ESPN Analysts envision ideal PGA Championship scenario for Tiger Woods
ESPN analysts see Tiger Woods’ ideal scenario at the PGA Championship
Everyone wants to beat Tiger Woods at the PGA Championship, no matter how they play.
But ESPN golf analysts Andy North and Curtis Strange, two-time U.S. Open champions, especially expect Tiger Woods to play well from time to time. “I think from a media coverage standpoint, we want it to be Friday afternoon,” he said.
“It keeps my energy level high,” Strange said. The golf gods give the northern, and their desires depend on the Tiger Times era. In fact, most of the victory depends on the obviously small situations. The first two rounds of professional golf are often organized so that golfers start in the morning one day and in the afternoon the next day. This is done to equalize the conditions throughout the field. I will get the perfect green someday. Next, get them. Those who have won many tournaments are more likely to get the best slots, at 10 or 11 a.m. in the morning and 1 or 2 p.m. in the afternoon. These are the moments golfers want. New entrants and professional clubs are likely to receive the earliest and most recent schedules, which is the last thing you want. It’s a hierarchy. Players like Woods, and more recently who have achieved better results, as have Rory McIlroy, Justin Thomas, Jordan Spieth, Patrick Cantlay, Rickie Fowler, those who have won important tournaments or are popular with fans.
Regardless of the actual start time, one day is morning or “early” and the other day is noon or “late”. The ideal timing combination for Tiger Woods is an early/late rotation because it gives him more time between the first and second rounds to do everything he needs to do with his body to recover. Ice baths, massages, etc. between sessions. Not to mention the warm-up he must follow in order to play. Recently, the forest has been arriving late and early, and bad weather has occurred. Because they were the starting duo there, they struggled to recover after the first round, even without the weather. The situation was made worse when there was a causing the first round to finish on Friday. Worse yet, Woods had to start his second round right away. There’s no doubt that early timing has an impact on the outcome, but other factors come into play in any tournament, especially the big ones. Players’ feelings about the golf course are on
- e thing.