After making the turn, I was finally rewarded with the hot 9 holes of putting I was waiting for, making birdies on 11, 12, 13, and 15. And the two shots I hit on the 18th hole to lead to a near-eagle and 2putt birdie were two of the best I’ve hit under pressure in my life. While I fell two shots short of the win, the solo second-place finish and back-nine 31 vaulted me inside the top 30 in the FedEx Cup for the first time ever.
However, I think the real reason my putter heated up was because I finally paid my caddy Travis the $20 I owed him. Back story, we always bet a few dollars here and there during practice rounds and pro-ams to keep me engaged. I owe him $3 for every bogey, and he owes me $2 for every birdie. Two in a row doubles, three triples,etc. And when either of us reaches $20 of debt, we have to pay the other. Long story short, I got fleeced in the practice round on Wednesday, and ended up owing Travis $21. The week got going quickly, and our bets were placed on the back burner for now.
But walking down the hill to the famous seventh green at Pebble on Sunday, I was lamenting how putts just didn’t seem to want to drop in for me. I thought I needed something to change my fortune. So on that two minute walk, I calculated how much I owed Travis from the practice round, and realized I owed him a fresh $20 bill ASAP. He put the bag down by the green, I reached into the bag and shoved a fresh $20 into his caddie bib. I proceeded to drill a 35 foot birdie putt into the back of the hole at firm speed, smiled, and told Travis that I was never going to play golf owing him money again.
In all seriousness, I was so excited to perform under pressure on Sunday the way I did, and learned so much about how to manage my own tendencies and use the adrenaline and excitement to my advantage coming down the stretch. In the following highlights link, you tell by the big smile on my face, I was having a blast.
Maverick McNealy’s Round 4 Highlights from AT&T Pebble Beach
The rest of the weeks were largely forgettable from a golf standpoint- I missed a 20 footer on the last hole in Los Angeles to miss the cut by one shot, finished 46th at Bay Hill, and missed the cut by a lot at both Players and Honda. I continued to struggle with the putter, and adding poor iron play to the mix did not help my cause. The bright spot was after a disastrous start on my first 8 holes at Honda, I played the remaining 28 holes in 3 under par (which would have placed me inside the top 20). One of the highlights of the Players Championship week was to see the new PGA Tour Headquarters building in Ponte Vedra–it was only a few hundred yards from the famous island green! It is one of the coolest office buildings I have ever seen, and a beautiful home for the FedEx Cup!
I am now in the middle of three weeks off before I head to Hilton Head and New Orleans for Zurich. I am spending a lot of time in the gym at Greathouse Physical Therapy, taking advantage of my off time to “prehab” different areas of my body and build strength and athleticism. I am also spending a lot of time on my favorite “putting carpet”, the ugly plaid rug that I have putted on since high school to work on alignment and roll, and have seen huge improvements in my putting stroke.
Looking forward, I am very excited to play Hilton Head (which will be different this year over seeded versus entirely Bermuda), and even more-so, playing the Zurich Classic with my partner and roommate Joseph Bramlett. For those that don’t know, the Zurich is a team event that combines alternate shot and best ball formats, and Team Mav and Bram is going to have a great week!
What we’ve been working on at Curriki:
Our main focuses remain building upon our existing product CurrikiStudio, and even more importantly raising awareness of and assisting with its integration into groups that can use it. Over 5,000 organizations are now using CurrikiStudio, headlined by our recently launched programs with the PGA Tour, LA Opera, Teach for America, social-emotional learning startup Vivensity, civics curriculum Civicate, and Arizona State University. There are also three states with which Curriki is also working on implementations, giving us the potential reach of over 1M students next year.
On the product side, CurrikiStudio has released new functionality to allow teams of educators to collaborate on building interactive playlists, which was the most requested feature since launch. We are also actively building new features like virtual whiteboards, video conferencing, and peer-to-peer chat.
Due to Curriki’s growth and unique approach to education innovation, Larry Ellison donated $5M to continue to expand our mission and impact on learning. Thank you all for your generous contributions to Birdies for Education – it is commitment from this community that is vital to the ongoing efforts of Curriki’s mission.
It is so fun for me to know that $266 is being pledged every birdie I make, and I can’t wait to make some more.
Please continue to pass the BirdiesForEducation site along to your family, friends, and anyone else interested in golf and education– just $1 per birdie means the world to us, and is a fun way to follow along with our PGA Tour season!
Thanks again, Maverick