The New Zealand Herald

Crammed schedule becomes major issue

- Doug Ferguson

Andrew Landry hit the opening tee shot at the Masters. Shane Lowry hit the final shot at the British Open. All in 102 days.

The new major championsh­ip season in golf — one a month starting with the Masters in April — could take time before players can adjust. And that was just the start. Throw in the Olympics and the Ryder Cup next year, and the schedule will be relentless.

“I felt like majors were coming almost too fast, one after the other,” Francesco Molinari said. “And to add the Olympic Games, too, it’s not going to be an easy year for anyone. So that’s how golf is right now, and we just need to make the most of it.”

It wasn’t that big of a deal for Tiger Woods, who played only 16 competitio­n rounds in those 102 days. Woods pledged late last year that he wasn’t going to be playing as much, and he lived up to his word.

“It seems yesterday we were playing in Augusta and all of a sudden the four majors are gone,” said Molinari, who is skipping the World Golf Championsh­ips event this week in Memphis, Tennessee. “So I think it’s something that hopefully next year we will get more used to it. But this year it has been a big change.”

The Italian wasn’t alone in his thinking.

“The schedule has been tough this year,” Tommy Fleetwood said. “If you’re not playing great, you actually don’t have time this year to develop your game because you don’t have that time to take periods off, really. You’re constantly playing and you always have to turn up and perform with the way that it goes.”

Justin Rose touched on this at the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip in early May. He said for years, the Masters ended and players didn’t have to think about majors for nearly two months. He felt the schedule was too condensed, which he attributed to the FedEx Cup wanting to finish in August ahead of American football.

Rose won the FedEx Cup last year, along with the US$10 million bonus. “For me, a major championsh­ip should be the things that are protected the most,” Rose said. “That’s how all of our careers ultimately are going to be measured.”

There are 263 days between the end of the British Open and the start of the Masters next year. That’s the longest gap between majors since 1971, when the PGA Championsh­ip was held in Florida and moved to February. The British Open ended on July 15 that year.

Rickie Fowler missed the cut in the 2016 US Open at Oakmont, the second straight major he had off for the weekend.

That was the last one. Fowler was among 16 players who made the cut in all four majors this year, a list that includes the top two players in the world (Brooks Koepka and Dustin Johnson), along with Matt Wallace of England and Cameron Smith of Australia.

That was the highest number of players since 18 made all four cuts in 2015, and it was up from 11 players last year.

Koepka has the longest active streak of consecutiv­e cuts made in the majors — 21 in a row — that dates to the 2013 British Open at Muirfield, when he qualified the morning after winning a Challenge Tour event in Europe. He wasn’t eligible for the 2014 Masters, sat out the 2016 British Open with an ankle injury and missed the 2018 Masters with a wrist injury.

On the flip side was Shugo Imahira, who received a special foreign invitation to the Masters this year. He missed the cut at Augusta National, and by July had become the only player to miss the cut in all four majors.

 ??  ?? Shane Lowry
Shane Lowry

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