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Mark Herrmann

PGA gets a major move to May at Bethpage Black in 2019

If only someone had won the first three major golf tournaments in one calendar year, that season's PGA Championship would have been off the charts, especially if that someone had been Tiger Woods. That would have finally been vindication for the event that was always last in the rotation and last in prestige.

That never did happen for the PGA and it apparently never will. After this week, it no longer will be the fourth major on the schedule, regardless of where it might rank in pro golfers' hearts. With the 100th PGA Championship, which begins Thursday at Bellerive Country Club outside St. Louis, the event will say goodbye to August and aiming toward a new day in May.

It will get an early jump, ushering in a new landscape for professional golf when it is held May 16-19 at Bethpage Black. PGA officials like the prospect of having the championship between the Masters and U.S. Open, when the golf year still is fresh. They are willing to roll the dice on the weather.

"We hope for a mild, warm winter. That would be great," Pete Bevacqua, chief executive officer of the PGA, said recently. "But if you grew up on Long Island, and I grew up in the Westchester area, playing Bethpage, you know that the condition of the golf course in late May is probably as good as it gets all year."

By May, Bevacqua will be long gone from the association, having announced last month that he has been named president of NBC Sports Group. The search for a new leader adds another thick layer of uncertainty for a tournament that could have a completely different vibe.

As it is, the PGA Championship's last turn in the cleanup spot could be one for the books. Jordan Spieth has the chance to complete the career Grand Slam, which would put him in the heady company of Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player and Woods. That would be a distinction. But this week at Bellerive would be remembered forever if Woods wins, ending a 10-year major drought and capping a dramatic comeback from back fusion surgery.

His progression has been the one consistent thread in an otherwise theme-free major season. No one has won more than one of the first three. Brooks Koepka, by winning at Shinnecock Hills for a second consecutive U.S. Open title, stopped a trend of first-time winners. Francesco Molinari of Italy, in hoisting the British Open's Claret Jug, halted a run of six consecutive majors won by Americans.

Woods stoked interest in his resurgence by briefly taking the final-round lead at Carnoustie last month. As recently as the spring of 2017, he told fellow pros he probably never would play again because his back was in such bad shape. The subsequent fusion surgery allowed him not only to get back on tour but to become a contender.

The better he has played, the more dominant a story he has become. Jason Day acknowledged as much after having shot 5-under-par 65 Friday at the Bridgestone Invitational, moving within two shots of the leader. He began his post-round news conference by saying, with a laugh, "Let's go ahead and get the Tiger questions out of the way first." He recognized, correctly, that the focus would be on the fact he had played in the same threesome as Woods, who shot 68.

Justin Thomas, the defending PGA champion who later said that receiving an invitation for a congratulatory dinner from Woods last August was as thrilling as the victory itself, said at the Bridgestone: "I'm always pulling for Tiger if I'm not playing, or if he has a chance to win and I don't. I mean, it's the same as any of my friends. I said this at the beginning of the year. I think he's going to win (tournaments) if he stays healthy. And it would be really cool for the game, if and when he does."

If Woods does not win his fifth PGA this week (he will play the first two rounds with fellow champions Thomas and Rory McIlroy), he will have to wait only nine months for another shot.

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