FARMINGDALE, N.Y. -- All the talking points are in place:

Tiger Woods is coming off his first major title in 14 years.

The PGA has moved to May, now positioned second in the major championship batting order.

Bethpage Black is long.

Bethpage Black will play even longer because it's cold and wet.

Brooks Koepka feels slighted by a lack of attention.

That just about covers it.

With all that as the backdrop, who will take home this year's PGA Championship? (Koepka should not feel slighted when he reads this list.)

Our collection of experts loves Brooks Koepka. Ray Carlin/USA TODAY Sports

Matt Barrie, ESPN

Winner: Tony Finau

Why he'll win: Bethpage Black is long. And it's wet. This week will truly be about the bombers, and Finau fits the mold. After a T-5 at the Masters and top 10s in four of his past five major starts, Finau has proven it's only a matter of time. The New York crowd will love Finau, and he'll love them back by breaking through with his first major championship.

Michael Collins, ESPN

Winner: Tony Finau

Why he'll win: Even with the change of schedule, the PGA Championship is a place for first-time major championship winners. Finau is a bomber, which is needed with the course and the weather at Bethpage Black. Most important, Finau has a great attitude, which is a key factor on a course this brutally hard.

Chris Fallica, ESPN Stats & Information

Winner: Tony Finau

Why he'll win: It's easy -- and could prove to be correct -- to take Brooks Koepka or Dustin Johnson this week. So I'll mix it up and go with Tony Finau, who was the darling to win the 2018 PGA at Bellerive. And after an opening-round 74, he played great over the final three rounds. With four top 10s and a pair of top 5s in the past five majors, this could be the one for the 54-hole co-leader at the 2018 U.S. Open and the man who entered the final round of last month's Masters in second. Few players can string together par-breakers like this guy, and given 15-under or so will likely win, he fits the bill. One other factor here is that the very likable Finau is someone the New York crowd will get behind should he be in the mix on Sunday.

Michael Eaves, ESPN

Winner: Brooks Koepka

Why he'll win: Over the past two years, no one has done a better job of peaking for the majors than Koepka. And right now, he's playing too well not to take advantage of Bethpage's layout.

Charlotte Gibson, ESPN The Magazine

Winner: Brooks Koepka

Why he'll win: At Bethpage Black, distance off the tee matters. Koepka's length (not to mention his strength both mentally and physically) will play well on Long Island this week. Plus, it's an added bonus that he has won three of the past seven majors and either won or finished second in three of the past four. To top it all off, his recent tiff with Golf Channel's Brandel Chamblee is just the motivating factor he needs before claiming another major. I am all in on Koepka this week.

Mike Golic, ESPN

Winner: Dustin Johnson

Why he'll win: He's a long-ball hitter and a long-stride walker, which will help, as there is about a mile more walking distance at this course per round than at an average PGA Tour course.

Mike Greenberg, ESPN

Winner: Brooks Koepka

Why he'll win: No one has been better in major championships the past two years. With his length, he can handle the carries and generally play this golf course in ways most players cannot.

Bob Harig, ESPN.com

Winner: Brooks Koepka

Why he'll win: Does anyone do slights better than Koepka? He's the defending PGA champion, but guess who everyone will be talking about? And yet it was Koepka with the last best chance to derail Tiger Woods at the Masters, was the guy who beat Woods at last year's PGA Championship, and is the one with a game well-suited for a brute of a course in Bethpage.

Peter Lawrence-Riddell, ESPN.com

Winner: Brooks Koepka

Why he'll win: The Long Island repeat for Koepka, and back-to-back PGA Championships. If his driver is on, which it usually seems to be at majors, Koepka is going to be tough to beat at Bethpage. The Black Course should be wet, and it will definitely be long, both things that will favor the big hitters --and Koepka is one of the biggest (regardless of what weight he's playing at). Koepka seems to always be in contention at the majors, and this week shouldn't be any different.

Andy North, ESPN

Winner: Brooks Koepka

Why he'll win: The course is long. The course is wet. And he is good at defending.

Ian O'Connor, ESPN.com

Winner: Brooks Koepka

Why he'll win: As Fred Couples said recently, Koepka is a machine. He's won three of his past seven major starts and nearly made it four last month at the Masters. If Koepka can channel his anger over that missed putt at Augusta into a positive force, Bethpage is in serious trouble.

Nick Pietruszkiewicz, ESPN.com

Winner: Rory McIlroy

Why he'll win: Seems like forever ago he was the runaway favorite to win the Masters. Oh, right, that was last month. We can talk about the big hitters -- Koepka and Finau and DJ -- but it's not like McIlroy is going to be slapping bunts around Bethpage Black. He can fly it all the places the winner of the year's second major will need to fly it.

Mark Schlabach, ESPN.com

Winner: Brooks Koepka

Why he'll win: The golfer who never gets talked about -- at least in his mind -- has played better than anyone else in majors over the past three seasons. If he'd missed Rae's Creek at Augusta National on Sunday, he might have a green jacket, too.

Curtis Strange, ESPN

Winner: Tiger Woods

Why he'll win: He won the last major. He'll win this one.

Scott Van Pelt, ESPN

Winner: Brooks Koepka

Why he'll win: It's a major on a big-boy course -- and he's a big boy.

Kevin Van Valkenburg

Winner: Brooks Koepka

Why he'll win: A big, brawny golf course is going to produce a big, brawny champion. He's the strongest player in the field, physically, and after Tiger he's probably the strongest player in the field mentally. This is the week he matches Rory McIlroy for total majors.

Trey Wingo, ESPN

Winner: Brooks Koepka

Why he'll win: He has been playing well. He's the defending champion, and he happens to hit it a country mile -- a must at Bethpage. Look for Brooks to have two Wanamaker trophies and two U.S. Open trophies at the same time.