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Padraig Harrington has won the last two majors and is considered the favorite to be voted player of the year on the PGA Tour. But if he doesn't play well the next two weeks, he might not even make it to the Tour Championship.
Colin Montgomerie and Darren Clarke are among the European stars who have a last chance this week to capture places on the Ryder Cup team.
Camilo Villegas apparently likes the skins game format.
The British press, which roasted Tiger Woods six years ago for choosing a $1 million payoff over winning the Ryder Cup, has been strangely subdued over Ian Poulter's decision to put the lucrative FedEx Cup over his last chance at making the European team.
The LPGA Tour boasts players from all over the world, and it wants all of them to be able to speak English.
If nothing else, Paul Azinger deserves credit for making sure the United States fields its best team in the Ryder Cup.
Tiger Woods is already the world's top-ranked golfer and highest paid athlete. And if all goes according to plan, he'll soon be sporting his biggest trophy yet: a luxury golf course hewn from the sands of the Arabian desert.
Tiger Woods said he is not sure whether he will be ready to defend his title at the Dubai Desert Classic early next year.
The FedEx Cup playoffs opened with a "Caddyshack'' moment.
The thoughts started sneaking into Tom Kite's head. Maybe after nine Champions Tour titles, two years without a victory and the constant fight with his streaky putter, Kite's winning ways were finished.
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Headlines

Dan Rooney loves the game of golf. He loves his country a little more. And by combining the two loves, he’s making a difference for those who have served our country.  
Bob Tway could easily be part of the FedEx Cup's first playoff tournament, The Barclays, but the 49-year-old has different priorities this week. Instead of attempting to secure his PGA Tour card for 2009, Tway is carrying the bag of 20-year-old son Kevin at this week's U.S. Amateur Championship. 
The PGA Championship is notable for a number of things, not the least of which is its position in golf's  major championships lineup. It is the final act, the cleanup hitter, “Glory's Last Shot.” But the most astounding piece of the PGA's personality, if you are a European, is its elusiveness. The count is at 78 now, 78 years since a European-born player won the tournament. Only the Chicago Cubs, whose last world championship came in 1908, have known such frustration.

The tournament within the tournament can’t be ignored this week, much as some people try hard to do just that. The 90th PGA Championship might be the last shot at glory for those yearning to win a major this year, but it’s also a last chance for some U.S. players to lock up a Ryder Cup spot. The eight automatic bids under the new points system instituted by the PGA of America and captain Paul Azinger will be determined Sunday. Azinger then has three more weeks to select four men for wild-card positions, up from the traditional two picks.

Enough, already. We get the point. Actually, we got the point four months and 3,762 references ago, because that’s about how many times we have been subjected to this nonsense about something Ben Hogan may have said 57 years ago.
Michelle Wie was on the verge of something big last week at the LPGA State Farm Classic — her first professional win. But a rules infraction got her DQ'd on Saturday. Now she'll go after that first win on the PGA Tour, and likely won't forget to sign her card.  
From Kenny Perry to John Daly to Colin Montgomerie, from the sublime to the colorful. This is what makes the game so good. 
The wind is often going to be brutal, so deal with it. The courses are not as pristine and manicured as in the United States, so get over. This is the British Open and, whether they like it or not, the conditions are often the same for everyone. Move on if you don't like it.  
Say what you will about The Open Championship, but even without you know who in the field — and, no, not Kenny Perry — this is still a revered championship with a legacy that runs further back than when Tiger Woods made his first appearance. 
Anthony Kim was a crossroads. He could either continue down the road of laziness and late night carousing or he could shape up and start living up to his potential. He chose the latter — and he’s having way more fun.