The Desert Sun

PACKED WITH TALENT More inside

Field tees off with 6 Hall of Famers, 19 major champs Langer’s injury reminds fans how good he’s been

- Larry Bohannan 3B Larry Bohannan Columnist Palm Springs Desert Sun USA TODAY NETWORK

GALLERI CLASSIC

For David Toms, the Dinah Shore Tournament Course at Mission Hills Country Club was a revelation in the first year of hosting a PGA Tour Champions event in 2023, especially the course’s most famous hole.

“I obviously knew about the 18th hole, which is an interestin­g golf hole compared to the rest of the golf course, a little bit different,” Toms said of the par-5 with its island green made famous through 51 years of hosting an LPGA event. “You’ve got so much water on every shot basically. A lot of other holes you don’t have any water at all.”

Toms and the rest of the PGA Tour Champions players will get a second chance to master the Shore Course this week at the second Galleri Classic presented by Spotlight 29 Casino. A year after the senior tour returned to the desert after nearly three decades, the seniors will again play a 54-hole event for a

Cancer testing available at tournament this week,

For all the players and all the happenings coming to the Coachella Valley this week with the return of the PGA Tour Champions, there is one person missing: Bernhard Langer

Langer, the all-time winningest player on the senior tour with 46 titles, played in the inaugural Galleri Classic in Rancho Mirage last year, tying for 19th place. But Langer won’t be in the Galleri Classic field this year because of a torn Achilles tendon suffered playing pickleball in February. It’s an absence that will be felt by fans who love the senior tour and have seen Langer play tremendous golf on the circuit for nearly two decades.

Langer’s accomplish­ments on the PGA Tour Champions might not mean that much to fans who have never embraced the senior circuit. But by not playing this year, the German star gives fans a chance to appreciate

$2.2 million purse.

Toms, who won by four shots at 16under 200 last year thanks to opening and closing rounds of 7-under 65, will lead a field of 78 golfers. The field includes six World Golf Hall of Famers, 19 winners of major championsh­ips on the regular tour, 54 players who won at least once on the regular tour and 50 players who have won on the PGA Tour Champions.

Among the top players in the field are Steve Stricker, who was the 2023 PGA Tour Champions player of the year with six wins including three majors. Other top names include Fred Couples, Ernie Els, Vijay Singh, Retief Goosen, Darren Clarke, John Daly, David Duval, Jim Furyk and Mark Calcavecch­ia, all major championsh­ip winners.

Calcavecch­ia is in a group of golfers making their debut in the desert senior event, along with Notah Begay III and two other major winners, Justin Leonard and Mark O’Meara.

Other top names include Steven Alker, the 2022 tour player of the year and a winner already this year,

Tee times run from 8:20 a.m. to 10:26 a.m. each day on the first and 10th tees of the Shore Course in Rancho Mirage.

Stricker a favorite

Stricker, who finished tied for fifth in the inaugural event last March, returns to the event as a newly signed ambassador for Grail, the title sponsor.

“My game hasn’t been quite up to speed where I would like it. But I turned the corner,” said Stricker, who is looking for his first win of 2024.

Stricker said the seniors enjoyed the inaugural event, especially the golf course.

“It’s a perfect sport for us. The course is immaculate,” Stricker said. “There is not a blade of grass out of place. It’s a great venue. The type of people, the demographi­c, it’s an older generation who lives here, and we are old, too.”

As for the course, Stricker said it is a style of course that the senior pros are familiar with.

Stricker might have an advantage on the Shore Course, since he has caddied for his daughter the last few years in LPGA qualifying, though that is in August in high temperatur­es.

“It is a wonderful course, no matter what level you are at,” Stricker said. “There is room to hit it, but not a lot of room. If you want to be able to score here, you have to play out of the fairways. The greens, they can hide some of the pins on the greens. They are fair. It is kind of right in front of you. There is nothing tricky about it, but it is a good challenge.”

Michelle Delancy, tournament director for the Galleri Classic, said she was pleased with the first year of the event, especially the crowds that showed up for the first PGA Tour Champions event in the desert in three decades.

“We are hopeful the same group of crowds or larger crowds will show up this year,” Delancy said. “We also learned that people like to buy their tickets closer to the event as they learn more about the event. Our pricing is affordable to many ($30 daily tickets). Kids under 15 get in free, military gets in free with two guests. So trying to get to where it is an affordable ticket and people can brings their guests.”

 ?? ANDY ABEYTA/THE DESERT SUN ?? David Toms hits his drive shot on 18 during the final round of the 2023 Galleri Classic in Rancho Mirage.
ANDY ABEYTA/THE DESERT SUN David Toms hits his drive shot on 18 during the final round of the 2023 Galleri Classic in Rancho Mirage.
 ?? JAY CALDERON/THE DESERT SUN ?? Tom Lehman, left, and U.S. soccer legend Landon Donovan chat after playing in the pro-am event at the Galleri Classic at Mission Hills Country Club on Wednesday.
JAY CALDERON/THE DESERT SUN Tom Lehman, left, and U.S. soccer legend Landon Donovan chat after playing in the pro-am event at the Galleri Classic at Mission Hills Country Club on Wednesday.
 ?? JAY CALDERON/THE DESERT SUN ?? John Daly tees off on the first hole during the pro-am at the Galleri Classic at Mission Hills Country Club on Wednesday.
JAY CALDERON/THE DESERT SUN John Daly tees off on the first hole during the pro-am at the Galleri Classic at Mission Hills Country Club on Wednesday.

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