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| Tiger Woods © Reuters |
The awards are starting to pile up for Tiger Woods again.
Woods has won the points-based award as player of the year from the PGA of America, which was virtually certain when the FedEx Cup ended and became a mathematical fact this week. His six US PGA Tour victories (ten points each) were twice as many as anyone else, and Woods already wrapped up the US PGA Tour money list (20 points) and lowest adjusted scoring average (20 points).
It was the tenth time Woods has won the PGA of America award.
He also wins the Vardon Trophy from the PGA of America and the
Byron Nelson Award from the US PGA Tour for having the lowest
adjusted scoring average at 68.05. It's the eighth time he has won
the Vardon.
Woods wins the Arnold Palmer Award on the US PGA Tour for
winning the money title for the ninth time, earning just more than
$10.5.
Still to be decided is the Jack Nicklaus Trophy for the tour
player of the year, which is a vote of the players. The other
candidates likely will be Steve Stricker and Phil Mickelson, with
three wins each, or perhaps YE Yang, who won the US PGA
Championship and Honda Classic. None of the other major champions
won more than once.
If Woods were to win US PGA Tour player of the year, it would
be only the fourth time since it began in 1990 that a player won
the award without having won a major. Woods (2003), Greg Norman
(1995) and Wayne Levi (1990) were the others.
FRUITLESS FURYK
Jim Furyk ended his 2009 season on the US PGA
Tour with a 62 in last week's Las Vegas Open and finished the year
with 11 top tens (second only to Tiger Woods) and nearly $4 million
in earnings.
He will start next year with a question that is beginning to bug
him.
When is he going to win again?
"I would be lying if I said it didn't bother me," Furyk said.
"Not that it's brought up - it's only my fault. I didn't get it
done."
Furyk now has gone 54 starts without winning, his longest
drought since he went 62 tournaments at the start of his career
before winning for the first time in Las Vegas in 1995.
"I'm just not doing enough to keep those rounds going," he said.
"When you win a tournament, you always have that one day where
you're not really clicking on all cylinders. But you've got to find
a way to scratch it out."
SIM STAYS PUT
Michael Sim picked a bad time to earn an instant
promotion to the US PGA Tour.
Sim won his third Nationwide Tour event on August 23, right before
the FedEx Cup playoffs began. That meant no tournaments in the big
leagues for five weeks. And now that the Presidents Cup is over,
his luck is not improving.
The Australian did not get in the field in Las Vegas, and he
didn't get in the Fry's.com Open this week in Arizona. Instead, Sim
is playing the Nationwide Tour Championship this week, with nothing
to gain except a chance to build on his record earnings.
US PGA Tour officials say Sim will get in the Viking Classic
next week. That will give him at least two starts as a US PGA
Tour member, half as many as Nick Flanagan got in 2007 when he
earned his instant promotion.
The Fall Series has some of the weakest fields of the year,
although the field in Las Vegas was 18 per cent stronger than last
year. One reason could be so many players having to wait so long
without competing during the playoffs. Along with a week off during
the playoffs, there was another week break with the Presidents Cup.
Plus, with one fewer tournament in the Fall Series, more players
might be competing in every event.
US PGA BALLOT
The US PGA Tour awards process began last week
in Las Vegas with a Players Advisory Council meeting. The 16
members, along with four players on the policy board, can nominate
up to five players each for player of the year and rookie of the
year, and up to three players for comeback player of the year.
The five players and rookies with the most nominations go on the
ballot.
How many for comeback player of the year?
That depends.
After Steve Stricker won the comeback award for the second
straight year in 2007, the PAC decided it would be OK to not have
an award if there was not a reasonable candidate who came back from
injury, off-course issues or a long period of poor play.
The question is whether Tiger Woods - a shoo-in for player of
the year - is a worthy candidate of comeback player of the year
after missing half of last year with reconstructive knee surgery.
Then again, Woods won four times in six starts last year, with the
other finishes a runner-up and tie for fifth.
That prompted Stricker to dismiss Woods's comeback candidacy by
saying, "Where did he go?"
ROOKIES
Three tournaments remain to keep alive a streak on the
US PGA Tour: A rookie has won every season since 1998.
The closest call this year was Ricky Barnes, who was two shots
behind Lucas Glover in a tie for second at the US Open. Four
months later, Barnes is in jeopardy of losing his card.
Marc Leishman of Australia tied for second in the BMW
Championship, seven shots back of Tiger Woods. He was a leading
candidate for rookie of the year because he was ranked highest on
the money list (No 44) and was the only rookie to make it to the
Tour Championship.
Then again, winning a US PGA Tour event doesn't guarantee the
rookie of the year award. Charles Howell III was voted the top
rookie in 2001 without a victory, getting the honour ahead of US Open champion Retief Goosen, Garrett Willis, David Gossett and Jose
Coceres, who won twice that year.
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