Las Vegas Review-Journal

Stadium Course huge challenge in Players Championsh­ip

- By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Rory Mcilroy didn’t break par until his fourth time at The Players Championsh­ip.

The next step is having a chance Sunday.

The four-time major champion has learned to love the TPC Sawgrass — “learned to like,” he quickly clarified with a smile — and he has taken small steps toward contention. The Players Stadium Course has a history of not favoring any one style of play, and the list of winners at the PGA Tour’s premier event illustrate­s that, going from Greg Norman to Lee Janzen, from Tiger Woods to Craig Perks, from Henrik Stenson to Tim Clark.

“I felt like it handcuffed me,” Mcilroy said. “I felt like I was just being stubborn, trying to hit driver where there’s no point in hitting drive. So I’ve learned to take it for what it is — a very positional golf course.”

Attitude is everything in golf, especially on this Pete Dye-designed course created on land that used to be a swamp.

Mcilroy said he now looks forward to The Players Championsh­ip, even though he has yet to finish closer than four shots of the winner. Much of that has to do with the water, just not any found on the golf course.

“I started staying on the beach a few years ago, and that’s made the event a lot more enjoyable,” Mcilroy said.

Mcilroy is not alone in his struggles.

Jordan Spieth has gone the opposite direction. He nearly won the first time he played and didn’t even make a bogey until his 59th hole. He tied for fourth. And that was the last time he played on the weekend at Sawgrass.

“I just kind of assumed that it would come easy to me,” Spieth said.

Dustin Johnson has never finished better than a tie for 12th. That was last year, and he had to close with a 68 to finish that high.

It all starts to unfold Thursday, the final time The Players Championsh­ip will be held in May after a 12-year run before returning to the pre-masters date in March.

The star attraction is Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson paired in the same group for the first time since the 2014 PGA Championsh­ip.

Woods has won twice at Sawgrass. He has never missed the cut. But he has been perplexed by the Stadium Course, just like so many others. He has finished out of the top 20 in just over half his appearance­s, some of those when he was the most dominant player in golf.

“There’s no way of faking it around this golf course,” said Woods, who won his first U.S. Amateur at Sawgrass in 1994. “The golf course negates a lot of different things. We’re all playing from basically the same spots off the tees with our approach shots.”

Mickelson has said of his 2007 victory, “I can’t believe I won here.”

The purse has been raised to $11 million, with the winner getting just under $2 million for a week’s work.

And while it has an All-star roster of champions, equally impressive is the list of players who haven’t won. That includes the top five players in the world, all of whom have a mathematic­al chance to be No. 1 by the end of the week.

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