Kaymer Gets Early Major With PGA Championship
The final round of the PGA Championship was enough to give even seasoned journalists heartburn. Favorites fell, contenders rose, the unexpected happened.
Sunday provided leaderboard whiplash of the first order. Lead changes happened at the speed of backspin. And then there was the bunkergate controversy over an area of land on the 18th hole. It ended in a playoff between two of the six who were in contention on the back nine: Bubba Watson and Martin Kaymer.
The others who nearly made it to -11 were Zach Johnson, Steve Elkington, Rory McIlroy and the ill-fated Dustin Johnson. They were all tied for, or close to, the lead several times on the final nine holes.
Kaymer was leading, or tied for, the lead after four holes. He was unflappable until he missed a five-footer for par at the 15th, failed to birdie the par five 16th and then short-shotted his second at the 18th. However, he followed with a miraculous flop shot to about 20 feet and rolled in a super-clutch putt to finish at -11, ahead of the final group which included Johnson.
Kaymer, from Germany, had gone unnoticed most of the week. He took a page out of the Bernhard Langer playbook and produced rock solid golf except for the misstep at the 15th. At age 25, Kaymer now becomes a contender in all majors.
Watson who struggled in Saturday’s round, righted the ship on Sunday and was the first player in at -11. Kaymer was next, and the two waited for the Johnson situation to be sorted out.
In the three-hole, cumulative score playoff Watson’s length seemed an advantage, and it proved to be at the 10th, which was the first playoff hole, which he birdied. Kaymer then birdied the second playoff hole while Watson parred. They were tied going into the 18th.
Watson’s second shot, hit from the right rough, found the water hazard left and short of the green. Kaymer, seeing Watson’s situation, elected to lay up. Kaymer was then hitting three to the green while Watson was hitting four, after dropping out. Despite hitting the pin with his fifth shot, the result was apparent. Watson putted out to give the stage to Kaymer.
While some were unhappy that neither Tiger Woods nor Phil Mickelson were in the mix, it was an exciting PGA Championship even without them in contention.
Look for some second guessing of the decision by the rules officials and the tournament committee in the days ahead. Next time the tournament comes to Whistling Straits, one would hope for better definition of areas that are trampled by the gallery to the point that they are not recognizable. There were many areas of the course that did not resemble bunkers but where walking had transformed them to unrecognizable messes of grass and earth – whether that earth was sand or dirt – up for question.
Special note: one person on our shuttle bus out of the golf tournament left with a sample of the sand with him. Watch for it on eBay.

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