What To Look For: 2018 PGA Championship

The a hundredth PGA Championship occurs tomorrow at Bellerive Country Club in St. Louis.

What many humans do now not comprehend is that the PGA Championship become firstly a healthy play layout earlier than transferring to stroke play in 1958.

There's always the contention that the PGA Championship isn't really a 'major' from small factions of people.  I get the idea as it lacks some identity.  With the Masters you have the 1 course played each year and you have those Augusta greens.  The US Open was about the brutal rough and the British Open is about the links design and in particular, the wind.  But with the PGA you really lack that identifiable trait.  That's why I propose that they make this a global event with the tournament being held at a different course in the world each year.

This year the venue is Bellerive Country Club.  It plays to 7,547 yards at a par-71 that is 530 feet above sea level.  It's a Robert Trent Jones design.  I grew up playing a lot of RT Jones designs as he graduated from Cornell University and got his start in the Central New York area.

Jones' calling card is somewhat wide fairways and very long holes.  You can gain some strokes off the tee, particularly if you're long and somewhat straight off the tee.  But most of the strokes will be lost/gained from the Red Zone in Jones' designs.

Here had been the 'ninety four pinnacle finishers:

1st - Nick Price

t-2d - John Cook, Nick Faldo, Jim Gallagher, Jr. And Gene Sauers

6th - Jeff Maggert

Peter Jacobsen, a completely underrated ballstriker, gained the 2004 US Senior Open there as nicely.

Nick Price was one of the best drivers of the ball on Tour since 1980.  In fact, when I wrote about the players that accomplished the feat of being 1 standard deviation above the mean in both driving distance and driving accuracy in the same year since 1980 (2011 Pro Golf Synopsis)Price was one of the few players to have done it in two different seasons (so did Nicklaus, Lietzke and Duval).

But, Price was also a superb Red Zone player.  John Cook's data follows the same suit, but Faldo and Maggert were more excellent Red Zone players than great drivers of the ball.  Combine that with Jacobsen's victory, I would look out for quality drivers and Red Zone players of the ball.

The players are believing that this is a low scoring course, but you never know when the tournament flags go up.  What would concern me is that the top finishers in '94 were mostly very accurate off the tee.  That likely means firm and fast fairways.  However, St. Louis has had a lot of rain recently.

3JACK'S FAVORITES

Dustin Johnson 800

Rory McIlroy 1,2 hundred

Justin Thomas 1,four hundred

Brooks Koepka 1,800

Justin Rose 2,000

Jon Rahm 2,500

Tommy Fleetwood 2,500

3JACK'S DARK HORSE PICKS

Francesco Molinari three,000

Gary Woodland 10,000

Kiradech Aphibarnrat 20,000

3JACK

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