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Collin Morikawa change is more than numbers on a score card.
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Furintown, without. – Collin Morikawa needed a change. Something felt out. Although I ask the winner twice great what he was, and he cannot articulate it completely.
Despite the Morikawa’s need for a vibe shift led it Part of ways with caddy jj Jakovac for a long time and hire Joe Greiner to replace it.
“Hard hard because you might ask a caddy, and they say they will do it, do it, but you don’t really know until you are there,” Morikawa said on Thursday after his first round with Greiner in the bag in the championship in the Truist Philadelphia Cricket Club. “What’s what is great. When I talked to Joe, is we always ready to learn, how to get better? I think (JJ) is still amazing in what he does, but always pushing borders like, what can we do better tomorrow? How do we continue to do so. future. ”
Morikawa has played good golf this season. He was a contestant in Sentry and Arnold Palmer Invitational. But the good is not good enough when you are a player with Morikawa’s resume and talent.
“Look, everything new will be interesting, and it will be a curve of learning, but at the end of the day, I have to take full responsibility for now how I are describing shots, how we are passing it,” Morikawa said after posting a seven sub-63 in round 1. “It is not as simple as 150.
“I just have to take responsibility for what I’m doing there.”
This may seem familiar.
Eight years ago, another senior player broke up with his veteran caddy after years of success, hoping for a spark for similar reason.
It was 2017, and Rory Mcilroy had just been separated with Caddy JP with a long time Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald had been Mcilroy’s Kadi since 2008. The pair won four degrees together and scored 22 wins all over the world. Mcilroy spent 95 weeks like the No.1 world with Fitzgerald in the bag.
Then, a difference was needed. Sign in Harry Diamond.
“I’ve set this line there for a while I am trying to get ownership of my game a little more and trying to take more responsibility,” Mcilroy said in WGC-Bridgestone Invitational after split with Fitzgerald in 2017. “I have been walking with my garden book this week and trying more.
“This was the decision I reached at the end,” Mcilroy continued later. “I was becoming very difficult for him in the Golf Course and I didn’t want to handle it. I thank JP for everything, he knows how much I think of it and what we’ve got together, but at the end of the day it was a change I had to make. myself, making a wrong decision than becoming a wrong decision than making a wrong decision.
Mcilroy ended up in a tie to the fifth during his first diamond event in the bag. Their first victory together did not come until next March at Arnold Palmer Invitational 2018. Since then, Mcilroy and Diamond have won 21 times more in the world, including 2025 masterswhere the value of the diamond was visible while Mcilroy went to a play off with Justin Rose.
“After the scoring, Harry and I was walking in the Golf cart to bring us back to 18, and he said to me,” Well, Paul, we would have received this Monday morning. “,” Mcilroy said after finishing his Grand Slam career. “I’m like,” Yes, we would absolutely have. “That was an easy reset.
Morikawa has not won since the Zozo 2023 championship. He had cracks last year in Masters, PGA Championship, Memorial and Genesis Scottish Open. Without a victory. Some other close losses led to a search for a new feeling in the bag.
There is a debate among the golf fans for how influential a caddy has in the outcome of an Elite player. Morikawa believes that a good caddy can save it “a small piece of shooting” over a week, which may be the difference between victory and a five-five end.
For Morikawa, the Caddy Switch will enable him to return to the way he played the game. It’s about more than just numbers on a result card, as was Mcilroy’s.
“A few weeks ago, I could have grown up and hit a sharp wedge,” Morikawa said. “Where today I am really trying to describe the goal in so much detail, and so I have always played. It is simply turning to it.”
There may be freedom in returning or rediscovering something that was once a formative part of the person and the player you become.
Morikawa’s search to rediscover him led him to Greiner, a desire to take ownership of his game, and what he hopes is the evolution he has tried to find.
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Seduce
Golfit.com editor
Josh Schrock is a writer and reporter for Golf.com. Before entering Golf, Josh was the interior of Chicago Bears for the NBC Sports Chicago. He previously covered 49ers and Warriors for NBC Sports Bay Area. A native Oregonian and Uo alum, seduces and spends his free time walking with his wife and dog, thinking about how the ducks will break his heart again, and trying to become half a professor into pieces. A true romantic for golf, Josh will never stop trying to break 90 and will never lose the confidence that Rory Mcilroy’s main drought will end (updated: he did it). Josh Schrock can be reached in Josho.schrock@golf.com.