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You are likely to find everything golf here. Product reviews, course reviews, tournament commentary, and of course reports on my on-course travails. I hope you find it enhancing.

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Wednesday, May 15, 2024

KORDA & ZHANG SQUARE OFF AT MIZUHO AMERICAS

Nelly Korda-2021 Womens PGA- Titleist.com
Although most of the golf world–at least the male golf world–will be tuned into the PGA Tour’s second major of the season, the PGA Championship at fabled Valhalla, many of us will have an eye on the Mizuho Americas Open at Liberty National Golf Club in Jersey City, New Jersey. When Rolex Women's World Golf Rankings No. 1 Nelly Korda tees it up this weekend– after a disappointing finish to her record-tying run of five wins in five starts last weekend, she’ll have to contend with defending champion Rose Zhang, who is coming off her first win of 2024 at the Cognizant Founders Cup.  

Rose Zhang- 2023 Mizuho- Getty
When Rose Zhang turned professional in 2023, she joined the LPGA Tour with almost as much fanfare and hype as Caitlin Clark’s entry to the WNBA generated. Zhang didn’t disappoint either, as she was the first player to win their first professional start on the LPGA Tour since Hinako Shibuno won the 2019 AIG Women’s Open. That win at the Mizuho Americas Open is the turf she'll be defending this weekend. Although she didn’t win again during her rookie season, she picked up four other top-ten finishes, with three of those coming in LPGA majors.

Zhang- 2024 Founders Cup- Seth Wenig-AP.
In 2024, Zhang has had mixed results, much like she did during her rookie season. In addition to last weekend’s win, she has posted two top-ten finishes: Tie-5th at the T-Mobile Match Play in April, and tie-7th at the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions in January. She has also missed two cuts: The Ford Championship in March, and in the first LPGA major, the Chevron Championship in April. At this point of Zhang’s budding career (she’s only 20-years-old!), consistency seems to be her holy grail.

Korda- 2024-Chevron-David-j-Phillip-AP
In contrast, at age-25, Nelly Korda has been a paragon of consistency in 2024, finishing in the top-20 in each of her seven starts, including a stretch of five consecutive wins, which ended with Rose’s win last weekend the Founders. Korda, who claimed the Chevron where Zhang missed the cut, was not a model of consistency last season finishing in the top-ten in eight of 18 events played, with no wins. We can likely attribute her uneven performances over the past two years to health issues that seem to have been resolved.

Hannah Green- 2024 HSBC Womens Open- Getty 
Although Korda and Zhang are a pair to keep an eye on this weekend, Hannah Green, the only other player on the LPGA Tour to win multiple times this season, is an enigma worth following as well. She has two top-ten finishes in seven starts, and both were wins at the HSBC Women's World Championship in February and the JM Eagle LA Championship in April (she also won this event in 2023). Her next best finish of the season was last weekend’s tie-18th at the Founders. She has been outside the top-20 in her other four starts. It’s hard to tell which Hannah Green will show up from week to week, but she has shown that she knows how to win when in contention.

Lydia Ko-2024 TOC- Julio Aguilar-Getty
None of the season’s other winners appear to be in form, including Lydia Ko who began the season getting her first win since the CME Group Tour Championship in November of 2022. Ko, just one win away from induction into the LPGA Hall of Fame, came close in the season’s second tourney, claiming 2nd in the LPGA Drive On Championship in January, but hasn’t really threatened a win since finishing 4th at the Blue Bay LPGA in March. Given her history of winning, despite recent performances, Ko must be included as a possible winner of the Mizuho Americas Open.

Madelene Sagstrom- 2024 Founders Cup-Getty
It'll also be interesting to see if Madelene Sagstrom will continue her elevated play this weekend. Her last two starts have resulted in a tie-8th at the JM Eagle and solo-2nd to Zhang at the Founders. She’s definitely trending in the right direction and may be poised to add to her victory tally which stands at one to date.

As has been shown throughout the years of professional golf, you never know who will rise to the occasion from week to week, but with the potential of a rivalry shaping up between World No.1 Nelly Korda and World No.6 Rose Zhang, it will be an intriguing weekend at the Mizuho Americas Open this weekend.

2024 PGA CHAMPIONSHIP PREVIEW: SCHEFFLER, MCILROY & KOEPKA HEADLINE

Scottie Scheffler- 2023 PGA-Golf Digest
How can you start a conversation about potential winners of the 2024 PGA Championship with anyone but Scottie Scheffler? The guy is the top-ranked player in the world and is coming to Valhalla having won four of his past five events, and finishing second by one shot in the one he didn’t win. Scheffler was close in 2023, when he closed with a 65 to share runner-up honors with Viktor Hovland, the eventual 2023 FedEx Cup winner. I suppose someone could argue that Scheffler hasn’t been the world’s best golfer over the past two years, but that person would probably also argue that rain isn’t wet. Scheffler’s 2024 results just scream dominance.

Bennett Scheffler- Instagram
But there are some potential factors besides playing against the other supreme talents on the PGA Tour to consider when assessing Scheffler’s chances to pocket this season’s second major. Scottie will have been a first-time father for just eight days when he tees it up on Thursday. Who knows what he’s been through since he sank the winning putt at the RBC Heritage at Harbour Town three weeks ago? Is his game still sharp? Is his mind still on golf? No way to answer such questions before his name is called on the first tee at Valhalla.

Scheffler- 2024 Masters-John-Angelillo-UPI.
Then, of course, we have to consider the lesser known “Masters Jinx.” Everyone knows about the “Masters Par-3 Jinx,” which claims that no one who wins the par-3 event wins that Green Jacket, but fewer probably know that the last player to win the Wannamaker Trophy after donning the Green Jacket was Jack Nicklaus in 1975, the second time he’d done so (also in 1963). Nicklaus is the only player to have claimed both in the same year since the tourney moved from match play to stroke play in 1958 (Were Scottie’s parents even born yet?). Tiger didn’t do it, Arnie, didn’t do it, none of the other greats have done it since PGA Championship stroke play was implemented. Yet, as spectacular as his two-year run has been, is Scheffler and his game in the rarified air as the GOAT, Jack Nickalaus? Guess we’ll get an inkling this weekend.

Rory McIlroy-2014 PGA-SkySports
Prior to Rory McIlroy’s triumph last weekend, I would have followed Scheffler with Brooks Koepka, but Rory’s back-to-back PGA Tour wins, and specifically his second nine last Sunday have made me reconsider. McIlroy won the PGA Championship in 2012 and 2014, the latter being his most recent major, which, by the way, was held at Valhalla. There is no doubt that he is seeking to end that 10-year major drought and he is coming off consecutive victories including last weekend’s Wells Fargo, where he closed with a 65, despite a meaningless double bogey on 18. Meaningless? Yes, he was smiling and chuckling after posting that double, and why not? He’d just carded two eagles and two birdies on the second nine to leave Xander Schauffele–whom he had trailed by two then walked down and bounced past in his five-shot win–wondering what could have been. Coincidentally, Rory’s win at the Wells Fargo was at Quail Hollow, another venue where he holds multiple wins (4). 

Rory at Wells Fargo 2024-Jim-Dedmon-USA Today
Rory’s credentials at the PGA are stellar. In addition to two wins, he holds the record for the most lopsided victory in PGA Championship history, claiming the Wannamaker by eight strokes over David Lynn (Who?) in 2012. I only wonder how McIlrory will weather the constant questions about his major championship drought, and how he’ll handle the presence of Scottie Scheffler if Scheffler is on his game. Scheffler hasn’t played in either of McIlroy’s recent wins. When relaxed and rolling, I’d put my money on Rory against anyone…and yes, that includes Scheffler. But relaxed and rolling hasn’t been McIlroy’s norm in the big moments at majors…except for that three-year span from 2011 – 2014 when he picked up four major titles (2 PGAs, US Open, and The Open Championship). My hope is that both Rory and Scottie will bring their A-games to Valhalla. If both do, I’d expect them both to be vying for the Wannamaker on the second nine on Sunday. What a treat that would be!

Brooks Koepka- 2019 PGA- Stuart Franklin-Getty
And how about Brooks Koepka chances, he who won the PGA in 2018, 2019, 2023 and was the runner-up at Phil Michelson’s historic win in 2021? We’re talking about a guy who won the Wannamaker three of the past six years and who was runner-up in a fourth! You simply cannot ignore that kind of success and he is coming off an early-May victory in Singapore and a top-ten finish in his previous outing, both on the LIV Tour. I’m not sure how much weight we can put on LIV tourney results, given the fields he’s competing against there, especially since his one foray onto the PGA Tour this season was a tie for 45th at Augusta National. Then again, a win is a win, and there’s nothing like a win to bolster confidence, which is at least as important as your driver and putter in golf.

Brooks Koepka- 2018 PGA-Doug-Mills-NYT
Koepka has PGA Championship credentials that outweigh every other player in the tourney except Tiger Woods, who has four Wannamaker Trophies. In two of Koepka’s three wins (2018 & 2019), he equaled the record low score of 63 for the PGA Championship. Oh, and Brooks is one of only 20 players in professional golf history to have won five or more major championships, and is only one of three who are still active on tour…if you really consider Tiger active. Phil Michelson is the other. No, Koepka cannot be left out of the conversation of potential winners this weekend.

Xander Schauffele- Jim Dedmon-USA Today
I think Xander Schauffele must be considered among the favorites at Valhalla despite his collapse last weekend, zero major titles, and his historically so-so performances at the PGA Championship–his best finish a tie for 10th in 2020. He has been knocking at the door of majors without an answer for some time now and he just might be due. He’s been second at major twice (2018 Open Championship and 2019 Masters), is the defending Olympic champion, and I believe he is the only player to have finished in the top 20 of eight straight majors. Schauffele has got to be fired up after giving up his lead to Rory on the back nine last Sunday, and I wouldn’t be surprised if he uses that fire as a springboard to his first major championship.

Jason Day-2015 PGA- Andrew Redington-Getty
There are other former PGA champions in the mix who might have something to say about the outcome on Sunday. I suspect the most likely of those to be in contention on Sunday is Jason Day. After a five-year drought, Jason won the AT&T Byron Nelson, took 2nd at The Open Championship, and notched 8 top-ten finishes in 2023. Day has four top-ten finishes this season and finished tied for 4th this past weekend. In our “what-have-you-done-for-me-lately” world, it’s no surprise that Jason Day isn’t on many people’s radars as a potential 2024 Wannamaker Trophy lifter on Sunday. I mean, 2015 is ancient history, right? His win then seems to have faded fast in our rearview mirrors, so much so that we forget he boasts the lowest score in relation to par (-20) in PGA Championship history. When Day is healthy, he is as game and gritty as they come. I see him among the contenders on Sunday.

Colin Morikawa- 2020 PGA- Sports Illustrated
I just can’t count out Collin Morikawa, who has shown himself to be a big-stage player…at times. In his last 16 majors, he’s won the PGA Championship (2020), was the Champion Golfer of the Year at The Open Championship (2021), and finished in the top-20 eight other times. That includes ties for 4th and 5th at the 2021 and 2022 US Opens; as well as 5th, 10th, and tie-3rd at Augusta in 2022, 2023, and 2024 respectively. Morikawa’s penchant for self-destruction gives me pause however. His tie for 3rd at the 2024 Masters included double bogeys on holes 9 and 11 and a bogey on 18 as well. This past weekend, he played the final three holes +3 and in the tourney before that, the RBC Heritage, he played his final six holes +2. If Colin could curb his tendency to drop shots down the stretch as he repeatedly has lately while in contention, he’s a legit contender for the Wannamaker.

Justin Thomas- 2022 PGA- Getty Images
Justin Thomas is also a two-time winner, raising the Wannamaker in 2017 and 2022 and just might capture some magic to upset the applecart. “Justin who?” some might ask. Well, although JT’s results over the past two years don’t shine a bright light on his chances this weekend, he has been showing us glimpses of his former brilliance recently. He’s had three top-ten finishes this season, the latest being tie-5th at the RBC Heritage in late April. When you consider that he carded just four top-ten finishes in official tour events all of last season, Thomas’ game is definitely on the rise. Longshot? Yes. Possible? Definitely.

Phil Michelson- 2021 PGA- David J. Phillip-AP
One of the two old-timers among the former winners that have to be mentioned regardless of their chances is Phil Michelson. Phil won in 2005 and 2021, his most recent win setting a record for being the oldest winner of the PGA Championship and the oldest winner of a golf major, period. Michelson was also the runner-up twice at the PGA, and one of those times was at Valhalla in 2014 when he fell to Rory McIlroy by one stroke. Phil hasn’t done much on the LIV Tour this year, his best finish is 9th, which came at Jeddah in March. Neither before nor since has Phil cracked the top-ten this year in LIV competition. Still, can we count out this hall-of-famer who has gotten up off the canvas in the past to drop a haymaker on Father Time? Does anyone remember Phil shooting 65 in the final round of the 2023 Masters to finish tie-2nd? I do. Age, shaky game, whatever, counting out one of the best that’s ever played, who is still healthy is not something I’ll be doing this year.

Tiger Woods- 2000 PGA- Brian Spurlock-USA Today
I did write “healthy” above, right? Well, even though I am pretty much counting this next former champion out, it’s only because Tiger Woods will probably never be “golf-healthy” again. That said, and although the odds of him winning are astronomical, I suppose there can’t be a professional golf tournament with Tiger Woods in the field, where we don’t acknowledge his presence and speculate on his chances. Despite Tiger having won a PGA Championship at Valhalla in the past and his being one of only two players to have won four Wannamaker trophies during the stroke-play era (Jack Nicklaus being the other with five), I don’t think he has the proverbial snowball’s chance at winning this weekend.

Potential Breakout Players

Ludwig Åberg- Sam Greenwood-Getty
Ludwig Åberg (pronounced "oh-berg") hasn’t done a whole lot of winning, but the golf word is high on his talent and this could be his breakout event. He’s gotten close twice already. The 24-year-old Åberg is in his rookie season and has five top-ten–including two runner-up– finishes in 10 tour starts, has missed no cuts, and is No.6 in the World Golf Rankings. One of those runner-up finishes was at the Masters where he finished tie-2nd. Not bad for a rookie, eh? Åberg ranks 3rd in total driving and 2nd in proximity to the hole on approaches. His putting has yet to catch up with his long game– he’s ranked 112th in overall putting, but if the flatstick gets hot…

Sahith Theegala- Getty
Sahith Theegala is another player I’ve got my eye on. Theegala has five top-ten finishes in 13 starts this season and two of those have been runner-up finishes. At the RBC Heritage at Harbour Town, Sahith finished second to Scottie Scheffler with a -3 final round (tying Scheffler’s final round score), while Åberg finished tie-10th after a +1 final round. Theegala’s +8 total at last weekend’s Wells Fargo as well as missing the cut at the Zurich Classic with Will Zalatoris doesn’t bode well coming into Valhalla. However, if you examine Sahith’s performance pattern this season, you might beg to differ.  

Sahith Theegala- 2024 Wells Fargo- Jared C. Tilton-Getty
Theegala began the season with tie=2nd at The Sentry, which he followed up with missing the cut at the Sony Open and a tie-64th at the Farmers. He then finished in the top-20 at Pebble Beach and solo-5th at the WM Phoenix Open. His next outing produced another mediocre performance at The Genesis (tie-37th), before two top-ten finsihes at the Arnold Palmer (tie-6th) and The Players (tie-9th). Two more middling efforts at the Texas Children’s (tie-28th) and the Masters (tie-45th) preceded his solo-2nd at the RBC, before the Zurich and Wells Fargo disappointments. The bottom line is that Theegala’s form waxes and wanes and he is due to be on-form for the PGA.

Byeong Hun An- Gregory Shamus-Getty
Speaking of potential breakout players who might be on form, I can’t exclude Byeong Hun An, who finished solo-3rd at the Wells Fargo, tying Matt Hughes for the second-best closing round (66) with a clean card (3 birdies) on the second nine. That finish followed up his tie-4th at the Byron Nelson, where he closed with another clean second nine with five birdies in seven holes.  An has 5 top-ten finishes in 13 events, including tying for 2nd in a playoff loss to Grayson Murray at the Sony early this season. His 6th-place standing in the FedEx Cup race heralds his ascendance and a win for An at Valhalla would not surprise me.

Okay, PGA Tour players are all so talented that any player who gets hot for four days can win any event. Regardless of who emerges with the Wannamaker, the various storylines and splendid form of the top players in the game practically guarantee that we’ll be talking about the 2024 PGA Championship for some time to come.

Monday, May 13, 2024

CAN XANDER SCHAUFFELE CLOSE AT THE 2024 PGA CHAMPIONSHIP

Note: I’m leaving out the Zurich Classic and AT&T Pebble Beach because the former is a team event and the latter was called after three rounds due to weather.

Today’s subject is Xander Schauffele and closing the deal…or not. The last five minutes of a basketball game, the 9th inning of a baseball game, the final two minutes of a football game are considered crunch time, and that is when the best of the best usually shine. In golf, the final day and the last nine holes of a tournament is where winners shine-unless you have a ridiculous 54-hole lead you’re just trying to protect.

Xander Schauffele-Jim Dedmon-USA Today
After watching Xander Schauffele come up short yet another time yesterday at the Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow, I thought I’d take a look at how he does in final rounds compared to earlier rounds, and on second-nines versus first nines. We can blame this post on the commentators who continuously mentioned how close Schauffele has been to winning without closing the deal over the past two years. Yep, we’re talking about closing today, which is something the best in golf–and all sports for that matter–do better than most.

But before we get to Schauffele’s struggles in closing the deal, let’s be sure to mention that he is one of the best and most consistent players on the PGA Tour. Xander has finished in the top-ten eight times and has been the runner-up twice in the 10 events I’ve included for analysis here. I should probably note that coming in second to Scottie Scheffler–World No.1 and the hottest player on tour this year with 4 wins–at The Players Championship, and to Rory McIlroy–one of the most talented players since Tiger Woods and owner of 26 tour titles–yesterday at Wells Fargo is nothing to be ashamed of.

Anyway, before examining his failure to close for the past couple years, let me support my contention that Schauffele is one of the best and most consistent players on the PGA Tour. In addition to what he’s done thus far in 2024, his 2021-2022 and 2022-2023 seasons speak to his consistent exemplary play. Xander teed it up 23 times last season and finished in the top-10 in almost half of his starts (11). Of the 23 events he played, he finished in the top-25 18 times! That’s a whopping 72% of the time he’s finishing in the top-25. I don’t think we can say that of too many on the PGA Tour or any professional golf tour for that matter.

Xander Schauffele & Patrick Cantlay- Golf Week
Although he wasn’t quite as consistent during the 2021-2022 season, finishing in the top-ten fewer times (7) in 21 events than he has already in the 12 events he’s played this season, Schauffele won twice on his own and had a 3rd win with Patrick Cantlay at the Zurich Classic in New Orleans two seasons ago. His last win was at the Genesis Scottish Open in July of 2022. The last time Schauffele missed a cut was the 2022 Masters.  

After yesterday’s runner-up finish, Xander is 2nd in the FedEx Cup standings, 3rd in the World Golf Ranking, and has made more than $23.5 million in less than two full years, with half of this season yet to play. Not too shabby, I’d say. Playing consistently great golf has not been a problem for Xander Schauffele, but closing out tourneys with wins has been since that Genesis win.

Okay, given the above, it’s clear that we’re talking about one of the premier golfers in the world, but that dang closing issue! In six of the 10 events included in this analysis, Schauffele’s worst scoring rounds came in the final round. Granted, in two of those instances, that final round score matched another of his previous rounds in the event, but just saying…

Scottie Scheffler- Instagram
Only twice in 10 events this season has Schauffele posted his best score in the final round, both in March and both on the Florida Swing. Those were at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, and the Valspar Championship at Innisbrook, where he tied for 25th and 5th respectively. In Arnie’s event, he shot a -2 on the final day, with his two-under coming on the first nine, with an even-par second. He finished even-par for the tourney, 15 shots behind winner Scottie Scheffler. At Innisbrook, he tied for low round on the final day with a six-under 65, his best closing round of the year. That final nine included four birdies and an eagle during his final eight holes after bogeying the 10th. Despite that back-side 30, Xander finished four shots behind tourney champion, Peter Malnati. In comparison, in the nine tourneys (Pebble Beach left out) that I looked at for Scottie Scheffler’s numbers, Scheffler posted his best score of the tourney in the final round of events five of nine times (55.5% to Schauffele’s 20%).

If Schauffele’s scorched-earth second nine at Valspar wasn’t an aberration, I wouldn’t be talking about his ability to close…or rather to leave the door open. In addition to his final round scoring, the closing deficiency is also apparent when we examine his second-nine finishes as well. He scored worse on the second nine in 20 of the 40 rounds (50%) I examined, compared to the 15 times (37.5%) he scored better on the second nine, and the five times that he scored equally on the first and second nines.  Scheffler, on the other hand, scored worse on the second nine 12 of 36 (33.3%) rounds, better on his second nine 20 times (55/5%), and four times posted equal scores to par on the first and second nines.

Okay, okay, so comparing anyone to Scottie Scheffler this year is probably unfair, but when you’re trying to be the best you’ve got to beat the best, right? I’ve heard that cliché a time or two. And heck, they are No.s 1 and 2 in the FedEx Cup race, so who better than Scheffler to compare Schauffele to?

Rory McIlroy- Golf Week
I couldn’t tell you if it is pressure, lost focus, coincidence, or some combination of the three that’s responsible for Schauffele’s stumbles on second nines and in final rounds, but somehow Xander has to figure out how to get over the final-round hump? Many top golfers have a mental coach these days, and that seems to have helped a number of talented golfers (think Max Homa) climb the ranks to a position in line with their skills. I’m not sure how many besides Schauffele claim their dad as their mental guru, but perhaps Xander might consider getting a second mental coach; after all, it’s probably tough to fire your pops. Whatever he does, and however he does it, with Scheffler doing his thing and Rory McIlrory seemingly hitting his stride, Schauffele needs to do something with the PGA Championship–golf’s second major of the year–on the horizon.