This conversation at PGA Championship between Justin Thomas and Bones on what club to hit is golf nerd gold

Attention golf announcers: We’d get more stuff like this.

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It’s rare to capture a conversation between player and caddie during a golf broadcast because most of the time the broadcasters can’t shut their mouths.

So far, the coverage on ESPN+ has been fantastic and quite a few discussions have been picked up by the various microphones on the course.

Another great moment happened Friday morning when Justin Thomas and his caddie, Jim “Bones” Mackay, were discussing what club to hit into the 18th green of Southern Hills Country Club during the second round of the 104th PGA Championship.

Listening in on two great golf minds is as good as it gets for many golf nerds, including the one writing this article. They discuss things amateur golfers don’t even think about and your average player can learn a lot from these conversations.

Thomas would put his approach to just under 50 feet and later two-putt for par.

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JT had the low round in the afternoon wave Thursday, and shot a 1-under 34 on his opening nine Friday to get within a shot of first-round leader Rory McIlroy, who tees off Friday afternoon with Tiger Woods and Jordan Spieth.

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‘It’s a beast’: Southern Hills’ 18th hole a harrowing adventure, even for golf’s best

Nearly half the field made bogey on 18 during Thursday’s first round.

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TULSA, Okla. — Not long after he finished his round of 3-under-par 67 early Thursday afternoon, Matt Kuchar offered up a question for the regular members of Southern Hills Country Club.

How, exactly, do they approach the menacing 18th hole on their home course, which this week is hosting the 104th PGA Championship?

“I have to think the members must dread 18,” Kuchar said. “I try to envision how they play it. I don’t know that they can tee off enough forward to enjoy that golf hole. It’s hard. It’s a beast. I saw Cameron Davis in my group hit a perfect drive, bounced down into the creek. Didn’t go in the water, just played from the rough.

“It’s a tough driving hole, and then certainly having 200 yards straight uphill is an awfully challenging approach shot. It’s a tough one.”

Playing at 490 yards, the hole has a wide landing area for the tee shot, though a creek running up the right side cuts across the fairway to present some danger. A tee shot on the right half of the fairway can leave a tricky cut shot around some protruding trees. But even a drive to the correct spot leaves an uphill approach to a green guarded by five bunkers.

2022 PGA Championship
Will Zalatoris plays his shot on the 18th fairway during the first round of the 2022 PGA Championship. (Photo: Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports)

“On top of that, it’s the toughest green on the golf course,” said Will Zalatoris, who bogeyed the 18th in an otherwise strong round of 4-under 66.

Southern Hills has hosted seven major championships prior to this week, and five of those winners made bogey or worse in their Sunday round.

Of course, the 2001 U.S. Open was the most famous spotlight moment on Southern Hills’ treacherous 18th.

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That Sunday, Mark Brooks and Retief Goosen each three-putted for bogey — Goosen from 12 feet, missing an uphill 2-footer that would’ve won the tournament — forcing an 18-hole playoff between the two the following day. Stewart Cink, playing in the final group with Goosen, three-putted for double-bogey, missing an 18-inch putt that would’ve earned him a spot in the playoff.

Again this week, the winner’s story likely will be told through the prism of the 18th hole.

“It’s 490, uphill into the wind. That’s all you want,” Zalatoris said. “You want to be able to go into that hole on Sunday, whoever is going to win this tournament, you want to have a cushion.”

It played as the hardest hole on the course Thursday. Birdies made could be counted on your fingers with a few left over, and nearly half of the field carded bogey.

Matt Kuchar of the United States walks on the 18th green during the first round of the 2022 PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club on May 19, 2022 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. (Photo by Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images)

After a well-placed drive, Kuchar hit a 5-iron from 187 yards out, which landed hard and zipped past the pin. He missed the 14-foot birdie putt and tapped in for par, feeling happy to escape with that.

“My 5-iron is not landing very softly, I assure you,” Kuchar said. “It’s a tough one to control that distance and how the ball rolls out.”

Former Oklahoma State golfer Viktor Hovland says he has played Southern Hills “a decent amount” in recent weeks to prepare for this event, but couldn’t get a good feel for 18 because he often faced north or east winds, not the stiff southern breeze players saw on Thursday.

“It was really hard today,” he said of the 18th. “I hit a good drive and a 5-iron in there, two good shots, just to get away with a 4. It played the full number today.”

The winds are expected to change for the weekend, adding a different type of challenge.

Zalatoris had two bogeys Thursday, but one was courtesy of a three-putt from 32 feet on the 18th green.

“Even for me being one of the top 25, 30 longest guys out here, I still hit driver, 5-iron in today,” he said. “We’re supposed to get a north wind, I guess, which is pretty weird for this time of year, but that hole is just a beating no matter what.”

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Rickie Fowler, back in Oklahoma for the 2022 PGA Championship, keeps grinding to fulfill potential

You could argue that Rickie Fowler has not lived up to his potential, but he’s said he’s still grinding, and enjoying the grind.

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TULSA, Okla. — The last time the PGA Championship was contested at Southern Hills Country Club, back in 2007, Rickie Fowler hadn’t signed any endorsement deals or been featured in any television commercials. He had not won a Players Championship nor any other PGA Tour events, been an Olympian, a Ryder Cup player or someone who has contended in major championships.

Nope. Back then Fowler was a hot-shot freshman from California who was helping a stacked Oklahoma State men’s golf team win a Big 12 Championship over Texas and Texas Tech. He would go on to win the Ben Hogan Award and the Phil Mickelson Award that season as both the collegiate player of the year and the best freshman golfer of the year, respectively.

In other words, Rickie Fowler was potential.

Today, Rickie Fowler is in a slump. He failed to qualify for the FedEx Cup playoffs last season and coming into this week, he ranked No. 125 on the Fed Ex Cup point list. His best finish and lone top 20 this year is a T-3 at the CJ Cup last October. With Stillwater, Oklahoma, being just over an hour’s drive from Southern Hills, so many people thought that returning to a familiar area might help Fowler jumpstart his game.

Thursday’s opening round of the PGA Championship, a 1-over 71, proved that Fowler still has patience. He grinded and worked and sweated in 90-degree temperatures. Nothing seemed to come easy. In fact, before holing a 14-foot birdie putt on 17, Fowler had only made 33 feet of putts Friday.

The score was good enough to put Fowler in a tie for 41st in a clogged field. He will start the second round six shots behind the leader, Rory McIlroy. The low 70 players and ties make the cut at the PGA Championship, so Fowler is in good shape, but he can’t afford to play a loose round Friday either.

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Fowler’s tumble from a career-high Official World Golf Ranking of No. 4 to his current ranking, No. 146, comes down to two things—poor putting and poor driving—a lethal combination for professional golfers.

Five years ago, Fowler was the best putter on the PGA Tour. He won the Honda Classic that year, was a runner-up at the Memorial and the BMW Championship, played on the Ryder Cup team and earned over $6 million in prize money.

As you can see in the chart below, coming into this week’s PGA Championship, he’s among the worst putters on Tour, ranking 162nd in strokes gained putting. He has also fallen from being ranked 18th in strokes gained off the tee to 141st coming into this week.

Fowler came to Southern Hills tied for the lead on a list that no golfer wants to be on. He and Matt Kuchar have both finished in the top 10 in major championships 12 times without winning one. That’s one more than Lee Westwood, two more than Tony Finau and three more than Xander Schauffele. It means that Fowler has played at a high level on the biggest stages.

You could argue that Fowler has not lived up to his potential, but he’s said this week that he’s still grinding, and enjoying the grind.

“Going through it, it’s never fun. I’ve actually enjoyed it as much as it sucked,” Fowler said. “I’ve definitely found myself, not that I ever fell out of love with the game or anything like that, but I’ve embraced the grind and the aspect of just taking every day and going out and enjoying it, even though we have been in tough spots.”

Those are not the words of someone who is giving up on himself or his potential. And Fowler is not giving up on contending this week at Southern Hills either.

“Tomorrow morning it’s supposed to blow even harder, and yeah, that just makes it tough,” Fowler said Thursday evening. “You know it’s hard going in, so the biggest thing is you just focus on trying to execute each shot. You’re not going to do it perfect, so hit it, find it and keep going.”

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2022 PGA Championship at Southern Hills featured groups, Friday tee times

Everything you need to know for the second round of the PGA Championship.

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Thursday morning couldn’t have started better for Tiger Woods, who returns to Southern Hills for the first time since winning the 2007 PGA Championship in Tulsa, Oklahoma. A birdie on No.1 and another on five would get Woods to 2 under for the day.

Then, it started to go downhill.

He would make five bogeys on his next eight holes, then would make two more on his last two holes of the day for a 4-over 74 to start his 2022 PGA Championship.

One of his playing partners, however, didn’t have the same issues.

Rory McIlroy started his PGA campaign with a 5-under 65 and is the 18-hole leader. He hasn’t won a major championship since the 2014 PGA.

From tee times to TV info, here’s everything you need to know for the second round of the PGA Championship.

PGA: How to watch | ESPN+ streaming | Yardage book

All times ET.

Friday tee times

1st tee

Tee time Players
8:00 a.m.
Brandon Bingaman, Talor Gooch, Ryosuke Kinoshita
8:11 a.m.
Tim Feenstra, Anirban Lahiri, K.H. Lee
8:22 a.m.
Rich Beem, Jesse Mueller, Alex Cejka
8:33 a.m.
Russell Knox, Seamus Power, Scott Stallings
8:44 a.m.
Jason Kokrak, Corey Conners, Christiaan Bezuidenhout
8:55 a.m.
Martin Kaymer, Marc Leishman, Keegan Bradley
9:06 a.m.
Zach Johnson, Russley Henley, Cameron Champ
9:17 a.m.
Webb Simpson, Branden Grace, Henrik Stenson
9:28 AM
Sepp Straka, J.J. Spaun, Adam Schenk
9:39 a.m.
Matthew Wolff, Joohyung Kim, Keith Mitchell
9:50 a.m.
Chad Ramey, Austin Hurt, Lucas Herbert
10:01 a.m.
Tyler Collet, Chan Kim, Maverick McNealy
10:12 a.m.
Luke List, Paul Dickinson, Patton Kizzire
1:30 p.m.
Ryan Palmer, Robert MacIntyre, Alex Noren
1:41 p.m.
Adri Amaus, Colin Inglis, Jinichiro Kozuma
1:52 p.m.
Mackenzie Hughes, Michael Block, Sadom Kaewkanjana
2:03 p.m.
Hideki Matsuyama, Xander Schauffele, Tony Finau
2:14 p.m.
Tyrrell Hatton, Max Homa, Denny McCarthy
2:25 p.m.
Viktor Hovland, Will Zalatoris, Cameron Smith
2:36 p.m.
Jordan Spieth, Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy
2:47 p.m.
Patrick Reed, Justin Rose, Bubba Watson
2:58 p.m.
Kevin Na, Lucas Glover, Daniel van Tonder
3:09 p.m.
Cameron Young, Sam Burns, Davis Riley
3:20 p.m.
Francesco Molinari, Lee Westwood, Gary Woodland
3:31 p.m.
Brian Harman, Ryan Yermeer, Oliver Bekker
3:42 p.m.
Dylan Newman, Lanto Griffin, Laurie Canter

10th tee

Tee time Players
8:05 a.m.
Ryan Brehm, Wyatt Worthington II, Min Woo Lee
8:16 a.m.
Nicolai Hojggard, Sean McCarty, Justin Harding
8:27 a.m.
Cameron Tringlae, Hudson Swafford, Adam Hadwin
8:38 a.m.
Shane Lowry, Brooks Koepka, Adam Scott
8:49 a.m.
Dustin Johnson, Patrick Cantlay, Justin Thomas
9:00 a.m.
Jason Day, Rickie Fowler, Harold Varner III
9:11 a.m.
Jon Rahm, Collin Morikawa, Scottie Scheffler
9:22 a.m.
Daniel Berger, Louis Oosthuizen, Ian Poulter
9:33 a.m.
Kevin Kisner, Tommy Fleetwood, Billy Horschel
9:44 a.m.
Sergio Garcia, Charl Schwartzel, Matt Fitpatrick
9:55 a.m.
Harry Higgs, Joaquin Niemann, Erik van Rooyen
10:06 a.m.
Alex Beach, Bernd Weisberger, Jhonattan Vegas
10:17 a.m.
Jared Jones, Aaron Wise, Joel Dahmen
1:25 p.m.
John Daly, Shaun Micheel, Y.E. Yang
1:36 p.m.
Takumi Kanaya, Matthew Borchert, Troy Merritt
1:47 p.m.
Dean Burmester, Kyle Mendoza, Chris Kirk
1:58 p.m.
Nic Ishee, Mito Pereira, Sam Horsfield
2:09 p.m.
Kevin Streelman, Shaun Norris, Carlos Ortiz
2:20 p.m.
Matt Kuchar, Cam Davis, Rikuya Hoshino
2:31 p.m.
Stewart Cink, Jason Dufner, Padraig Harrington
2:42 p.m.
Kramer Hickok, Abraham Ancer, Thomas Pieters
2:53 p.m.
Richard Bland, Matt Jones, Garrick Higgo
3:04 p.m.
Beau Hossler, Tom Hoge, Si Woo Kim
3:15 p.m.
Shawn Warren, Pablo Larrazabal, Ryan Fox
3:26 p.m.
Zac Oakley, Yuki Inamori, Sebastian Munoz
3:37 p.m.
Brenden Steele, Casey Pyne, Bio Kim

How to watch Friday

See the complete TV, streaming, radio listings here.

TV

PGA Championship On the Range, Noon to 2 p.m., CBS Sports Network

PGA Championship with Joe Buck & Michael Collins (alternate telecast), 1-2 p.m., ESPN

Second round (main coverage), 2-8 p.m., ESPN

PGA Championship with Joe Buck & Michael Collins (alternate telecast), 2-5 p.m., ESPN2

Golf Central – Live From the PGA Championship, 8-10 p.m., Golf Channel

PGA Championship Clubhouse Report, 9-10 p.m, CBS Sports Network

Streaming

First round (Featured groups, featured holes), 8 a.m. till end of play, ESPN+

Radio

Second round, Live Championship play-by-play, 2 p.m. to end of round, SiriusXM and Westwood One

Streaming radio

Second round, Live Championship play-by-play, 2 p.m. to end of round, SXM App (siriusxm.us/SXMPGATourRadio), Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant

Full schedule of TV, streaming and radio times here.

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2022 PGA Championship by the rankings: Shane Lowry, Alex Noren, Corey Conners could surprise

The PGA Championship field is broken down here according to the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings as well as the OWGR.

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We have reached the eve of the 2022 PGA Championship and all eyes are on Tiger Woods, making his first start since he made the cut at the Masters in April.

The PGA field is 156 players, and this list reflects the late Wednesday WD of Bryson DeChambeau, who was replaced by Denny McCarthy.

The Heat Index breakdown below takes into account the latest Golfweek/Sagarin rankings as well as the most recent Official World Golf Ranking.

The column labeled “Heat” is a player’s ranking based on his play over the past four months. That can help those of you looking to make a few friendly wagers pick a player who is trending.

So far in the 2021-22 PGA Tour season, the average ranking of the winner heading into the week in which he won a PGA Tour event has been 50.7 in the Golfweek/Sagarins and 54.3 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

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Golfer Heat GW/Sags OWGR
 Scottie Scheffler 1 2 1
 Shane Lowry 2 9 27
 Justin Thomas 3 3 9
 Hideki Matsuyama 4 6 11
 Jon Rahm 5 1 2
 Alex Noren 6 25 52
 Max Homa 7 37 28
 Corey Conners 8 14 32
 Rory McIlroy 9 7 7
 Billy Horschel 10 13 14
 Tyrrell Hatton 11 29 24
 Sebastián Muñoz 12 60 51
 Viktor Hovland 13 5 6
 Sergio Garcia 14 20 47
 Collin Morikawa 15 11 3
 Cameron Smith 16 12 4
 Keegan Bradley 17 42 45
 Maverick McNealy 18 16 76
 Ryan Fox 19 91 90
 Matt Fitzpatrick 20 23 17
 Patrick Cantlay 21 4 5
 Cameron Young 22 67 38
 Rikuya Hoshino 23 129 66
 Will Zalatoris 24 26 30
 Joaquin Niemann 25 27 16
 Adam Scott 26 15 39
 Troy Merritt 27 41 94
 Tommy Fleetwood 28 22 44
 Louis Oosthuizen 29 8 15
 Joel Dahmen 30 40 117
 Robert MacIntyre 32 98 79
 Xander Schauffele 33 19 10
 Matt Kuchar 35 55 78
 Si Woo Kim 36 45 57
 Jhonattan Vegas 37 31 92
 Adam Hadwin 38 65 107
 Patton Kizzire 40 83 129
 Daniel Berger 41 10 25
 Harold Varner III 42 33 37
 Russell Henley 43 18 43
 Keith Mitchell 44 69 80
 Mito Pereira 45 36 100
 Brian Harman 46 57 55
 Denny McCarthy 47 51 158
 Jason Kokrak 51 47 31
 Dustin Johnson 52 28 12
 Jordan Spieth 54 34 8
 Sepp Straka 55 142 53
 Brooks Koepka 58 52 18
 Oliver Bekker 59 110 84
 Ian Poulter 60 54 83
 Bio Kim 63 N/R 115
 Christiaan Bezuidenhout 64 32 67
 Anirban Lahiri 65 114 75
 Bernd Wiesberger 66 44 87
 Abraham Ancer 67 15 21
 Pablo Larrazabal 70 73 70
 Yuki Inamori 71 201 93
 Tom Hoge 73 74 40
 K.H. Lee 74 64 41
 Chris Kirk 76 97 101
 Cameron Champ 77 121 102
 Talor Gooch 78 21 35
 Russell Knox 79 113 186
 Lucas Glover 81 100 112
 Tony Finau 82 49 19
 J.J. Spaun 83 85 96
 Aaron Wise 84 39 91
 Davis Riley 88 109 130
 Gary Woodland 91 102 103
 Kevin Kisner 93 107 29
 Sam Burns 96 30 13
 Kevin Na 101 46 33
 Marc Leishman 108 43 48
 Lanto Griffin 114 63 99
 Erik van Rooyen 117 61 61
 Adri Arnaus 118 151 56
 Brendan Steele 120 135 164
 Cameron Tringale 121 53 49
 Stewart Cink 124 131 81
 Seamus Power 125 35 42
 Matt Jones 127 152 74
 Bubba Watson 133 62 73
 Scott Stallings 134 149 203
 Lucas Herbert 141 89 46
 Jinichiro Kozuma 142 240 97
 Laurie Canter 145 165 111
 Dean Burmester 147 84 77
 Richard Bland 148 75 58
 Justin Harding 164 116 106
 Webb Simpson 166 59 50
 Rickie Fowler 167 146 146
 Daniel van Tonder 168 243 104
 Chad Ramey 171 99 119
 Francesco Molinari 172 125 190
 Joohyung Kim 173 78 72
 Ryan Palmer 179 122 86
 Jason Day 181 90 124
 Kevin Streelman 183 88 113
 Beau Hossler 189 190 193
 Sadom Kaewkanjana 193 N/R 118
 Thomas Pieters 202 72 34
 Henrik Stenson 203 186 224
 Ryosuke Kinoshita 210 217 82
 Hudson Swafford 214 143 85
 Cam Davis 215 118 89
 Mackenzie Hughes 224 93 69
 Padraig Harrington 226 196 172
 Carlos Ortiz 227 124 98
 Patrick Reed 240 86 36
 Branden Grace 241 172 108
 Zach Johnson 253 176 250
 Charl Schwartzel 259 253 116
 Harry Higgs 275 221 157
 Luke List 282 120 62
 Shaun Norris 294 179 68
 Lee Westwood 297 157 71
 Min Woo Lee 307 132 54
 Kramer Hickok 310 231 162
 Ryan Brehm 314 388 286
 Chan Kim 355 275 95
 Justin Rose 359 50 65
 Adam Schenk 370 206 185
 Takumi Kanaya 407 171 63
 Matthew Wolff 438 154 59
 Garrick Higgo 442 394 105
 Martin Kaymer 444 188 204
 Nicolai Hojgaard 553 257 88
 Jason Dufner 662 446 560
 Alex Beach N/R N/R 1733
 Rich Beem N/R N/R 1733
 Brandon Bingaman N/R N/R N/R
 Michael Block N/R N/R 1733
 Matthew Borchert N/R N/R 1733
 Alex Cejka N/R N/R 1733
 Tyler Collet N/R N/R 1733
 John Daly N/R N/R 1733
 Paul Dickinson N/R N/R N/R
 Tim Feenstra N/R N/R N/R
 Austin Hurt N/R N/R N/R
 Colin Inglis N/R N/R N/R
 Nic Ishee N/R N/R N/R
 Jared Jones N/R N/R N/R
 Sean McCarty N/R N/R N/R
 Kyle Mendoza N/R N/R 1733
 Shaun Micheel N/R N/R 1733
 Jesse Mueller N/R N/R 1733
 Dylan Newman N/R N/R N/R
 Zac Oakley N/R N/R N/R
 Casey Pyne N/R N/R N/R
 Ryan Vermeer N/R N/R 1733
 Shawn Warren N/R N/R 1733
 Tiger Woods N/R N/R 818
 Wyatt Worthington II N/R N/R N/R
 Y.E. Yang N/R N/R 1053
 Sam Horsfield N/R 58 64

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Jordan Spieth on completing the career Grand Slam at the PGA Championship: ‘What do you think it would mean? It would be pretty cool, wouldn’t it’

Asked what it would mean to achieve the career Grand Slam, Jordan Spieth didn’t hesitate.

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TULSA, Okla. – Jordan Spieth isn’t afraid to address the elephant in the room.

The three-time major winner is one Wanamaker Trophy away from completing the career Grand Slam – an exclusive fraternity consisting of Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods – and he’s never been in better form ahead of what will be sixth attempt at the PGA Championship since winning the 2017 British Open at Royal Birkdale.

“It’s an elephant in the room for me. It’s a goal of mine,” Spieth said during his press conference ahead of the 104th PGA at Southern Hills. “If you just told me I was going to win one tournament the rest of my life, I’d say I want to win this one, given where things are at. … long term it would be really cool to say that you captured the four biggest golf tournaments in the world that are played in different parts of the world and different styles, too. So you feel like you kind of accomplished golf when you win a career Grand Slam, I guess.”

The career Grand Slam has been a recurring storyline for Rory McIlroy at the Masters, Phil Mickelson at the U.S. Open and Spieth at the PGA, and there may never be a better opportunity for Spieth to seal the deal. Having claimed his third major four days ahead of his 24th birthday, Spieth is on the other side of a slump that saw him drop to No. 92 in the world and rebound into the top 10 (he’s currently No. 8).

Southern Hills: Yardage book | ESPN+ streaming | How to watch info

He’ll enter the week riding the momentum of his 13th Tour title in a playoff at the RBC Heritage in April and shooting 64-67 on the weekend to finish second a shot back of winner K.H. Lee at the AT&T Byron Nelson last week.

Ahead of this recent run, Spieth left the season’s first major “annoyed” after missing the cut at the Masters for the first time and getting beaten by Tiger Woods.

“I didn’t feel very good about myself knowing he was on one leg and he made the cut and I didn’t,” Spieth said.

But in a sign of his maturity, he didn’t let the setback derail him.

“The old me a few years ago may have tried to go back to the drawing board and said, ‘How do I fix this? What do I need to change’ ” he explained. “Instead I went out on Sunday, decided I didn’t want to watch the final round, and went and played golf with (agent) Jay (Danzi) and (caddie) Michael (Greller) over in Hilton Head. And I just wanted to keep pushing what I was pushing because I just think my level of patience with my game is far superior than it was a few years ago.”

2022 PGA Championship
Jordan Spieth and his caddie Michael Greller discuss their upcoming tee shot at 13 during a practice round for the 2022 PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club. (Photo: Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports)

Spieth won at Harbour Town despite a dreadful putting week, which included a missed 18-inch par putt on the final hole of the third round.

“It shows you how talented he is and how much his ball-striking has improved,” said CBS Sports analyst Dottie Pepper. “He’s another guy that you just you never say he has no chance because we saw it. I mean, it could take him three to get to the green and still hold out for par. It doesn’t seem to matter with that guy.”

Southern Hills is a course that Spieth played previously at the 2009 U.S. Amateur, where he was the last player to be eliminated in a playoff to qualify for match play. He joined Justin Thomas for a scouting trip last week and concluded, “Reminds me a lot of Colonial, just a little bit on steroids,” referring to another course that features architect Perry Maxwell’s fingerprints and where Spieth has a great track record, including a win at the 2016 Charles Schwab Challenge.

For Spieth, the biggest question is will his putter be friend or foe? He ranks No. 175 in Strokes Gained: Putting this season, but he did gain shots to the field on the greens last week for the first time since the Genesis Invitational in February.

“He has not putted the way he did back in 2015 when he was winning majors at a crazy, crazy clip,” CBS’s Colt Knost said. “He’s hitting it honestly better than he probably ever has. If he gets the putter going, I expect him to be a factor come Sunday afternoon. But there is still that pressure of playing, trying to complete that career Grand Slam. I know that’s on his mind.”

How could it not?

“Looking at it long-term thinking, man, if I’m healthy, I’d look to have 20 chances at it,” said the 28-year-old Texan, “and maybe 1 out of 20. I normally get better odds than that.

“I’m not trying to force it this week I guess is the best way to say it.”

Asked what it would mean to him to achieve the career Grand Slam, Spieth didn’t hesitate. “What do you think it would mean? It would be pretty cool, wouldn’t it. I think it would be pretty cool.”

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Listen: What are Tiger Woods’ chances at Southern Hills? Full PGA Championship preview, picks

The 2007 PGA Championship winner said earlier this week he’s “gotten a lot stronger” since Masters.

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As Rory McIlroy said, this week should be a celebration of Phil Mickelson. Last year, Lefty became the oldest major winner at 50 after his conquest at Kiawah Island.

Now, he’s nowhere to be found.

The only thing saving Mickelson from even more scrutiny this week is the presence of a certain 15-time major champion.

Tiger Woods is making his second-straight major appearance of the season. His triumphant return at Augusta National put the golf world on notice, and earlier this week Woods said he’s “gotten a lot stronger” since the Masters.

This week on the Twilight 9 podcast, Andy Nesbitt and I discuss Woods’ chances of winning at Southern Hills, and whether or not he’s worth a spot on your betting card.

PGA: Thursday tee times | Best bets | ESPN+ streaming

Along with our normal pick segment, we touch on Mickelson, McIlroy, Jordan Spieth, Collin Morikawa, Brooks Koepka, Viktor Hovland, Cameron Smith, and more.

We also go over some of the great changes Gil Hanse made to Southern Hills during the 2018 restoration.

Follow the Twilight 9 Podcast:
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Armour: What’s sad isn’t Phil Mickelson missing the PGA Championship. It’s Mickelson himself.

As bad as it’s been for Mickelson, there should be a sense of relief he’s not defending his PGA Championship title.

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Phil Mickelson’s absence will no doubt loom large over the PGA Championship. A year after his improbable win at Kiawah Island, this week would have been a celebration of that accomplishment and so many others in his career.

Instead of sadness at how far the most beloved golfer since Arnold Palmer has fallen, however, there should be a sense of relief. Bad as it’s been to see his image and reputation go up in flames from a distance, it would be far worse to see the blaze up close.

And that’s exactly what would have happened had Mickelson showed up at Southern Hills.

Waiver requests for the next event on the Saudi-backed tour, almost certain to be denied by the PGA Tour, are due Tuesday. That’s also the day that “Phil,” an unauthorized biography by longtime golf writer Alan Shipnuck that shows the craven and boorish side of the six-time major champion that the public rarely sees, is released.

Neither will show Mickelson in a positive light, and he will not be able to dodge the pointed questions whenever he does resurface. The more space he can put between himself and the revelations that undermine the Man of the People image he’s crafted so carefully all these years, the better.

That’s a distance that cannot be measured in days or even weeks, mind you, but rather in months and major championships. He’s already missed the Masters and now the PGA. If Mickelson is smart, he won’t play the U.S. and British Opens, either.

That’s how corrosive the vile and selfish things Mickelson said, and were said about him in Shipnuck’s book, are.

“Mickelson’s future was unlimited,” Shipnuck wrote, “as long as he could avoid saying something stupid.”

Mickelson is hardly the first athlete who has turned out to be not what he seemed, his true self a disappointment to those who conflated athletic ability with moral character. What makes Mickelson’s fall so stunning was that he was so committed to the con.

For 30-some years now, he has presented himself as Every Man. With his goofy grin, a penchant for audacity that bordered on reckless and an endless patience for seemingly everyone who wanted an autograph, a ball or just a high five, he made fans feel special. Seen.

He was an entertainer as much as an athlete, and he gave everyone a front-row seat to his circus.

But like every show under the big top, it was as much illusion as it was reality.

According to Shipnuck’s book, Mickelson can be gracious and kind. He is generous with his tips for clubhouse attendants and waiters. He paid to retrofit the house of a casual acquaintance after he was paralyzed in a motorcycle crash. Upon hearing that fellow pro Ryan Palmer’s wife had been diagnosed with breast cancer, Mickelson immediately put Palmer in touch with the doctors who had treated his wife, Amy.

But Mickelson also can be immature and cruel, delighting in other’s failings and dredging up embarrassments years later. He is also ruthlessly calculating.

In Shipnuck’s book, Brandel Chamblee shares a story from early in Mickelson’s career of Mickelson blowing off a child who wanted an autograph, telling the boy he’d come back after his round.

“This little boy was crestfallen,” Chamblee recalled. “He wasn’t gonna wait around for six hours to ask again and they both knew it.”

“I’m not saying this to denigrate Phil, just to illustrate that it was strategic when he decided to start signing all those autographs,” Chamblee continued. “Because early in his career he didn’t sign a lot. I’m 99 percent sure it was strategic because Tiger (Woods) hated signing and pretty much refused to do it. Phil saw there was a void and decided he would be the superstar who signs for everyone.

“And that elevated the narrative surrounding Phil.”

That kind of cool self-interest helps explain what is Mickelson’s greatest sin: his involvement with LIV Golf Investments.

Mickelson defending his interest in the alternate tour by slamming the PGA Tour for its “obnoxious greed” is both hilarious and the height of hypocrisy. This, after all, is the multimillionaire who whined about the taxes he has to pay as a California resident. A man whose career earnings alone top $800 million.

Worse, though, is Mickelson’s cavalier attitude about throwing in with the Saudi royal family. He is well aware that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman had Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi killed and dismembered because Khashoggi was a vocal and unrelenting critic. He knows the Saudi government is repressive, particularly to women and members of the LGBTQ community.

But he considers it a small price to pay to bring the PGA Tour to heel. And further line his pockets, of course.

“They’re scary (expletives) motherf—–s to get involved with,” Mickelson told Shipnuck in a November phone call that didn’t become public until February. “Knowing all of this, why would I even consider it? Because this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to reshape how the PGA Tour operates.

“They’ve been able to get by with manipulative, coercive, strong-arm tactics because we, the players, had no recourse,” Mickelson added. “As nice a guy as (PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan) comes across as, unless you have leverage, he won’t do what’s right. And the Saudi money has finally given us that leverage.”

Ah yes. What’s a little murder and torture among friends when there’s golf to be played and money to be made!

There will come a day when Mickelson makes a sheepish return, apologizing and asking fans for forgiveness, and no doubt some will. He’s brought too much joy and entertainment for too many years for them to hold a grudge.

Others, however, will never be able to see Mickelson the same way. Their fun and folksy hero is anything but, and he does not have enough years left in his career to write a redemption story.

It’s sad that Mickelson is missing the ultimate victory lap for his career this week. What’s even sadder is why, and who Mickelson has shown himself to be.

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2022 PGA Championship weather: Day-by-day forecast for Southern Hills

It won’t be as hot at Southern Hills this week as it was in 2007 for the PGA Championship.

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TULSA, Okla. — It won’t be as hot at Southern Hills Country Club this week as it was in 2007.

Southern Hills hosts its fifth PGA this week, beginning Thursday. The last time the tournament was held in Tulsa, it was the hottest major championship on record. That year, it was contested in August.

That won’t be the case this time around.

Temperatures should be much cooler, especially during the weekend rounds because of a cold front expected to come through the area late Friday, according to weather.com. The wind direction is also forecasted to be different every day.

Thursday will be the hottest day of the week, with temperatures likely reaching 91 degrees with a south wind between 10 and 20 miles per hour.

Friday’s weather is similar, with highs reaching 89 and southwest winds blowing between 15 and 25 miles per hour. In the afternoon and evening, however, is when winds shift to out of the northeast and temperatures drop into the 60s.

Southern Hills: Yardage book | ESPN+ streaming | How to watch info

Saturday, the high is only 63 degrees with winds 10 to 20 miles per hour out of the north and a slight chance of rain in the morning. Sunday’s final rounds looks spectacular, with a high of 72 and 10 to 15 miles per hour winds out of the east.

The change in winds will present a different challenge every day for the golfers, but overall, the weather is looking to be spectacular.

Forecast for tournament days

Thursday: High of 91, winds S at 10-20

Friday: High of 89, winds SW at 15-25, changing to NE at 10-15 by evening

Saturday: High of 63, winds N at 10-20, 30 percent chance of rain

Sunday: High of 72, winds E at 10-15

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Watch: Steve Scott breaks down two key holes at Southern Hills for 2022 PGA Championship

Golfweek’s Director of Instruction Steve Scott takes a closer look at the second and 12th holes.

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The 104th PGA championship has come to Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

The second and the 12th are two key holes on the golf course, which is playing as a par 70 and measuring 7,365 yards this week.

The second hole is a 500-yard par 4 that plays as the No. 1-handicap hole for the membership. It requires about a 230-yard carry just to reach the fairway on the other side of the creek, making it one of the more demanding holes off the tee. What also makes this tee shot very difficult is the predominant left to right southerly wind.

The 12th hole is a 456-yard par 4 that has a dogleg to the left. There is a creek that meanders its way behind the green and can prove problematic for those coming in from the right rough. The 12th is a Perry Maxwell gem for sure.

This 104th PGA Championship is gonna be a tremendous test for the world’s best players. Let’s see who takes home that Wanamaker Trophy this week.

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