Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Max Homa part of an elite field and he’s getting used to it

- By DOUG FERGUSON

NASSAU, BAHAMAS (AP) » Max Homa arrived long before his plane touched down in the Bahamas to face an elite field of 20 players, all of them the core of the PGA Tour and European tour after defections to Saudifunde­d LIV Golf.

This is a charity event Tiger Woods has hosted for 24 years to benefit education and youth, not counted as an official win except that it gets official world ranking points. And the $1 million going to the winner spends just the same.

But it’s effectivel­y an AllStar Game in golf. That includes Homa, and rightly so.He has four wins over the last two years. He played in the Presidents Cup and won all four of his matches. His profile is such that he shared a tee time with Woods at St. Andrews for two days.

“I don’t feel like this is the thing that’s making me feel like I belong,” Homa said. “I felt like that for quite a while. But it is very cool to be here.”

The leisure week took on a business tone ever so briefly with a players meeting on Tuesday to discuss a PGA Tour schedule that remains a work in progress in response to LIV Golf.

The next time most of these players are together will be at Kapalua on Maui, the first of 16 “elevated events” that average $20 million in prize money. Next year is really a bridge to 2024 when the schedule and criteria to play will look nothing like it ever has.

LIV Golf wrapped up its eight-event inaugural season a month ago and is staying in the news. Woods added to previous comments by Rory McIlroy that LIV leader Greg Norman needs to be out of the picture before anyone can sit down and talk.

LIV Golf, meanwhile, began releasing bits of its 2023 tournament­s — Mayakoba in Mexico, Valderrama in Spain, Sentosa Golf Club in Singapore — with the full schedule expected to be announced next week.

Through all this chaos, the focus is increasing­ly on the needle movers, and that’s particular­ly true at a tournament hosted by the ultimate needle in golf.

All but Sepp Straka — who replaced Woods when the host had to withdraw with a foot injury — have played in a Ryder Cup or Presidents Cup. Fifteen of the 20 players are among the top 20 in the world, and Corey Conners (filling in for Hideki Matsuyama) is the highest-ranked player at No. 33.

And now there’s another ranking — the Player Impact Program, which doles out $100 million in bonus money to the leading players who are deemed to have brought attention to the sport through their performanc­e or popularity.

Homa always had the right touch on Twitter. He got more traction when he began analyzing swings of recreation­al golfers. And then when his own golf began to soar, so did his profile.

He finished at No. 14 on the PIP, worth $3 million. What’s funny to Homa — he finds humor in everything — is that he is No. 16 in the world ranking.

“I always thought I was significan­tly more popular than I was good at golf,” Homa said. “So it feels nice that those things are aligning, so that’s a little mini-bonus. But at the end of the day, 14th is pretty good.”

The real measure of moving the needle might be to be included in the rumor mill of who’s going to jump over to LIV Golf. Homa has made it clear where he wants to be, and his name is not part of the gossip.

“I guess it would have been cool to be a part of that so I could live the life of ... it felt like a reality TV series for a bit,” he said.

 ?? AP PHOTO/FERNANDO LLANO ?? Max Homa, of the United States, watches his shot on the 10th tee during a practice round of the Hero World Challenge PGA Tour at the Albany Golf Club, in New Providence, Bahamas, Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2022.
AP PHOTO/FERNANDO LLANO Max Homa, of the United States, watches his shot on the 10th tee during a practice round of the Hero World Challenge PGA Tour at the Albany Golf Club, in New Providence, Bahamas, Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2022.

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