<p>India's Anirban Lahiri is finally going to tee off at a PGA tournament this week when he plays at the Wyndham Championship, ending his five-month long coronavirus-forced break.</p>.<p>"It's been a long, long time," said Lahiri.</p>.<p>"I am hungry and all ready to go. I came to India for the Hero Indian Open and then had to stay back as the Covid outbreak started spreading all over."</p>.<p>This week Lahiri and Atwal will play in the Wyndham Championships at the Sedgefield Country Club.</p>.<p>Due to the long break, Lahiri was not even able to go back to the US because of travel restrictions.</p>.<p>But now he is back in the US and excited about playing his first event since early March.</p>.<p>"I'm feeling excited. It's not something I've felt like in a long time," Lahiri said.</p>.<p>"It's like going back to school after a summer vacation. It's a good thing."</p>.<p>Lahiri, who spent a lot of the time in India with his parents, later moved to Ahmedabad to be with his coach, Vijay Divecha, and started working on his game.</p>.<p>"Mentally, I decided that I was going to focus on the next 2020-21 season, instead of thinking about the ongoing one. I took it as an opportunity to work on my game and rebuild it," he said.</p>.<p>"After all, how many times does anyone get a chance to work on the game and assess it with one's coach and stay away from tournaments without needing to worry about the Tour card.</p>.<p>"This was one such chance," added Lahiri, as the PGA Tour decided that all players would keep the status they had for the 2020 season.</p>.<p>Lahiri had a proper status.</p>.<p>"I got to spend six weeks with Vijay which I haven't done in like five or six years. It's a big reset and I was able to work continuously with him," said Lahiri, who has gone through a lean spell.</p>.<p>"That was the reason I needed and wanted to work on my game. In the past few years I would get short periods of practice with Vijay and we would try fix the problems. They were just that – fixes. Now, I had a proper stretch of time, and I grabbed it."</p>.<p>With a hearty laugh, he said, "I was telling someone, that basically (we) disassembled the engine and put everything back together."</p>.<p>Lahiri and Divecha worked on just about everything.</p>.<p>He added, "This time, we have rebuilt from scratch. It was like I was starting golf again -- right from the basic, the grip, posture, the fundamentals. It was a re-set button. In a way it was like writing something new on a clean slate."</p>.<p>This week Lahiri will have Arjun Atwal for company at the Wyndham Championship. This is where Atwal won India's first and only PGA Tour title.</p>.<p>Lahiri has played at the Donald Ross-designed Sedgefield Country Club, in the past.</p>.<p>"It is tree-lined and you have to shape shots. There's a good mix of lengthy holes and shortish holes. If you get hot, you can make lots of birdies and rise up the leaderboard."</p>.<p>Lahiri did not watch much of golf during the last few months.</p>.<p>"I would follow scores maybe once a day, not like looking at my phone every few minutes. I was focused on working on my game and I feel good about it. So, I am excited."</p>.<p>The Wyndham Championship is the final event of the Regular Season.</p>.<p>For Lahiri, who is way down in the FedExCup points list, it is more a question of testing his game and then getting ready for the new season which begins right after the Play-offs.</p>.<p>Atwal, who had a few starts last few weeks, is 215th and Lahiri is 219th.</p>.<p>So, getting into 125th is a long shot, unless Atwal or Lahiri can pull off something big on Sunday. </p>
<p>India's Anirban Lahiri is finally going to tee off at a PGA tournament this week when he plays at the Wyndham Championship, ending his five-month long coronavirus-forced break.</p>.<p>"It's been a long, long time," said Lahiri.</p>.<p>"I am hungry and all ready to go. I came to India for the Hero Indian Open and then had to stay back as the Covid outbreak started spreading all over."</p>.<p>This week Lahiri and Atwal will play in the Wyndham Championships at the Sedgefield Country Club.</p>.<p>Due to the long break, Lahiri was not even able to go back to the US because of travel restrictions.</p>.<p>But now he is back in the US and excited about playing his first event since early March.</p>.<p>"I'm feeling excited. It's not something I've felt like in a long time," Lahiri said.</p>.<p>"It's like going back to school after a summer vacation. It's a good thing."</p>.<p>Lahiri, who spent a lot of the time in India with his parents, later moved to Ahmedabad to be with his coach, Vijay Divecha, and started working on his game.</p>.<p>"Mentally, I decided that I was going to focus on the next 2020-21 season, instead of thinking about the ongoing one. I took it as an opportunity to work on my game and rebuild it," he said.</p>.<p>"After all, how many times does anyone get a chance to work on the game and assess it with one's coach and stay away from tournaments without needing to worry about the Tour card.</p>.<p>"This was one such chance," added Lahiri, as the PGA Tour decided that all players would keep the status they had for the 2020 season.</p>.<p>Lahiri had a proper status.</p>.<p>"I got to spend six weeks with Vijay which I haven't done in like five or six years. It's a big reset and I was able to work continuously with him," said Lahiri, who has gone through a lean spell.</p>.<p>"That was the reason I needed and wanted to work on my game. In the past few years I would get short periods of practice with Vijay and we would try fix the problems. They were just that – fixes. Now, I had a proper stretch of time, and I grabbed it."</p>.<p>With a hearty laugh, he said, "I was telling someone, that basically (we) disassembled the engine and put everything back together."</p>.<p>Lahiri and Divecha worked on just about everything.</p>.<p>He added, "This time, we have rebuilt from scratch. It was like I was starting golf again -- right from the basic, the grip, posture, the fundamentals. It was a re-set button. In a way it was like writing something new on a clean slate."</p>.<p>This week Lahiri will have Arjun Atwal for company at the Wyndham Championship. This is where Atwal won India's first and only PGA Tour title.</p>.<p>Lahiri has played at the Donald Ross-designed Sedgefield Country Club, in the past.</p>.<p>"It is tree-lined and you have to shape shots. There's a good mix of lengthy holes and shortish holes. If you get hot, you can make lots of birdies and rise up the leaderboard."</p>.<p>Lahiri did not watch much of golf during the last few months.</p>.<p>"I would follow scores maybe once a day, not like looking at my phone every few minutes. I was focused on working on my game and I feel good about it. So, I am excited."</p>.<p>The Wyndham Championship is the final event of the Regular Season.</p>.<p>For Lahiri, who is way down in the FedExCup points list, it is more a question of testing his game and then getting ready for the new season which begins right after the Play-offs.</p>.<p>Atwal, who had a few starts last few weeks, is 215th and Lahiri is 219th.</p>.<p>So, getting into 125th is a long shot, unless Atwal or Lahiri can pull off something big on Sunday. </p>