John Daly and Rich Beem are going
to sit out this PGA Championship
[May 07, 2025]
By DOUG FERGUSON
John Daly plans to tee it up in a major next week, just not at the
PGA Championship.
The biggest quirk of the 2025 schedule is that the Regions Tradition
in Birmingham, Alabama — the first of five majors on the PGA Tour
Champions — is the same week as the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow
Club in Charlotte, North Carolina.
“I can go there and miss the cut and get $6,000,” Daly said of the
PGA Championship, which last year paid $4,000 to players who missed
the cut. “But I'm playing Birmingham. I love Regions. They're a
great sponsor. But why are they scheduling Regions the same week as
the PGA Championship, where I can see Brooks (Koepka) and all the
guys?”
May typically is crowded for golf and the Regions Traditions didn't
want to take this week because it's tough getting support on
Mother's Day. The week after the PGA Championship is the Senior PGA
Championship at Congressional.
Going earlier was tough with NASCAR at Talladega on April 27.
Daly also is not in top form after surgery on his left hand in
January. He said his biggest issue remains getting through the ball
on three-quarter shots — that and his putting. He finished at
27-over par last week at the Insperity Invitational, a tournament he
won in 2017 and was runner-up in 2020.
But he's not ready to pack it in from playing on the PGA Tour
Champions, even with 16 surgeries and bladder cancer.
“I'm like Lazarus — I keep coming back from the dead,” he said.
“Waking up is a win for me.”
Daly isn't the only former PGA champion missing next week.

Rich Beem, who took down Tiger Woods at Hazeltine in 2002, chose not
to play this year after a rough go at Valhalla last year. Beem now
works for Sky Sports at the big events and felt he didn't have
enough time to prepare this year for a big course. Quail Hollow is
7,262 yards and plays as a par 71.
“I got my (butt) handed to me last year," he said. “Even though I
had success at Bethpage (2019), you lose 10 yards, you might as well
lose 100.”
He said he plans on skipping Aronimink next year but will return to
the PGA Championship in 2027 in his home state of Texas, where he
hopes dry and firm conditions will help.
Davis Love III (recovering from heart surgery) and Y.E. Yang also
are not in the PGA Championship next week.
Haeran Ryu leads the charge
It’s not surprising that Haeran Ryu, coming off a wire-to-wire win
at the Black Desert Championship, moved to a career-high No. 5 in
the women’s world ranking.
The surprise? It’s the first time in more than six months that a
South Korean player has been among the top five.
At least one South Korean player had been in the top five 80% of the
weeks since the women’s world ranking began in 2006. Jin Young Ko, a
former No. 1, was at No. 5 on Oct. 14, 2004.
Ryu now has three LPGA Tour wins in the last 19 months. She was at
No. 25 one year ago.
Hyo Joo Kim is at No. 8 and Ko is at No. 9 in this week’s ranking.
Americans all have three players in the top 10, and they have six in
the top 25, compared with five from South Korea and five from Japan.
Rare bird
So much for the albatross being the rarest shot in golf. For the
second time this year, it has happened in back-to-back weeks on the
PGA Tour and LPGA Tour.
Stephanie Kyriacou of Australia holed her second shot on the par-5
18th at the Black Desert Championship, the second albatross in as
many weeks on the LPGA. It was the 53rd albatross recorded on the
LPGA dating to 1971.
Yan Liu had No. 52 the previous week at the Chevron Championship
when she holed a 7-iron from 170 yards on the par-5 eighth at The
Club at Carlton Woods.
Kyriacou hit a 5-wood from 212 meters (233 yards) into the cup in
the final round Sunday.
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Haeran Ryu, of South Korea, holds the trophy after winning the LPGA
Black Desert Championship golf tournament Sunday, May 4, 2025, in
Ivins, Utah. (AP Photo/Candice Ward)

“My 5-wood carries like 195, so it landed short,
bounced up. I was just trying to hit on the green, to be honest,”
she said. "Then I smoked it, and it went in. But I kind of stopped
watching it, and everyone was like, ‘Whoa, whoa, whoa!’ And then
they cheered.
"I was like, ‘Oh, that’s pretty good.’”
The 24-year-old Kyriacou said she made an albatross during a casual
round at home in Australia, but it wasn't the same.
“In a tournament, on camera, there is proof,” she said. “I can now
say I’ve definitely had an albatross. If I do that again in my
career, I’ll be very surprised."
Earlier this year, Jake Knapp made an albatross in the second round
of The American Express, and the next week Shane Lowry made one on
the sixth hole of Torrey Pines (South) in the final round of the
Farmers Insurance Open.
East Lake reminder
Matthieu Pavon and Chris Kirk are reminders that only three majors —
the Masters, U.S. Open and British Open — have categories that offer
spots to players who reach the Tour Championship.
There's an assumption that anyone getting to East Lake will get into
the PGA Championship because they would have made enough money to be
among the top 70 in the PGA points list. Pavon and Kirk will be at
Quail Hollow next week, but they had to rely on special invitations.
Both remain in the top 100 in the world.
It speaks to the state of the game.
Kirk, who finished 27th in the FedEx Cup last year after winning at
Kapalua, has gone 14 straight tournaments without a top 10 dating to
the BMW Championship. He has made a 36-hole cut five times in that
span. He was No. 40 after the BMW and now is at No. 77.
Pavon, who won at Torrey Pines in 2024, has gone 23 straight
tournaments without a top 10. He was at No. 20 after the U.S. Open
and since has dropped to No. 61.
Roberto Castro made the Tour Championship in 2016 but then played so
poorly he did not qualify for the PGA Championship.
Divots
Luke Clanton of Florida State, Jackson Koivun of Auburn and David
Ford of North Carolina have been named finalists for the Big Hogan
Award that goes to the top player in college golf. They are Nos.
1-2-3 in the world amateur ranking. The winner will be announced May
19 at Colonial. ... Mizuho Americas has renewed its title sponsor
agreement for five years through 2030 and is raising the total prize
money next year to $3.25 million. The Mizuho Americas Open is held
this week for the third time at Liberty National. ... Alex Noren is
in the Truist Championship at Philadelphia Cricket Club, making his
first start in seven months because of lingering neck and hamstring
issues. ... Justin Rose has two wins in the Philadelphia area — the
2010 AT&T National at Aronimink and the 2013 U.S. Open at Merion.

Stat of the week
The five players who have won signature events this year — Hideki
Matsuyama (Kapalua), Rory McIlroy (Pebble Beach), Ludvig Aberg
(Genesis at Torrey Pines), Russell Henley (Bay Hill) and Justin
Thomas (Hilton Head) — are all in the top 10 in the world ranking.
Final word
“I told you it was going to be a steep mountain to climb, and it
was. Scottie was practically flawless, which is kind of what you
expect from the world No. 1.” — Erik van Rooyen, who started the
final round eight shots behind Scheffler, shot 63 and finished eight
shots behind in the CJ Cup Byron Nelson.
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