With Olympics postponed, Tiger Woods must wait another year for shot at making U.S. team

Tiger Woods, who was on the outside of making the team before the Olympics was postponed, presumably will still have time to make the team.

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The onset of 2020 looked so promising for Tiger Woods.

Last year he won the Masters – his 15th major championship and first in 11 years – tied Sam Snead for the most victories in PGA Tour history with his win at the Zozo Championship in Japan and further confirmed his return to elite status by being the best player in last year’s Presidents Cup while captaining his troops to victory.

He was healthy, happy and eyeing a defense of his title at the Masters, a chase for a record-setting 83rd PGA Tour title and a pursuit of a berth on the U.S. golf team in the Summer Games in Tokyo.

And then the coronavirus turned into a global pandemic.

His defense of his fifth green jacket is on hold and his hunt for that record-breaking 83rd PGA Tour title suspended as the PGA Tour and most of professional golf is grounded. And after Tuesday’s official postponement of the Tokyo Games to next year, Woods won’t be playing for the red, white and blue this summer on the outside chance he would have made the team.

The postponement of the Olympics is the latest dagger to a sport whose 2020 calendar was stacked with titanic events – the Players Championship; four major championships and four World Golf Championships events; the Summer Games and the Ryder Cup.

The Players was canceled; only one WGC event has been played; the Masters, PGA Championship and Olympics postponed; and the U.S. Open, British Open and Ryder Cup are on the clock as the number of COVID-19 cases continues to rise around the world.

Woods, who went to the 1984 Summer Games in Los Angeles when he was 8, and many others including world No. 1 Rory McIlroy, No. 2 Jon Rahm and Japanese star Hideki Matsuyama had the Olympics circled on the calendar.

“Over the years, having friends compete in the Olympics, seeing golf be part of the Olympics, it would be an honor to represent my country. Hopefully next year I can have a good year and qualify,” Woods said at the Zozo Championship in October.

Woods and others will now have to wait through another birthday. Woods, 44, who was on the outside of making the team before the Olympics was postponed, presumably will still have time to make the team. Qualifying for Tokyo was to end June 22, but a new date will need to be established.

For now, the Official World Golf Ranking and the Rolex Women’s World Golf Ranking have been frozen in place until further notice.  As was the case in Rio for the 2016 Summer Games when golf returned to the Olympics after a 112-year-absence – and Justin Rose won the gold, Henrik Stenson the silver and Matt Kuchar the bronze – 60 players will be in the field.

The top 15 players in the Olympic Golf Rankings (basically the Official World Ranking) would be eligible, with a maximum of four players per country. There is a maximum of two players per country if that country does not have two or more players ranked in the top 15.

The USA would be represented by Brooks Koepka, Justin Thomas, Dustin Johnson and Patrick Reed. But Johnson has said he wouldn’t play in the Olympics, so Patrick Cantlay would be his replacement. After Cantlay is Webb Simpson. Woods, ranked No. 11, is next. Xander Schauffele and Bryson DeChambeau are also ranked in the top 15.

As of right now, McIlroy would lead Ireland, Rose would defend his gold medal for England along with Tommy Fleetwood. Australia would be represented by Adam Scott and Marc Leishman, Spain would field a team of Rahm and Sergio Garcia. Stenson is in line to represent Sweden.

On the women’s side, the most notable name off the list is Inbee Park, who won the gold medal at the Rio Games. Park is at No. 11 in the Rolex Rankings but sits as first alternate behind South Koreans Jin Young Ko, Sung Hyun Park, Sei Young Kim and Eun Jeong Lee6.

The American team would be comprised of Nelly Korda, Danielle Kang and Lexi Thompson. The host country, Japan, would also have three players: Nasa Hataoka, Hinako Shibuno and Ai Suzuki.

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Victor Perez was peaking on the European Tour, until the coronavirus hit

With the Masters postponed, and no clear idea of whether it will be played in 2020, Victor Perez is trying to keep it all in perspective.

Victor Perez won his first European Tour title at the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship in September. Runner-up finishes followed at the Turkish Airlines Open in November and the HSBC Championship in January. Perez had climbed all the way to No. 40 in the Official World Golf Ranking when the sport came to an abrupt stop for coronavirus precautions.

Perez, 27, was among 23 men who were slated to make their Masters debut next month. The Frenchman qualified for the Masters by getting into the top 50 in the final OWGR of 2019. With the Masters now postponed, and without any clear idea of when or if it will still be played in 2020, Perez is trying to keep things in perspective.

Related: Players who would have made their Masters debut in April

“Health is far more important than any tournament but it comes at a difficult time because if maybe this had happened in December, some of the big tournaments would not have been affected as much,” Perez told the PA news agency, according to the European Tour.

One way that Perez is trying to keep his head up is by looking at his Masters qualification as the start of a new era in his career. He’s “planning on playing the tournament for the next 20 years or whatever.” He’ll compete at Augusta at some point.

Perez has already played it, having made the trip to Georgia two weeks ago to a get a look at the place.

“The tournament might be on a date that’s completely different than what everybody else is used to and I think it will make the course somewhat different to what everyone knows. Being a first-timer there could be an advantage I can get from it,” Perez reasoned.

“We had rented a house and my girlfriend, my agent and my trainer were going to be there.

“Being my first major I was trying to keep it really small, try to keep it as golf-related as possible like how I’ve been behaving ever since I turned pro, because I know the stress level is going to be as high as it’s ever been.”

The Masters wasn’t the only big break Perez was looking for. He was also hoping his solid play would position him nicely for a Ryder Cup selection. For now, that biennial event is still on for September at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin

Perez was in the crowd for the 2018 Ryder Cup at Le Golf National in Paris, which the Europeans won.

“As a European it’s something that we take a lot of pride in and something that I’m really looking forward to,” he added.

“I can’t tell if canceling tournaments plays into my advantage or not, time will tell, I just know that eventually the best players are going to be on the team and it’s going to be a matter of being prepared and executing when it happens.”

The only sure thing is that the waiting game continues.

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With most professional golf on hiatus, OWGR and Rolex Rankings announce freeze

The governing boards responsible for the Official World Golf Ranking and the Rolex Women’s World Golf Ranking announced a rankings pause.

With professional golf on pause for the next several weeks, the rankings are also on pause. The governing boards responsible for the Official World Golf Ranking and the Rolex Women’s World Golf Ranking released a statement on March 20 that the rankings would effectively be frozen as they stand as tours around the world suspend competition amid a global pandemic.

A statement that appeared on the OWGR web site said rankings resumption information would be made available “in due course.”

As it stands, Rory McIlroy is the top-ranked male in the world while Jin Young Ko remains the top-ranked female. McIlroy and Ko are also the No. 1-ranked players in the Golfweek/Sagarin Professional Rankings, which will continue to be run each week.

The other factor that should be taken into account with the OWGR and Rolex Rankings freeze is the impact on Olympic team selection. The rankings are used to finalize the fields for that event. A statement from the International Golf Federation supported the rankings freeze and confirmed that June 22 would remain the cutoff.

“The qualification system for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games commenced on 1 July 2018 and will conclude on 22 June 2020 for the men and from 8 July 2018 through to 29 June 2020 for the women, with players accumulating World Ranking Points over a two-year ‘rolling’ period,” the statement read. “This has proven to be a fair and equitable system and despite the freeze, we believe that the system remains fair to all athletes who are vying for qualification to the Tokyo Olympic Games.”

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Arnold Palmer Invitational: No. 1 Rory McIlroy stays in the moment

ORLANDO – The old chestnut that seven days is a long time in politics is no less true in sports. Just ask Rory McIlroy. When he came to the Arnold Palmer Invitational two years ago, McIlroy was lost, 18 months removed from his last win and enduring …

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ORLANDO — The old chestnut that seven days is a long time in politics is no less true in sports. Just ask Rory McIlroy.

When he came to the Arnold Palmer Invitational two years ago, McIlroy was lost, 18 months removed from his last win and enduring a miserable run of form marked by mediocre putting. That week in 2018 began Monday with a putting lesson from veteran PGA Tour player Brad Faxon. It ended Sunday with victory at Bay Hill, sealed with the finest putting performance of his career.

“I feel like this place has a lot of special memories to me,” the four-time major winner said on Wednesday. “It was definitely the catalyst to sort of do what I’ve done over the past two years and ascend back to the top of the world rankings.”

Before that ’18 win, McIlroy had slumped to No. 13 in the world. A solid showing this week will keep him at No. 1 for the 100th week of his career, making him only the third golfer after Tiger Woods and Greg Norman to spend triple-digit weeks as No. 1. Just such a solid showing seems almost ordained: in five starts this season, McIlroy’s worst finish is tied fifth.

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“From a mental perspective the consistency and showing up every week even when I don’t have my best stuff I’m able to still get in the mix and have a shot at winning tournaments,” he said. “So mentally over these last few years I’ve definitely gotten better. More stability in my life. There’s a lot of different things that go into it. But, yeah, just a lot more comfortable with where everything is.”

The only thing more predictable than McIlroy being in contention every time he plays is the rite of spring in which he faces questions about the Masters. A win at Augusta National 39 days from now would complete a career grand slam for the 30-year-old. His upcoming tournament schedule — he’s playing five of the next six weeks plus hosting a ‘thank you’ gathering for his sponsors in his off week — hints at a desire to remain busy in the run-up to the most scrutinized week of his year.

“For some people it starts the Monday they arrive at Augusta. For some people it started in January,” he said when asked when Masters preparation begins. “I think it’s different for everyone. For me, what I realized is I can’t make things too big in my head. If I started to gear up in January, by the time Augusta got around in April my head would be absolutely fried. I try to push it out as late as possible. I’ve got four tournaments to play between now and then and my biggest concern and my top priority are those four tournaments.”

Rory McIlroy and Vijay Singh ahead of the 2020 Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill. (David Dusek/Golfweek)

Looming farther down the road is the Olympics, where he is expected to play for Ireland. Having skipped the Rio Games over concerns about the Zika virus, McIlroy admitted he’s keeping a wary eye on coronavirus and its potential impact but is putting his fate in the hands of those who know best. “If the organizers and the Olympic Committee believe it’s safe enough that athletes can go and compete in the Games, then you have to take their word for it,” he said. “They’re obviously liaising with the people that are the best at doing this, whether it’s the CDC in this country, whether it’s the World Health Organization, whatever it is. If they’re talking to those people then those people are the best in their field, then you have to trust that their judgment is the right one.”

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All the golfers ever ranked No. 1 in the OWGR

The Official World Golf Ranking was introduced in 1986. Since its introduction, 21 different players have been ranked No. 1 in the world.

The Official World Golf Ranking was introduced in 1986.

The ranking takes into account a golfer’s performance over a rolling two-year period. The ranking is updated each week.

Since its inception, there have been 21 different players who have earned the No. 1 spot in the world ranking. You can probably guess who holds the title for the most weeks in the top spot. Some of the other names on this list may surprise you.

Here is the complete list of golfers who reached No. 1 in OWGR history and how long each of them was ranked in the top spot.

Genesis Invitational field, by the rankings

The 2020 Genesis Invitational at Riviera features 120 of the best golfers in the world.

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The Genesis Invitational features 120 of the best golfers in the world.

The PGA Tour has announced that nine of the top 10 golfers in the Official World Golf Ranking are in the field.

This marks the most for an event that “distributes 500 FedExCup points to the winner (non-majors, WGCs, FedExCup Playoffs and THE PLAYERS) since the 2007 Wells Fargo Championship.”

Meanwhile, eight of the top ten players in the Golfweek/Sagarin ranking are in the field.

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Rory McIlroy, now the No. 1-ranked player in both rankings, leads the way. Tiger Woods, tournament host, is 7th in the Golfweek/Sagarin ranking and 8th in the OWGR.

Player GW/Sagarin OWGR
Rory McIlroy 1 1
Jon Rahm 3 3
Patrick Cantlay 4 6
Justin Thomas 6 4
Tiger Woods 7 8
Collin Morikawa 8 53
Dustin Johnson 9 5
Hideki Matsuyama 11 23
Brooks Koepka 12 2
Justin Rose 13 10
Matthew Fitzpatrick 14 25
Adam Scott 15 14
Xander Schauffele 16 9
Paul Casey 17 21
Patrick Reed 19 13
Tony Finau 21 12
Sungjae Im 22 33
Jim Furyk 24 74
Matt Kuchar 26 20
Rory Sabbatini 29 97
Marc Leishman 30 19
Jason Kokrak 31 73
Andrew Putnam 35 56
Abraham Ancer 37 29
Jordan Spieth 39 49
Vaughn Taylor 41 109
Scott Piercy 42 98
Joaquin Niemann 43 64
Russell Knox 44 115
Scottie Scheffler 45 54
Adam Hadwin 47 57
Nick Taylor 48 101
Alex Noren 49 89
Charles Howell III 50 67
Cameron Tringale 51 217
Erik van Rooyen 53 50
Bryson DeChambeau 55 18
Rafa Cabrera Bello 57 46
Sergio Garcia 58 41
Max Homa 59 90
J.T. Poston 61 75
Ryan Palmer 63 78
Jason Day 64 38
Kevin Na 65 28
Brian Harman 66 133
Bubba Watson 68 45
Denny McCarthy 73 164
Dylan Frittelli 74 118
Matt Jones 76 91
Corey Conners 78 63
Lanto Griffin 79 93
Matthew Wolff 80 105
Talor Gooch 81 208
Ryan Moore 82 110
Francesco Molinari 86 24
Pat Perez 89 136
Keegan Bradley 90 58
Bud Cauley 91 147
Sebastián Muñoz 92 106
Carlos Ortiz 93 150
Brendon Todd 94 61
Cameron Smith 95 35
Joel Dahmen 98 104
Danny Willett 100 31
Aaron Baddeley 101 246
Brian Stuard 103 149
Nate Lashley 106 71
Bronson Burgoon 107 202
Jhonattan Vegas 120 159
Chez Reavie 123 43
Emiliano Grillo 125 126
Sam Ryder 128 267
Sam Burns 130 203
Aaron Wise 133 139
Branden Grace 137 70
J.B. Holmes 138 92
Sung Kang 140 86
Harold Varner III 143 143
Joseph Bramlett 146 429
Cameron Champ 149 77
Danny Lee 151 103
Peter Malnati 152 232
Adam Long 154 107
Scott Stallings 155 288
Troy Merritt 156 154
Patrick Rodgers 157 285
Adam Schenk 166 221
Kevin Tway 167 137
Kyle Stanley 172 141
Wyndham Clark 174 174
Charley Hoffman 176 162
Martin Laird 181 390
Nick Watney 184 216
Brian Gay 193 193
Phil Mickelson 194 55
Kiradech Aphibarnrat 204 127
Jimmy Walker 206 261
Jason Dufner 215 286
Kevin Chappell 219 433
Russell Henley 226 252
Ryan Armour 230 222
Luke List 231 165
J.J. Spaun 232 287
Andrew Landry 243 114
Tyler Duncan 245 168
C.T. Pan 249 84
Roger Sloan 266 268
Michael Thompson 270 236
Kyoung-Hoon Lee 278 302
Sepp Straka 283 179
Scott Brown 284 369
Si Woo Kim 287 122
Matt Every 291 289
Chris Stroud 428 278
Jim Herman 475 298
Kyongjun Moon 493 379
Martin Trainer 790 391
James Hahn N/R 768
Steve Stricker N/R 874

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Rory McIlroy will return to the No. 1 spot in the World ranking

Rory McIlroy will ascend to the top spot in the Official World Golf Ranking when it is updated next Monday.

Rory McIlroy will ascend to the top spot in the Official World Golf Ranking when it gets updated next Monday, despite not playing this week.

It will also happen regardless of this week’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

McIlroy is currently just .2 points back of Brooks Koepka, who is not playing this week either. Nor is World No. 3 Jon Rahm, leaving the door open for McIlroy to make the move to No. 1.

McIlroy first reached No. 1 after the 2012 Honda Classic. He then floated between second and third before regaining the top spot that year. He was also No. 1 during parts of 2013 and 2014. He last held the No. 1 spot after the 2015 U.S. Open.

McIlroy finished T-5 at the Farmers Insurance Open, his only tournament appearance so far in 2020. He could have reached No. 1 with a win there.

Prior to that event, he talked about being in the top spot.

“I think it’s always cool when you attain that ranking for whether it’s the first time ever or the first time in a while. It’s a pretty cool feeling. I don’t think it irks me or gets me annoyed if I’m not holding that position. If I go about my business and I try to do the right things all the time, if I play well enough for a sustained period of time, hopefully I get there.”

It will be his 96th week at No. 1, fifth all-time behind Nick Faldo, Dustin Johnson, Greg Norman and Tiger Woods.

Koepka will hold the top spot for one more week. He’s been No. 1 since winning the 2019 PGA Championship at Bethpage Black, a streak of 38 weeks. Koepka held his grip on the spot by finishing solo second at the U.S. Open and T-4 at the Open Championship. For good measure, he also won the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational last July and posted a fourth-place finish at the Tour Championship.

But in Las Vegas in October, Koepka revealed that he had a stem-cell procedure on his left knee. He then missed the cut at that week’s Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. Then in Korea, he slipped on concrete and withdrew from the CJ Cup @ Nine Bridges where he was the defending champion.

More recently, he finished T-34 at the European Tour’s Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship and T-17 at the Saudi International.

McIlroy and Koepka battled for the PGA Tour Player of the Year award in 2019, with McIlroy taking home the honor.

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