Tiger Woods remained No. 1 in the world ranking Monday. He was nowhere to be found on two other lists that matter.Woods failed to qualify for the Ryder Cup for the first time — he had
led the standings every other time since 1997 — and now must rely on
U.S. captain Corey Pavin spending one of four wild-card picks on him.
Pavin
sat at the head table between two poster boards that listed the eight
American qualifiers, with Woods' name nowhere to be found between Phil
Mickelson at No. 1 and Matt Kuchar at No. 8.
Pavin would only say that Woods is "high on my list" and will be a "big consideration" when he announces his selections Sept. 7.
"I'm
looking at him in essence like any other player. He isn't . . . but he
is," Pavin said. "I'm certainly not going to disrespect other players by
considering him different from other players. I have to look at the way
he's playing, the way he played, and I have to look at his body of work
as well. If anyone can turn it around quickly, it's him."
Woods has at least one more tournament to make an impression.
While
he wound up No. 12 in the Ryder Cup standings, equally troublesome is
that Woods is No. 108 in the FedEx Cup standings. The top 125 are
eligible for The Barclays next week at Ridgewood Country Club, which
kicks off the PGA Tour playoffs. Only the top 100 in the standings
advance to the second round of the playoffs at the Deutsche Bank
Championship outside Boston.
Woods is so far down in the FedEx Cup standings that he's one spot behind Pavin."He's ranked a lot higher on Ryder Cup points," Pavin said with a laugh, "and probably the world ranking, I'm guessing."Despite
the shockingly low numbers next to Woods' name, Pavin came away from
the PGA Championship encouraged as much by what he heard from Woods as
what he saw from him.
Woods
stated plainly at the start of the week that he wants to play in the
Ryder Cup and would accept a captain's pick. Even after he closed with a
1-over 73 to tie for 28th at Whistling Straits, he joked that he could
still help out in singles. His Ryder Cup record is 10-13-2, including
3-1-2 in singles.