|      AKRON, Ohio (Reuters) -    Most players tend to pace themselves with the occasional break heading into    golf's big events but in-form Brandt Snedeker has no qualms about his plan to    compete in every PGA Tour event left on the 2013 schedule. Fresh from his second    victory of the season at the Canadian Open on Sunday, Snedeker intends to tee    it up all the way through the FedExCup playoffs before likely making his    debut appearance for the United States at the October 3-6 Presidents Cup. "I'm playing the    rest and no concern at all," the fast-talking American told reporters on    Wednesday while preparing for Thursday's opening round at Firestone Country    Club in the elite WGC event. "I'm being really    smart about practice and taking time away. I didn't touch a club since    Sunday, had two days off with the family, which was nice. I'm being real    smart about how much I'm hitting balls and practising, and should be    fine." Snedeker always knew he    would have a hectic late schedule on the U.S. circuit this season, and he    prepared by competing only once in May and just once between the U.S. Open    and British Open. "I made sure I was    working on the right stuff, that we had a clear game plan of what we were    going to do these last nine events, eight events, and start to execute    it," the 32-year-old said. "Any time you put a    lot of hard work in to execute your game plan and what you want to do, you    start feeling like you're doing the right stuff. "My golf game feels    as good as it's felt in a long time, and I'm excited to keep playing. I did    the exact same schedule last year and it worked out pretty well. Hopefully I    can do it again this year." Snedeker believes he is    close to the spectacular form he displayed at the start of this year when he    recorded four top-threes in his first five events, including a two-shot    triumph at the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. "Beginning of the    year, I was driving the ball fantastic and I was hitting a lot of greens and    hitting my irons fantastic," he said. "I felt like I haven't been    able to piece that together like I was early in the year. "Last week my iron    play was phenomenal, but I didn't drive the ball particularly well. I got    really lucky last week a lot, and then to do that this week is not going to    be successful. "I've got to hit    fairways this week. There's no way around it. If I can just kind of get that    mentality of my driver that I've had with my irons the last couple weeks,    everything should be pretty good." Snedeker, bidding this    week for a sixth PGA Tour victory, has been paired with Northern Irish world    number three Rory McIlroy for the first two rounds at Firestone. (Reporting by Mark    Lamport-Stokes; Editing by Julian Linden)  |    
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