Hoops recruit P.J. Hairston said a factor in his decision to choose North Carolina over Duke was that the crew in Durham consistently misspelled his name in recruiting letters.
THE WORLD ACCORDING TO US
GOLF
OPEN CHALLENGE
NAVIGATING CONGRESSIONAL WILL BE DEMANDING FOR EVERY GOLFER IN THE FIELD, BUT THESE FIVE PROS WILL ARRIVE AT THE U.S. OPEN WITH SOMETHING TO PROVE.
PHIL MICKELSON 40 USA OWGR: 4 BEST U.S. OPEN FINISH: 2 (1999, 2002, ’04, ’06, ’09)
Lefty’s been Mr. Consistent, making every cut so far this season, with one win and four top-10s, and is the only Yank currently in the world Top 5. While winning four majors has gotten one monkey off his back, a U.S. Open record five runner-ups has provided him with another. His chokes are legendary, from the double bogey on 18 at Winged Foot in 2006 to the two bogeys over the last five holes in 2009 and 2010. That’s why this is the major Phil covets most. Congressional’s 523-yard, par-4 18th won’t make getting it any easier.
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TIGER WOODS 35 USA OWGR: 12 BEST FINISH: 1 (2000, ’02, ’08)
Watching Woods win his 14th major and third U.S. Open in 2008—on one leg—it seemed impossible to imagine that it might be his last. Hobbled and humbled, Tiger has fallen out of the world Top 10 for the first time in 14 years. He’s played in just seven events on Tour this season, and has been hard pressed to find consistency in any aspect of his game. He won the AT&T National at Congressional in ’09, and despite Achilles and knee problems, he’s determined to end the longest winless streak of his career here.
June 13, 2011
K.J. CHOI 41 SOUTH KOREA OWGR: 16 BEST FINISH: T15 (2005)
LEE WESTWOOD 38 ENGLAND OWGR: 1 BEST FINISH: 3 (2008)
DUSTIN JOHNSON 26 USA OWGR: 13 BEST FINISH: T8 (2010)
Choi comes in hot, with five top-10s, a No. 3 spot on the money list and a gutsy playoff win at the Players, the most significant victory of his career to date. He dominated a shorter, friendlier Congressional course, winning the 2007 AT&T National by three strokes, but with 300 yards added for the track’s third Open, no one’s running away with this one. Choi may be the most accomplished Asian player on Tour, but his majors résumé doesn’t stack up, showing just two top-fives. And at age 41, time may be running out.
The plucky Brit has yet to pick up a PGA Tour win in 2011, but he’s been busy on the other side of the Pacific. Over a two-week span in late April, Westwood won the Indonesian Masters and the Ballantine’s Championship in South Korea. Despite claiming a trophy on every continent, the world’s No. 1 is still looking to earn his first major. His troubles seem to come when it counts most: Westwood carded a combined seven final-round bogeys after starting the day with the lead at the 2008 U.S. Open and 2010 Masters.
At 7,574 yards, Congressional will play as the secondlongest track in the Open’s 111-year history. The layout favors bombers like Johnson. The four-year pro averages 305 yards off the tee, good for third on Tour, and he leads the PGA on par 4’s, scoring birdie-or-better 22.3% of the time. He has the game to win, but needs to show he’s got the moxie. Last year, he blew a three-stroke lead on Sunday with an 82 at Pebble Beach, then coughed up a shot at the PGA Championship by grounding his club in a hazard on the closing hole.
FROM LEFT: MIKE EHRMANN/GETTY IMAGES; ALLAN HENRY/US PRESSWIRE; DAVID GOLDMAN/AP IMAGES; ANDREW REDINGTON/GETTY IMAGES (2)
By LaRue Cook