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Kevin Stadler, Allen, Riley Use Wyndham Championship to Make FedEx Cup

FanHouse is fighting the rain at Greensboro's 2009 Wyndham Championship.

GREENSBORO, N.C. -- Neither Michael Allen or Chris Riley will be remembered at the Wyndham Championship. Allen will end up with a top-five finish, and Riley led heading into the fourth day, but because they failed to make the playoff (or much noise on Sunday at Sedgefield for that matter) no one will discuss their presence here.

Kevin Stadler, who did make the playoff will be remembered, naturally. But for a bigger reason, all three golfers will probably look back at the 2009 Wyndham a little more fondly. That's because their respective performances this week guaranteed them a spot in the FedEx Cup and the opportunity to make some more money in the 2009 PGA season.

PGA Championship Ratings Double From 2008, More Proof That Tiger Is Golf


Tiger Woods led the first three days of the PGA Championship and halfway through the fourth. And then Y.E. Yang happened. But Yang's victory was so unexpected, so sudden, so ... not according to script, that by the time the reality of what happened washed over jaw-agaped onlookers it was too late.

In terms of ratings, anyway.

Tiger Woods Shoots 5-Under, Leads PGA Championship After First Round

Tiger Woods, Padraig Harrington and Rich Beem have seven Wanamaker Trophy among them. They're playing together the first two days of the 91st PGA Championship, and midway through the first round, Tiger is alone in first place after a 5-under, 67, Paddy trails by one, and Beemer is tied for 13th at 1-under.

Apart from Woods, who is the story whenever he tees it up, Harrington arrived at Hazeltine after a demoralizing loss at last week's WGC-Bridgestone Invitational. But any doubts about his mental state were quickly erased on the front nine Thursday.

Paddy went out in 34 strokes, matching Tiger shot for shot (as did Beem, who won the PGA Championship the last time it was at Hazeltine in 2002, but hasn't done much in the seven years since). On the back, Woods separated himself, needing only 33 strokes to get to the clubhouse. Harrington was steady and efficient, shooting a 34 on the way in, and Beem, save a double-bogey on No. 3 (his 12th hole), looked like he belonged, carding a 36.

Is Zach Johnson 3rd Best U.S. Golfer?

Every Monday during the PGA Tour season, Monday Pin Placement will run as a wrap-up of the weekend's action. Basically, we'll focus on what you missed while you were out grinding on the putting green.

Johnson Delivers Another Playoff Victory -- Before April of 2007, Zach Johnson was a relative nobody in the golf world. He'd won the BellSouth Classic back in 2004, but he hadn't been making noise before he headed to Augusta National last year.

Yet twelve strategic lay-ups and a bunch of well played golf had Johnson wearing his first green jacket. Johnson's 2007 Masters win made us believe that golf isn't just about booming tee shots and big names.

Rich Beem Took It Upon Himself to Find Sponsors and It Worked

Before 2002, Rich Beem was best known for his role in the incredible golf book, "Bud, Sweat, & Tees" by Alan Shipnuck. Beem had won the Kemper Open in 1999, but nothing really of notoriety until '02, when he reeled off an International victory, which was followed by an improbable PGA Championship win that memorably included a little shimmy when his final putt dropped.

You remember that PGA. He beat a guy named Tiger Woods, who famously told his caddy Steve Williams something to the degree of, "If we can birdie these last four holes we'll win." Woods then Tiger-ishly pulled it off, only to lose by a shot to Beem.

Those were Beem's good days. Since then, mostly bad.

Rough Putting: Five Things To Watch In 2009


Golf season starts tomorrow, which means it is time to actually start thinking of the best game with dimples. While the giants take a nap, others will play at the Mercedes Championship, and golf will be around the rest of the year. FanHouse spent a couple of minutes thinking what is to come in 2009. Here is what transpired.

Which golfer will be the first to break through in the Majors?
A lot of the time this is overlooked, but look back a few years ago to Tiger's first full year on tour. The guy won his first-ever start in a major as a professional. With Tiger, the monkey never even had a chance to find a nice place to rest on his back. How long did it take for Tiger to win number two? Eleven major championships. Yeah, it isn't nearly as easy as he makes it seem now.

What I'm trying to say with all of this is that winning a major championship is really, really, really tough and as Sergio Garcia (and Phil Mickelson a few years back) can tell you, if you don't get one early, then the questions about "When will it happen?" start to stir around.

Garcia has gone 38 majors as a professional without a victory. That might seem like a tremendously long time until you think of some of the talented guys that took a while to win their first big one. Vijay Singh didn't get his until his 27th major. Fred Couples went 34 until he took the 1992 Masters. Tom Kite played in 67 majors before taking his 1992 U.S. Open crown.

Garcia is in panic mode but he's still young (in golf terms) and has enough talent to open the floodgates in the major championship sense.

Along with him, Anthony Kim is due to take one of these as a youngster, as well as Hunter Mahan, Adam Scott, Aaron Baddeley and Camilo Villegas.

Interesting stat to close all this up and make it apparent how hard it is to win a major: Out of the top 10 in the Official World Rankings, five have won majors, five have not.

Your Attractive PGA Championship Preview

"Glory's Last Shot" is upon us, and with He Who Should Not Be Named out for the second consecutive major, we in the golf world have to type and make up things as we pick "favorites" when we really have just as good an idea of who will win as you.

If that doesn't entice you, this might -- only one golfer not named Tiger Woods in the top 10 of the Official World Ranking has won a major championship since the Masters in 2006. Vijay Singh, Ernie Els, Sergio Garcia, Geoff Ogilvy, Stewart Cink, Steve Stricker and Adam Scott have all gone a very long time without winning a major (if ever) and it seems these top-10 golfers might be due.

Here are my favorites, their best finish in a PGA Championship, and why they made the list.

  • Phil Mickelson -- WON -- My least favorite person ever to pick in majors, but he did play good for three rounds (or four if you ask him) last week and had himself in a extremely good position even with a balky putter and his obviously struggle with weight choking. If he can somehow find a way to hit the fairway this week, he'll be near the top come Sunday (and on cue probably find a way to drop the ball in dramatic fashion).

Davis Love III Would Like Whiny Americans to Quit Complaining About British Open


So, last week, Kenny Perry finished sixth at the U.S. Bank Championship in Milwaukee instead of playing in the British Open. You may have heard something about this. I'm fine with Perry's decision, although not everybody feels that way, particularly his PGA Tour colleagues.

Good news, though, Kenny: Davis Love III's got your back.
"Kenny is a great guy. There's nothing bad in his heart," Love said. "He wasn't complaining. He just doesn't want to play."

What bothers Love more are the players that do fly across the Atlantic and start complaining ... "Just don't come," Love said. "If you're going to have a bad attitude on Thursday before you tee off because it's raining, then don't come, because you're just wasting your time. It's going to be bad, eventually, one way or another."
Davis didn't name names, but the AP suggests that Pat Perez, and his always-sunny disposition, "would have been a candidate for saying the rain and wind in the first round didn't feel like golf." I would also like to nominate Rich Beem, whose British Open experience lasted nine holes before he decided that not shooting a 90 was more important than finishing his round.

I agree with Love -- if guys don't want to be at the British, stay home -- but it's hardly news, I think. Golfers, no matter their nationality, have been complaining about the sport, well, forever. That a few of them aren't crazy about rain and wind is barely surprising. I mean, it's not like golf is actually a sport.

Winners And Losers From Open Week


It might take some time to truly appreciate what went on at the 2008 Open Championship.

With the top golfer in existence not around to fist pump, it was going to take some heavy story lines to keep people interesting. Little did we know an Irishman, an Australian and a dude in pink pants would make this major better than expected.

Here are the winners and losers from British Open week.

Greg Norman Might Be a Longshot That Pays Off Big Money

Greg Norman would not have been your first prediction for British Open leader, two days in (he'll still be there, assuming K.J. Choi or Ian Poulter don't close out two under). However, you might have at least wagered on him at somewhere between 300 and 500:1, considering that he is a fairly popular name in the history of golf.

Darren Rovell points out that he if he actually holds on and wins this thing, he might go down as the most well backed huge underdog in the history of golf.
Many U.S. books, including those in Vegas, didn't even have Norman on the board. But the active shops in Europe had Norman as high as 300-to-1. It wasn't a bad read by the bookmakers. The guy hasn't played in a major since the British three years ago at St. Andrews. Those odds, for the most part, were slashed in half after Round 1, as the bookmakers don't believe Norman, who was wearing no logos aside from the familiar "Shark" logo on his hat, can keep up this pace.
Rovell picked up the tip from a few friends at sportsbooks and also points out that there have been bigger longshots, although most of them probably didn't carry a ton of money. (John Daly, Ben Curtis, Rich Beem, Todd Hamilton are all names that [don't] stand out in terms of having people bet on them before they won their first major.)

There's still plenty of weekend golf left, and there are still plenty of big, dangerous names lurking around the shark. Besides, he'd only dropped to 50:1 at BoDog before the second round, so if you don't believe, you're not the only one.

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