The PGA Championship is known as "Glory's Last Shot," but this major will be a first.
No one has ever played a competitive round at Whistling Straits, the course built along the shores of Lake Michigan. The links-styled course is the longest in major championship history at 7,514 yards, with three par 4s at least 500 yards and the shortest par 5 measuring 569 yards.
There are more than 1,000 bunkers, so much sand that it's hard to tell when one bunker ends and the other starts.
By the sound of some early reviews of Whistling Straits, players might be whistling past the graveyard from next Thursday.
Defending champion Shaun Micheel shot 77 with no birdies the first time he played the Pete Dye design on a windy afternoon in June, then said the cut could be 10 to 12 over par. He later amended his prediction.
"If the wind comes up at all, and they play the golf course the way it did when I played, it really felt like double digits over par could win the golf tournament," Micheel said.
Loren Roberts called it the hardest course he has ever played. Former PGA champion Rich Beem heard the fairways were long and tight, but didn't believe the scouting report.
"I just figured there's just no way," he said. "But when we played it, it was awful."
Indeed, curiosity is at an all-time high for the final major of the year -- and so is the hysteria.
"I've heard so many different opinions," Tiger Woods said before going up to Wisconsin for his first look at Whistling Straits. "I've heard it's too tight in the landing areas, and I've heard other guys say it's a fair test with plenty of room. Some guys say you can roll the ball up to the greens, others say you have to carry it to get to the right spot.
"That's the thing," he said. "We don't know."
About the only thing anyone expects is another strong performance by Phil Mickelson, who transformed himself from the guy who couldn't win a major into the lefty who does everything right.
If not for missing a couple of short par putts at Shinnecock and Troon, Mickelson could be going for the Grand Slam. Instead, he has gone 1-2-3 in the majors, starting with his breakthrough win at the Masters, and now has a chance to become the first player to finish in the top 3 in all four professional majors in the same year.
Ernie Els gets one last chance to erase a season of major heartache. While he is closer than ever to replacing Woods at No. 1 in the world ranking, all that matters to the Big Easy is winning majors. And all the South African has this year are three close calls, including runner-up finishes to Mickelson at the Masters and Todd Hamilton in a playoff at the British Open.
"I've come this close, so obviously I'm doing something right," Els said. "Something is good in my game. It's just not quite there at the end."
At stake for the Americans is the last hope of making the Ryder Cup team. Because the points are double at a major, 34 players have a mathematical chance of getting into the top 10.
Most of the attention is on John Daly (No. 20), the only two-time major winner to have never played in the Ryder Cup, and Jay Haas (No. 14), at age 50 trying to become the oldest American to qualify for the team.
The other focus at Whistling Straits is whether Woods can end a drought that has reached nine majors since he last hoisted a trophy. Woods has twice gone entire years without winning a major (1998 and 2003).
His only victory this year is the Match Play Championship in February. He is US$2.3 million behind Mickelson on the money list. He is assured of being No. 1 in the world for the 331st week when he arrives at the PGA, which will tie the record set by Greg Norman, although Els will have another chance to surpass him.
But Woods' outlook on his season could change in four days.
"Any time you win a major, it's going to be a great year," Woods said.
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