Traffic:   4 Incidents
Weather: 65°F Go
  03:40am, 08/30/08
Search:      wwj.com  Web  Audio
Local News
 
 

Posted: Thursday, 07 August 2008 7:31AM

PGA Championship Under Way


Bloomfield Township (WWJ)  -- The first golfers have hit the links at the 90th PGA Championship at Oakland Hills in Bloomfield Township.  WWJ is your place for live updates as we broadcast sports from the course Thursday through Sunday.

Check out more info and links here.

PGA guide from CBS Sportsline

Fifteen times in the last 25 years, someone has made the PGA Championship their first major victory.  Anthony Kim, Kenny Perry and Sergio Garcia are three of the most likely candidates to make that 16 of 26 come Sunday.

A lot of people will also be watching Phil Mickelson, who told WWJ's Jeff DeFran earlier this week that he thought that golf should be an Olympic sport.

But for the first time since 1949, the defending champion will not be teeing it up at the PGA Championship, the final major of the golf season. Tiger Woods is still recuperating from knee surgery following his victory at the U.S. Open.

Maybe it's the way the courses are typically set up for the final major of the year - conducive to scoring, relatively low on stress - that provides such an avenue for breakthrough wins. Or maybe it's timing, with the game's brightest lights already worn down by three majors or thoughts of the impending international competitions like the Ryder Cup or Presidents Cup.

It's particularly easy to foresee a fresh face winning the PGA Championship, which was to get under way Thursday at Oakland Hills, because two-time defending champion Tiger Woods is still recovering from knee surgery.

"Winning a major is winning a major, whether he's in the field or not,'' said Kim, considered by many the ``Next Big Thing'' in American golf at the age of 23. ``Obviously, you want to feel like you beat everyone when they are at the top of their game, but that's just not the way this game works. Whether he's here or not, I'd love to put a major under my belt.''

Kim, like the rest of the 156-player field, knows that when Woods returns next year, he might want to make up for lost time.

"When he comes back, he's going to come back firing on all cylinders, so we'd all better be ready,'' said Kim.

Kim has shown signs that he might be built for the biggest tournaments. He's made the cut in all four of his major starts, including an impressive tie for seventh at last month's British Open.

"I'd love to put on a good show this week,'' he said.

The PGA Championship has always been like your quirky uncle: old, kind of odd, but still a lot of fun.

The Masters effectively opens the golf season with its azaleas and lightning-fast greens. Then players get to grouse (usually) about the U.S. Open setup because of the length of the rough and the impossible pin positions. Next is the British Open, where the winner is frequently determined by who plays best in horizontal rain and winds more fitting a category-1 hurricane.

That leaves the PGA Championship, which prides itself on playability and, well, fun.

"It was always very comfortable for me to play in the PGA,'' said Perry, one of the hottest golfers in the world with three wins since early June.

Perry elected not to play the first three majors this year, so it's clear he thinks a lot of the PGA. Besides, the tournament
has almost been an annuity for him, since he's made the cut in 16 of his 17 starts.

Garcia's career has been bracketed by the PGA Championship. It was in 1999 when the then-19-year-old Spaniard burst upon the world's consciousness, scissoring his legs while running to follow his shot from next to a tree at Medinah. He challenged Woods to the final hole before falling a shot short.

Nine years later, many are wondering when he's finally going to live up to that bright promise and win a major. There could be no better time than this.

Garcia has had success at Oakland Hills before, collecting 4{ of a possible five points in Europe's lopsided win over the United States in the 2004 Ryder Cup matches at the Donald Ross-designed layout in suburban Detroit.

He said changes to the course in the ensuing four years - some bunkers were restructured, some tees moved back - has taken away any advantage he might have on the course.

"This is a great golf course, probably the toughest PGA (course) I've ever played,'' Garcia said. ``Shots around the greens here (you just take) a big whack at it, try to get out of the rough and land it softly.''

No European has won the PGA Championship since Scotland's Tommy Armour in 1930.

England's Justin Rose, like Garcia a promising 28-year-old without a major championship, believes this is the year to end that drought.

"You've got to think if there is ever a venue that's going to suit a European,'' he said, ``it's going to be this week.''

The purse for the 90th PGA Championship is $7.5 million, up from $7 million last year at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Okla. The Champion will receive $1.35 million.

© MMVIII WWJ Radio, All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
 
 
ADVERTISEMENT
Print Page Email This Page
Top News
Penske on Kilpatrick: It's Time That He Moves On
Decision Tues. On Gov. Hearings To Remove Mayor
Alaska Gov. Is McCain's VP Shocker
Nissan to Make Price Hikes in Japan
Obama Promises Change For America
Stores Pull Bassinets From Shelves
Mayor Seeks To Halt Gov's Removal Hearings
Presidential Candidates Headed Back To Michigan
Gustav Grows Near Jamaica, Threatens Gulf
Archer Proposes Solution to Kilpatrick Ordeal
 
 
WWJ 950 Video On Demand
 
 
Recent Podcasts
Jazz Fest 8/29
Chris Collins, Director of Jazz studies at Wayne State University, has info about the Detroit International Jazz Fest in Detroitl
Education Minute 8/29
WWJ's Pat Vitale explains some ways for high school students to get the jump on college credits.
Feldman Report-P.M. 8/29
WWJ and Fox2's erudite Biz Man Murray Feldman has financial news that you and your family can live with.
GreatStuff 8/29
Lots of action this long weekend and Roberta Jasina aptly covers the biggies.
Caring For Aging Parents - 8/29
WWJ's Pat Sweeting advises that a Geriatric Medicine Specialist may be better suited to care for your aging parents' needs.