In the midst of the busy early stretch of the season — especially off the back of Tiger Woods’ long-awaited PGA Tour comeback at the Genesis Open last week — the Honda Classic feels like a chance to grab a quick breath. Not just for golf fans, but for players, too.

Billy Horschel raced into the early Honda Classic lead with an opening five-under round of 65. It was a marked shift from his form coming into the event, which featured two missed cuts, a T-30 and a T-32 in his last four starts. The issue, Horschel explained earlier in the week, lay in his swing.

Knowing two of his season’s starts would feature newly increased purses, Horschel and his coach Todd Anderson went to work on his swing in the off-season, trying to find something a little extra. Noticing some inconsistencies in his accuracy, the pair worked on trying to keep Horschel’s upper body more centred at the top of his backswing by altering his set-up and combat his tendency of moving his upper body off the ball slightly.

But Horschel has not been loving the early returns and not feeling comfortable, so the Honda Classic presented the first lower-stakes opportunity to change strategies. They tried a different approach that helped his upper body stay more central in a more comfortable way.

“What Todd Anderson and I did on Monday going back to some of the old stuff felt really natural right away,” he said after his first round. “I’ve got to do golf swing maintenance, but I have to be smart about it.”

There’s plenty of golf left to play this season, of course, and in golf’s newfound era of elevating certain events over others to grab maximum eyeballs, it’d be ironic if the game-changing moment for a player like Horschel came on one of its lower profile events.

Drive for show…

Joseph Bramlett prepares to hit his second shot on the eighth hole during the first round of the Honda Classic. Sam Greenwood

Joseph Bramlett has long been one of those “if only he could figure out X part of his game” guys. Off the tee, Bramlett has some wicked speed — he finished seventh on the PGA Tour in driving distance last season, and fifth in overall ball speed — yet he actually lost more than half a stroke with his driver. Translation: He hits the ball far, but everywhere.
Bramlett hit almost 60 per cent of his fairways during his first round, so it’s no surprise to see him co-leading with Horschel at five-under. It goes to show just how high the ceiling is for bombers with raw speed like Bramlett, and how indispensible it is rein it in.

A boring one-under round

Speaking of keeping your ball in the fairway and playing steady golf, Aaron Wise registered a crazy scorecard during his first round. The card reads one-under, but the round featured four water balls, a hole-out from the fairway for eagle, and zero two putts.

Quantity and quality

Sungjae Im. Eakin Howard

Finally, while most of golf’s top players are taking the week off before Bay Hill and the Players Championship rolls around, workhorse Sungjae Im is teeing it up at the Honda. Im has played a whopping 122 PGA Tour events over his past four seasons, and the Honda marks his 10th start already this season.
But more important than the quantity is the quality. After a T-4 and T-6 in the Farmers Insurance Open and WM Phoenix Open, respectively, his three-under 67 on Thursday leaves him T-7 heading into the second round. It’s noteworthy early season form for a man who tends to play well at the year’s first major coming up in April.