
Timed to perfection, Thomas in form for PGA Championship
CHARLOTTE, North Carolina : Justin Thomas' game appears to be building toward something bigger and he could not have timed it any better given this week's PGA Championship at Quail Hollow Club is being contested at the site of his major breakthrough in 2017.
World number five Thomas is far from the version of himself that saw his form bottom out in 2023 and comes into the year's second major with six top-10 finishes in 11 starts this season, including his first victory in nearly three years.
Should he find himself in contention during Sunday's final round, Thomas will undoubtedly recall vision of the two-shot victory he secured over Francesco Molinari, Patrick Reed and Louis Oosthuizen in the 2017 PGA Championship at Quail Hollow.
"If I'm coming down the stretch and trying to win the tournament, I can tell myself I've literally done this before here," Thomas told reporters at Quail Hollow.
"I've hit the shots. I've made the putts. I've handled all of that mentally on this exact golf course in this exact tournament. So I think it's something that can be helpful and able to fall back on if I need."
Thomas, who collected a second PGA Championship title in 2022, enters the week with three runner-up results this season - the most of any player on the PGA Tour this year - including at last week's tune-up even in Philadelphia.
It is a far cry from the type of results he endured in 2023 but Thomas said that dry spell ultimately helped him in the long-term.
"It doesn't seem like it when it's happening, and I obviously would have much rather not had a poor year than have one, but I learned a lot from it," said Thomas.
"I feel like it's something that you unfortunately have to go through some stuff like that and maybe make some wrong decisions or chase some things that you don't need to, to figure out down the road that you don't need to do that anymore or again."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
10 hours ago
- Straits Times
Phil Mickelson: ‘Likelihood' this will be final US Open
Phil Mickelson of HyFlyers GC tees off at the 12th tee on day one of LIV Golf Virginia at Robert Trent Jones Golf Club on June 6. PHOTO: AFP Not wanting to close all doors, six-time US Open runner-up Phil Mickelson admitted that next week probably will be his last chance at winning the event that has brought him so much heartache. Mickelson has won six major championships, including the Masters three times, and showed in 2021 that he does have the ability to pull off surprises. He won the PGA Championship at age 50 that came with the added perk of a five-year US Open exemption. That exemption package expires this year when the US Open arrives next week to Oakmont Country Club, just outside of Pittsburgh. So is this the last chance to earn the elusive trophy that just slipped from his grasp in runner-up finishes in 1999, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2009 and 2013? Will he get another chance to complete a career grand slam? 'I haven't thought about it too much,' Mickelson said before this weekend's LIV event in Virginia. 'There's a high likelihood that it will be, but I haven't really thought about it too much.' There are ways Mickelson can find his way into the US Open field beyond this year. For starters, he can go through the grueling qualifying process. And the USGA always can grant him an exemption like it did in 2021. He also can get there by leading LIV's player standings at the end of the current year. He went into the Virginia event in 15th place. Mostly, though, Mickelson says he hasn't thought about his US Open future. Or he has and he doesn't care to reveal his thinking just yet. He even says he is undecided about his LIV career. 'As far as my playing schedule, I don't know the answer to that,' Mickelson said. ' ... I don't have a great answer for you. I'm also going to be 55 in a couple weeks, so I want to be realistic there, too.' While Mickelson says he isn't sure if he is willing to go through the qualifying process for future, US Opens, he is far more clear on his expectations in order to continue his LIV playing days. He is captain of the LIV team HyFlyers and holds the position in high regard. 'I want this team to succeed. I don't want to hold it back,' he said. 'If I'm not an asset, if I'm not helping, if I'm holding it back, then it's time for me to move on and get somebody else in here who is going to really help the team win and succeed. This year I've played better.' REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.


CNA
10 hours ago
- CNA
Referee body cams and enhanced offside detection system tested at Club World Cup
PARIS : Referees wearing body cameras and an upgraded offside detection system will be among the headline innovations at this year's Club World Cup in the United States, FIFA said on Friday. For the first time at a FIFA tournament, match officials will wear body cameras, with selected footage broadcast live to audiences. A new, advanced version of semi-automated offside technology — combining Artificial Intelligence, multiple cameras, and ball sensors — will be deployed to speed up decision-making while maintaining VAR oversight for marginal calls. "However, for challenging offside scenarios, the video assistant referee will still validate the information provided by the system before the decision is taken," FIFA said in a statement. The tournament, which expands to 32 teams this year, will serve as a major testing ground for both systems, the governing body said.


CNA
13 hours ago
- CNA
Sailing-SailGP roars back into action in New York after Rio cancellation
NEW YORK :SailGP teams will shake off the rust in New York this weekend, as the global racing championship gets back into action after a wingsail defect forced a brief hiatus with the cancellation of May's Rio event. Organisers identified the defect after the Australian boat's wing collapsed in San Francisco in March and carried out repair and upgrade work to remedy the issue on the F50 fleet in time for the highly anticipated New York competition. "We had almost two months of learning to take from the previous events," said Brazil's twice Olympic champion Martine Grael, SailGP's first-ever female driver. "We have a lot of changes in our sailing - there are almost too many changes and we know you can only handle a few changes at a time. We're focusing to see what we can adapt here." The recently added Brazil team hope to move up the standings from 10th as the action kicks off on Saturday at 1 p.m. ET (1700 GMT), two and a half hours earlier than planned due to inclement weather. The three-times champions Australia, who hold just a one-point advantage over Britain in the standings, want to impress after making headlines off the water, with new A-List co-owners Hugh Jackman and Ryan Reynolds announced this week. The great equaliser between the celebrity-fronted top dogs and the up-and-comers has been the competition's tech-first approach to sailing, with each of the vessels equipped with 125 sensors continuously feeding data. "We give the data to everybody," SailGP's Chief Technology Officer Warren Jones told Reuters. "Top teams hate it, but the newer teams love it." Jones was able to build the robust analytics operation from "a blank sheet of paper" by cherry-picking from billionaire co-founder Larry Ellison's Oracle capabilities. The hope is that the data points broadcast across the competition can help transform the next generation of fans - newcomers and diehards alike. "There are the basics - you need to know how fast people are going because then it adds the jeopardy of what's going on," said Jones.