Imperial Valley Press

TV special on ‘Tiger Slam’ to air after Woods’ charity match

- By DOUG FERGUSON AP Golf Writer

Golf Channel was going to wait until a few hours after the Masters was over to show the latest project from its Golf Films unit called “Tiger Slam.” But it wasn’t going to wait until November.

The timing turned out to be even better. The one-hour special, which chronicles Woods winning all four majors in a span of 294 days, will be shown two hours after Woods is seen in live competitio­n for the first time in three months.

“Tiger Slam” is scheduled to air on May 24 at 8 p.m. EDT, right after Woods and Peyton Manning face Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady in a charity exhibition for COVID-19 relief efforts.

The film originally was set to be shown on April 12, the Sunday night after the Masters. But then the new coronaviru­s put a stop to sports, and the Masters eventually was reschedule­d for two weeks before Thanksgivi­ng. Golf Channel decided to wait until the right moment.

It helps, too, that “Tiger Slam” will be shown one week after the conclusion of “The Last Dance” documentar­y on Michael Jordan and his championsh­ip runs with the Chicago Bulls.

For Woods, the one-hour special covers four tournament­s — his 15-shot victory in the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach in 2000, his eight-shot victory in the British Open at St. Andrews to complete the career Grand Slam, his playoff victory over Bob May in the PGA Championsh­ip at Valhalla and his battle with Mickelson and David Duval to win the Masters.

Woods remains the only player to hold all four profession­al majors at the same time.

The film, with limited commercial interrupti­on, is narrated by Emmy Award-winning actor Michael Kenneth Williams. It features insight from caddie Steve Williams and swing coach Butch Harmon, along with sports media personalit­ies at the majors. Steve Williams talks about the time they nearly ran out of golf balls to finish the fog-delayed second round on Saturday morning because Woods was putting in his hotel and left three balls in his room.

Golf Films began in 2014 with the fourpart series on Arnold Palmer, which was shown right after the Masters that year. It also has produced a three-part series on Jack Nicklaus and a two-part film on Ben Hogan.

Tiger Woods was 31 when he won the PGA Championsh­ip at Southern Hills during a scorching week in 2007. He will be 54 the next time the PGA returns to Tulsa, Oklahoma.

The PGA of America announced Tuesday that Southern Hills, which has hosted seven majors, will hold the 2030 PGA Championsh­ip. The PGA said three years ago the Perry Maxwell design was on the rotation for another PGA, and it was simply waiting for the year.

Southern Hills once held three majors in a span of 13 years — the 1970 PGA Championsh­ip (Dave Stockton), the 1977 U.S. Open (Hubert Green) and the 1982 PGA Championsh­ip (Raymond Floyd).

TRACKING FANS

The PGA Tour has said only that the first four events upon its return at Colonial next month will not have fans. That means the Memorial — now scheduled as the sixth event (July 16-19) — is planning to have spectators.Just not as many.

Dan Sullivan, the tournament director, says there will not be grandstand­s — Muirfield Village in Dublin, Ohio, didn’t need that many, anyway, because of the landscape — and beverages will be sold only in bottles.

Most interestin­g about his discussion last week with the Greater Columbus Sports Commission was the concept of chips inserted in badges to determine how fans are gathering.

“At any time we can know around the golf course how many people are collecting in a certain area,” he said. “We’re going to use that technology to make sure that we’re protecting everyone around us, protecting the folks that are inside those various venues and make sure that we’re monitoring effectivel­y and producing a tournament that everyone can be comfortabl­e with.”

PGA WEEK

The PGA Championsh­ip was supposed to be played this week at Harding Park in San Francisco, easy to overlook since this would have been only the second year of the championsh­ip moving to May. Its two networks are still going to fill the void with recaps of four PGA Championsh­ips on ESPN2 and full final rounds from two others on CBS Sports this weekend.

ESPN plans to show Justin Thomas winning in 2017 at Quail Hollow (noon EDT) and Rory McIlroy winning his second Wanamaker Trophy in 2014 at Valhalla (2:30 p.m. EDT), when it was a four-man race on the back nine that featured Phil Mickelson, Henrik Stenson and Rickie Fowler.

CBS has two of Tiger Woods’ most exciting runs in the PGA Championsh­ip on the weekend — one a win, the other a loss.

It starts Saturday at 2:30 p.m. EDT with Brooks Koepka holding off a strong rally by Woods at Bellerive in 2018. Woods shot a career-low 64 in a major. Koepka shot 66 and won by two with a record score of 264.

On Sunday at 3 p.m EDT is Woods’ 2000 victory at Valhalla, where he holed what he considers the biggest putt of his career, a 6-foot birdie to force a three-hole playoff against Bob May. Woods won for his third straight major, becoming the first player to win back-to-back at the PGA Championsh­ip in stroke play.

THIS WEEK IN HISTORY

The LPGA rookie class of 1998 included a 20-year-old named Se Ri Pak. Most players didn’t know much about her. Laura Davies was the exception. She had seen the South Korean play in Europe the previous year, and when she discovered Pak’s odds at the season-opener were 66-1, she put 100 pounds on her to win before leaving England.Davies was four months too early. It was this week 22 years ago when Pak opened with a 65 in the LPGA Championsh­ip while playing alongside Nancy Lopez and JoAnne Carner. She shared the 54-hole lead and then pulled away with a 68 for a three-shot victory. Seven weeks later, Pak won the U.S. Women’s Open in a playoff at Blackwolf Run.

She became a star, and stirred a nation that became a powerhouse in women’s golf.

MICKELSON AND MICHAEL

Phil Mickelson has found a place to hang his clubs when he moves to South Florida: Michael Jordan’s place.

Mickelson said on the “Dan Patrick Show” on Monday that he was in the process of joining The Grove XXIII, the ultra-exclusive club that Jordan created.

“It’s a cool place,” Mickelson said. “He did an exceptiona­l job there.”

Mickelson says joining the club is invitation-only, but that he knows a number of members. Mickelson, who lives in San Diego, says he and his wife have bought a lot about 10 or 15 minutes away from Jordan’s club. Golf Channel reported in January that Mickelson plans to move to Florida next year after his youngest child graduates high school.

 ??  ??
 ?? AP Photo/Elise Amendola ?? In this 2000 file photo, Tiger Woods tees off on the 18th hole on his way to winning the 100th U.S. Open Golf Championsh­ip at the Pebble Beach Golf Links in Pebble Beach, Calif.
TULSA TIME
AP Photo/Elise Amendola In this 2000 file photo, Tiger Woods tees off on the 18th hole on his way to winning the 100th U.S. Open Golf Championsh­ip at the Pebble Beach Golf Links in Pebble Beach, Calif. TULSA TIME

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States