Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Johnson the best player with only 1 major title

- Doug Ferguson AP Sports Columnist

FARMINGDAL­E, N.Y. >> Dustin Johnson was on the wrong side of history at the last PGA Championsh­ip.

It wasn’t because Brooks Koepka, his best friend in golf, walked away with the Wanamaker Trophy for his third major championsh­ip. By finishing 10 shots behind, Johnson set a most obscure record by going eight consecutiv­e majors at No. 1 in the world without winning any of them. And the beat goes on. He is back to No. 1 for the May version of the PGA Championsh­ip, still among the favorites at Bethpage Black because it’s a big course and he has big talent. He was a runner-up at the Masters and already has two victories this year.

The No. 1 ranking means little more than pride. Having only one major in 39 tries? That’s a little more irritating.

“Disappoint­ed I wouldn’t go with,” Johnson said, perhaps realizing 21 victories worldwide would not suggest his career has been a bust. “But a little frustrated sometimes just because I’ve had quite a few chances.”

Some of those chances are as memorable as the one major he won.

There was the three-shot lead at Pebble Beach that was gone after two holes in the 2010 U.S. Open on his way to an 82. He missed a playoff in the PGA Championsh­ip later that year at Whistling Straits when he set his club on loose sand without realizing it was a bunker. The 12-foot eagle putt he needed to win the

2015 U.S. Open at Chambers Bay turned into a three-putt par.

Last year at Shinnecock Hills in the U.S. Open, he went from a four-shot lead to a four-way tie going into the last round, and then Koepka outplayed him.

His only major was at Oakmont, famous for Johnson having to play the final seven holes without knowing the score because of a rules dispute. He won that 2016 U.S. Open with such a steady hand that it looked for sure more majors would follow.

While it’s still early — Johnson is only 34 — he is eager to add to the total. Never mind the decades-old label of best to have never won a major. Now it’s the best to have only one major.

“It’s hard to win majors,” Johnson said. “If it was easy, a lot of guys would have a lot more than they do. But it’s just tough. They’re always on tough golf courses, and you’ve got to put four good rounds together. A lot of times that’s hard to do on really tough courses.”

It seems ludicrous now because Tiger Woods is sitting on 15 majors, but getting that second one was important. Woods had won the 1997 Masters by 12 shots and then went 10 majors without. He changed his swing, his agent, his caddie. And then he held on for a one-shot victory at Medinah in the 1999 PGA Championsh­ip.

“It was a big deal to get a second major championsh­ip and get the numbers to start to accrue,” Woods said Tuesday. “It just started the momentum, and you can see what happened in 2000, 2001 and

2002. But I think ’99 was a big moment to kick-start all that transpired.”

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