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🏌️ Eat. Sleep. Golf: The Story Of Nolan Krentz

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Nolan Krentz is a golf fanatic, spending the pandemic playing the sport 256 straight days. In today?

Nolan Krentz is a golf fanatic, spending the pandemic playing the sport 256 straight days. [View in browser]( [FOX SPORTS INSIDER WITH MARTIN ROGERS]( In today’s FOX Sports Insider with Martin Rogers: Wisconsin native Nolan Krentz spent the pandemic playing golf from sunup to sundown ... we take a look at 14 names to watch in next week’s NFL Draft ... and the FOX Sports App is nominated for a Webby Award. Nolan Krentz plays golf on Thanksgiving. He has played, during a couple of relatively balmy Wisconsin winters, on Christmas Day. He plays on his birthday, he plays when it’s raining and when the wind is howling, he plays when he’s tired and, perhaps most remarkable of all for a diehard golf nut, he plays on Masters Sunday. Both before the final round at Augusta, and again afterwards. To date, he has never played on Super Bowl Sunday, but yeah, you can probably guess where this is going: “I would if I could,” Krentz told me, via telephone. “There’s always too much snow.” Krentz likes playing golf, which is just as well, because he does virtually nothing else. Already an obsessively devoted player, the 29-year-old from Mount Horeb, Wisconsin kicked things up a notch during the pandemic, getting in a scarcely believable average of 69.4 holes per day. [STORY IMAGE 1] He often spends more time at the course than he does sleeping, or at his job in the e-commerce department of a grocery store in nearby Fitchburg. Fortunately, he lives only two minutes from his preferred course – Norsk Golf Club - and he even manages to fit in a second job, coaching two high school golf teams, that correlates with his hobby. “I don’t really have a social life,” Krentz said. “I don’t have a significant other. A lot of people think I’m crazy but this is what I do – and it’s what I love to do.” This job I have, of writing about sports, has made me fortunate enough to meet countless athletes who play for varied reasons, sometimes several at once. They play to win, they play to get paid, they play for the recognition and some play because they don’t know what they’d do otherwise. Krentz isn’t a professional but he’s really good by normal people standards. He doesn’t have an official handicap but plays to around a five, so he isn’t doing this to break into the ranks of the PGA Tour and start teeing it up next to Dustin Johnson and Brooks Koepka. He’s doing it because he truly adores it, the activity, the endeavor, the peace and the outdoors, so much so that he went through three pull carts over the past summer and kept on going even when shin splints threatened to slow him down. [STORY IMAGE 2] Last year, Krentz did not skip a day of playing from April 1 to Dec. 12, when a blanket of snow fell on Southern Wisconsin and forced his clubs into storage for a while. His annual tally ended up at 1,974 rounds and 17,766 holes (Norsk is a nine-hole course). That’s a lot of golf. And a lot of walking. It could be that Krentz’s efforts are good enough for a world record, but he’s not quite sure. Texan Barry Gibbons set a Guinness mark with 15,804 holes in 2016, which was bettered in 2019 by retired serviceman Yancy Methvien of Louisiana, who played 16,398 holes as part of a battle to cope with PTSD following active duty. At last word, Gibbons was attempting to recapture the record and was approaching 18,000 holes last year, but then the website he used to record his rounds went down and updates have not been forthcoming. Krentz isn’t too worried about records anyways. He once played 135 holes in a day, mixing Norsk and another local course, Dodge Point Country Club. “I started early,” he said. “And I just kept going.” [STORY IMAGE 3]( Playing by himself he gets around swiftly, speeding along under his own steam. Krentz doesn’t take a single practice swing. He just locates his ball, steps up to it, and swings away. He’s played Norsk so many times he doesn’t feel the need to read his putts anymore, figuring he knows every blade of grass on the greens. “Most players are very good about waving me through, they’ve come to know me,” Krentz added. “It gets kind of funny, they’ll wave me through on the second hole and I’ll catch up to them again by the sixth.” Krentz’s tale came to my attention when he was first featured by outstanding veteran sports writer Gary D’Amato, with whom I shared a press box at numerous Olympic Games, Winter Olympics and other major events for more than a decade. D’Amato writes for Killarney Golf Media, a Wisconsin-based website and magazine devoted to the sport and admitted he did not believe Krentz’s claims when he was first informed of them. “I did the math and I’m thinking ‘how is this possible?’” D’Amato said. “I’m playing a 100-hole marathon next week for charity and I don’t know if I will finish it. He’s doing almost as much as that every day.” [STORY IMAGE 4] D’Amato noted that while the Wisconsin weather – with around 16 hours of midsummer daylight – likely helped Krentz during the middle part of the year, he endured some extremities in April and December. “We are not talking about Bahamas weather out here,” D’Amato added. “He’ll have been out there in 40 degrees, with the sleet coming in.” It would be cool for the story if Krentz had an “a-ha” moment that led to his decision to embark on such a quest, some dramatic happening that caused him to pursue the mission. In truth, it wasn’t like that, and maybe it’s for the best. Krentz plays golf because he wants to, and his extraordinary tale of endurance began with a simple and organic thought. “Well, the pandemic hit and I had to figure out what to do,” he said. “I thought, ‘hmm, let’s just get in as many holes as we can.’” [STORY IMAGE 5]( Here’s what others have said ... Mike Woodward, Norsk Golf Club General Manager: “He gets more bang for the buck than anyone as a member. The guy just loves to play.” Joe Masson, Wisconsin State Journal: “Nolan Krentz acknowledges he is a golf fanatic. He has loved golf since he began playing in Mount Horeb when he was 6 or 7 years old ... After college, the number of rounds he played in recent years reached astronomical numbers, topping 10,000 holes a year. Then came 2020 and the COVID-19 pandemic ... He took playing golf to another level.” SPONSORED Can your Smart TV make you smarter? Well, it will -- if you've activated CuriosityStream, the home to thousands of streamable documentaries and non-fiction TV shows on History, Nature, Science, Food, Technology, Travel and more. This includes award-winning exclusives and originals featuring Sir David Attenborough, Stephen Hawking, Nick Offerman and Chris Hadfield. And if you're on the go, CuriosityStream works on just about any device, anywhere, anytime. [Sign up now to get 40% off of annual CuriosityStream plans today!]( [IN OTHER WORDS] - Who needs a first-round pick when you can grab these future steals on Days 2 and 3. [FOX Sports NFL Draft Analyst Rob Rang lists 14 names to watch in the upcoming NFL Draft](. - At Talladega, where you need a pack to get to the front, drivers have extra pressure to work with teammates. [FOX Sports NASCAR Writer Bob Pockrass has the story](. - NFL win totals dropped last week, and [FOX Sports NFL Analyst Geoff Schwartz is here to tell fans where he lands on the over/under scale](. [THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED] [THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED]( We are thrilled to announce that the FOX Sports App has been nominated for a Webby Award in the “Best App: Sports” category. With that said, we need your help! If you’d be so kind, [please visit the following link]( to vote for the FOX Sports App. As always, we appreciate all the support you, the reader, have shown this past year. [VIEWER'S GUIDE] Philadelphia 76ers at Milwaukee Bucks (TNT, 7 p.m. ET) Joel Embiid and the Philadelphia 76ers take on Giannis Antetokounmpo and the Milwaukee Bucks. New York Mets at Chicago Cubs (ESPN+, 7:40 p.m. ET) Pete Alonso and the New York Mets go up against Kris Bryant and the Chicago Cubs. Los Angeles Lakers at Dallas Mavericks (TNT, 9:30 p.m. ET) Andre Drummond and the Los Angeles Lakers battle Luka Doncic and the Dallas Mavericks. [BET OF THE DAY] [BET OF THE DAY] Odds provided by [FOX Bet]( Najee Harris Draft Poston: UNDER 30.5 Here’s a cold hard fact … NFL running backs have a short shelf life. There is no secret about it. However, every so often you get a running back that comes into the league that is as close to a “can’t miss prospect” as one can be. This year, that running back is Alabama standout Najee Harris. “He’s the most polished of this year’s runners,” FOX Sports NFL Draft Analyst Rob Rang said on Harris. Rang has Harris going No. 18 overall to the Miami Dolphins in his latest NFL Mock Draft. If he does happen to slip past Miami at 18, Pittsburgh would be another nice fit for Harris at No. 24. FOX Bet has set the O/U on where Harris is selected at 30.5. You should feel pretty good about Harris being drafted in the top 30. [WHAT THEY SAID] “Success in this game depends less on strength of body than strength of mind and character." — Arnold Palmer [FOLLOW FOX SPORTS] [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [YouTube]( [Instagram]( Download FOX Sports App: [Fire TV]( [Roku]( [Google Play]( [App Store]( [Fire TV]( [Roku]( [App Store]( [Google Play]( Also available on these devices: [fireTV | AppleTV | ROKU | Google Chromecast | XBOX ONE | SAMSUNG Smart TV] [fireTV | AppleTV | ROKU | Google Chromecast | XBOX ONE | SAMSUNG Smart TV] Trademark & Copyright Notice: ™ and © 2021 Fox Media LLC and FOX Sports Interactive Media, LLC. All rights reserved. Please do not reply to this message. If you do not wish to receive emails like this in the future, please [unsubscribe](. FOX Sports respects your privacy. Click [here]( to view our Privacy Policy. Fox.com Business & Legal Affairs - Manager Digital Media P.O. Box 900 Beverly Hills, California 90213-0900

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