Woods back into spotlight
Five talking points from 2019 in golf
TIGER ROARS AGAIN
The most memorable moment of the year came back in April at Augusta National when Woods tapped in to seal his first major championship victory since the 2008 US Open. The now-43-year-old has since had to battle personal problems, injury woes and a shocking loss of form.
He surprised the golfing world by returning to the top events in 2018, winning the PGA Tour’s season-ending Tour Championship, before capping his comeback this year in incredible fashion by winning a fifth Masters green jacket.
Woods went on to lift a record-equalling 82nd PGA Tour title in Japan in October, before leading the United States to victory in the Presidents Cup in Melbourne as a playing captain.
Now, the talk of him chasing down Jack Nicklaus’ long-standing record of 18 major wins has been reignited.
LOWRY DELIGHTS PORTRUSH
Irishman Lowry provided an enthralling finale in a party atmosphere as Royal Portrush staged the British Open for the first time in 68 years.
The 32-year-old won his maiden major title with a dominant six-shot victory over England’s Tommy Fleetwood in difficult conditions on the final day.
“I let myself enjoy it and it was incredible walking down 18, they were singing and going mad. I could not believe it was happening to me,” said Lowry after becoming only the second player from the Republic of Ireland, after Padraig Harrington, to lift the Claret Jug.
REED ‘CHEATING’ STORM
Patrick Reed was accused of cheating after being given a two-stroke penalty for twice moving sand behind his ball with his club during the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas.
The infraction cost the former Masters winner a place in a playoff as he finished two strokes behind eventual champion Henrik Stenson.
Reed was jeered mercilessly the following week by the home crowd at the Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne, despite insisting that he was not a “cheat” and that he broke the rules “unintentionally”.
‘PHENOMENAL’ KO BREAKS THROUGH
Ko Jin-young produced the biggest breakthrough of the season by winning two women’s majors, four LPGA Tour titles in total and finishing the year as world No. 1 – all in only her
second
LPGA campaign.
The 24-year-old South Korean won for the first time in the US with a thrilling victory in the Founders Cup in March, before securing her maiden major two weeks later at the ANA Inspiration.
Another followed at the Evian Championship in France, while she also went 114 holes without a bogey – breaking Woods’ record of 110.
“It’s phenomenal,” said Ko’s veteran caddie Dave Brooker.
TIGER SIGNS OFF IN STYLE
Tiger Woods’ United States produced a stunning turnaround to deny the Internationals a first Presidents
Cup in 21 years, dominating the singles on a tense final day that went to the wire at Royal Melbourne.
Veteran Matt Kuchar was the hero, with his winning putt on the 17th in the penultimate match enough to ensure victory, sparking wild celebrations from playing-captain Woods, who set the
tone by getting the first point on the board.
WHAT TO WATCH IN 2020: KOEPKA, MCILROY THREATEN TO DOMINATE
Brooks Koepka and Rory McIlroy have pulled clear as the best two players in the world according the rankings, after the American won his fourth major at the USPGA Championship and the
Northern Irish star claimed four titles and was named PGA Tour Player of the Year.
“He (Koepka) talked about trying to be the dominant player in the game… and I thought: ‘He’s going to have to go through me first,” McIlroy said after beating Koepka at the Tour Championship.
But the world No.1 hit back, saying: “I’ve been out here for, what, five years. Rory hasn’t won a major since I’ve been on the PGA Tour. So I just don’t view it as a rivalry.”
With McIlroy and Koepka the joint-favourites to win April’s Masters, the competition between the
two appears set to become fiercer in 2020.