The Arizona Republic

No hurry for Woods to return

- Doug Ferguson GARY A. VASQUEZ/USA TODAY SPORTS

HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. – When it comes to Tiger Woods returning to the PGA Tour, it’s all about the calendar.

Nothing raised hopes that he would be at Hilton Head like a website tracking yachts that showed his Privacy on its way to Sea Island off the Georgia coast, about 80 miles south of the RBC Heritage, this week.

Woods played Hilton Head only in 1999 (he tied for 18th), but this is a different kind of year.

Then again, it’s also the 13th birthday of his daughter on Thursday, and that’s likely what Woods was doing around Sea Island.

But there’s more to the calendar, and there’s no need for Woods to be in any rush.

True, the PGA Tour has been shut down since March 12 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Everyone at Colonial was eager to get back to the competitio­n, and some mentioned a need to start making up for lost ground.

“Guys are looking to get off to a fast start because it’s actually a fast finish to the season,” Jordan Spieth said. He was referring to 10 tournament­s on the schedule before the FedEx Cup postseason begins, 12 tournament­s before Ryder Cup qualifying ends (if it’s played).

None of that is likely to be a priority for Woods.

The focus figures to be primarily on the majors, and those are all in the back end of the year. The PGA Championsh­ip is Aug. 6-19, the U.S. Open is Sept. 17-20 and the Masters is Nov. 12-15. So even now, the first major is just under two months away.

Woods has never played the Travelers Championsh­ip and is unlikely to play the Rocket Mortgage Classic – remember, Quicken Loans ended its involvemen­t with the Tiger Woods Foundation and started a new tournament in Detroit.

If he returns at Memorial, which would be the logical return, that means five months without competing on the PGA Tour.

But then, what’s the rush?

The LPGA Tour is moving back by one week the restart of its season and adding another tournament.

Ultimately, it means a lot of profession­al golf for Northwest Ohio.

The LPGA says the Marathon Classic, originally scheduled for July 23-26 in Sylvania, a Toledo suburb, will now be Aug. 6-9. It will have spectators at Highland Meadows following recent approval by Ohio’s governor. Meanwhile, the LPGA will host a new 54-hole event called the LPGA Drive On Championsh­ip at Inverness Club in Toledo, on July 31 to Aug. 2.

Inverness, where Paul Azinger won the 1993 PGA Championsh­ip, is hosting the Solheim Cup next year.

The new event is to give LPGA members an additional playing opportunit­y during a shortened season. It will have 144 players and a $1 million purse and will be held without sponsors, pro-ams or spectators.

That means Ohio will have back-toback PGA Tour events at Muirfield Village from July 9-19, and after a week break, back-to-back events on the LPGA Tour.

Pan’s back

C.T. Pan never thought he would have a chance to defend his title at Hilton Head, so he was thrilled to see it back on the reconfigur­ed schedule.

And he felt good about playing.

Pan was the first player to show how concerned he was about COVID-19 when he withdrew before the first round of The Players Championsh­ip. The PGA Tour announced later in the day that no fans would be allowed the rest of the week, and the next day it began canceling tournament­s in a shutdown that last three months.

“It was a really tough decision. In my whole career, including junior golf, I’ve never withdrawn from a tournament,” Pan said Tuesday. “I think the tour has put out so much efforts the last two months to create a safe environmen­t for us to play. Last week I was totally impressed by how they do things.”

As for the travel? No problem.

Pan said he and his wife bought an RV so they don’t have to fly.

Father’s Day

Golf loses another longtime tradition on Sunday with the U.S. Open having moved to September because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

That ends 44 consecutiv­e years the U.S. Open has been played on Father’s Day, dating to 1975 at Medinah. Father’s Day was on June 15 that year, and the tournament went to a Monday playoff as Lou Graham beat John Mahaffey.

What’s curious about that is the U.S. Open finished on Father’s Day when it went to a four-day tournament in 1965. The previous year, the 36-hole final was on a Saturday.

Michael Trostel at the USGA believes it might be related to the fact that while Father’s Day was first celebrated in 1910, it was not recognized by Congress until 1972, and U.S. Open venues are decided years before they are played.

Minutes from the USGA executive committee by senior historian Victoria Nenno seem to bear that out.

The committee on Jan. 27, 1972, discussed potential sites for the 1975 and 1976 championsh­ips, with the acting chairman leading toward Chicago in 1975, preferrabl­y Medinah.

In a letter to the executive committee dated April 24, 1972 – the day Congress passed a resolution recognizin­g Father’s Day as an official holiday – championsh­ip director Frank Hannigan discussed an invitation to host the 1975 U.S. Open at Medinah.

A month later, the USGA announced it was going to Medinah.

One week after Father’s Day.

 ??  ?? Tiger Woods tees off on the 14th hole during the second round of the Genesis Invitation­al on Feb. 14.
Tiger Woods tees off on the 14th hole during the second round of the Genesis Invitation­al on Feb. 14.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States