How Californians Have Thrived In Home PGA Tour Events

Maybe it’s being comfortable on Poa annua greens. Or maybe it’s just being close to home and feeding off the support of hometown fans. But it’s evident that native Californians thrive in their home state.

Consider this: In the last three seasons, the players with the best cumulative score to par in California events on the PGA Tour are Maverick McNealy and Patrick Cantlay. Each is a cumulative 99 under after the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines.

McNealy grew up in Northern California and attended Stanford University. Cantlay grew up in Southern California and attended UCLA. Although McNealy is still looking for his first Tour win, Cantlay has six – including the 2020 Zozo Championship at Sherwood Country Club. And, of course, he’s the defending FedExCup champion.

There’s just one tournament left in the West Coast swing in February as of writing – the Genesis Invitational. Both players will be pushing hard on courses they love.

“I love California golf, and this is the epitome of California golf,” Cantlay said in the build-up to the event at Pebble Beach. “So I think it’s great and I definitely feel at home. … Whenever I’m on Poa annua greens at a course like Pebble Beach, it feels like I’ve played courses like that my whole life.”

Four of McNealy’s six top-10 finishes on Tour have come in the Golden State, including a runner-up at Pebble Beach last year to Floridian Daniel Berger. Even more to the point – those four top-10s have come in 18 starts in California; the other two top-10s have come in 56 starts in non-California events.

In addition, McNealy’s greens in regulation percentage is four points higher in California than his overall average.

Of course, there are other non-Californians who seem to thrive on the West Coast, including Spain’s Jon Rahm and Australia’s Jason Day, who were both in contention at Torrey Pines. Rahm is a collective 98 under in California the past three seasons; Day has 11 top-5 finishes in 23 career starts in the Golden State since 2014, the most of any player during that span, according to Ray.

But generally, it’s a Cali thing – which was reinforced in the opening event of this season when Max Homa (a Burbank, California native) won the Fortinet Championship in Napa at Silverado. Homa, by the way, is a collective 84 under in the last three seasons in California.

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