Planet Golf — 27 August 2017 by Jim Street
Golf Bag: Garnett wins WinCo title

NORTH PLAINS, Or. — Brice Garnett won the WinCo Foods Portland Open on Sunday to take the Web.com Tour money title and top the 25 PGA Tour qualifiers.

Garnett closed with a 6-under 65 for a four-stroke victory over four players in the regular-season finale. He finished at 18-under 266 on Pumpkin Ridge’s Witch Hollow Course and earned $144,000 to jump from 11th to first on the money list, with $368,761.

Garnett pulled away with birdies on five of the last eight holes in a back-nine 30. He won the Utah Championship last month for his first Web.com Tour title.

David Skinns (64), Sam Ryder (65), Ben Silverman (66) and Abraham Ancer (69) tied for second and each made $52,800. Ryder, Ancer and Silverman had already locked up top-25 finishes on the money list, with Ryder moving from sixth to second with $314,306, Ancer from ninth to third, and Silverman from 14th to 10th. Needing a win Sunday to earn a PGA Tour card, Skinns jumped from 115th to 58th to get a spot in the Web.com Tour Finals, the four-event series that will determine another 25 PGA Tour cards.

No players moved into the top 25. Roberto Diaz took the last PGA Tour card with $157,823, edging Keith Mitchell by $6,379. Diaz closed with a 70 to tie for 43rd at 5 under and earn $2,800. Mitchell, part of a four-way tie for the lead after a third-round 62, had a 70 to drop into a tie for sixth at 13 under — missing out on a card by a stroke.

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Jim Street

Jim’s 40-year sportswriting career started with the San Jose Mercury-News in 1970 and ended on a full-time basis on October 31, 2010 following a 10-year stint with MLB.com. He grew up in Dorris, Calif., several long drives from the nearest golf course. His first tee shot was a week before being inducted into the Army in 1968. Upon his return from Vietnam, where he was a war correspondent for the 9th Infantry Division, Jim took up golf semi-seriously while working for the Mercury-News and covered numerous tournaments, including the U.S. Open in 1982, when Tom Watson made the shot of his life on the 17th hole at Pebble Beach. Jim also covered several Bing Crosby Pro-Am tournaments, the women’s U.S. Open, and other golfing events in the San Francisco area. He has a 17-handicap, made his first and only hole-in-one on March 12, 2018 at Sand Point Country Club in Seattle and witnessed the first round Ken Griffey Jr. ever played – at Arizona State during Spring Training in 1990. Pebble Beach Golf Links, the Kapalua Plantation Course, Pinehurst No. 2, Spyglass Hill, Winged Foot, Torrey Pines, Medinah, Chambers Bay, North Berwick, Gleneagles and Castle Stuart in Scotland, and numerous gems in Hawaii are among the courses he has had the pleasure of playing. Hitting the ball down the middle of the fairway is not a strong part of Jim’s game, but he is known (in his own mind) as the best putter not on tour. Most of Jim’s writing career was spent covering Major League Baseball, a tenure that started with the Oakland Athletics, who won 101 games in 1971, and ended with the Seattle Mariners, who lost 101 games in 2010. Symmetry is a wonderful thing. He currently lives in Seattle and has an 8-year-old grandson, Andrew, who is the club's current junior champion at his home course (Oakmont CC) in Glendale, Calif.

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