San Francisco Chronicle

An eerily quiet place to work

Sounds of silence usher in 1st round of 2020’s 1st major

- By Ron Kroichick

As Tiger Woods stepped to the tee Thursday morning at Harding Park, a man with a microphone welcomed the handful of media members and tournament volunteers, listed Woods’ four PGA Championsh­ip victories and introduced him to the sound of…

Nothing. Silence. Not a peep.

In a normal major championsh­ip, the mention of “Tiger” would spark a thunderous ovation from an oversized, exuberant crowd — before the announcer could even say “Woods.” But this is not a normal major championsh­ip by any measure.

Woods’ surreal introducti­on conveyed the unpreceden­ted atmosphere for the first major in Harding Park history, the first major in San Francisco in eight years and the first major of 2020. The coronaviru­s pandemic kept spectators away and kept the volume down — as in, disarmingl­y quiet — during the first round of the 102nd PGA Championsh­ip.

First, the leaderboar­d: Jason Day and Brendon Todd shot 5underpar 65s to share the lead. Brooks Koepka, Zach Johnson, Martin Kaymer and Justin Rose — all major champions like Day — highlighte­d the pack at 4under 66. Woods shot 68.

Cal alum Collin Morikawa posted 69, Rory McIlroy headlined the group at even

par 70 and topranked Justin Thomas shot 71.

Still, the most striking thing about the Bay Area’s return to bigtime golf was the utter absence of noise. No spinetingl­ing roars when players hit good shots, except for scattered shouts from outside the fence along Lake Merced Boulevard. No groans when putts somehow stayed out of the hole.

Woods hit a terrific flop shot on his first hole (No. 10), for example, cozying the ball close. Silence. Later in the round, McIlroy lofted a gorgeous wedge shot on No. 16, landing the ball beyond the hole and spinning it back to 3 feet. Again, silence. It almost felt like an amateur event, with only family and friends traipsing along. Thursday morning’s marquee group of WoodsMcIlr­oyThomas attracted 50 to 100 people at various times, a mix of ESPN crew members, media and tournament volunteers.

Still, the strangest moment came when Woods, whose mere presence invariably attracts a raucous response, stepped to the tee to begin his round. He later called it “our new norm” as the game cautiously moves ahead amid a global pandemic.

Asked if that introducti­on was weird, even after similar silence in recent weeks on tour, McIlroy said, “At this point, not really. It’s still funny. They say 99000607 PGA champion Tiger Woods — and there’s nothing. That’s interestin­g, and definitely different. It’s the way it’s going to be for the foreseeabl­e future, unfortunat­ely.”

Woods is accustomed to plying his trade amid myriad distractio­ns: spectators gawking or shouting, photograph­ers jostling for position or clicking their cameras too quickly. He doesn’t need to worry this week.

“There’s really no one moving around,” he said. “You don’t hear the crowd noises. It’s just different.”

The lack of spectators could add to the challenge. Crowds usually stomp down thick rough outside the ropes, so a player might draw a good lie even after hitting a shot way off line. Now, the rough is thick and nasty all over the place.

This didn’t cause many problems amid ideal scoring conditions Thursday: cool, partly sunny, little wind. Day, an affable Australian with 12 tour wins (including the 2015 PGA Championsh­ip), took full advantage. His five birdies included one on No. 9, a 515yard par4, his final hole and the most difficult on the course for the opening round.

Soon thereafter, Day acknowledg­ed he prefers boisterous crowds to this new normal. PGA officials had planned to cram nearly 40,000 people onto Harding Park each day.

“I miss playing in front of fans, because you obviously work off that energy, especially in a major,” Day said. “Usually, it’s buzzing from Monday all the way through Sunday. There’s a lot of people here and there’s a big buzz going around the course. … It’s just not the same.”

The irony is that Harding, the rare municipal course to host a major, quickly establishe­d a reputation for lively galleries after its early21st century renovation and return to hosting big tournament­s. Flash back to the World Golf Championsh­ip event in 2005, when Woods tangled with John Daly in a memorable playoff.

As a cart took Woods to the No. 18 tee for the first playoff hole, he later joked his left ear felt halfdeaf. Then, after he and Daly smacked towering drives, they walked down the same fairway heading the other direction — and Woods’ right ear felt halfdeaf.

“It was electric,” he said at the time.

Fifteen years later, Woods and the rest of the world’s best players are navigating an entirely new world.

 ?? Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle ?? As the PGA Championsh­ip’s Wanamaker Trophy is displayed behind him, twotime defending champion Brooks Koepka tees off.
Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle As the PGA Championsh­ip’s Wanamaker Trophy is displayed behind him, twotime defending champion Brooks Koepka tees off.
 ?? Photos by Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle ?? Brooks Koepka, above left, who opened with a 4underpar 66, and Shane Lowry (68) took advantage of ideal scoring conditions — cool, partly sunny, little wind — Thursday at Harding Park. Lowry, below, hits out of the rough on the 12th hole.
Photos by Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle Brooks Koepka, above left, who opened with a 4underpar 66, and Shane Lowry (68) took advantage of ideal scoring conditions — cool, partly sunny, little wind — Thursday at Harding Park. Lowry, below, hits out of the rough on the 12th hole.
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