For the second consecutive year, Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers paired up with his good friend Jerry Kelly for the Cologuard Classic Jose Cuervo Pro-Am at the Omni Tucson National Resort.
As one of the biggest celebrities in the event Wednesday, Rodgers had a huge crowd of fans following his group, asking for autographs and photos before and after every hole.
Gavin Brown, 9, was one of those fans. Sporting Packers sweatshirt and sweatpants, Brown stood right near the rope that separated the practice tee from the fans. He was waiting patiently for Rodgers.
As luck would have it, Brown was one of the first fans Rodgers noticed. Brown asked him to sign a poster for his favorite teacher and to take a photo with him.
βI hope this works,β Rodgers said, referring to the poster, βand you better get an A.β
Said Brown: βI think heβs the best football player in the world.β
Rodgers was happy to be back in Tucson, and his knee is in good shape. He opted to forgo surgery this offseason after spraining his knee in September last year, an injury that lingered throughout the 2018 season.
βIβm feeling great. Itβs the best my body feels all year. I get banged around every week. I feel really good,β said Rodgers.
On Wednesday, Rodgers was looking forward to getting back four or five holes from last year, starting with the first.
βThis one I think I went right off the tee, so maybe I can go a little left. Iβm actually trying to turn the ball over the opposite way and hit like my mentor Jerry (Kelly) here,β he said.
When Packers teammate and former Canyon del Oro High School standout Blake Martinez walked up to the second hole, 3-month-old Wyatt Seery (and his mom) was waiting in a little Packers T-shirt for a photo. His mom, Rochelle Cannon, has been a Packers fan since 1996, when she was in first grade. Her teacher would give students extra credit on spelling tests if they knew how many yards Brett Favre had that weekend.
βThatβs how I started following them. That year, we went to the Super Bowl and everyone was calling me a bandwagoner after that for a while, said Cannon. βBut when I went through their lean years, they are like βoh yeah, you are definitely a Packers fan.β I think I was trying to go against the grain, because my dad was a Vikings fan.β
She also owns shares in the Packers, so technically she is a team owner.
βKeep me on the team, please,β Martinez said.
While Martinez may be a leader in the world of sacks, golf is an entirely different game. Martinez had played just two rounds before Wednesday. In between shots, Martinez received tips from his pro playing partner, Olin Browne, and focused on learning βhow to hit the ball straight,β said Martinez.
On the second hole, Martinez popped up his second shot into the trees where it bounced off the cart path before landing. He was hoping heβd see improvement as the round went on, but was just happy to be on the course and playing for a good cause.
Cologuard, the PGA Tour Champions eventβs sponsor which developed an at-home colon cancer screening test, gave $50,000 to the Vince Lombardi Cancer Foundation earlier Wednesday. The Packers coach died from the disease in 1970.
Martinez, meanwhile, is keeping busy during his offseason in Tucson.
βIβve been training six days a week and working on little things from flexibility and speed, strength,β Martinez said. βMaking sure Iβm able to go next season. Iβve gotten more into yoga this year. Itβs crazy to see the certain poses Iβm getting into. Things I would never have thought Iβd be able to get into.β
Another former Packer, Lynn Dickey, played with pro Tom Lehman. Dickey, who lives in Kansas City, said he was happy to be in the Tucson sunshine.
Tournament favorite Langer withdraws
Bernhard Langer, one of the favorites to win the Cologuard Classic, withdrew from the tournament Wednesday with an injury to his rib and stomach area. He described it as an βopen woundβ that could continue to tear every time he swings.
Langer showed up Wednesday morning ready to give it a go, yet it was too much for him to play.
βIt happened last Wednesday at home practicing. I didnβt practice much after that, just chipping and putting,β said Langer. βI had some treatment and took some medication and I thought it was getting better, and when I got here yesterday, I got even more treatment and was able to play eight holes. Then on the ninth fairway I re-injured it again. When I talked to my doctor, he advised that I not play the next several days to allow it to heal.β
Langer has won 39 Tour Champions events β six wins away from tying Hale Irwinβs wins record β is the all-time leading money winner on the tour, and is No. 1 in the Charles Schwab Cup standings following a win at the Oasis Championship earlier this month.