Boston Herald

Garcia gets into U.S. Open that now tilts away from qualifying

- By Doug Ferguson

PITTSFORD, N.Y. >> Sergio Garcia was left out of the PGA Championsh­ip, the first time in 24 years he was not eligible for a major. The day after Brooks Koepka won, the Spaniard made it to the next major through U.S. Open qualifying in Dallas.

That was the third of 13 final qualifiers for the U.S. Open, to be held June 1518 at Los Angeles Country Club. Already in the books are England last week and Japan on Monday, where Ryo Ishikawa was among three to advance.

The other 10 are on June 5 — the Monday after the Memorial. Along with one more look at the top 60 from the world ranking, that will complete the 156-man field.

But there are fewer qualifying spots than typically available. The USGA prides itself on being the most “open” of the majors. For three years prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, there were 78 players who had to go through 36-hole qualifying — half of the field.

The pandemic required some changes because of travel restrictio­ns. But now that golf is back to normal, qualifying is not.

The PGA Championsh­ip was the cutoff for the top 60 in the world ranking — that was previously the case — but it also was the cutoff for the leading five players from the FedEx Cup standings. That provided spots for Nick Taylor, Mackenzie Hughes, Taylor Montgomery, Hayden Buckley and Andrew Putnam.

Putnam, currently at No. 37 in the FedEx Cup, ordinarily would have gone through qualifying — ditto for Hughes, who dropped three spots to No. 62 in the world when he missed the cut at the PGA Championsh­ip.

The USGA also reserved a spot for the points leader on the Korn Ferry Tour last year — Justin Suh, No. 75 in the FedEx Cup and No. 76 in the world ranking.

There also is a new spot for the NCAA champion this year.

Throw those out and it would bring the number to roughly the 50-50 range as it was before.

The USGA also provided five additional spots for the European tour — three from the Race to Dubai are various points, and two more from a special four-tournament money list that ends in Germany next week. However, the UK qualifier went from 12 or 13 spots to seven this year, so that’s a push.

Among those outside the top 60 who have two weeks to work themselves back in are Kevin Kisner (65) and Scott Stallings (68). Both are at Colonial this week.

Tiger’s Open

Tiger Woods is not playing the U.S. Open, which was entirely expected given the ankle fusion surgery in late April that is likely to take months of recovery.

It brought into clear view how much time he has missed from back surgeries and the Los Angeles car crash in February 2021.

Woods has three U.S. Open titles — one short of the record — along with two runner-up finishes. After this year, he will have played only 10 rounds in the last 10 years at the U.S. Open, having played only four times. He missed the cut in three of them — Chambers Bay in 2015, Shinnecock Hills in 2018, Winged Foot in 2020.

His scoring average dating to 2013 is 73.8.

Back in the USA

Linn Grant makes her LPGA Tour debut on American soil this week in the Bank of Hope LPGA Match Play at Shadow Creek. This comes about 18 months after the former Arizona State star from Sweden actually earned her card.

Grant’s vaccinatio­n status kept her from coming to the United States. Her only six tournament­s as an LPGA Tour rookie were overseas — two in Scotland, and events in France, Northern Ireland, Japan and South Korea. She had four top 10s and qualified for the season-ending CME Group Tour Championsh­ip, turning it down because she couldn’t get there.

Travel restrictio­ns were lifted earlier this month. Grant played in the Aramco Series last week in Florida — that’s part of the Ladies European Tour schedule. And now she tees it up against 63 other players north of Las

Vegas.

“I’m just going to try and enjoy, and not think too much about it and get into the mood that this is my workplace now,” Grant said about her first LPGA event in the U.S.

Her time away from the LPGA Tour was beneficial. Grant won shortly after turning pro in late 2021. Last year, she had four wins, two runner-ups and three times finished third.

“Looking back at it now, I really appreciate not coming here earlier,” Grant said Tuesday. “I think I wouldn’t have had the experience I’ve had with the LET and all the confidence that I’ve gained through the year. I think that was a great year for me to get into profession­al golf and learn about my game and traveling and getting used to all the stuff you have to get used to.

“I feel like I’m more prepared coming here now than I would’ve been a year ago.”

College honors

Rose Zhang has won just about everything in women’s college golf this year. After winning the NCAA title again, she won the Annika Award that goes to the top female Division I player.

Zhang won the award for the second straight year. Her final season at Stanford — she is expected to turn pro for next week — featured eight victories.

In men’s golf, Texas Tech senior Ludvig Aberg of Sweden won the Ben Hogan Award that goes to the top male college golfer based on his collegiate, amateur and pro events. Aberg joined Jon Rahm as the only players to win the Hogan Award backto-back.

Zhang and Aberg are No. 1 in the amateur ranking — Zhang now has been there a record 140 weeks. Aberg is coming off wins in the Big 12 title and the NCAA regional.

Aberg also is a finalist for the Haskins Award that goes to the top college golfer.

 ?? KATELYN MULCAHY — LIV GOLF VIA AP ?? Captain Sergio Garcia of Fireballs GC reads his putt on the fourth green during the first round of LIV golf tournament at the Cedar Ridge Country Club, Friday, May 12, 2023, in Broken Arrow, Okla.
KATELYN MULCAHY — LIV GOLF VIA AP Captain Sergio Garcia of Fireballs GC reads his putt on the fourth green during the first round of LIV golf tournament at the Cedar Ridge Country Club, Friday, May 12, 2023, in Broken Arrow, Okla.

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