FORMER WORLD NUMBER one Tiger Woods and defending champion Phil Mickelson were both named in the field for next weekโs PGA Championship on Monday.
Woods, who made a dramatic return from injuries sustained in a 2021 car crash at last monthโs Masters, has not played since his final round at Augusta.
The 15-time major winner โ including the PGA Championship in 1999, 2000, 2006 and 2007 โ is yet to confirm he will tee it up at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Oklahoma, for the second major of the 2022 campaign, on May 19-22.
The buzz about Woodsโ possible participation at Southern Hills intensified after he played a practice round at the course recently.
Reports have said Woods plans to play the tournament barring setbacks.
Woods has said he hopes to play in the 150th British Open in July at St. Andrews and a two-day tune-up event in Ireland before that, but has not been firm about other tournaments, including the PGA Championship and the US Open in June in Boston.
Mickelson, meanwhile, has not played since triggering uproar in February following publication of his remarks made last year concerning the new Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf Series.
The 51-year-old Mickelson described the Saudi financial backers of the LIV series as โscaryโ with a โhorrible record on human rightsโ but said he was willing to deal with them in order to gain leverage to โreshapeโ the US PGA Tour.
Mickelson subsequently apologized for the comments and announced he was taking some โdesperately needed time awayโ from golf.
US reports said Monday that Mickelson has held talks with PGA of America officials about his schedule but has not decided whether he would defend his title.
โI think heโs trying to figure out when the right time is for him,โ PGA of America chief executive Seth Waugh told the โ5 Clubs Conversationsโ podcast.
โI think the game is trying to figure out the right time for him, too. How long is enough? And is he ready mentally and physically to do it?โ
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Limerick. The peopleโs team.
How Times and his attitude has changed through the years. Iโm reading an unauthorised biography on him at the moment and during his peak years he was a cold person. Guess he understands now that itโs not all about winning at any costs and people are genuine in their appreciation of him. Good to hear this.
@Rory: did a lot of that not have to do with his management company though? In his early years he seemed like a great guy then in mid 2000โs he seemed to become really withdrawn when he signed to some management company.
@Ciaran Rice: agree. I felt he became an overly managed puppet for the mgt company.
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