The not-so-new but expanding world of golf
SHANGHAI – Consider a couple of scenes from the golf world this year, with emphasis on “world.”
Inbee Park began her bid to become the first golfer to capture four straight majors in one season by teeing off at 7 a.m. in the opening round at St. Andrews. It was a strange starting time for the star attraction, except that was prime viewing in South Korea.
Luke Guthrie had just started his second PGA Tour season when he packed his bags, along with a 2-liter bottle of Mountain Dew for his caffeine fix, and flew from Las Vegas to Shanghai for a European Tour event with little more at stake than experience in a new environment. He nearly won. Hello, China.
One of the rules officials at the HSBC Champions was a Chinese woman who has a Ph.D. in golf. Tiger Woods has only a Masters (OK, four of them).
Jordan Spieth wandered down to the caddie’s bar Saturday night with his Texas Longhorns cap turned backward and his eyes on a TV showing the USC-Oregon State game from Friday night that had ended eight hours earlier. He was a long way from home, but for a moment, it sure didn’t feel like it.
One of the biggest celebrations of the year starts this week in Australia – Adam Scott finally returns home with his green jacket.
Americans can be found over the next month from the Pacific Rim to Down Under. Rickie Fowler went from Malaysia to Shanghai to Australia, and then he was headed to Los Angeles for intense gym work before returning to Thailand. Tiger Woods was in China, Macau and Singapore doing corporate outings and an exhibition before going to Turkey this week for his second regular European Tour event of the year. Matt Kuchar is representing his country at Royal Melbourne again, this time in the World Cup.
Graeme McDowell, who grew up in Northern Ireland and lives in Orlando, Fla., spent two weeks in Shanghai, and then flew home to Florida for a week going back across eight time zones to finish his European Tour season in Dubai. Then he goes to Australia and Los Angeles.
That’s why it makes perfect sense for the PGA of America to explore the possibility of occasionally taking the PGA Championship overseas. The key words are “explore” and “occasionally.”
“I would say we’re more than halfway through a serious analysis,” PGA chief executive Pete Bevacqua said over the weekend. “What’s important is we boil down our missions to two pillars – serve our members and grow the game,” Bevacqua said. “The ultimate test will be can we check both boxes? Does it make sense to occasionally play the PGA Championship overseas? Would growing the brand globally help our members? Would it grow the game? Part two is easy.”
The assumption would be to look at Asia, though the HSBC Champions already bills itself as “Asia’s major” and likely will be even further established when or if the PGA of America ever decides to start accumulating stamps in its passport.
“The world is getting smaller,” PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem said. “Things are coming together. It’s more a question of the best players in the world are going to play, and it’s going to be a big deal wherever it goes. What’s best for that tournament long-term? And what’s good for golf globally given the options? I don’t think there’s any reason not to think of those things.”
It’s a new world of golf. It’s a big world, yet one that is shrinking.
For years, the PGA Championship has been looked upon as the “other” major because it lacks a clear identity the other three enjoy. The Masters and Augusta National. The Open Championship and links golf. The U.S. Open historically as the toughest test in golf.
The PGA Championship has a chance to identify itself as the only international major. It’s worth exploring, because it’s clear that’s where golf is going.