Daily Southtown

Thomas eyes big turnaround

- By Doug Ferguson

PITTSFORD, N.Y. — Justin Thomas won the PGA Championsh­ip when he least expected it, matching a tournament record last year at Southern Hills when he rallied from seven shots behind in the final round and won in a playoff.

Now he’s not sure what to expect.

That was his only win in the last two years, dating to The Players Championsh­ip in 2021.

He has fallen out of the top 10 in the world for the first time in nearly six years.

It’s not as though he has vanished from the elite in golf.

Thomas, who turned 30 last month, is still at No. 13 and still very much a threat to win wherever he plays. It’s just he hasn’t felt like that very often over the last year, and he went through some stretches where he showed up at a tournament and wasn’t sure he could win.

“How I described it for a couple months is I’ve never felt so far and so close at the same time,” he said Monday at Oak Hill after playing 18 holes on a pleasant spring day.

“That’s a very hard thing to explain, and it’s also a very hard way to try to compete and win a golf tournament.

“That’s how you get out of it, just playing your way out of it and hitting the shots when you want to and making those putts when you need to, and then your confidence builds back up, and next thing you know, you don’t even remember what you were thinking in those times.”

Oak Hill looks certain to present as strong a test as Southern Hills was a year ago.

Both classic courses had gone through restoratio­ns since previously hosting a PGA Championsh­ip, and so in some respects, it’s new for all 156 players in the field.

Thomas hasn’t had the results — only four top 10s since winning the PGA Championsh­ip, only one serious chance of winning at the Canadian Open last June — but he is seeing improvemen­t.

His last start was the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip, where he didn’t feel he had much going for him except for reasonable scoring.

“I felt like in Charlotte, I really turned a little bit of a corner of scoring better,” he said.

Oak Hill last hosted the PGA Championsh­ip in 2013 — Thomas was still at Alabama, getting ready to turn pro.

The restoratio­n work by Andrew Green presents a tree-lined course with Allen’s Creek meandering through it, sharps edges on the greens the way famed architect Donald Ross intended it.

There’s also plenty of thick grass to the relief of the PGA of America, which hoped for the kind of weather that would allow for growth in the turf and in the trees, and that’s what it got.

Thomas arrived on Sunday and walked 18 holes to chip and putt. He played with Max Homa on Monday and got the full experience.

“It’s everything that I’d heard about. It’s a tough test,” Thomas said. “I felt like I had a lot of lies chipping and hitting irons that I had a pretty good idea how it was going to come out, and I didn’t.

“So I think that’s going to be something that a lot of people will have to guess correctly or adjust as the week goes on.”

 ?? ANDY LYONS/GETTY ?? Defending champ Justin Thomas is not sure about his game ahead of the PGA Championsh­ip.“I’ve never felt to so far and so close at the same time,” he said.
ANDY LYONS/GETTY Defending champ Justin Thomas is not sure about his game ahead of the PGA Championsh­ip.“I’ve never felt to so far and so close at the same time,” he said.

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