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On the Fringe: More at stake at FedEx Cup than $10M
PGA Championship Golf Heal
It used to be Tiger. Who's the best in golf? It's not so clear-cut this year. - photo by Associated Press

The FedEx Cup was all about the $10 million bonus when it began in 2007 because there was nothing left to decide.
    Tiger Woods was the best player in golf, and everyone knew it.
    He already had won five times that year, including the PGA Championship at Southern Hills. He already had earned $7.8 million on the PGA Tour, making it impossible for anyone to catch him without winning all four playoff events, which was bordering on impossible. There was no debate on player of the year.
    Golf is more unpredictable these days.
    And that's what makes the FedEx Cup playoffs, which start this week at Bethpage Black, more compelling than $10 million to the winner.
    Thanks to changes that former U.S. captain Paul Azinger brought to the Ryder Cup — specifically waiting three weeks to decide the captain's picks — the next two tournaments will serve as an audition for a half-dozen players trying to get on the team.
    Rickie Fowler and Dustin Johnson are two of them, and they played together Tuesday during a practice round at The Barclays. Not only were they linked as possible picks, they were partners in a game against Phil Mickelson and Keegan Bradley.
    "You guys playing a match?" one of the fans called out to Mickelson from behind the ropes.
    "Just for funsies," Mickelson said, with a laugh that made it clear that more was at stake.
            The prevailing thought is that Davis Love III has a good idea on three of his four picks. Hunter Mahan barely missed out qualifying and finished ninth, which shows the quality of American play this year because he won two times, including his thorough win over Rory McIlroy at the Match Play Championship. Steve Stricker and Jim Furyk also appear to be logical picks, leaving Love with one more choice.
    Fowler? Johnson? Brandt Snedeker?
    Winning at Bethpage Black this week, or at the TPC Boston next week in the second playoff event, could make it tough for Love to leave any of them out.
    "If I play well the next two weeks, I would hope that I'd definitely be in consideration," said Johnson, who has won every year since his rookie season in 2008. "But I think I've had a good year, other than I didn't play for three months. But hopefully, the captain knows that, and he'll make the right decision."
    There are four picks. But there might only be one, two at the most.

"He probably already has the guys he's going to pick," Johnson said. "And these next couple weeks probably could change his mind. But most of the guys have played well all week, and I've played pretty solid all year long and I think I'd be a great asset to the team. And hopefully, I'll get picked."

PGA Tour members vote on player of the year. The ballots aren't due until after the final event at Disney in November, and it was so close last year that Luke Donald and Webb Simpson played deep into the Fall Series. Simpson and Donald finished Nos. 1-2 in the FedEx Cup. Neither won a major. Donald finished the season with a 64 to win Disney and capture the money title. Only then was it an easy vote.

That probably won't be the case this time.

For three players, their only win was a major — Simpson (U.S. Open), Bubba Watson (Masters) and Ernie Els (British Open). The leading candidate for player of the year going into the FedEx Cup playoffs is McIlroy, who won the Honda Classic and the PGA Championship, setting a record with his eight-shot margin.

Not to be forgotten is Woods, who has won three times this year. No one else has more than two.

Els, Simpson and Watson could make it a five-man race if they were to win the FedEx Cup, which means they would have to win another tournament. Keep in mind that the next four weeks — particularly the next two with a full field — feature some of the strongest fields of the year.

Woods (No. 1 in the standings) and McIlroy (No. 3) are in the same group the opening two rounds at Bethpage, which is fitting. How they perform over the next month could decide who wins player of the year.

Woods is a 10-time winner of the award, including two of those years when he failed to win a major.

The closest vote was in 2003, when he had one more win than Vijay Singh (5 to 4), and won the Vardon Trophy for the lowest scoring average while Singh won the money title. Neither won a major. Three years ago, Woods won despite not having a major because he won six times, including the FedEx Cup. McIlroy has a major, and the degree of dominance will not be overlooked. He joined Woods as the only players to win majors by at least eight shots since 1976.

Woods probably has to win a playoff event to capture player of the year. And if McIlroy were to win a playoff event, that should be enough for him to win unless Woods were to win twice, including the FedEx Cup.

Beyond the Ryder Cup and the tour's biggest award, the FedEx Cup offers something for each of the 125 players who qualified — hope.

Heath Slocum was the only player who moved into the top 125 last week, moving up to No. 124. He is a long shot, though history is on his side. Three years ago, Slocum narrowly got into playoffs at No. 124 and made a 10-foot putt on the last hole at The Barclays to beat Woods, Els, Stricker and Padraig Harrington. That assured him a spot in the Tour Championship and in all four majors.

The goal for Slocum is keep playing as long as he can — the top 100 go to the second round in Boston, the top 70 to the third event in Indianapolis. He is in the playoffs, though there is no guarantee that Slocum will have his PGA Tour card locked up when the playoffs are over.

That might be more important for him than who gets picked for the Ryder Cup or voted PGA Tour player of the year.