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Who should panic, who should reset and who shouldn't change a thing halfway through golf's major season

TULSA, Okla. — Justin Thomas' long wait to win another major championship is over after he defeated Will Zalatoris in a playoff to win the 104th PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club.

Zalatoris will have to wait again for his first PGA Tour victory, along with Mito Pereira, whose costly mistake on the 72nd hole on Sunday cost him a chance to be the first man from Chile to win a major.

With two majors in the books, and the next one not coming until June 16-19 at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts, it's a good time to look at the sport's biggest stars and where they stand at the halfway point of the major season.

Tiger Woods

It's an absolute miracle that Woods, 46, is even playing competitive golf after nearly losing his right leg in a car wreck on Feb. 23, 2021. When the 15-time major champion unexpectedly returned at the Masters in April, the golf world had grand illusions about him contending as soon as he came back.

Six weeks later, it's clear that Woods has plenty of healing and work left to do before he contends again — if that even ever happens. Give him plenty of credit for making the cut at both the Masters and PGA Championship. But his surgically repaired right leg and foot couldn't hold up over 72 holes, forcing him to withdraw before the final round at Southern Hills.

Andy North discusses Tiger Woods withdrawing from the PGA Championship after Round 3.

And that's a problem.

It's time for Woods and his team to assess what they want out of the rest of this season. Should he skip next month's U.S. Open and focus on the 150th Open Championship at St. Andrews in July? Should he play in any tournaments until he has had more time to recover? If this is as good as it's going to get for Woods, is it

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