Breaking: Phil Mickelson will not defend his title at next week’s PGA Championship

“We would have welcomed him to participate,” the PGA said in a social media release Friday.

Phil Mickelson caught lightning in a bottle last year at Kiawah Island, winning a major championship at 50 years of age. The fairways flooded, and the golf world stood and applauded as the beloved lefty hoisted the PGA Championship trophy.

Fast forward a year, and Mickelson is out of golf.

And that won’t change for the PGA Championship.

The PGA of America has announced that the six-time major champion will not be in the field next week at Southern Hills. On May 9th, it was announced Tiger Woods and Mickelson were both listed in the field. As of now, Woods will play.

“We would have welcomed him to participate,” the PGA of America said in a social media release Friday.

Full statement:

Since 1960, just four players did not defend their major championship title: Art Wall, 1960 Masters; Payne Stewart, 2000 U.S. Open; Tiger Woods, 2008 PGA Championship; and Rory McIlroy, 2015 Open Championship.

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Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson listed in the field for next week’s PGA Championship at Southern Hills

The field of 155 players features 34 major champions.

The full field for next week’s PGA Championship was officially released on Monday afternoon, and among the 155 players listed, two names stood out among the rest.

Former champion Tiger Woods and defending champion Phil Mickelson are both bound for Southern Hills in Tulsa, Oklahoma, as are 34 other major winners like World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, Jordan Spieth and Jon Rahm, to name a few.

Woods made his return to competitive golf after his single-car accident last month at the Masters where he made the cut after a 1-under 71 in his first round. Following Sunday’s final round he foreshadowed his entry to next week’s field, as well as the British Open at St. Andrews in July. The four-time PGA champion (1999, 2000, 2006, 2007) recently played a practice round at Southern Hills, the site of his win in 2007.

Mickelson’s representation announced he had registered to play in the PGA Championship and U.S. Open, and that he also filed a request to play in the first LIV Golf Invitational event next month in London.

Mickelson has been away from golf since his controversial comments about the PGA Tour and Saudi Arabia in regards to his role in helping Greg Norman’s LIV Golf efforts.

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Scottie Scheffler lights up Southern Hills in scouting trip ahead of 104th PGA Championship

Southern Hills is Scheffler’s favorite course, and he showed why with an impressive practice round.

Tiger Woods isn’t the only major winner to show up at Southern Hills in Tulsa, Oklahoma, for a preview of the host venue of next week’s 104th PGA Championship.

So, too, did World No. 1 and reigning Masters champion Scottie Scheffler, though no one tracked his private plane and helicopters didn’t hover above as he played his round.

But Scheffler was there on Thursday alongside his Zurich Classic of New Orleans partner Ryan Palmer and a buddy of theirs to see the latest renovations made by Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner in 2018.

Scheffler likely will be more familiar than most of the players in the PGA field with Southern Hills, which he often has touted as his favorite course. It is the site of Scheffler’s victory in the 2015 Big 12 Championship while competing for the University of Texas and he finished in a tie for fifth in 2018. He also competed in the 2014 Trans-Mississippi Championship, tying for 21st place.

Last week, Scheffler had Cameron Chhim on the bag, and the Southern Hills assistant professional came away duly impressed with the game of the Masters champion. And why not? The hottest golfer on the planet, with wins in four of his last six individual tournaments, fired 6-under 64 in his practice round. After touring the front nine in a ho-hum score of 1-under and then enduring a rain delay, Scheffler peeled off birdies on Nos. 10, 11, 12, 13, 15 and 17.

“He played one ball the entire time, no practice putts, and made it look easy,” Chhim told Golf Oklahoma. “He’s No. 1 in the world and it was pretty easy to see why. It would be hard to say that he’s not going to win or at least be in contention. He hits it far enough and he has just incredible distance control with his irons. Ryan shot 2 or 3 under and looked like he was standing still based on how Scottie was playing.”

Scheffler, the only player capable of winning the Grand Slam this year, will warm up for the second major this week at the AT&T Byron Nelson in his hometown of Dallas.

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Southern Hills pro dishes on Tiger Woods’ practice round ahead of PGA Championship in Tulsa

Cary Cozby caddied for Tiger Woods during his practice round at Southern Hills Country Club.

Cary Cozby’s phone hasn’t stopped blowing up.

That’s no surprise after the director of golf at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Oklahoma, spent Thursday caddying for Tiger Woods during his practice round for the PGA Championship.

Cozby noted he dropped a towel on the first hole and forgot to rake a bunker at the third while talking to Tiger’s right-hand man, Rob McNamara, who joined Tiger for the round and had Cozby’s 13-year-old son Banks on his bag.

“I thought I was going to get fired on four tee,” he said.

Speaking on “A New Breed of Golf” with Michael Breed on SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio, Cozby recounted receiving a call from the PGA of America informing him of Tiger’s impending visit and being told “you can’t tell anybody.” He described Tiger’s visit as akin to the Beatles showing up at his club.

“It’s amazing what he has to deal with on a daily basis,” Cozby said. “He came through the gate. He didn’t even come to the clubhouse because he knew what he’d have to deal with and went straight to the range. They sent a text said, ‘Hey, we’re on the practice tee. I’ll meet you on the first tee.’ And of course our clubhouse is open so we probably had 20 people, the patio, the golf shop’s right off the first tee. So there were probably 20 members that slipped out there to watch him. He didn’t look up, hit his shot. Second hole, there’s a helicopter. Fourth hole, there’s 50 to 70 people up on the hill overlooking that hole. And by the time we get to six there’s 30 to 40 people in the trees across the street with television cameras and phones and pictures, and [saying] ‘We love you, Tiger. Go get ’em, Tiger. Great shot, Tiger.’ Just amazing.”

Cozby, the 2016 PGA Professional of the Year and son of Jerry, a club pro in his own right and former Golfweek Father of the Year, has been the director of golf at Southern Hills since 2015. He competed in the 2021 Senior PGA Championship and knows a thing or two about the golf swing. He had this review of Tiger’s swing from his up-close look.

“Every piece of it is very, it’s simple,” Cozby said. “He never once swung anything out of perfect rhythm. So he never went out of shot. Some things I just noticed, like his grip is perfect. It’s just perfect. And he never missed one shot anywhere close to an inch left to where he was looking. If he missed it, just hung a little to the right. I went through every shot, as you might guess, last night just thinking about it. And it was, if he missed it, he just hung it a little right. Or he just misgauged the wind. It was windy yesterday. And I think he hit one shot that, it was heavy and Rob goes, ‘The wind got that.’ He goes, ‘No, I hit a [inaudible] shot with my six iron instead.’ So that was about the only shot that wasn’t just on the button. And watching him pitch around the greens, I can tell you this, I was pretty nervous holding that putter.”

When Breed asked about Tiger’s stamina and ability to handle the walk at Southern Hills, Cozby said, “Obviously his gait’s permanently, I’m guessing, different. And he walks gingerly or just kind of like he is favoring it, but, and he was maybe looked like he, late in the round [was] hurting, but he didn’t say a word. Of course, he didn’t complain about any of that. My guess is he got back from Augusta and he assessed it and knew what he was dealing with and went back to work just based on what you know about him for the past 25 years. And I think he’s, I mean, he’ll be fine and he hits it so good. And does everything, he chips it and putts it incredible. Just fun to watch. He forgot his sand wedge so just had his 60. Left it in the backyard he said.”

When they reached 18, Cozby estimated more than 100 members watched on the hillside.

“It looked like the Beatles were here when we walked off 18,” Cozby said.

Tiger signed a ball and glove for Banks, but scooted before Cozby could ask for a photo. McNamara said they’ll take one together in May when Tiger returns for the championship – is that confirmation he’s playing? – but Cozby won’t be lacking for a keepsake from his experience.

“I’ve had 300 people text me a photo,” he said.

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Tiger Woods spotted in Oklahoma for practice round at Southern Hills ahead of PGA Championship in May

Cary Cozby, the head professional at Southern Hills, served as caddie for Woods.

When last we heard from Tiger Woods at the Masters, he was non-committal about whether he would play in the PGA Championship, the season’s second major.

“We’re excited about the prospects of the future, about training, about getting into that gym and doing some other stuff to get my leg stronger, which we haven’t been able to do because it needed more time to heal,” Woods said. “We’ll get back after it, and we’ll get into it.”

Apparently, Woods is doing just that as his private airplane arrived at a Tulsa, Oklahoma airport on Thursday. Woods was expected to play a practice round at Southern Hills Country Club, the site of the PGA, beginning May 19, where he won the 2007 PGA Championship by two strokes.

Golf Channel’s Todd Lewis, citing multiple sources, reported that Cary Cozby, the head professional at Southern Hills, served as caddie for Woods, who planned to walk all 18 holes.

Woods, 46, shocked the world in April when he competed in the Masters less than 14 months after being involved in a high-speed single-car accident in February 2021 that nearly resulted in amputation of his right leg. Woods opened with 71 at Augusta National, made the 36-hole cut, but began limping as the tournament went on and finished 47th.

In a post-round TV interview, Woods said he intended to play in the 150th British Open at St. Andrews in Scotland, where he won twice, and that he hoped to play at the PGA. He later committed to the J.P. McManus Pro-Am, a two-day event at Adare Manor in Ireland to be held the Monday and Tuesday before the season’s final major.

Woods entered the PGA Championship and U.S. Open to be held June 16-19 at The Country Club in Brookline, Mass., before the deadline but that was simply a formality to give himself options rather than a firm commitment that he’d be healthy enough to walk four rounds. At the Masters, Woods declared himself a game-time decision and it wouldn’t be surprising if he takes a similar cautiously optimistic attitude about playing the PGA and beyond.

The visit to Tulsa on Thursday for Woods was a pit stop en route to Las Vegas, where Woods will host Tiger Jam, his annual charity fundraiser for the Tiger Woods Foundation on April 29-30.

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