It starts today, the near-major that leads into four straight months with a major.
Tiger Woods was inducted into the Golf Hall of Fame last night. I watched some of his remarks, he has some humility to him now so it's hard to dislike him. It's the likes of Golf Channel Propaganda Minister Rich Lerner that are hard to stomach. Lerner poses as Woods' biggest fan in the world, which is saying something given how the media has lionized him over the years. From what I could tell, almost all of the "Live From The Players" last night was about Richie's faux-hero, however I turned it off for good when I flicked back just as Lerner was narrating a segment showing brief footage of different top players and saying, "They come here because they want to win for Him." Not God or Jesus Christ, but Tiger Woods. (Sorry for the basphemous spelling of "him" but it's meant sarcastically.) His fellow analysts at the network must be truly cucked to be able to suppress their gag reflex around Lerner.
But Tiger isn't playing, and at 46 and coming off a serious leg injury from his latest driving-while-high adventure, on top of all the other injuries he's had, he's finished as a threat to win majors.
There's no clear favorite to win. Jon Rahm is still number one in the world but there is no dominant player currently, just some really good ones. There's been quite a shuffle the last few years as Jordan Spieth, Jason Day, Rory McIlroy and Justin Thomas failed miserably to become a "big four." Thomas has had the best run, while McIlroy is going on eight years without a major now, Spieth five. Collin Morikawa has been the best young player, winning majors in 2020 and 2021. Meanwhile, the talented Scottie Scheffler has won two of the past three tournaments.
This is always an enjoyable event on a tough course with a great field and huge galleries of very enthusiastic fans so I'm looking forward to it.
Tiger Woods was inducted into the Golf Hall of Fame last night. I watched some of his remarks, he has some humility to him now so it's hard to dislike him. It's the likes of Golf Channel Propaganda Minister Rich Lerner that are hard to stomach. Lerner poses as Woods' biggest fan in the world, which is saying something given how the media has lionized him over the years. From what I could tell, almost all of the "Live From The Players" last night was about Richie's faux-hero, however I turned it off for good when I flicked back just as Lerner was narrating a segment showing brief footage of different top players and saying, "They come here because they want to win for Him." Not God or Jesus Christ, but Tiger Woods. (Sorry for the basphemous spelling of "him" but it's meant sarcastically.) His fellow analysts at the network must be truly cucked to be able to suppress their gag reflex around Lerner.
But Tiger isn't playing, and at 46 and coming off a serious leg injury from his latest driving-while-high adventure, on top of all the other injuries he's had, he's finished as a threat to win majors.
There's no clear favorite to win. Jon Rahm is still number one in the world but there is no dominant player currently, just some really good ones. There's been quite a shuffle the last few years as Jordan Spieth, Jason Day, Rory McIlroy and Justin Thomas failed miserably to become a "big four." Thomas has had the best run, while McIlroy is going on eight years without a major now, Spieth five. Collin Morikawa has been the best young player, winning majors in 2020 and 2021. Meanwhile, the talented Scottie Scheffler has won two of the past three tournaments.
This is always an enjoyable event on a tough course with a great field and huge galleries of very enthusiastic fans so I'm looking forward to it.