It’s a fine line: Why Collin Morikawa’s new technique for aiming putts could make-or-break his PGA Championship

Drawing a line on his ball may go a long to determining which type of week it will be for Collin Morikawa.

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TULSA, Okla. – Collin Morikawa is aiming to win his third major championship this week at Southern Hills and his ability to aim his putts properly may be the key to doing just that.

Morikawa, the 2020 PGA Championship winner, is renowned for his ballstriking, which makes him one of the favorites this week at a venue where precision may be valued more than distance.

If Morikawa has a weakness in his arsenal, it has been putting. He ranked No. 179 in Strokes Gained: putting last season. He’s already experiencing his best season with the short stick of his young career, improving to No. 63 in gaining strokes for the first time (+0.218). Now, Morikawa is set to change things up yet again as he is now drawing a line on his ball to help with alignment.

“Just to kind of see if I can see putts a little differently, read them better, stroke them a little better,” he said.

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Morikawa picked up the technique from playing with Viktor Hovland in the Zurich Classic of New Orleans. The two partnered together in the team event. Hovland uses a line on his ball.

“I hit it maybe two or three times during Zurich just to try, because trust me, we couldn’t make a putt for our life,” Morikawa said. “I was trying to use a line, and just messed around last couple weeks just seeing if I could use it, if I couldn’t use it. I’ve never used a line in my life. I just never felt comfortable over it. But I found a way to where I feel like I can stroke the putt.”

Morikawa said he’s been practicing with a line for the past couple of weeks.

“Do I wish I had maybe another event to try it out? Yeah, but we’re here,” he said. “Taking risks.”

Morikawa compared it to when Hall of Famer Mark O’Meara taught him the “saw putting grip” and he adopted and shortly thereafter won the 2021 WGC-Workday Championship at The Concession thanks to a stellar putting week.

“Like, it felt so good that it just kind of brought something out in my putting, even though when I first tried it I made nothing. The first week I used it at Riviera last year I made nothing. Hopefully that’s not the case this week. It’s a minor change, but it’s not really changing how I feel over the putt, which is the biggest thing. It’s just helping me put my putter down to where I want it to be.”

When Morikawa putts well, it’s almost not a fair fight. So it will be interesting to see how the line on the ball impacts his performance and whether he sticks with it. It’s a small change but one that could play a big factor in Morikawa’s chances of nabbing a second Wanamaker Trophy. And it feels like a bold move for someone who considers himself more of a feel player than a technical one.

“I think putting a line takes out a variable of where I’m aiming. The line at least just tells me and then I can just feel everything else after that,” he said. “For me, I like taking out variables. I like to know the reasons why, this, that. And that’s the thing, is for me you can see some patterns putting over the past three years, but sometimes you don’t know. Sometimes maybe I’m not even aiming where I say I am because it’s literally – I lined it up blank; there’s nothing on top. Hopefully this kind of gives me a little more answers on where to go.”

Morikawa said he didn’t see any reason why he would switch his strategy mid-tournament.

“It’s feeling so good the past couple days, past two weeks really, that I’m going to trust it,” he said.

He added: “I keep thinking back, what’s the difference between when you win events and when you don’t win, and sometimes it’s just a mentality type of thing. You show up to a tournament and you have this kind of feeling. Some weeks you show up and it’s just kind of smooth sailing and you’re just ready to win, and sometimes you just need to tell yourself that and hopefully you can translate that into good golf.”

Drawing a line on his ball may go a long to determining which type of week it will be for the World No. 3 and two-time major winner.

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Brooks Koepka was late for his Tuesday PGA Championship press conference because he locked his keys in his car

After a month of R&R, Brooks Koepka’s return to the golf world took a little bit longer than normal Tuesday.

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After a month of R&R, Brooks Koepka’s return to speak with the golf media took a little bit longer than normal Tuesday, and not due to any of the injuries that have plagued the four-time major champion.

Instead, Koepka was late for his slotted press conference at the Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in advance of the PGA Championship because he mistakenly left his keys in his car — while it was running.

“We’re not at the press conference because we’ve started the car, put the keys in it, went and put the bag in the back,” Koepka said on Twitter. “And literally the car is locked.”

Koepka’s last tournament came when he missed the cut at the Masters, and although the 32-year-old was scheduled to appear at the AT&T Byron Nelson at TPC Craig Ranch outside Dallas, Texas, last week, he withdrew just before the event.

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

It’s been a trying season for Koepka, who has had flashes of brilliance but has lacked consistency. In nine events this calendar year, he’s missed four cuts while also cashing in four top 20s.

The eight-time Tour winner has won the PGA Championship twice, winning consecutive years at Bellerive (2018) and Bethpage (2019).

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‘It’s going to shape the future of professional golf one way or another’: Rory McIlroy gives latest take on Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf Invitational

“I’m just so sick of talking about it,” Rory McIlroy said Tuesday at the PGA Championship.

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TULSA, Okla. – Back in February following the final round of the Genesis Invitational north of Los Angeles, Rory McIlroy gave his take on the upstart Saudi Arabia-backed golf league that was trying to lure some of the game’s biggest stars with outrageous sums of money.

“It’s dead in the water in my opinion,” McIlroy said.

Well, the league led by Greg “The Great White Shark” Norman is still afloat. The inaugural tournament of the LIV Golf Invitational Series will be played June 9-11 at London’s Centurion Club, the first of eight events featuring a total of $255 million in prize money. The tournaments feature individual and team play, 54-hole no-cut events and shotgun starts.

“I might have been a little presumptuous at that point,” McIlroy said about his February remarks. The four-time major winner and two-time PGA Champion met with the media Tuesday at the 104th PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club. “It seems like it’s still going. Greg [Norman] and everyone behind it are very determined. I think we’re just going to have to see how it plays out. Guys are going to make decisions.

“Honestly it’s going to shape the future of professional golf one way or another, so I think we’re just going to have to see how it all shakes out.”

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

The rival league wasn’t shaking out well back in February, as many of the games top players pledged their allegiance to the PGA Tour’s flag, including McIlroy, Tiger Woods, Jordan Spieth, Collin Morikawa, Justin Thomas, Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka and Jon Rahm.

Still, nearly 75-80 players requested releases from the PGA Tour to be allowed to play in the London tournament. The PGA Tour denied all of them. If players who were denied a release still decide to play in London – which features a $20 million purse, with $4 million to the winner – they could face disciplinary action, including suspension or banishment from the PGA Tour.

The second event of the series will be held July 1-3 in Oregon. The PGA Tour does not grant releases to any tournament held domestically that is opposite of PGA Tour event. So expect more noise to erupt – perhaps threats of lawsuits – when the series reaches Oregon.

“Honestly I’m rooting for it all to be over. I’m just so sick of talking about it,” McIlroy said. “I’ve made my decision, and I know where I want to play, and I’m not standing in anyone’s way, and I’m not saying that they shouldn’t go over there and play if that’s what they feel is right for them, then 100 percent they should go and do it.

“I’m certainly not wanting to stand in anyone’s way, but I think the sooner it all happens and the sooner everything shakes out, I think we can all just go back to not talking about it and doing what we want to do.”

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‘Good thing I don’t drink a lot’: $18 beers and $16 salads await fans at 2022 PGA Championship

Fans are finding that food prices are steep at the 2022 PGA Championship.

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TULSA, Okla. – Talk about inflation.

Spectators of this week’s PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club might want to drink up before passing through the gates. For if you are parched shortly after arriving at the second men’s major of the year, your wallet better be fat.

The following are not typos. A Michelob Ultra is $18, a Stella Artois $19. A glass of wine is $13, souvenir and signature cocktails are $19.

It should be noted, however, the beers come in 25 oz. cans, which equates to $9 per 12.5 ounces of Ultra. Not quite the sticker shock, but still steep.

“Good thing I don’t drink a lot,” Keith Coleman of Tulsa said Monday as he sized up what he was going to buy.

As for non-alcoholic beverages, a good-sized bottle of water comes in at $6, a Gatorade will set you back $7.

For food, a chicken Caesar Salad is running $16, the all-beef hot dog $8. The Butcher’s Grind Cheeseburger is $14, the Beyond Burger $15.

A small bag of chips? $3.

“Well, it’s only for one day,” Samantha Ripken of Oklahoma City said. “And I get to eat my salad watching Tiger Woods.”

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Book review: Alan Shipnuck presents the good and bad sides of Phil Mickelson and lets the reader decide

Golf fans get a good read but don’t get their fill of Phil in Shipnuck’s “Rip-Roaring” biography of Mickelson.

Wherever it is that Phil Mickelson is laying low this week, he must be thinking, “if only I hadn’t called Alan Shipnuck.”

Without Mickelson opening his big mouth and telling his unvarnished thoughts on the Saudis behind a renegade golf league (“scary motherf—–s”), Shipnuck still would have produced a read that is a rollicking good time, but it wouldn’t be the talk of the town – and Phil likely wouldn’t be skipping his title defense of this week’s PGA Championship and on sabbatical from what has been a Hall of Fame career.

Who is the real Phil Mickelson? Phil: The Rip-Roaring (and unauthorized) Biography of Golf’s Most Colorful Superstar seeks that answer. Shipnuck, longtime golf writer for Sports Illustrated and Golf and now a partner in the Firepit Collective, reflects back to something Mickelson said to him during a confrontation that he highlights in the book’s introduction. “It was meant as a taunt but became the challenge that animated this book: ‘You think you know me but you don’t.’”

Think about it: for as much Phil has spent the last 30+ years under a microscope he’s done a masterful job of protecting his private life. We’ve never seen him play golf with any of his kids. Everything about Phil that he shares has felt very calculated, as Shipnuck notes even his psoriatic arthritis diagnosis netted him an endorsement opportunity.

Shipnuck paints Phil as “a smart-ass who built an empire on being the consummate professional; a loving husband dogged by salacious rumors; a gambler who knows the house always wins but can’t help himself, anyway; an intensely private person who loves to talk about himself.”

He’s always been the proverbial riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma. But by the time you finish this page-turner you’ll have a better idea who you think Phil is. I suspect Phil’s fan base will find reasons anew to adore him even more while his detractors will find fresh ammo to argue that he’s one of the all-time phonies.

The opening chapter sets a wonderful pace going from one outrageous story to another – it feels like Shipnuck gathered a bunch of Phil’s acquaintances around a campfire and they’re dishing their best of collection of Phil tales and said, ‘I can top that.’

My favorite part of the book may be the early chapters before Phil turned pro. Kudos to Shipnuck for tracking down childhood friends and college pals and presenting popped-collar Phil in all his frat-boy glory for some fresh stories of beer-swilling, money games and competitions, egos and envy before Phil really became Phil.

Shipnuck takes us inside the highs and lows of his PGA Tour career, and is at his best in the section on Mickelson’s collapse at Winged Foot, but short-changed his stunning victory at age 50 in the 2021 PGA Championship. That chapter is a mere six pages.

The book is a breezy read, weighing in at just 239 pages. You know how you go to a movie you really wanted to see and you leave wishing they had cut out at least 45 minutes (I’m looking at you, latest James Bond flick)? Well, Shipnuck’s Phil bio is the opposite. He easily could’ve written another 50, 75, dare I say 100 more pages and readers surely would have eaten them up like cat nip. In short, we didn’t get our fill of Phil.

Who is Phil? Shipnuck presents both the good and bad and leaves it to the reader to decide where they come out in the end. Leave it to two of his longtime Tour breathren to describe him best: “People ask me what he’s like,” says Brian Gay, “and I say, ‘If you ask Phil Mickelson what time it is he’ll tell you how to build a watch.’ ”

And then there’s Stewart Cink: “There are so many stories, but they all have one thing in common: juice. Doesn’t matter what form the juice takes. Needling in the locker room is juice. Money games during practice rounds is juice. Trying to pull off crazy shots with a tournament on the line is definitely juice. Criticizing Tiger’s equipment when he’s on a historic run is a lot of things, but it’s also juice. Phil loves math and computations, and where that stuff meets juice is Vegas, so of course Phil loves it there. When you know you don’t have an advantage, but you still want to bet large amounts? That’s juice. Phil is an all-time juice guy.”

While the juiciest material already has been squeezed out and released in excerpts, this book has plenty of juice. I’m still not convinced Shipnuck got to the bottom of the parting of Phil and Bones after 25 years together, but at least Shipnuck called as he put it, “B.S.” and advanced the story. It’s a second-hand quote – as Bones didn’t participate directly in the book either – but this shot from Bones is telling nonetheless.

“Nobody knows Phil Mickelson. Nobody. I spent 25 years standing next to the guy and he’s still a total mystery to me.”

After all these years, Phil revealed too much of his inner thoughts when he phoned Shipnuck in November and spouted off about the Saudis, Jay Monahan and his true feelings about the inner workings of the PGA Tour. But as Shipnuck concludes, Phil is no stranger to controversy. “Somehow he always emerges with his vast fan base intact. Sports fans love a comeback and a redemption story. A more humble, more human, less cartoonish Mickelson figures to be more popular than ever. Come what may, he will survive, because he survives everything.”

What will Phil do next? The way he eventually handles the fall out of his inflammatory comments may shape his legacy in the game and reveal once and for all, who is Phil.

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Could the 104th PGA Championship be decided on Friday? History at Southern Hills says ‘yes!’

Leading after 36 holes is the place to be in a major at Southern Hills.

It never hurts to get off to a fast start at a major championship, but it really matters at Southern Hills in Tulsa, site of the 104th PGA Championship, if history teaches us anything.

In a Q&A for the golf newsletter The Quadrilateral, Southern Hills club historian Clyde Chrisman noted that in all seven of the major championships the club has hosted as well as its two Tour Championships and last year’s Senior PGA Championship, the 36-hole leader has gone on to hoist the winner’s trophy.

“In fact, the only two who didn’t lead or share the lead after the first round are Dave Stockton and Tiger Woods,” Chrisman told Geoff Shackelford. “It’s not a course where someone has gotten hot in the last round or two and made a late charge to win.”   

That’s a staggering stat. Ten events, 10 36-hole leaders win? C’mon, that just doesn’t happen.

During a CBS Sports media conference call, Jim Nantz gave a shout out to Shackelford’s Q&A and called the stat “jaw dropping.”

“I’ve never heard of anything like that in my life. We’re going to crown a champion, folks, on Friday night, OK?” he cracked.

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But Southern Hills, a Perry Maxwell design and perennial top-100 course, underwent a renovation by Gil Hanse and his partner Jim Wagner in 2018, and Nick Faldo, who played in his first U.S. major at Southern Hills at the 1982 PGA when Ray Floyd went wire-to-wire, termed it a new course.

“I bet that you one will change, it will be different,” he said. “Unless Scottie Scheffler is leading by six, oh, boy.”

“But there’s something to be said, you’d better go out and make hay early,” Nantz said. “That’s a history for it there.”

A history that includes World Golf Hall of Famers Tommy Bolt, Floyd, Hubert Green, Nick Price, Retief Goosen and Woods.

Here’s a look at the winning history at Southern Hills:

Year Tournament Winner
1958 U.S. Open Tommy Bolt
1970 PGA Championship Dave Stockton
1977 U.S. Open Hubert Green
1982 PGA Championship Raymond Floyd
1994 PGA Championship Nick Price
1985 Tour Championship Billy Mayfair
1996 Tour Championship Tom Lehman
2001 U.S. Open Retief Goosen
2007 PGA Championship Tiger Woods
2021 Senior PGA Championship Alex Cejka
2022 PGA Championship ???

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