Orlando Sentinel

Tour should make HSBC wins count

- By Doug Ferguson

POTOMAC, Md. —

went from a share of the 54-hole lead to an eight-shot runaway in the Quicken Loans National, a performanc­e that would not have surprised anyone who saw his victory in Shanghai in 2010.

Molinari never flinched in a duel with

that came down to the last hole in the HSBC Champions. He won by one shot, but far more notable was that no one else was within 10 shots of the Italian. It was his only World Golf Championsh­ip, and the biggest win of his career. At least on the European Tour.

The PGA Tour finally put a WGC outside America, but then it did not recognize the HSBC Champions as an official victory until 2012. Molinari still received 68 world ranking points and $1.2 million. He even got into Kapalua a few months later for the Tournament of Champions. But he remains slightly bothered that it didn’t count as a PGA Tour victory. Westwood was No. 1 in the world. Molinari beat by 11 shots, by 12 and by 20.

“When everyone was saying I never won on the PGA Tour, I felt like saying, ‘Well, technicall­y, it was pretty much a PGA Tour tournament,” Molinari said Sunday. “But yeah, it’s just a formality, and I think it’s different anyway to win on U.S. soil . ... So this win feels special.”

The tour logic when the HSBC Champions began — “WGC Lite” was the nickname — was that only 29 players in the 78-man field were PGA Tour members.

It found it unrealisti­c to count such a big purse against the money list, even though it would not have affected anyone at Disney the following week as it relates to the top 125.

A year after Molinari won, the PGA Tour said that it would count as official provided a PGA Tour member won.

of Germany won, so it didn’t count. The tour undoubtedl­y was answering to Americans who felt internatio­nal players had a quick avenue to a PGA Tour card — never mind that they beat some of the strongest fields.

won in 2012 and it counted as a PGA Tour victory. He was followed by

and All were PGA Tour members. Five of the nine winners are major champions.

It wasn’t until 2002 that the PGA Tour finally recognized the British Open as an official victory, setting the all-time victory record of at 82. It’s worth revisiting the HSBC and making those victories retroactiv­e. It matters more in principle than in history, with one exception. Mickelson won the first HSBC Champions, playing with Woods in the final group. Mickelson’s goal is to get to 50 career victories. Mickelson is at 43. He should be at 44.

The British Open is starting to take shape, and part of it has to do with timing. had a 12-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole at the Quicken Loans National to earn one of four spots available. While he missed, Landry at least helped himself with a tie for eighth, moving up six spots to No. 76 in the world ranking. The R&A determines reserves by their place in the world ranking when there is a withdrawal or open spots.

A week ago, the Open took the leading five players (not already eligible) from the top 20 in the FedEx Cup and the Race to Dubai. Only three players from each tour qualified, leaving four spots available. Along with not playing because of injury, the five spots on last week’s world ranking went to

and Landry moved ahead of

and if a spot were to become available this week, or in R&A language, “at the time that intimation of withdrawal is received or further places are made available.”

Otherwise, the world ranking after this week will serve as the alternate list until the opening tee shot on July 19 at Carnoustie. Meanwhile, three spots from the leading 10 at the Irish Open and four spots from the leading 12 at the Greenbrier are available this week.

The PGA Tour can now manufactur­e the groups for the opening two rounds, mainly to establish its feature pairings that are shown on PGA Tour Live. Odds are the tour will do what it can to avoid

and from being in the same group. Sunday night after the Quicken Loans National, Dahmen was asked why the group behind was able to play through on the par-5 10th hole. Dahmen replied with shocking bluntness: “Kang cheated. He took a bad drop from a hazard.”

Player disputes on rulings are rare, and it’s even more rare for a player to publicly accuse another of cheating. At issue was whether Kang’s second shot crossed the other side of a hazard near the green. He says it did. Dahmen said it didn’t. The Twitter thread that followed was filled with commentary from someone who said he had a good view to a ShotLink worker who said there was no way Kang should have dropped near the green. Without concrete evidence, such as video, the PGA Tour rules official sided with Kang. He finished third, earning a spot in the British Open.

 ?? ROB CARR/GETTY IMAGES ?? Francesco Molinari remains slightly bothered that his HSBC Champions win didn’t count as a PGA Tour victory.
ROB CARR/GETTY IMAGES Francesco Molinari remains slightly bothered that his HSBC Champions win didn’t count as a PGA Tour victory.

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