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Rickie Fowler gets back on track to start new season in Napa

Rickie Fowler gets back on track to start new season in Napa

NAPA, Calif. – New season, new equipment, new caddie, new coach and a strong start at the Fortinet Championship for Rickie Fowler.

The five-time PGA Tour winner announced last month that he parted ways with Joe Skovron, his caddie of 13 years. Last week, Fowler confirmed reports that he also ended a relationship of more than three years with swing instructor John Tillery, and he switched into a more forgiving version of Cobra irons this week for good measure.

If anyone needed a re-boot, it was Fowler, who last won at the 2019 WM Phoenix Open and barely snuck into the first playoff event at No. 125 (out of a field of 125) in the standings last season. When his season ended in Memphis, he decamped to Baker’s Bay in the Bahamas and decompressed for five days.

So far, so good. Fowler showed up at this week’s season opener of the 2022-23 PGA Tour campaign with renewed purpose and played the brand of golf he’s more accustomed to – a bogey-free 5-under 67 at Silverado Resort’s North Course.

“I missed a 10-foot putt on No. 18, my ninth hole, otherwise I would have what I would consider a perfect card with no bogeys and no fives on the card,” Fowler said.

Fowler is one stroke off the early lead set by S.H. Kim and Ben An, who opened the new season with three birdies in his return to the Tour after a season spent on the Korn Ferry Tour.

Fowler was accompanied by veteran looper Ricky Romano for his splendid start.

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“He’s about my size,” said the 5-foot-9-inch Fowler. “So, I won’t look too small out there, which is a good thing.”

Romano, who played at the University of Houston before turning to caddying, grew up in Fowler’s hometown of Murrieta, California, and is four years older than him.

“He’s a good fit for me just because he’s someone I know, someone I know is a good player and I can trust his insight from the get-go,” Fowler said.

Fowler had only kind words for Tillery, his former swing coach.

“I couldn’t love the guy anymore, and we gave it a good run but it was almost like speaking another language in a way and it never really clicked,” Fowler said. “I’ll take a lot out of the time we spent together. It’s not like the last few years were for nothing. I gained a lot of knowledge and I feel like I’m in a very good spot.”

Fowler will be relying on his former coach Butch Harmon for swing advice.

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