34 players at the 2024 PGA Championship also competed in 2014 at Valhalla. Here’s how they fared

Eight players finished inside the top 25, 16 players missed the weekend cut and one withdrew.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — For the fourth time in its 106-year history, the PGA Championship is back at Valhalla Golf Club this week.

It’s been a decade since the PGA of America brought its flagship event to the big ballpark in the Bluegrass State, where Rory McIlroy claimed the 2014 PGA Championship in near darkness for his most recent major victory. McIlroy finished with a 16-under-par 268 to beat Phil Mickelson by a shot.

The world No. 2 is back 10 years later coming off back-to-back wins (the Wells Fargo Championship and the team-based Zurich Classic of New Orleans) and is one of 34 players who played the 2014 PGA and have returned this week.

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But how did they all fare? Check out the results below.

Results for 2014 PGA Championship players in 2024 field

Player 2014 result
 Rory McIlroy 1
 Phil Mickelson 2
 Rickie Fowler T3
 Jimmy Walker T7
 Adam Scott T15
 Brooks Koepka T15
 Jason Day T15
 Justin Rose T24
 Thorbjørn Olesen T30
 Hideki Matsuyama T35
 Brian Harman T40
 Luke Donald T40
 Shane Lowry T46
 Billy Horschel T58
 Francesco Molinari T58
 Patrick Reed T58
 Brendon Todd 72
 Charley Hoffman Cut
 Chris Kirk Cut
 Gary Woodland Cut
 Harris English Cut
 John Daly Cut
 Jordan Spieth Cut
 Keegan Bradley Cut
 Martin Kaymer Cut
 Michael Block Cut
 Padraig Harrington Cut
 Rich Beem Cut
 Russell Henley Cut
 Shaun Micheel Cut
 Tiger Woods Cut
 Tommy Fleetwood Cut
 Y.E. Yang Cut
 Jason Dufner WD

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Michael Block is back at the PGA Championship. Here’s what to know about the darling of Oak Hill

Block captivated those watching on television. He became an adopted son of Rochester, New York.

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Brooks Koepka won the 2023 PGA Championship.

But Michael Block won fans’ hearts.

Block captivated those watching on television. He became an adopted son of Rochester, New York, where last year’s PGA Championship was contested at Oak Hill Country Club. And during his final round, he hit one of the tournament’s most memorable shots in recent memory: a hole-in-one at the 15th hole, playing alongside one of the sport’s biggest stars, Rory McIlroy.

“I couldn’t believe that my game held up for four straight days at Oak Hill,” Block said Tuesday. “That golf course is so hard. Just a spectacular golf course, especially when we lost the roll (on the fairways) going into Saturday when it rained. … I couldn’t believe that the 47-year-old club pro’s swing and putting stroke somehow held up during that time.”

One year later, Block returns to the PGA Championship, held at Valhalla Golf Club for the first time since 2014.

More: Michael Block’s 2023 PGA Championship performance was a win for all PGA of America golf professionals

“Valhalla is just a spectacular track,” Block said. “I have not heard one negative thing said from any player or caddie this entire week. Only positives. It’s very fair. … I’m excited to get out there and tee it up.”

Here’s what you need to know about Block heading into Thursday’s opening round:

Who is Michael Block again?

2023 PGA Championship
Michael Block at the driving range during the final round of the 2023 PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club on May 21, 2023 in Rochester, New York. (Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

Block is a golf instructor, serving as the head golf professional at Arroyo Trabuco Golf Club‎ in Mission Viejo, California.

PGA CHAMPIONSHIPHow to watch | Tournament hub

What is Michael Block known for?

2023 PGA Championship
Michael Block reacts after being awarded the low PGA Championship Club Professional Bowl at Oak Hill Country Club. (Photo: Adam Cairns-USA TODAY Sports)

Block finished in a tie for 15th at the 2023 PGA Championship. It was the best showing by a PGA professional (those who teach the game) since Lonnie Nielsen tied for 11th at Inverness in 1986 — and the third-best all time.

Has Michael Block ever won on the PGA Tour?

No, Block has never won a PGA Tour tournament. Block has appeared in 30 PGA Tour events, making five cuts. His best finish was the T15 at the PGA Championship — the only cut he made in six tries during the 2022-23 season.

But he’s no stranger to success elsewhere, as he’s won the Southern California PGA Championship four times.

Has Michael Block competed in more than one PGA Championship?

Yes, this year will mark his sixth appearance in the PGA Championship. Prior to last year, he never had made the weekend at the PGA.

Coincidentally, the first time he played in the PGA was the 2014 edition … also at Valhalla.

“2014 was great,” Block said, “and the course has, I think, gained a couple hundred yards (since then). … But it’s going to — it will be a good time. Just keep it in the short grass, for sure.”

Has Michael Block played at Valhalla Golf Club prior to this year?

Aside from his 2014 PGA appearance, Block came to the Bluegrass State last year and put on a record-setting performance during a practice round. Block carded a 9-under 63, matching the score shot by José María Olazábal during the 2000 PGA Championship.

Reach Kentucky men’s basketball and football reporter Ryan Black at rblack@gannett.com and follow him on X at @RyanABlack.

PGA Championship: Storms are forecast, so learn what water does to courses and golf equipment

How will players likely compensate and adapt to the wet conditions we anticipate seeing at Valhalla this week?

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Overnight rains in the Bluegrass State had already softened Valhalla Golf Club before a late-morning storm dropped more water on the course and sent players, caddies and fans at the 2024 PGA Championship scurrying for shelter. The waves of rain are just the first taste of what forecasters predict is coming this week to the Louisville area, so if you are a fan of firm and fast courses, you won’t be happy.

Recreational golfers hate playing in rainy, wet conditions because they typically don’t prepare for the weather, and they don’t understand the necessary adjustments they need to make in order to play well in the rain. On the other hand, pros and elite players like those in the field at the PGA Championship start to salivate when a soft rain falls. Wind spooks the game’s best players because it adds unpredictability, but armed with good rain gear, an umbrella-carrying caddie loaded, a supply of dry towels and experience, pros look at rain-softened golf courses like kids eye chocolate chip cookies when they come out of the oven.

Below is a brief description of what water does to golf equipment and the course, and how players at the PGA Championship will likely compensate and adapt to the wet conditions we anticipate seeing at Valhalla this week.

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Off the tee

Wet golf courses effectively play longer and broader off the tee because, after a drive shot lands in the fairway, it typically does not roll very far. In fact, in rainy conditions, tee shots often hit the ground and either stop inches from where they land or even pop up and backward a foot or two. If a course is very wet, a tee shot might even embed in the fairway.

Valhalla Golf Club
On many holes at the 2024 PGA Championship, the farther you miss off the tee, the worse the rough gets. (David Dusek/Golfweek)

The result of the softened condition is that a tee shot that might land in the fairway and roll into the rough will often stay in the fairway in wet conditions. Yes, players will lose some distance, but they will frequently hit more fairways.

In some cases, golfers may opt to add some loft to their driver in hopes of getting more carry distance in wet conditions.

The one thing that pros and caddies work hard to avoid is letting the golf ball get wet before the player hits his tee shot. In a steady rain, caddies frequently hold an umbrella over a teed golf ball, keeping it as dry as possible while the player goes through his pre-shot routine. A wet ball can slide up the face of a driver, which reduces spin and increases the launch angle, effectively turning a controlled tee shot into a high knuckleball. The drier the ball, the more it can be controlled.

From the fairway

The last time Valhalla Golf Club hosted the PGA Championship, the fairways were bentgrass, but the club switched to Zeon Zoysia grass, a soft-textured, thin-bladed variety that can handle the hot Kentucky summer and is known for its shade and drought tolerance.

Andrew Putnam
Andrew Putnam hitting from wet rough Tuesday at Valhalla Golf Club. (David Dusek/Golfweek)

Golfers can’t pick up a ball and dry it off in wet conditions, so judging how a wet ball will react from the Zoysia fairway – and how it might react when hitting from the rough – will be a handy skill. Here are three guidelines:

  1. If the ball is perched in wet rough, players can anticipate making contact higher in the face, which reduces spin and often leads to a higher launch angle.
  2. If the ball is hit from the fairway or the collar and players make contact in the sweet spot, but excessive water gets between the ball and the hitting area, the ball often slides up the face. This is commonly referred to as a ‘flier lie’ because the ball often goes farther than a player anticipates.
  3. All things being equal, iron shots will not fly as far when it is raining because moist, humid air is more dense than dry air, and that creates more aerodynamic drag. The longer the shot, the more significant the effect.

Around the green

It seems appropriate that the rough surrounding the greens at Valhalla is Bluegrass, a broad-leafed grass that can create some unique lies. Depending on how a player’s shot enters the rough, it may sit up or drop down between the broad blades of grass.

Bluegrass rough
Depending on how shots enter the rough, balls in the Bluegrass rough can sit on top of the grass or fall down. (David Dusek/Golfweek)

On chip shots and pitch shots in wet conditions, water on the hitting area or the ball makes it harder for the grooves to bite into the ball’s cover and create spin. Balls often slide up the face, and like iron shots from the fairway, shots often pop up more quickly and land short of a player’s intended target with less spin. Fresh wedges with sharp grooves can help, and clean grooves can get water off the hitting area more effectively than grooves that are filled with dirt, sand or debris, but the effect of water and grass on the face is almost unavoidable.

Ironically, after the rain stops, rain-softened greens can amplify the effects of spin on approach shots because the water creates friction. If a hole is located in the back of the green, players who generate a lot of spin on their short irons and wedges often get frustrated seeing shots land near the flag and peal backward, away from the hole.

In bunkers, wet sand tends to get clumpy, but balls tend to sit on top of the sand. Accomplished players can generate a lot of spin from rain-softened bunkers, so if a player is going to miss a green, finding the sand instead of the rough is often the goal.

Putting

Putters are not affected by rain because putting strokes are slower than full swings. However, rain slows the speed of the greens because the water on the putting surface creates friction. Rain can also subtly decrease the effect of breaks and undulations on the green.

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Can Tiger Woods win again? CBS’s Frank Nobilo says, ‘His chances of winning are close to none’

As far as Woods winning a 16th major championship? Nobilo said it’s time to be realistic.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – The last time we saw Tiger Woods he was limping off the course at Augusta National after finishing dead last among those players who completed 72 holes at the Masters. He’s back this week – sporting a goatee, no less – for the 106th PGA Championship at Valhalla Golf Club, a course where at this tournament in 2000 Woods became the first player to win three straight majors since Ben Hogan in 1953.

In April, Woods showed grit and moxie and that he’s still got the shots to stay within striking distance of the lead through 36 holes, even in some of the most difficult conditions that had been seen at the Masters in a long time. Woods set a Masters record, making the cut for the 24th consecutive time, but shot 82 on Saturday.

“This one was done sort of with string and tape, really,” CBS commentator Frank Nobilo said recently on the “Musings on Golf” podcast.

But as far as winning a 16th major championship? Nobilo said it’s time to be realistic.

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“This is going to come across as negative but you’ve got to say no,” he said on the podcast. “I would never say no against Tiger Woods but to be realistic if you added all the players up together you’d say that his chances of winning are close to none, right? If he was to do what he did in 2019 (at the Masters) again that’s how amazing that would be. I didn’t think 2019 would happen and if I went back to the week before I think I’m on record saying I don’t think it’s possible. That’s how good a performance that was.”

If Woods only is capable of making the cut, it begs the question: How much longer will he keep showing up at majors? ESPN golf analyst Curtis Strange, a two-time U.S. Open champion, also expressed doubt that Woods would be adding to his 82 career PGA Tour titles.

“When that energy and that adrenaline wears off either sometime Thursday or Friday, what does he have after that?” Strange wondered. “We saw it a little bit at the Masters, the energy wore out, and there’s not the goal of winning, so what else is there for him? I think he’ll hit a lot of good shots and make some putts, but can he do it over four days?”

Curtis Strange is a part of ESPN’s broadcasting crew.

Strange’s ESPN colleague Andy North was more hopeful.

“I think every one of the majors he plays he’s got a better chance. I think they all become easier walks for him as we get into the season. But I think he’s played well at Valhalla. He’s got some great memories there. He’s got a lot of great shots he can step up on tees and remember hitting. I think that’s really important,” North said.“Where is his game in the last month? How much work has he been able to get in? I think that’s what it all boils down to.”

For that answer let’s listen to what Woods said on Tuesday during his pre-tournament press conference. He noted that his body is OK, that the fused ankle “is what it is,” and added, “I wish my game was a little bit sharper. Again, I don’t have a lot of competitive reps, so I am having to rely on my practice sessions and getting stuff done either at home or here on-site.”

But Woods still has the self-belief that he can hit the shots and that he can find some of the old magic at a place where he tasted victory in 2000.

“It’s getting around is more of the difficulty that I face day-to-day and the recovery of pushing myself either in practice or in competition days. You saw it at Augusta. I was there after two days and didn’t do very well on the weekend,” he said. “I still feel that I can win golf tournaments. I still feel I can hit the shots and still feel like I still have my hand around the greens and I can putt. I just need to do it for all four days, not like I did at Augusta for only two.”

Max Homa played with Woods during the opening two rounds at Augusta National and raved about the way Woods performed to make it to the weekend at the Masters. Asked how much gas Woods still has in the tank, Homa said, “If he had made anything he would have been right around the lead. So, it was a tough draw for him in that we had to play 20-odd some holes the second day. He wasn’t limping too bad. So, yeah, I think he’s got a decent amount.”

But can Tiger win again?

“At some point it probably just comes down to him, just how badly does he want it,” Homa said. “Watching him play those two days at Augusta, I very much thought he could win another golf tournament. So I don’t know tank-wise, but he works his ass off and he’s really, really good at golf so I would put nothing past him at this point. It always would be crazy to think he would win another one.”

Of Woods’s manic effort to keep playing after being involved in a single-car accident that battered his body and required multiple surgeries, Nobilo agreed.

“Everything he’s done to still play golf again, I don’t know of a single person that would be even trying to play golf again with what he’s gone through,” he said.

Woods’s quest for major No. 16 and win No. 83 begins on Thursday at 8:04 a.m. ET off the 10th tee in a grouping with Adam Scott and Keegan Bradley.

It’ll cost you $15 for a seltzer at the PGA Championship, ‘the largest all-inclusive event in the world’

Within the past couple years, the PGA rolled out a system called “Championship+.”

After a year of preparing, rows of biscuits are ready to be baked and just as many eggs are ready to be fried. Onions are ready to be chopped, bags of chips are ready for snacking, and boxes upon boxes of beer are ready for cracking.

These are just some of the behind-the-scenes workings we saw when taking a scenic golf cart ride, then walking up to a trailer and through a door marked “Production Kitchen” in a tucked-away corner of the Valhalla Golf Club. On the counter, thick binders with the title “Production Kitchen” emblazoned on the front carried pages and pages of information about what will be served May 13-19 during the 106th PGA Championship in Louisville.

The binders are big because this event is bigger than ever. It’s shaping up to be the largest PGA Championship in the history of the revered sporting spectacle, according to those behind the planning.

One of those is Eric Babcook, general manager of PGA of America Championships for the Patina Restaurant Group. The New York-based food service company was hired by PGA a few years ago, and as Babcook said, each running brings something new.

“There’s a lot of pressure, but that’s what we enjoy,” he told the Courier Journal during a media preview on May 10.

The level of pressure makes sense: The food service team stands to feed more people in seven days than a professional football or baseball stadium might serve their whole season.

The pressure might be on for organizers and the field of athletes, but hopefully, the experience is mostly fun for thousands of spectators walking the green fields of Valhalla.

Playing a part in the experience? Coming up with a game plan of what to eat and drink.

“You can get on the golf course and have this unbelievable experience of watching the best players in the world,” Babcook said. “Then you’re also eating some of the best food you can get.”

Your PGA Championship ticket includes some food and drinks

Patina Restaurant Group and contracted chefs and cooks prepare food ahead of the PGA Championship at Valhalla Golf Club on Friday, May 10, 2024.

Within the past couple years, the PGA rolled out a system called “Championship+,” which covers access to the grounds of Valhalla Golf Club, as well as food and beverage offerings.

“That’s a unique thing,” Babcook said. “This is the largest all-inclusive event in the world.”

The tickets include one entree item, one snack item, and one non-alcoholic beverage per entry into a concession venue. Ticket-holders can enter “as many times as they like.”

If this sounds confusing, the blue signs will tell you what to do upon entry. The course has seven concession stands, called “markets,” instructing attendees to pick one beverage, one food entree, and one snack item.

You then show your wristband to a volunteer and go on your way.

“When you go to a concession stand, you’re not pulling out your wallet,” Babcook said.

“The idea is that you come in, you grab a soda or water, you grab a burger and you come back as many times as you want,” he added. “There’s no gimmicks here.”

The setup is intended to cut down on long lines, too.

What’s on the menu at Valhalla during the PGA Championship?

When building a menu for the PGA Championship, one executive chef on the team said he kept in mind how much walking people would do.

Having some quality and tasty fuel for a day on the course “makes for a better day,” chef Ed Milan told the Courier Journal. “People are going to be hungry.”

There will be breakfast and lunch entrees, along with Pepsi products. You’ll see beef hot dogs, bratwurst, a vegan option in Beyond Burgers, grilled chicken sandwiches, and, what is expected to be the most popular grab, cheeseburgers. The team expects to sell more than 100,000 burgers throughout the tournament,

“Everything is fresh,” Milan said. “When you go up to the concession stand, there will be people grilling hamburgers fresh. Nothing is frozen.”

Patina Restaurant Group and contracted chefs and cooks prepare food ahead of the PGA Championship at Valhalla Golf Club on Friday, May 10, 2024.
While these things are included in tickets, a price list seen on Friday shows that a hot dog costs $8 and a cheeseburger costs $15.

Outside these stands, attendees will see tents selling alcoholic beverages including Michelob Ultra for $14, premium beer for $15 and a seltzer for $15.

Premium food and beverage areas around the course offer more options.

For more information, visit pgachampionship.com/championship-food-beverage#food-beverage-experience.

‘This is what I practice and prepare for’: Scottie Scheffler’s son arrived and now he’s ready to chase another major

“I was sitting there with a newborn in my arms and the green jacket in the closet.”

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Life is pretty sweet these days for Scottie Scheffler.

“I was sitting there with a newborn in my arms and the green jacket in the closet,” he said on Tuesday during his pre-tournament press conference ahead of the 106th PGA Championship.

The world No. 1 has won in four of his last five starts, including the Masters in April, but celebrated an even greater life moment when he and wife Meredith welcomed their first child, a son, Bennett, to the world on May 8.

“It was a wild ride,” Scheffler said. “Extremely proud of Meredith after watching her go through that. It’s nuts. I’m glad it was her going through it and not me because I don’t know if I could have done it.”

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Nor was it easy to leave home on Monday morning.

“I miss him like crazy,” he said. “I told my son as I was leaving, I was like, I don’t want to leave you right now, but I need to. I’m called to do my job to the best of my ability, and I felt like showing up Wednesday night wouldn’t really be doing myself a service this week when it comes to playing and competing in the tournament, so I had to show up, especially with the weather forecast, showing up, being prepared and ready to play and being back home as quick as I can.”

Added Scheffler: “This is a major championship week, and this is what I practice and prepare for is to play my best at these events, and hopefully that trend will continue.”

About the only thing to slow down Scheffler’s dominant run of late has been the birth of Bennett. Scheffler won the Masters and RBC Heritage during “Baby Watch” but then shut it down to be at home. He typically would have played the CJ Cup Byron Nelson in his hometown of Dallas and the Wells Fargo Championship, a signature event, last week.

But Scheffler said he didn’t expect his game to be rusty. He’s been playing his fair share of money games at home to simulate competition and stay sharp.

“I was able to practice and play plenty at home. Obviously the last week was a bit different with our son coming. But yeah, I would say three weeks is probably a bit of a longer break than I would usually take,” Scheffler said. “But yeah, definitely rested going into this week for sure. I don’t really feel like any rust has accumulated.”

2024 Masters
Scottie Scheffler hugs his caddie Ted Scott on the 18th green after winning the 2024 Masters. (Photo: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports)

There is one other curveball for Scheffler as he attempts to become the first player since Jordan Spieth in 2015 – and only the fifth player since 1960 – to win the first two majors of the year. Caddie Ted Scott receiving an excused absence from carrying the bag during Saturday’s third round. Scott’s 17-year-old daughter is graduating from high school and Scheffler gave him the day off to attend.

“Teddy is going home Friday night, coming back Saturday evening after the graduation — or probably Saturday late night, I’m sure they’ll do a little celebration afterward,” Scheffler said. “That’s something we talked about from the beginning of our relationship was family always comes first, and it’s the same thing for me as it is for my caddie. It was a pretty easy decision. He told me at the beginning of this year that that was the date that it was, so I got a backup caddie lined up.”

That would be Tour chaplain Brad Payne. Asked if he would be using one of his buddies who stayed with him during the Masters while Meredith was back home in Dallas awaiting the birth of their baby, Scheffler smiled and said of Payne, “I trust him to rake a bunker more than my buddies.”

Lynch: Tiger Woods’ old mantra gets new life — whatever you say, say nothing

Woods dodges troublesome inquiries with an enigmatic ease that would have impressed Muhammad Ali.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Through nearly three decades in the public eye, Tiger Woods has remained a consummate corporate cipher, dodging troublesome inquiries with an enigmatic ease that would have impressed Louisville’s own Muhammad Ali. No one has ever said less more often, a muscle he’ll work strenuously while facing inquiries about his work on the PGA Tour’s new subcommittee tasked with talking to the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund.

On Monday, independent director Jimmy Dunne resigned from the Tour’s Policy Board and bemoaned a lack of progress in advancing the Framework Agreement with the PIF that he helped architect, the June 6 announcement of which blindsided players (including Woods) and sparked a bitter governance review during which a faction of player-directors repeatedly demanded accountability from those who worked secretly on the deal unbeknownst to the rest of the board. A day after Dunne’s departure, Woods was asked how optimistic he is about a Saudi deal being reached.

“I think we’re working on negotiations with PIF. It’s ongoing; it’s fluid; it changes day-to-day,” he said, revealing as much as a burka. “Has there been progress? Yes. But it’s an ongoing negotiation, so a lot of work ahead for all of us with this process, and so we’re making steps and it may not be giant steps, but we’re making steps.”

Unlike Rory McIlroy, who has said a deal with PIF is in the best interests of the game, Woods hasn’t detailed what resolution he’d like to see, an astute strategy in that it keeps his counterparts wondering if he wants one at all. He was a vocal critic of LIV and allied with McIlroy to reshape the Tour in an effort to prevent more players leaving, but that was before executives performed an about-face on the Saudis to rival that of Linda Blair in “The Exorcist.” Woods acknowledged that he and McIlroy are not so aligned in their thinking now.

“It’s good to see it differently, but collectively as a whole we want to see whatever’s best for all the players, the fans, and the state of golf,” he said. “How we get there, that’s to be determined, but the fact that we’re in this together and in this fight together to make golf better is what it’s all about.”

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Pressed on what he wants to see happen, Woods blocked: “I’m not going to comment. Except that we’re making steps. That’s all I can say.”

Are you personally open to a deal with the Saudis?

“I’m personally involved in the process.”

Dunne called me Monday evening and described his position on the board as having become “superfluous,” describing a ghostly existence in which he wasn’t a decision-maker and wasn’t consulted by those who are — a predictable result of his role in the Framework Agreement. Woods was asked if he agreed with Dunne’s assessment.

“No,” he replied. “Jimmy and the amount of work and dedication that he put into the board and to the PGA Tour, it’s been incredible. It was a bit surprising that he resigned yesterday and just how it all came about, but, no, his role and his help, then what he’s been able to do for the PGA Tour has been great.”

It was a commendable effort at sincerity. Woods’ fellow director, Jordan Spieth, was also at pains to push back on a narrative that players now wield too much power, insisting that good governance has now been established. He used the word “balance” or a derivation thereof 11 times in his Tuesday press conference.

Tiger Woods smiled as his group approached the 5th green during a practice round in the PGA Championship at the Valhalla Golf Course in Louisville, Ky. on May. 14, 2024.

If Woods is opposed to or ambivalent about a Saudi deal, he finds himself now in an awkward position. No one will be collaring PIF governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan during negotiations to raise human rights abuses by the government whose slush fund he runs. Those in the room are determined to treat this dispute as purely commercial in nature. But no matter how artfully it is dressed up — unifying the game for fans, offering clarity to sponsors, safeguarding the PGA Tour — the entire sport will assume enormous reputational risk if it chooses to be in business with a mercurial dictator who dissects dissidents.

Should a PIF the deal happen? If morality matters, absolutely not. The game shouldn’t be leveraged to sportswashers under the guise of unity.

Will a PIF deal happen? It’s more likely than not, since all parties are incentivized to make it happen.

If terms can’t be agreed upon, multiple scenarios become the subject of conjecture. Can the PGA Tour go it alone with private equity? Do those investors have the stomach for financing a battle against the Saudis? Will players try waiting out PIF’s willingness to torch a billion-plus annually on a failed product? Would PIF seek to upend Europe’s strategic alliance with the PGA Tour?

None of those are readily answerable questions, but since they’re questions of commerce, they are a damned sight easier for the powers that be to consider than one simple question of conscience.

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Jon Rahm dishes on love for PGA Tour, Saudi PIF negotiations and his 2024 PGA Championship chances

“See you guys keep saying ‘the other side’ but I’m still a PGA Tour member, whether suspended or not.”

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Conversations with players who left the PGA Tour for LIV Golf don’t carry on for too long without someone inevitably bringing up the ongoing discussions between the Tour and LIV’s financiers, Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund.

Naturally, ahead of his eighth PGA Championship start this week at Valhalla Golf Club, Jon Rahm was asked about his viewpoint of the negotiations from the opposite side of the professional golf aisle.

“See you guys keep saying ‘the other side’ but I’m still a PGA Tour member, whether suspended or not,” said Rahm. “I still want to support the PGA Tour. And I think that’s an important distinction to make.”

“I don’t feel like I’m on the other side. I’m just not playing there. That’s at least personally,” he added. “I’m going to say what I’ve said all along, I hope we reach a resolution and a resolution that’s beneficial for everyone.”

PGA CHAMPIONSHIP: How to watch | Tournament hub

“I’ve said however I can, I would like to support (the Tour), right. So even though I’m playing full-time on LIV Golf, like I’ve said many times, had I been allowed, I would have played some events earlier in the year, and if allowed in the future and not conflicting with my schedule, I would play in the future,” Rahm continued. “The PGA Tour has given me so much and has given me this platform and the opportunity that I’m not really going to turn to the side and go against it, because I’m not going against it.”

When it comes to interviews and press conferences, Rahm is one of the best in the game. He’ll answer whatever is asked and do so in a thoughtful manner. He’s smart, so he has to know that claims of loving the Tour can fall on deaf ears after he joined the very league that’s pushed the Tour to the brink.

That said, he’s still advocating for a global tour with a reunited game, but fell back on the often-used saying by players these days that there are smarter people than him to figure out how to do it. He also doesn’t think either side should rush to a resolution.

“This would be some decisions and negotiations that can’t be taken lightly, so it should take quite a bit of time to get it done properly,” Rahm explained. “I don’t know if that takes one, two, three, five, six years. I don’t know what that might be like. But I don’t feel like I’m on any rush to make something happen today, right.”

The three-time member of Team Europe also dished on his desire to represent Team Europe in the Ryder Cup next year at Bethpage Black in New York. The DP World Tour recently clarified that LIV players can serve their suspensions while competing on the Saudi-backed league, which clears the way for European players to compete in the Ryder Cup so long as they pay their fines and make four DP World Tour starts. Rahm’s wife, Kelly, is pregnant with their third child, so her due date will impact Rahm’s schedule, but the big man from the Basque region of Spain is committed to earning a spot on Team Europe in 2025.

“I said I would do whatever I can to get into that Ryder Cup team, and I made that commitment to (captain Luke Donald), and I want to be able to be a part of it,” said Rahm. “So again the schedule’s going to be the hardest thing in that regard.”

Rahm loves watching old clips and highlights of past tournaments, so of course he did a YouTube deep dive on Valhalla, which has hosted three previous PGA Championships (1996, 2000, 2014), two Senior PGA Championship (2004, 2011) and the 2008 Ryder Cup. Rahm watched the 2014 PGA Championship live, but Anthony Kim walking off the 14th green after drubbing Rahm’s fellow countryman and friend Sergio Garcia, 5 and 4, in 2008 was the first thing that came to mind about Valhalla. Now LIV Golf colleagues, Rahm brought up the match with Kim ahead of this week’s major.

“As a 13-year-old I was very upset when he walked off the green on 14 after beating Sergio. I was like, ‘Man, that’s not fair, he’s such a you-know-what,’ and we laughed about it,” said Rahm. “I made him feel pretty old, but it was pretty cool to talk about it and talk about the Ryder Cup in that sense.”

So far this season on LIV, Rahm hasn’t finished worse than tenth in seven starts and has a trio of top fives under his belt. The two-time major champion appeared to take slight offense with a question about the state of his game, saying “I don’t think my game is in any sort of issues.” Rahm is the first to put his hand up and say he didn’t play well at Augusta National last month as he attempted to defend his 2023 Masters title, but was also quick to note the success he’s had with LIV thus far.

“I know it’s smaller fields, but I’ve been playing good golf. It’s just the one major that I played clearly wasn’t great,” Rahm said. “Have I played my best golf? No. But I do feel the last few weeks, especially coming off Singapore, I felt, you know, made a couple tweaks that you wouldn’t be able to tell. It’s just very minor things.”

“So I never, never felt like I was far off, and when I say I’m not playing my best, just hadn’t had my A-game for a week yet, but I still I’ve been close to my A game and B+ multiple times.”

If Rahm can find that A-game once again this week, don’t be surprised if he claims major championship number three.

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Photos: PGA Championship 2024 Tuesday practice round at Valhalla Golf Club

This marks the fourth time that Valhalla will host the PGA of America’s premiere event.

A little rain fell on Tuesday at Valhalla Golf Club during the second day of pre-tournament preparation for the 2024 PGA Championship.

Tiger Woods made his first appearance on the course Monday. The tournament rounds start Thursday for the 156 players, including 32 major winners and 16 past PGA champs, in the field.

Valhalla will measure 7,603 yards and play as a par 71 this week.

The winner of the PGA gets a lifetime exemption into the event as well as a replica of the Wanamaker Trophy.

Check out Thursday’s action here.

Check out some photos from Tuesday below.

2020 PGA champ Collin Morikawa and longtime coach Rick Sessinghaus officially reunited … and it feels so good

“It’s hard to replace someone you’ve worked with for 18 years.”

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Reunited and it feels so good.

Like the classic Peaches & Herbs song, Collin Morikawa, the 2020 PGA Championship winner, has resumed working with longtime instructor Rick Sessinghaus again.

“It’s like having your old friend back,” Morikawa said. “There’s a sense of comfort. When you have that and you can take a deep breath and know everything is going to be all right, it’s like, yeah, this is right.”

Morikawa parted ways with his childhood coach of 18 years after the Ryder Cup in September and began working with noted instructor Mark Blackburn, whose students include Max Homa. While Morikawa won the Zozo Championship in October in his first start since working with Blackburn and credits him with imparting useful knowledge on the golf swing, he began to feel as lost as he’s ever felt with his swing.

“It was very frustrating because I knew where my game was at and it wasn’t anywhere near where I needed it to be. Mentally, it was so frustrating to be on the golf course. I was trying to see the one shot that I’ve seen for like eight years and it just wasn’t happening,” he explained.

Morikawa said he needed to go down this path. He mused that golfers are always searching, always trying to get better. But what he discovered was he doesn’t need to search for something new.

“My game fits the type who plays with what you’ve got and you figure it out and you’ve got to be ready by Thursday. That’s something Rick was always good at,” Morikawa said. “No matter how I was playing, I had a shot and something to key on. That mindset was something nice to go back to.”

He gave notice to Blackburn after the Players Championship and struggled mightily at the Valero Texas Open. He reached out to Sessinghaus, and they began talking again on an informal basis.

2024 RBC Heritage
Collin Morikawa reacts on the 18th hole after finishing the second round of the RBC Heritage at Harbour Town Golf Links on April 19, 2024 in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina. (Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

“He’s been amazing and he’s one of the best people I know. We started with him just wanting to help me out. We talked a bunch through that stretch of Masters and RBC,” said Morikawa, who finished T-3 at the Masters, ninth at the RBC Heritage and 16th at the Wells Fargo Championship last week. “He reassured me that these are the pieces that have worked and this is what we are going to do.”

Morikawa described it as “a full reset,” something he wasn’t in favor of doing late last year as his trusty fade became a little less reliable.

“In the past it was always working, right, but I got to a point where it wasn’t. Instead of just taking five steps back and starting from a place where we have started before, I wanted to take two steps forward and find something new. Sometimes that works, sometimes it works for a lot of guys. For me, I know that five steps back my game is good enough to compete out here and be in contention. That’s what I need,” Morikawa said.

Sessinghaus won’t be at the PGA Championship this week due to a prior commitment but is planning to catch up with Morikawa at the Memorial ahead of the U.S. Open. Morikawa said he’s got a good handle on his swing at the moment and he also learned an important lesson.

“It’s hard to replace someone you’ve worked with for 18 years,” he said.