American Express: Let's get to know the unfamiliar names atop leaderboard

American Express: Let's get to know the unfamiliar names atop leaderboard

American Express: Let's get to know the unfamiliar names atop leaderboard

With one round remaining in the 2022 American Express golf tournament, the leaderboard includes a lot of names that are probably new to even avid golf fans.

That’s okay, and not altogether surprising. Six of the last 15 champions here had never won a PGA event before a victory in the desert.

So with that in mind, here is everything you need to know about the contenders at the top of the leaderboard. There are 10 players at 15-under or better.

Of this group, there is one major champion, one former champion in the desert, three international players, three players playing this event for the first time, and six players looking for their first career PGA Tour win.

Paul Barjon (-18)

Age: 29

From: Born in Bordeaux, France; resides in Fort Worth, Texas

College: TCU

Number of PGA Tour wins: Zero

Best finish at this event: First appearance

Current World Golf Ranking: 313

Notable: With a win, Barjon would be the seventh international winner in the tournament’s 62-year history. It marks the first time the desert’s golf tournament would have back-to-back international winners as Si Woo Kim of South Korea won last year.

Lee Hodges (-18)

Age: 26

From: Born in Huntsville, Alabama, resides in Athens, Alabama

College: UAB and Alabama

Number of PGA Tour wins: Zero

Best finish at this event: First appearance

Current World Golf Ranking: 312

Notable: Hodges is from an athletic family. His cousin, Logan Stenberg, is an offensive lineman in the NFL for the Detroit Lions (as of 2021).

Tom Hoge (-17)

Tom Hoge tees off on hole one during the third round of The American Express at the La Quinta Country Club in La Quinta, Calif., Saturday, Jan. 22, 2022.

Age: 32

From: North Carolina, but resides in Fargo, North Dakota

College: TCU

Number of PGA Tour wins: Zero

Best finish at this event: Tied for 6th in 2020

Current World Golf Ranking: 115

Notable: For starters, his name is pronounced exactly like the word Hoagie. This is the seventh time Hoge has played here and he missed the cut, four of the previous six, so this effort on these courses is a bit of a surprise.

Seamus Power (-16)

Age: 34

From: Tooraneena, County Waterford, Ireland

College: East Tennessee State

Number of PGA Tour wins: 1 (2021 Barbasol Championship)

Best finish at this event: Tie for 11th in 2018

Current World Golf Ranking: 49

Notable: Power won the Barbasol event last year on the sixth playoff hole over J.T. Poston. In doing so, he became the fifth player from the Republic of Ireland to win a PGA event, joining Pat Doyle, Peter O’Hara, Padraig Harrington, and Shane Lowry.

Lanto Griffin (-15)

Age: 33

From: Born in Mount Shasta, California, resides in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida

College: VCU

Number of PGA Tour wins: 1 (2019 Houston Open)

Best finish at this event: Played twice and missed cut both times

Current World Golf Ranking: 117

Notable: Once on the Web.com Tour, Griffin won an event after making the cut on the number, the only time that has ever happened on that tour.

Harry Higgs (-15)

Harry Higgs tees off on the 13th hole of the Pete Dye Stadium Course at PGA West during the American Express in La Quinta, Calif., on Saturday, Jan. 22, 2022.

Age: 30

From: Born in Camden, New Jersey, lives in Dallas, Texas

College: SMU

Number of PGA Tour wins: Zero

Best finish at this event: Played here once (2020) and missed the cut

Current World Golf Ranking: 141

Notable: He’s not nervous when the bright lights are on. Higgs has only played in one major tournament in his career, the 2021 PGA Championship, and he finished tied for fourth.

Hudson Swafford (-15)

Age: 34

From: Born in Tallahassee, Florida; resides in Sea Island, Georgia

College: University of Georgia

Number of PGA Tour wins: Two (2017 CareerBuilder Challenge, 2020 Puerto Rico Championship)

Best finish at this event: Winner in 2017

Current World Golf Ranking: 166

Notable: Hudson Swafford won this event in 2017, notably edging out Adam Hadwin, whose week included a 59 at La Quinta Country Club.

Cameron Young (-15)

Age: 24

From: Born in Scarborough, New York; resides in Jupiter, Florida

College: Wake Forest

Number of PGA Tour wins: Zero

Best finish at this event: First appearance

Current World Golf Ranking: 134

Notable: Cameron Young is the only player currently on the PGA Tour whose last name begins with a Y.

Francesco Molinari (-15)

Francesco Molinari of Italy walks on the 14th hole during the third round of The American Express at the Stadium Course at PGA West on January 22, 2022, in La Quinta, California. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images)

Age: 39

From: Born and lives in Turin, Italy

College: University of Turin

Number of PGA Tour wins: Three (2018 Quicken Loans, 2018 British Open, 2019 Arnold Palmer Invitational)

Best finish at this event: Tied for 10th in 2015

Current World Golf Ranking: 249

Notable: Molinari is one of 13 major champions in the field at The American Express this week. He won the 2018 British Open, outlasting a star-studded group of chasers that included Rory McIlroy, Justin Rose, and Xander Schauffele.

Harold Varner III (-15)

Age: 31

From: Born in Akron, Ohio; resides in Charlotte, North Carolina

College: East Carolina

Number of PGA Tour wins: Zero

Best finish at this event: Tied for 18th in 2019

Current World Golf Ranking: 95

Notable: Varner does not have a PGA Tour win, but he does have a win on the European Tour. He won the Australian PGA Championship in 2016.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/2V95qPJ
Texas Tech's Ludvig Aberg finishes first in 2023 PGA Tour University standings, earning a PGA Tour card through the 2024 season

Texas Tech's Ludvig Aberg finishes first in 2023 PGA Tour University standings, earning a PGA Tour card through the 2024 season

Texas Tech's Ludvig Aberg finishes first in 2023 PGA Tour University standings, earning a PGA Tour card through the 2024 season

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Ludvig Aberg made PGA Tour history on Monday evening.

He became the first player in the Tour’s history to earn his PGA Tour membership via PGA Tour University. And it became official as soon as stroke play ended Monday at the 2023 NCAA Men’s Golf Championship.

The third PGA Tour University rankings were finalized Monday, and the top 20 golfers secured status on varying professional tours. But it was Aberg taking home the top prize, a new perk to PGA Tour U this year.

Players who finished Nos. 2-5 in the final PGA Tour U rankings earned fully exempt Korn Ferry Tour membership for 2023, as well as an exemption to final stage of 2023 PGA Tour Q-School.

Golfweek/Sagarin rankingsMen’s team | Men’s individual
NCAA LeaderboardTeam | Individual | Photos

Players who finished Nos. 6-10 earned conditional Korn Ferry Tour membership for 2023, fully exempt membership on PGA Tour Canada for 2023, as well as an exemption to second stage of 2023 PGA Tour Q-School presented by Korn Ferry.

Then, Nos. 11-20 earned fully exempt membership on PGA Tour Canada for 2023, as well as an exemption to second stage of 2023 PGA TOUR Q-School presented by Korn Ferry, and conditional status through the Latin America Swing of the 2024 PGA Tour Americas season.

The program is designed to streamline the process for college players to advance to the professional level while also rewarding those who honor their college commitments. Players must play on the NCAA Division I level and complete a minimum of four years in college to be eligible for PGA Tour U.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/7avITln
PGA Championship sleepers and long shots at Kiawah Island's Ocean Course

PGA Championship sleepers and long shots at Kiawah Island's Ocean Course

PGA Championship sleepers and long shots at Kiawah Island's Ocean Course https://ift.tt/3uYYYYt

Looking for a big payday with your PGA Championship bets? Sportsbook Wire has you covered as the world’s best golfers tee it up at the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island in South Carolina this week. Below, we search for value in the odds and target five sleepers and long-shot picks to win the 2021 PGA Championship.

The PGA Championship has awarded the Wanamaker Trophy to many long-shot winners over the years. Past champs include YE Yang (2009), Keegan Bradley (2011) and Jimmy Walker (2016). The conditions of the Ocean Course this week are expected to help level the playing field as golfers contend with harsh wins off of the coast of the Atlantic.

Rory McIlroy begins the week at No. 15 in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings. He’s the pre-tournament favorite at +1100 after winning the 2012 PGA Championship at Kiawah by eight strokes. There were several forgotten names on that leaderboard who would’ve been worthy of a top-5 or top-10 placing bet.

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Tuesday at 9:05 a.m. ET.

Long-shot picks to target

Justin Rose (+8000)

Bet $100 to win $8,000

Rose showed at the 2021 Masters he can still contend in major championships with a seventh-place finish after holding the 18- and 36-hole leads. He finished ninth in last summer’s PGA Championship and tied for 23rd in the fall Masters.

He was one of four golfers to tie for third at the 2012 PGA Championship at the Ocean Course, albeit nine strokes back of McIlroy’s 13-under par. Rose’s game is well-suited to the howling, swirling winds and difficult conditions.

Top 5: +1400

Place your legal, online 2021 PGA Championship bets in CO, IA, IN, MI, NJ, PA, TN, VA and WV at BetMGM. Risk-free first bet! Terms and conditions apply. Bet now!

Bubba Watson (+9000)

Bet $100 to win $9,000

Watson tied for 11th at the 2012 PGA Championship. His 4-under par, 68, was one of the best rounds of the final day of the tournament when conditions were at their best.

The 42-year-old is still 40th on Tour in driving distance and the wide fairways of the Ocean Course will play to his favor.

Top 5: +1400

Matt Wallace (+10000)

Bet $100 to win $10,000

A four-time winner on the European Tour, Wallace has been playing more frequently on the PGA Tour this year. He made the cut in each of his last four stroke-play events, with finishes of third at the Valero Texas Open and T-6 at the Wells Fargo Championship.

Wallace is tied for 13th on Tour in Par 4 Efficiency: 450-500 Yards and should be able to score on the 7,876-yard Ocean Course’s toughest holes.

Top 10: +750

Dylan Frittelli (+25000)

Bet $100 to win $25,000

Frittelli was one of several surprises at the 2020 Masters in November with a T-5 finish. He missed the cut in April and has slipped to No. 81 in the Official World Golf Ranking but the South African’s game is well-suited to the PGA Championship venue.

He’s third among qualified golfers with 0.54 Strokes Gained: Around-the-Green per round, and he’s 13th in driving distance.

Top 10: +1600

Play our new free daily Pick’em Challenge and win! Play now!

Wyndham Clark (+25000)

Bet $100 to win $25,000

Clark gained a late entry to the 2021 PGA Championship after Vijay Singh withdrew Monday. He has never won on the PGA Tour, but he tied for eighth in a strong at The Genesis Invitational earlier this year and made the cut in each of his last four events.

He averages 0.43 SG: Around-the-Green per round, is fourth in driving distance and 15th in sand save percentage.

Top 20: +700

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from Golfweek https://ift.tt/3ynhknS
Why Phil Mickelson's statement on media rights is really significant?

Why Phil Mickelson's statement on media rights is really significant?

 If we believe Phil Mickelson's recent tirade against the PGA Tour at the Saudi International 2022 provided us the expression "obnoxious greed" to use for the next year or two, we've missed at least one age-old argument Mickelson was attempting to convey.

PIF Saudi International - Day Two : News Photo

 (Photo by Oisin Keniry/Getty Images)

Related:  "Threats from other leagues put more money in the pockets of PGA Tour players,"  Phil Mickelson.  

Mickelson tried to make some points in his attempted takedown of the PGA Tour that honestly didn’t hold that much water and in some ways seemed tone deaf. But when he talked about media rights, that was something as familiar to the PGA Tour discussion as, well, the PGA Tour itself.

“It’s not public knowledge, all that goes on,” Mickelson said in a pre-tournament press conference in Saudi Arabia. “But the players don’t have access to their own media. If the tour wanted to end any threat (from Saudi or anywhere else), they could just hand back the media rights to the players. But they would rather throw $25 million here and $40 million there than give back the roughly $20 billion in digital assets they control. Or give up access to the $50-plus million they make every year on their own media channel. 

Also:

Phil married his wife, Amy, in 1996. Get to know her a little bit better in this piece

“There are many issues, but that is one of the biggest,” he continued. “For me personally, it’s not enough that they are sitting on hundreds of millions of digital moments. They also have access to my shots, access I do not have. They also charge companies to use shots I have hit. And when I did ‘The Match’ — there have been five of them — the tour forced me to pay them $1 million each time. For my own media rights. That type of greed is, to me, beyond obnoxious.”

Mickelson’s point is that images of Mickelson, or any player playing in a tour event, are controlled by the PGA Tour. If you want to use a photo of a PGA Tour player for commercial purposes, well, the PGA Tour controls that image, not the player. So the tour has to be paid for use of the image. That might seem normal, since other sports have similar regulations. But in a day when college athletes are making hundreds of thousands of dollars since the U.S. Supreme Court announced it is the athletes that control their name, image and likeness, should PGA Tour players have the right to control their NIL rights, or is that something the tour must control to operate successfully?

Splitting off from the PGA The touring division was starting to make a lot of money for the PGA of America through increasing television rights to events. Arnold Palmer had a lot to do with that growing popularity of professional golf on television. The PGA of America was taking the money and basically putting it into its general fund to support the entire organization and its programs. The problem was the touring players were wondering why they weren’t getting that money, since it was the touring players who were generating the revenue. You knew that wasn’t going to end well. The television revenue issues, along with other issues, eventually forced an agreement that the touring players could break out on their own, maintaining some ties to the PGA of America. In 1968, the Tournament Players Division became its own organization, later changing its name to the PGA Tour.

And it was all forced because of a battle over media rights. No, the battle wasn’t quite the same thing that Mickelson is talking about now. In the 1960s, it was about all the touring pros getting a share of the money. In 2022, an era of Tik Tok and Twitter and Facebook and other social media outlets, players like Mickelson feel they should have the rights to whatever they do in a tournament.

Related: The PIF Saudi International 2022. Round 4 : After the final round here is the leaderboard & highlights.

The players in the 1960s felt so strongly about controlling the television money that they threatened several different times not to play a tournament without that money going to them. What some current players are threatening, without coming right out and saying as much, is they will play on the LIV Tour that is backed by money from the Saudi Arabian government and offers (according to reports) massive amounts of guaranteed money to players.

The idea that no player has yet signed on to the new league might be a plus for the PGA Tour. But the idea that players are making waves – particularly Mickelson – over changing some of the tour’s management rules and restrictions does have the tour’s attention. As Mickelson said, changes in purses and bonus money in the last several months show the PGA Tour is paying attention. Is the PGA Tour any more obnoxiously greedy than its own players taking millions in appearance money to play in the Saudi International? Probably not. But when it comes to a battle of media rights, the PGA Tour and its players may well be on different sides, something that was true 60 years ago as well. Larry Bohannan is The Desert Sun golf writer.

More:

5 things to know about Tim Mickelson. Who is Phil Mickelson’s caddie?

Source:  Desertsun.com

 

 


 

 

Justin Thomas defeats Will Zalatoris to win 2022 PGA Championship in a playoff

Justin Thomas defeats Will Zalatoris to win 2022 PGA Championship in a playoff

Justin Thomas defeats Will Zalatoris to win 2022 PGA Championship in a playoff

TULSA, Okla. – Justin Thomas never gave in.

Not when he had to battle a cold and allergies before the first round began. Not when he got the worst of the draw the first two days. Not when his putter let him down in the third round. Not when he hit a shank early in his final round.

And not when he faced a seven-shot deficit entering Sunday’s final 18 holes at Southern Hills Country Club. Make that the final 21 holes.

With help from Mito Pereira’s heartbreaking debacle on the 72nd hole, Thomas won the 2022 PGA Championship and hoisted the 2-foot tall, 27-pound Wanamaker Trophy for a second time after defeating Will Zalatoris in a three-hole aggregate playoff.

PGA: Leaderboard | Photos | Winner’s bag

The 2017 PGA champion came storming home with four birdies in his last 10 holes in regulation to sign for a 3-under 67 to reach 5 under, then birdied the first two extra holes at the par-5 13th and par-4 17th and added a tap-in par on the par-4 final hole to defeat Zalatoris by one shot.

2022 PGA Championship

Justin Thomas acknowledges the crowd after a putt on the 17th green during the final round of the 2022 PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club. (Photo: Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports)

Thomas matched the largest comeback in PGA history; John Mahaffey was seven shots back entering the final round before winning the 1978 PGA in a playoff against Tom Watson.

Thomas joined Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy, Johnny Miller and Tom Watson as the only players since World War II to win at least 15 PGA Tour titles and two majors before turning 30.

“It was a bizarre day,” Thomas said. “I definitely crossed one off the list; I’ve never won a tournament shanking a ball on Sunday, so that was a first, and man, I would really like it to be a last.

“Bones (Jim Mackay, his longtime caddie) did an unbelievable job of just keeping me in the moment today. We just tried to play the golf course for what it is, and this place is so tough.

“It’s funny, I was asked earlier in the week about what lead is safe, and I said, no lead. This place is so tough. But if you hit the fairways you can make birdies, and I stayed so patient, I just couldn’t believe I found myself in a playoff.”

The 104th edition of the PGA also will be remembered for the brutal ending to Pereira’s Cinderella story. Playing in just his second major and first PGA, Pereira took a 3-shot lead into the final round, led by two with four to play and led by one going to the final hole.

Trying to become the first golfer from Chile to win a major and the first PGA Tour rookie to win the PGA since Keegan Bradley in 2011, Pereira answered back whenever he faced adversity in the final round and never relinquished the lead.

Until the final 72nd hole.

After leaving his birdie putt on the lip on the 17th, Pereira drilled his tee shot on 18 into a creek on the right side of the fairway. After a penalty drop, he left his uphill third shot left of the green and needed three more shots to make a double-bogey 6 and miss the playoff by one shot.

In 15 minutes, he lost his grip on the Wanamaker, his place in history and his chance to put his first PGA Tour title on his resume.

“Obviously sad to be here and not in the playoff,” Pereira said. “On 18, I wasn’t even thinking about the water. I just wanted to put it in play, and I guess I aimed too far right. I just hit in the water. It’s not how I wanted to end up this week, but really good result.

“Today I was really nervous. I tried to handle it a little bit but it’s really tough. I thought I was going to win on 18, but it is what it is. I thought I was nervous the first day. Then I thought I was nervous the second day. Then I thought I was nervous on the third day but the fourth day was terrible. I mean, this morning was tough. I just played it through, and actually had a one-shot lead on 18 and that was pretty good and sad to hit it in the water. I wish I could do it again.”

Zalatoris, the 36-hole leader, made key 8-footers for birdie on par on the 71st and 72nd holes to finish with a 71 and earn a spot in the playoff. He has now finished runner-up in two majors; he finished a stroke behind Hideki Matsuyama in the 2021 Masters.

“Obviously I’m pretty close,” Zalatoris said. “I didn’t have my best stuff yesterday, which ultimately was kind of the difference. I battled like crazy today, especially after on 6 where you caught a random gust downwind and having to save a bogey off the cart path. I’m close and I’m super motivated, but we’ll get one soon.”

Pereira finished with a 75 and at 4 under. Joining Pereira at 4 under was Cameron Young, who grabbed a share of the lead earlier in the round but a double-bogey 6 on the 70th hole did him in as he finished with a 71.

In a tie for fifth at 3 under were Matt Fitzpatrick, Tommy Fleetwood and Chris Kirk. Fitzpatrick, playing in the final group, was unsteady throughout his 73, while Fleetwood came home with 67 and Kirk a 68.

The 15-time major champion and four-time Wanamaker Trophy winner Tiger Woods withdrew hours after his third round. Woods shot his worst score – a 9-over-par 79 – in his PGA Championship career. Woods clearly labored through the round and the second round, his right foot, ankle and leg that was severely damaged during a single-car rollover accident 15 months ago causing him pain.

It was his first WD from a major since turning pro in 1996.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/8sKD6HR
Omar Uresti hangs on to win 53rd PGA Professional Championship

Omar Uresti hangs on to win 53rd PGA Professional Championship

Omar Uresti hangs on to win 53rd PGA Professional Championship https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. — Omar Uresti started Wednesday’s final round of the 53rd PGA Professional Championship with a seven-shot lead, and he needed most of it.

After playing flawless golf for the first 54 holes, Uresti struggled throughout the final round. The Austin, Texas, resident was 4-over after four holes and saw his once-invincible lead shrink to two shots on the back nine of the Wanamaker Course at PGA Golf Club.

But he got back to what he does best, grinding away for pars, and held on for a three-shot victory over Frank Bensel Jr. of Jupiter, Florida. Uresti etched his name on the Walter Hagen Trophy for the second time in four years, having also won in 2017.

“I had a pretty good lead and got off to a rough start, so there was a little frustration early,” Uresti said. “I just tried to grind it out. I didn’t putt like I did the first three days, but I was able to hang in there and make some 2-putts.”

PGA Professional Championship: Leaderboard

Uresti’s 75 left him at 11-under 276. At 52, he became the second-oldest PPC champion behind Hall of Famer Sam Snead, who was 59 when he won in 1971.

The win also earned Uresti a spot in next month’s PGA Championship at Kiawah Island, six PGA Tour exemptions over the next year – Uresti has played in 377 career PGA Tour events – and a spot on the 2022 U.S. PGA Cup team.

“I’ve never played at Kiawah, so I’m looking forward to it,” Uresti said. “That’s a long course. I’m 5-foot-6 and 52, so that’s going to be a fun week.”

Bensel started the final round 11 shots back of Uresti, but charged into contention with four birdies on his first 10 holes while Uresti was struggling. Bensel’s birdie at the 16th moved him within two shots of the leader for the second time on the back nine. Bensel had the day’s second-lowest round, a 68.

“We got to the sixth hole and I saw Omar was 4-over and I was 3-under, so I knew I had a chance,” said Bensel, a PGA Teaching Professional at Century Country Club in New York. “It’s tough to play with a big lead, so I just kept wanting to play well and keep making putts. I’m really happy with how I played.”

Ben Cook of Vero Beach, Florida, had three late birdies to rally for a 74 and finish third at 6-under 281. Larkin Gross of Center Cross, Virginia, couldn’t match his third-round 64, shooting a 76 that left him fourth, a shot ahead of Ben Polland (73-284) of Bloomington, Minnesota.

While Uresti hung on for the win, most of the focus Wednesday was to see which PGA Professionals finished in the top 20 to land a precious spot in the 2021 PGA Championship.

Stuart Smith of Reno, Nevada, made the day’s biggest move with his 7-under 65 propelling him 60 spots up the leaderboard into sixth place at 1-under 286. Smith was tied with defending champion Alex Beach (70) of Stillwater, Minnesota. Brett Walker (70-287) of Ukiah, California, earned a PGA spot by finishing tied for eighth with Danny Balin (71) of Lake Success, New York; Tyler Collet (72) of Vero Beach, Florida; Peter Ballo (72) of Stamford, Connecticut; Joe Summerhays (73) of Syracuse, Utah; Derek Holmes (78) of Cottage Grove, Minnesota; and Brad Marek (74) of Berkeley, California.

There was a five-way playoff for the final four PGA spots between Mark Geddes (74) of Coronado, California; Greg Koch (73) of Orlando; Patrick Rada (74) of Jupiter, Florida; Sonny Skinner (75) of Sylvester, Georgia; and Cody Haughton (76) of Canton, Michigan. Haughton was odd man out after missing out on the PGA with a bogey.

from Golfweek https://ift.tt/3dY5I2H
Dustin Johnson is 'fully-committed to the PGA Tour' despite Saudi Arabia-backed Super Golf League rumors

Dustin Johnson is 'fully-committed to the PGA Tour' despite Saudi Arabia-backed Super Golf League rumors

Dustin Johnson is 'fully-committed to the PGA Tour' despite Saudi Arabia-backed Super Golf League rumors

Dustin Johnson isn’t leaving the PGA Tour.

The world No. 6 and two-time major champion released a statement Sunday through the PGA Tour stating he is fully committed to the PGA Tour. For nearly a year, Johnson, who counts 24 PGA Tour titles on his resume, has been rumored to be one of the top players who would join a potential Saudi Arabia-back Super Golf League that would pay enormous amounts of  guaranteed money, siphon off some of the game’s biggest names and be a direct rival with the PGA Tour.

More:

Watch Genesis Invitational 2022 | Round 3 | Highlights | Leaderboard. 

The Truth About Phil and Saudi Arabia!

 

Speculation of Johnson joining the league has been fueled in part by his playing in the Saudi International the past four years; he won in 2019 and 2021.

“Over the past several months, there has been a great deal of speculation about an alternative tour; much of which seems to have included me and my future in professional golf,” Johnson said. “I feel it is now time to put such speculation to rest. I am fully-committed to the PGA Tour. I am grateful for the opportunity to play the best tour in the world and for all it has provided me and my family.”

Lynch: Phil Mickelson’s mouth has brought him — and his greedy Saudi scheme — to the brink of ruin

Talk of the league has dominated the conversation at the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club this week. Johnson, who has 10 top-10s at Riv, including victory in 2017, missed the cut on Friday.

Comments by World Golf Hall of Fame member and reigning PGA champion Phil Mickelson ignited the talk. In a report by Alan Shipnuck of the Firepit Collective and the author of the soon-to-be-released book, “Phil: The Rip-Roaring (and Unauthorized!) Biography of Golf’s Most Colorful Superstar,” Mickelson told Shipnuck that he was one of the architects behind the proposed league.

Mickelson also added, per the report, that he hoped to use the Saudi-backed league as leverage against the PGA Tour.

The PGA Tour has responded by increasing purses, upping the FedEx Cup bonus money to $75 million, and creating additional programs that will dole out $60 million. All told, the PGA Tour will pay out more than $800 million to players this year.

Naturally, players at Riviera were asked about the league. Jon Rahm, Rory McIlroy, Collin Morikawa, Justin Thomas and Viktor Hovland all said their allegiance is to the PGA Tour.

Johnson weighed in on Sunday.

While there will always be areas where our Tour can improve and evolve, I am thankful for our leadership and the many sponsors who make the PGA Tour golf’s premier tour,” he said.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/LrKDQOg
Larger, longer Will Zalatoris in contention again for first PGA Tour title after 65 at Farmers Insurance Open

Larger, longer Will Zalatoris in contention again for first PGA Tour title after 65 at Farmers Insurance Open

Larger, longer Will Zalatoris in contention again for first PGA Tour title after 65 at Farmers Insurance Open

SAN DIEGO – Will Zalatoris is going to win one day on the PGA Tour.

Ask his peers. Golf analysts, too. And just watch him play.

Well, that one day could come Saturday.

A larger, longer Zalatoris is once again in position to win his first Tour title following a solid 7-under 65 Friday in the third round of the Farmers Insurance Open, a round that left him atop the leaderboard alongside Jason Day.

Zalatoris finished one shot back in last year’s Masters and has been in contention numerous times elsewhere. But the No. 36-ranked player in the world, who has one Korn Ferry Tour win under his belt, isn’t about to put any extra pressure on himself to capture that maiden victory despite coming so close.

“I still feel kind of like the underdog,” Zalatoris said after his successful tour around the South Course at Torrey Pines on another Chamber of Commerce day of plenty of sunshine, soft breezes and warm temperatures by the Pacific.

“My time will come and hopefully it’s tomorrow.”

Zalatoris, starting the day six shots behind the leaders, pitched in for eagle from 40 yards on the second hole – his third big bird of the week – and finally caught the leaders with a birdie on the 14th. But his 65 could have been much lower.

Leaderboard | Yardage book | Tee times, TV info | ESPN+ streaming info

“Oh, God, yeah,” Zalatoris said when asked if he left shots out there.

Zalatoris missed a 2-footer for birdie on the 13th, a 4-footer for birdie on the 17th and didn’t make birdie on the par-5 18th despite having just 235 yards from the middle of the fairway into the green for his second shot.

“There’s a lot of Poa annua out here. You’ve got putts that you’ve got to play outside the hole from distances you’re not really used to playing them out there,” Zalatoris said. “Out here you can get a little wobble here or there. I think really the two that I left out there today I just didn’t commit to playing outside the hole. So I think that’s something that definitely tomorrow, just commit to it and hey, if it bounces in, it bounces in; if it bounces out, it bounces out.”

Zalatoris knows getting that first PGA Tour title won’t be easy, especially considering the top of the leaderboard. Day won the 2015 PGA and has 12 PGA Tour titles, including wins in the 2015 and 2018 Farmers.

World No. 1 Jon Rahm, who has six PGA Tour titles, including his first in the 2017 Farmers and the 2021 U.S. Open on the South Course, is one shot back after a 72. And two back is Justin Thomas, the 2017 PGA champion and a winner of 14 Tour titles. If Thomas, who shot 73, were to win, he would join Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus, Sam Snead and Johnny Miller as the only players in the past 85 years to win 15 PGA Tour titles before turning 29.

Joining Zalatoris and Day in the final group will be Aaron Rai, a two-time winner on the DP World Tour. Rai shot 68 to move to 13 under.

Rahm will be joined by Sungjae Im (68) and Cameron Tringale (72) in the second-to-last group off. Tringale will try to win his first PGA Tour title in 318 starts. He is the all-time money leader ($15.6 million) on the PGA Tour among those who have not won.

Day, a former world No. 1, has battled various injuries for years and last won in the 2018 Wells Fargo Championship. But he said he’s healthy and his putting – his bread-and-butter – is back.

“It’s nice to be able to know that I’ve (won) on the golf course twice, not only in regulation but also in playoffs, but tomorrow’s a new day and you don’t know what’s going to come,” Day said. “I’ve just got to kind of get good rest tonight, get into it tomorrow and just be patient.

“I’ve been saying that I’ve been close for a long time, that’s what I’ve felt like I’ve been saying. It’s been a long two‑and‑a‑bit years not really being in contention or having a good shot at winning a tournament, but I think overall I’m pretty pleased with how things are progressing swing‑wise, body‑wise.

“If I can go out there and just play within myself, then I should be able to give myself the opportunities. I just can’t get inside my head too much; I’ve just got to go out there and be patient.”

That’s Zalatoris’ plan of attack, as well. While his iron play was spot on as usual, his driver was a huge weapon. Zalatoris, as thin as a 1-iron, it has been written, put on 15 pounds with a concentrated effort to gain weight – “I’ve never weighed 172 in my life,” he said – and has gone from a 44.5-inch shaft in his driver to one a shade under 46 inches.

He’s always wanted to put on weight, as much for stamina as for strength. And he’s upped his power game with a new driver.

“I had it the Tuesday (last week) before Palm Springs and put it immediately in the bag,” said Zalatoris, who contended and tied for sixth in the American Express before heading to San Diego. “It’s obviously been great, and I think today was the best driving day I’ve had maybe ever.

“(I’ve gained) 12 yards just on TrackMan, kind of hit a stock ball on the range, but get some adrenaline going or maybe get after one, I’ve clocked it up to 127 (mph swing speed) with 186 ball speed. A place around here, that’s huge.

“We’ve seen what Bryson (DeChambeau) has done; you won’t be seeing me at 220 anytime soon, but definitely the added distance has really paid dividends.”

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/2V95qPJ

For family and country: Raul Pereda rallies at the Valley to earn 2024 PGA Tour card

For family and country: Raul Pereda rallies at the Valley to earn 2024 PGA Tour card

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Raul Pereda wasn’t just playing for himself in the final round of PGA Tour Q-School, presented by Korn Ferry.

It was Para Mexico.

And por la familia.

Pereda, a 27-year-old Jacksonville University graduate, may win some tournaments on the PGA Tour. He may realize every kid’s dream of winning a major or a Players Championship.

But he’d be hard-pressed to come up with another back-nine rally like Monday’s finish at the TPC Sawgrass Dye’s Valley.

Pereda came from one shot outside the threshold to earn a PGA Tour card for the 2024 season to be able to absorb a closing bogey and still proudly hold one of five cards awarded at the end of the 72-hole qualifier in which the players were hit with everything Mother Nature had to offer, further exacerbating the jangled nerves and rumbling stomachs that come with the pressure of trying to reach the Tour.

Pereda chipped in twice for birdie at Nos. 10 and 13, then birdied the par-5 16th hole and willed a gutty 5-foot putt into the hole for par at the beastly par-4 17th hole to finish with a 69 and a four-round total of 8-under 272, tying for fourth with Hayden Springer (69) to hit the exact number they needed to finish among the top-five and earn a Tour card.

Pereda brings Mexico back to the Tour

Harrison Endycott of Australia is the medalist at 15-under 265, former Auburn golfer Trace Crowe (67) finished second at 11-under and former Oklahoma golfer Blaine Hale Jr. (71) finished third at 9-under. It was just those five who earned Tour cards.

But Pereda carried more banners than a Medieval festival: he became the third JU player to reach the PGA Tour, following Donnie Hammond and Russell Knox, and he realized a goal of once again giving Mexico representation on the PGA Tour.

After Pereda shot 66 in the third round at Sawgrass to get within the top five, he spoke of what Mexican professionals Abrahan Ancer and Carlos Ortiz, now playing for LIV Golf, meant to him.

Pereda didn’t question their LIV decisions and he appreciated the help they had given him.

But he said his primary motivation during the qualifying process has been all about country and knew he had the right stuff for the PGA Tour since last season when he contended in the early rounds of the World Golf Championship Mexico Open and holed a 249-yard shot for an eagle, the longest hole-out of the PGA Tour season.

“I need to get Mexico back on the PGA Tour,” he said.

Mission accomplished.

“I’m very proud of myself for pushing hard,” said Pereda. “This is for them [his family], and this is for my entire country supporting me.”

Team Pereda is large and loving

Pereda, the youngest of five children, came to the First Coast at the age of 14 to live with his brother Paco, an industrial engineer for Continental Tires, at the Sawgrass Country Club. After finishing high school with online classes, Pereda went to JU and starred for the Dolphins for four years.

His PGA Tour card has been five years as a professional in the making. And his brother was present on Monday. So were their parents, Claudia and Francisco, although Francisco Pereda came out only for the finish since he spent most of Sunday in the emergency room because of kidney stones.

“This is what I’ve been working all my life for,” he said during a post-round interview in which he broke down in tears several times, the release of the intense pressure of Q-School. “And we are there.”

Note the word “we.”

It’s doubtful any PGA Tour rookie will have a larger support group than Pereda. After dropping the final putt he got hugs and backslaps from caddie and six-time European PGA Tour winner Anders Forsbrand, family and friends, JU golf coach Mike Blackburn and athletic director Alex Ricker-Gilbert, former JU player Russell Knox (who had just finished shooting 65 at Sawgrass to tie for 28th and earn full Korn Ferry Tours status), and former PGA Tour player Jeff Klauk, who has become a mentor to Pereda.

Pereda rallied calmly from early disaster

Pereda kept his emotions in check for most of the round, even after errant tee shots into hazards at Nos. 6 and 7 produced a double-bogey and a bogey. He parred the next two holes but turned one shot behind the top five and then missed the 10th green to the left.

He promptly chipped in for birdie to get back within the top-five. After three pars in a row, Pereda missed the green of the 229-yard par-3 14th hole – and chipped in again.

Pereda bashfully said he got good lies on both of the chip-ins. But he also remembered what a sports psychologist told him in the past about a round of golf.

“He said to look at this like a boxing fight,” he said. “You’re going to hit … I got hit early in the round, and I still had 12 holes to go, so I might as well put some punches out there.”

Pereda ‘dances with his emotions’

Pereda’s long-time swing coach, Tom Burnett, said it was part of Pereda’s development from a mental standpoint.

“Instead of fighting his emotions he started to dance with his emotions,” Burnett said. “He learned how to handle them. He became very good at course management.”

Pereda said years of trying to get his card off the PGA Tour Latinoamerica finally taught him just that: don’t pretend nerves don’t exist, just embrace them.

“I was shaking and I was nervous at some point, but I think that I’ve gotten to know myself very well,” he said. “It’s not that I got it under control, but I knew how to play with it.”

Pereda has gotten so good at that, Forsbrand didn’t feel the need to give him a pep talk after his early stumbles.

“Nothing special,” he said. “He was still in the game. It was two swings that were a little loose but apart from that, he was hitting it well.”

Battling tears on final hole

Pereda’s calm almost dissolved after he got up-and-down from par at the par-4 17th, a converted par 5. Realizing that a Tour card was within his reach, he said he was in tears after making the putt, then again after finding the fairway of the dangerous par-4 18th, with water down the left side and out-of-bounds down the right.

“I wanted to cry on 17 green after I made that putt … I wanted to cry when I hit that drive on 18 because that’s probably one of the most important tee shots out there,” he said. “I didn’t look at the leaderboard putting from off the green, but [when he saw it after lagging to within 5 feet] I was like, ‘yeah, I’ve got this.’

“Right when I hugged Anders is when I started crying because we’ve worked so hard the past year, and we’ve accomplished a lot of things, especially mentally and emotionally, where it’s given me the opportunity to be here today and manage everything the best way possible.”

Also in tears was his brother Paco, a key member of his brother’s support team.

“Oh, my goodness,” he said. “I can’t even describe how happy I am. Raul has worked so hard. It tells you how mature he is, the way he handled it today, the amount of pressure.”

Pereda will now rep his family and his country on the PGA Tour. He plans on making the most of this opportunity.

“This is something new,” he said. “I need to be very holding my head on how to approach all these things. I’ve got the game, but I just need to know how to manage everything.”

Blackburn is among Pereda’s supporters who has no doubt.

“You could see that he had something special about him,” Blackburn said. “He was always a great ball-striker. When he put together that 100 yards and in more, he got elite.”

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/kKDgW1X
Two-time major champion Collin Morikawa and his baby draw atop the stacked leaderboard at the 2022 U.S. Open

Two-time major champion Collin Morikawa and his baby draw atop the stacked leaderboard at the 2022 U.S. Open

Two-time major champion Collin Morikawa and his baby draw atop the stacked leaderboard at the 2022 U.S. Open

BROOKLINE, Mass. — A week before the 2021 Open Championship, Collin Morikawa was lost as he struggled to finish 71st in the Scottish Open in his first encounter with links golf, befuddled by the sand-based, firm turf that was wrecking the accuracy of the masterful iron player.

Upon his arrival at Royal St. George’s a day later, he switched out a few irons, hunkered down on the practice ground and then won the Claret Jug for his second major championship.

Ahead of this week’s U.S. Open at The Country Club, Morikawa had been adrift during his tour of the PGA Tour, calling it a weird year and knowing he’s the only player in the top 10 in the world ranking who has not won this season. The culprit? His bread-and-butter cut with his irons has been disoriented.

So he’s set up camp for a few weeks now on driving ranges trying to work through it, even adding a small draw – think a 2-yard bend – to his arsenal. And the draw has worked so well he’s put the cut in the trunk for the most part.

“No,” Morikawa said when asked if the baby draw was here to stay. “What it proves is just you can play this game with many shots. I remember the first time I played with Tiger, and he hit every shot that called for it. Pin is on the right; you hit a little cut. Pin is on the left; you hit a little draw.

“I think this is just going to hopefully make my iron play and make my game a little bit more well-rounded rather than just hitting a cut. But this week we’re just going to work with what we have, and right now it’s a little baby draw.”

U.S. OpenPhotos | Leaderboard | How to watch

Well, it’s working just fine. Morikawa fashioned a solid 4-under-par 66 under bright skies and amidst calm winds in Friday’s second round to move to 5 under. Well positioned atop the first page of the leaderboard, Morikawa is 36 holes away from winning the third leg of the career Grand Slam, having won the 2020 PGA and last year’s Open.

But he’s only worried about the third round.

“Right now my game feels really good,” said Morikawa, ranked No. 7 in the world. “The last few days is a huge confidence booster for me heading into this weekend, and hopefully we can kind of make some separation somehow.”

It will be tough to separate from those also on the first page of the leaderboard.

Joining Morikawa at 5 under was Joel Dahmen, who has won one PGA Tour event but has looked very steady this week with rounds of 67-68. And the cream has started to rise to the top as No. 3 Rory McIlroy, last week’s winner in Canada, and defending champion, No. 2 Jon Rahm, are among those one shot back. McIlroy has posted 67-69, Rahm 69-67.

Two back is world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler (70-67). Three back are No. 9 Sam Burns (71-67) and No. 18 Matt Fitzpatrick (68-70).

“It’s fun for all of us because we all want to compete against the best and beat the best, and it’s obviously a lot more fun for people watching,” Rahm said. “I think it’s great for the game of golf that the highest-ranked players and the best players are up there (on the leaderboard), especially in the tournament where truly the best player ends up winning.”

Last week, McIlroy outdueled reigning PGA champion and No. 5 Justin Thomas and No. 15 Tony Finau over the last 36 holes to win the RBC Canadian Open. He relishes the opportunity once again to go against the best.

“For a little part of the day there, it seemed like I was going to be a few more behind, but I dug deep and played the last eight holes really, really well,” said McIlroy, who had an early double bogey but played his last eight in 3 under. “After I bogeyed 10, I just wanted to try to shoot under par. I had some chances coming up. Just played a really clean eight holes, which was pleasing. Hit fairways, hit greens, gave myself chances. Got myself right back in the tournament.

“You want to go up against the best to try to bring the best out of yourself. And to see Collin and Jon and Scottie and Sam up there and whoever else, that’s what major championship golf is all about. That’s what competition is all about.

I certainly don’t want it to be easy. I want guys to go out and shoot 65 so I have to go and shoot 64. That’s competition, and that’s at the heart of this game.

“I’m excited to be in that mix going into the weekend.”

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/LoWSknV
One year ago: After charges by Brooks Koepka and others, Phil Mickelson shocked the world at the 103rd PGA Championship

One year ago: After charges by Brooks Koepka and others, Phil Mickelson shocked the world at the 103rd PGA Championship

One year ago: After charges by Brooks Koepka and others, Phil Mickelson shocked the world at the 103rd PGA Championship

There was much about the 103rd playing of the PGA Championship that felt familiar.

The spectacular Ocean Course at Kiawah Island Golf Resort in South Carolina was hosting the event for the second time in less than a decade — Rory McIlroy had captured his second major at the Pete and Alice Dye design back in 2012, crushing the field with a devastating demonstration of championship golf.

After a year without spectators (due to the pandemic), PGA of America officials welcomed galleries, albeit smaller ones, back into the fold. It was announced that somewhere in the neighborhood of 10,000 fans would be able to attend the event, and a buzz started well before the first shot was played. Overall, the game was enjoying a spike in popularity akin to when Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson helped drive the sport decades prior, and this resurgence pushed demand for the few available tickets to an all-time high.

But Woods was still recovering from a near-fatal rollover car crash with fans clinging to hope that he’d again be able to walk. And Mickelson was a handful of weeks from his 51st birthday, so surely he wouldn’t be able to compete with a younger crop of superstars that included McIlroy, Bryson DeChambeau, Collin Morikawa and Viktor Hovland, right?

And what about Brooks Koepka, who had hoisted the Wanamaker Trophy two of the three previous years? There was little to believe that Koepka would threaten again after undergoing knee surgery in March. Although the former Florida State star had made appearances at both the Masters and the AT&T Byron Nelson leading up to the PGA Championship, he missed the cut in both events. Koepka’s surgeons had told him he wouldn’t be fully healed until late summer, so expecting him to challenge was a longshot.

But again, this event had a sense of familiarity — and when the first day was done, the four-time major champion toured Kiawah Island’s Ocean Course in 69 shots to grab a share of the early lead. Koepka made six birdies to yet again position himself atop the leaderboard in one of golf’s four more important championships.

“It’s a major. I’m going to show up. I’m ready to play,” Koepka said. “I feel so much better now. I don’t need to be 100 percent to be able to play good.”

“I felt like I already had confidence. In my mind, it’s just a major week. Just show up. That’s all you’ve got to do.”

Over the previous four years, Koepka has shown up for majors more reliably than any of golf’s elite players, although a series of speed-bumps — knee, hip and neck ailments, plus a split with his longtime coach Claude Harmon III — had slowed his charge of late. His opening 69 marked the first time he’d put himself into the frame in a major since last summer’s PGA Championship in San Francisco, a spell in which he missed the U.S. Open due to injury and failed to factor in two Masters.

PGA Championship

Brooks Koepka and Phil Mickelson look on during the final round of the 2021 PGA Championship held at the Ocean Course of Kiawah Island Golf Resort on May 23, 2021, in Kiawah Island, South Carolina. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

Koepka found only five of 14 fairways in blustery conditions on the Ocean Course but hit 13 of 18 greens, good enough to rank first in Strokes Gained: Approach through the early wave of players. The winds raked across the barrier island, making for tricky playing conditions, and the first-round scoring average when Koepka signed his card was 74.54. Koepka didn’t end the day atop the leaderboard — Corey Conners shot a 67 in the late wave to take those honors — but he did sit in a tie for second in a sextet that included Keegan Bradley, Cam Davis, Sam Horsfield, Viktor Hovland and Aaron Wise

“I love it when it’s difficult. I think that’s why I do so well in the majors,” Koepka said. “I just know mentally I can grind it out. You’ve just got to accept it and move on.”

While Koepka came to the PGA Championship hoping to use fortitude as his main weapon, Conners was hoping to use some of the mathematical acumen he’d picked up while earning a Bachelor of Science in Actuarial Mathematics from Kent State University.

The Canadian’s keen decision-making and analysis worked just fine on Thursday as he figured out his way around the Ocean Course in just 67 strokes.

“I’d say it’s impossible to be stress-free around this golf course. You can’t fall asleep out there on any holes. It’s very challenging,” Conners said. “I was fortunate to have a good day. Made it as least stressful as possible on myself. I hit a lot of really good shots and holed some nice putts early in the round, and that really helped boost the confidence. Played with a lot of freedom.”

The Ocean Course was just the most recent big stage in golf that Conners has performed well on. He finished third in the Arnold Palmer Invitational, seventh in the Players Championship and tied for eighth in the Masters leading up to the PGA Championship. He’d been a regular on the first page of leaderboards for a few months now while seeking his first major title and second PGA Tour victory. He’d also made a steady rise up the world rankings, climbing from No. 196 when he won the 2019 Valero Texas Open to No. 39 heading into this event.

Corey Conners, of Canada, watches his tee shot on the eighth tee during the first round of the PGA Championship golf tournament on the Ocean Course Thursday, May 20, 2021, in Kiawah Island, S.C. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

“I have a lot of belief in myself, and I’ve been playing well for quite a while,” Conners said. “I’m excited for the opportunity to play against the best players in the world and put my game to the test. I have a lot of confidence in my game and I’m excited for the rest of the weekend.

“I think one of most important things is the short game around this place,” he said. “A lot of major championships you can’t ball-strike your way to good rounds. You need to have a good short game. You need to get the ball up and down and you need to roll in birdie putts. Good ball-striking definitely helps. The wind and difficulty of the golf course, hitting it solid is very important.”

On Friday, many of the biggest names were sent packing — Dustin Johnson, Justin Thomas and Xander Schauffele to name a few — but one of the event’s charms came into the spotlight as PGA teaching professionals Brad Marek and Ben Cook qualified for the weekend.

A 37-year-old teaching pro from the Northern California PGA Section, Marek posted a 1-over 73 Friday and 2-over 146 for the championship (T-32). Cook, 27, PGA Director of Instruction at Yankee Springs Golf Course, in Wayland, Michigan, was leaking oil on the closing stretch of the Pete Dye layout, but managed to par the final two holes to make the cut on the number (72-77—149) for the first time in three appearances.

“It’s been a cool week,” Cook said. “I’m out here on the putting green hitting putts next to my heroes, and I have a great support team here. I feel very blessed.”

Marek, who played college golf at Indiana, competed professionally for nine years on a variety of tours, winning 15 times in that span, including a couple of times on the Dakotas Tour.

PGA Championship

Brad Marek reacts on the first green during the first round of the 2021 PGA Championship at Kiawah Island Resort’s Ocean Course on May 20, 2021 in Kiawah Island, South Carolina. (Photo: Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

“I chased mini-tours nine or 10 years after college, always with the goal of trying to get out here. Obviously didn’t attain that via the regular route, but as soon as I was done playing, I knew I wanted to be a part of the PGA for the opportunities like this on the playing side,” he said.

Marek, who tied for eighth at his first PGA Professional Championship to earn a spot in this week’s field, runs his own junior golf academy out of Corica Park in Alameda, California, for players with aspirations of playing college golf.

“Everybody in that has a goal of trying to move up to the next level in terms of their golf,” he said.

Speaking as much for Cook as for himself, Marek explained why it was important for two of the 20 club professionals in the field to make the cut.

“Any time one of us can make the cut, I think it’s really good for,” Marek said. “I think there used to be 25 spots in this and it got reduced to 20, so I feel like any time a couple of us can make the cut and represent the PGA well, I think that bodes well for the organization as a whole and just kind of shows the type of players that are at the top level of the PGA of America.”

But the big story of Friday was the familiar charge of Mickelson, whose 23-foot birdie putt dropped into the center of the cup capping a 3-under 69 that gave him the lead after the second round. Mickelson’s putt accentuated a 31 on his second nine that put him at 5-under for the tournament and energized a crowd that was growing with each birdie.

“It’s really fun, obviously, to make a putt on the last hole, finish a round like that and then to have that type of support here has been pretty special,” Mickelson said.

Mickelson had worked through “scar tissue” – something Padraig Harrington, one of his playing partners the opening two days, said 50-somethings must overcome – and of course, the unpredictable challenges of this “diabolical” (DeChambeau’s description) course to put himself in position to accomplish something he had not done in eight years – win a major.

“To be in contention, to have a good opportunity, I’m having a blast,” Mickelson said. “I’m excited for the weekend.”

Two weeks before the event at Kiawah, Mickelson was leading at Quail Hollow in Charlotte after an opening-round 64, but he followed with a 75 and two 76s and subsequently went from leading the tournament to finishing 69th.

He insisted an approach that included long spells of longer meditation and extra practice could make the difference.

“I’m working on it,” he said. “I’m making more and more progress just by trying to elongate my focus. I might try to play 36, 45 holes in a day and try to focus on each shot so that when I go out and play 18, it doesn’t feel like it’s that much. I might try to elongate the time that I end up meditating.

“But I’m trying to use my mind like a muscle and just expand it because as I’ve gotten older, it’s been more difficult for me to maintain a sharp focus, a good visualization and see the shot.”

Louis Oosthuizen

Louis Oosthuizen Saturday at the 2021 PGA Championship. (David Yeazell-USA TODAY Sports)

Mickelson wasn’t alone at the top as Louis Oosthuizen’s 68 pushed him into a tie for the lead through two rounds. Koepka posted a 71 and sat just a single shot behind the duo.

On Saturday, after shooting a 68 of his own, Jordan Spieth summed up the post-round sentiment of many of his colleagues. Spieth sounded as if he was channeling “the most interesting man in the world,” from old Dos Equis commercials when he said, “I don’t watch golf, but I promise you I’m going to turn it on to watch (Mickelson).”

“Yeah, it’s Phil, right,” he added. “It’s theatre.”

Dressed in all black like another ageless wonder, Gary Player, and sporting his now-familiar Highway Patrolman shades, the southpaw put on a world-class performance in the third round, threatening to run away with the title before a few stumbles.

He closed with five pars to shoot 2-under 70 and ended the day with a one-stroke lead over Koepka. After sharing the 36-hole lead, the 50-year-old Mickelson charged ahead with four birdies in his first seven holes.

In much more docile conditions, Mickelson sent the crowds into a delirious frenzy. Throaty cheers of “Let’s go Phil,” filled the air making it sound if not like 1999 then at least a pre-COVID world with Mickelson dispensing thumbs up to his fans as if giving out candy on Halloween.

By the time he canned a 7-foot birdie putt at 10 to reach double-digits under par, his lead had swelled to five strokes and Phil’s faithful were ready to crown him champion.

“I felt I had a very clear picture on every shot,” Mickelson said of his torrid start.

But as Spieth pointed out, Mickelson always provides theater and his five-stroke lead faded away as Mickelson hit into a fairway bunker at 12, took his medicine and made bogey, then snap-hooked his tee shot into the drink at 13, had to re-tee and made double bogey. Meanwhile, Oosthuizen made birdies at Nos. 11 and 12, and salvaged a bogey after driving into the water at 13, too. He shot 72 to trail by two and could’ve been even closer if he had made a few putts, including missing a gimme for birdie at 7 and taking three putts from 21 feet at No. 17.

“I think we all got lucky that he came back to the field,” Oosthuizen said of Mickelson.

Phil Mickelson

Phil Mickelson celebrates with the Wanamaker Trophy after winning during the final round of the 2021 PGA Championship held at the Ocean Course of Kiawah Island Golf Resort on May 23, 2021 in Kiawah Island, South Carolina. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

With his 70, Mickelson became just the fifth player aged 50 or older to hold at least a share of the lead after three rounds in a major since 1900, joining Tom Watson (2009 Open), Greg Norman (2008 Open), Boros (1973 U.S. Open) and Harry Vardon (1920 U.S. Open).

And as is his wont, Mickelson made Sunday something special.

After sleeping on a one-shot lead, Mickelson, 200-1 to win on Thursday, survived a helter-skelter first 10 holes where he and playing partner Koepka exchanged body blows to the tune of four two-shot swings and one three-shot swing. And then he didn’t stagger despite a few more edge-of-your-seat moments on the back nine.

Mickelson got off to a shaky start with three bogeys in his first six holes, but birdies on 2, 5, 7 and 10 gave him separation from the field and when he took to the 13th tee, he had a 5-shot lead.

He made two consecutive bogeys before righting his ship with a birdie on the 16th and his nearest competitors didn’t get closer than two shots down the stretch.

Thousands of those fans followed him up the fairway and encircled the 18th green when containment was lost by marshals and thundered when Mickelson capped off his triumph by tapping in from six inches.

“Slightly unnerving but exceptionally awesome,” Mickelson said.

Thus, after winning his first PGA Tour title 30 years ago when he stunned the golf world to capture the Northern Telecom Open as a junior at Arizona State University, Mickelson won his 45th. And the man whose plaque has been hanging in the World Golf Hall of Fame for nine years and who has three victories on the PGA Tour Champions didn’t have any problem lifting the 27-pound Wanamaker Trophy for the second time; 16 years ago he won the 2005 PGA Championship.

“This is just an incredible feeling because I just believed that it was possible but yet everything was saying it wasn’t,” Mickelson said. “I hope that others find that inspiration. It might take a little extra work, a little bit harder effort to maintain physically or maintain the skills, but gosh, is it worth it in the end.”

“My desire to play is the same. I’ve never been driven by exterior things. I’ve always been intrinsically motivated because I love to compete, I love playing the game. I love having opportunities to play against the best at the highest level,” said Mickelson.

“That’s what drives me. I just didn’t see why it couldn’t be done. It just took a little bit more effort.”

Golfweek’s Steve DiMeglio and Adam Schupak also contributed to this report.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/RFBnM3r