Sunday, December 1, 2013

白佳和、親友のアドバイスを胸に逆転優勝を狙う!



2011年08月20日17時27分




リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア1 チョ・ ミンギュ -12
2 白 佳和 -10
3 ドンファン -8
吉永 智一 -8
5 M・ママット -7
武藤 俊憲 -7
N・ベーシック -7
8 宮里 聖志 -6
9 田保 龍一 -5
10 C・プラポール -4


順位の続きを見る





明るく、楽しく、上を向いて初優勝を狙う!(撮影:上山敬太)








関西オープンゴルフ選手権 3日目◇20日◇小野ゴルフ倶楽部(6,929ヤード・パー71)>

 兵庫県にある小野ゴルフ倶楽部で開催されている、国内男子ツアー「関西オープンゴルフ選手権」の3日目。単独首位でスタートしたネベン・ベーシック(オーストラリア)が、この日は大乱調でスコアを6つ落とし5位タイに後退。代わりに2位からスタートしたチョ・ミンギュ(韓国)がトータル12アンダーで首位に。2打差の2位には白佳和がつけた。

池田勇太、スーパーリカバリーでギャラリーを魅了

 トータル6アンダー4位タイからスタートした白は、1番でボギーを叩くがその後前半でスコアを2つ伸ばして折り返す。後半もボギーを先行させるが16番で3メートル、17番で5メートル、18番で4メートルのバーディパットをねじ込み終盤3連続バーディを奪取。スコアを4つ伸ばしてトータル10アンダーとし2位に浮上した。

 「厳しいセッティングの中、よく我慢できた」と自分のゴルフを評価した白。パットの調子もいいが、ティショットも好調で、この大会でのフェアウェイキープ率は64.29%で1位。そしてこの暑さのおかげで、日本ゴルフツアー選手権で痛めた背中も調子が良いという。

 明日の最終日、心がけるのは「明るく、楽しく、上を向いてラウンドをする」こと。それというのも白は「いいところでネガティブになってしまう」悪い癖があるからだ。そんな白に昨年からよく行動を共にしているJ・チョイ(米国)が送ったアドバイスが「なんで球を打つとき以外もそんなに暗くなっているの? 打つときの20秒だけ集中すればいいんだよ」。明るいキャラクターで知られるチョイからのアドバイスに「打つとき以外はキャディとしゃべったりして楽しく回るようにした」という。

 そのチョイは第2ラウンドで熱中症による体調不良で棄権してしまったが、親友のアドバイスを心に刻み続ける白。明日は逆転でツアー初優勝を目指す。

【3日目の順位】
1位:チョ・ミンギュ(-12)
2位:白佳和(-10)
3位T:ドンファン(-8)
3位T:吉永智一(-8)
5位T:マーダン・ママット(-7)
5位T:武藤俊憲(-7)
5位T:ネベン・ベーシック(-7)
8位:宮里聖志(-6)
9位:田保龍一(-5)
10位:チャワリット・プラポール(-4)

31位T:池田勇太(+1)他6名

チョ・ミンギュ、単独首位で最終日へ「明日はもっと頑張る」




2011年08月20日17時53分




リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア1 チョ・ ミンギュ -12
2 白 佳和 -10
3 ドンファン -8
吉永 智一 -8
5 M・ママット -7
武藤 俊憲 -7
N・ベーシック -7
8 宮里 聖志 -6
9 田保 龍一 -5
10 C・プラポール -4


順位の続きを見る





国内ツアー初優勝を目指すチョ・ミンギュ(撮影:上山敬太)








もっと写真を見る(7)




関西オープンゴルフ選手権 3日目◇20日◇小野ゴルフ倶楽部(6,929ヤード・パー71)>

 兵庫県にある小野ゴルフ倶楽部で開催中の、国内男子ツアー「関西オープンゴルフ選手権」3日目。トータル9アンダー単独2位からスタートしたチョ・ミンギュ(韓国)が、3つスコアを伸ばしトータル12アンダーで単独首位に立った。

白佳和、親友のアドバイスを胸に逆転優勝を狙う!

 チョは初日首位タイスタートを切ると安定して上位をキープ。単独首位に立つのは自身初で、最終日最終組でプレーするのは2010年の「セガサミーカップ」以来2度目。首位で最終日を迎えることに「プレッシャーはあるけど目標は同じ。毎日、毎日、頑張る、頑張る。明日はもっと頑張る」と語った。「賞金王を目標に頑張っています。賞金王になったら米国ツアーにチャレンジしたい」という大きな夢をもつチョ。23歳の韓国から来た新鋭が初の栄冠をつかむことができるか。

 3位タイからスタートした武藤俊憲はスコアを1つ落とし、トータル7アンダー5位タイに後退。「なんとかなるでしょ。そう思ってやるしかない」と笑顔で語った。この日、3つスコアを伸ばしてトータル6アンダー8位に浮上した宮里聖志は「やることははっきりしている。ある程度攻めていかないと。人生で一番パターが入ったらいいですね」と攻めのゴルフで逆転優勝を目指すと話した。

【3日目の順位】
1位:チョ・ミンギュ(-12)
2位:白佳和(-10)
3位T:ドンファン(-8)
3位T:吉永智一(-8)
5位T:マーダン・ママット(-7)
5位T:武藤俊憲(-7)
5位T:ネベン・ベーシック(-7)
8位:宮里聖志(-6)
9位:田保龍一(-5)
10位:チャワリット・プラポール(-4)

31位T:池田勇太(+1)他6名

<中間速報>チョ・ミンギュ、前半終わって首位キープ!




2011年08月21日12時38分
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リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア優勝 チョ・ ミンギュ -14
2 白 佳和 -10
3 N・ベーシック -9
吉永 智一 -9
5 ドンファン -7
6 近藤 共弘 -5
上平 栄道 -5
星野 英正 -5
ハン・リー -5
田保 龍一 -5


順位の続きを見る


関西オープンゴルフ選手権 最終日◇21日◇小野ゴルフ倶楽部(6,929ヤード・パー71)>

 兵庫県にある小野ゴルフ倶楽部で開催されている、国内男子ツアー「関西オープンゴルフ選手権」の最終日。単独首位でスタートしたチョ・ミンギュ(韓国)が、前半で4つスコアを伸ばしトータル16アンダーで首位をキープ。2位の白佳和に5打差をつけて後半のプレーに入った。

 31位タイスタートの池田勇太は、17番までを終了。5つスコアを伸ばしトータル4アンダー10位タイまで浮上している。

<速報>チョ・ミンギュがツアー初優勝!池田勇太は12位タイ




2011年08月21日15時09分
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リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア優勝 チョ・ ミンギュ -14
2 白 佳和 -10
3 N・ベーシック -9
吉永 智一 -9
5 ドンファン -7
6 近藤 共弘 -5
上平 栄道 -5
星野 英正 -5
ハン・リー -5
田保 龍一 -5


順位の続きを見る


関西オープンゴルフ選手権 最終日◇21日◇小野ゴルフ倶楽部(6,929ヤード・パー71)>

 兵庫県にある小野ゴルフ倶楽部で開催された、国内男子ツアー「関西オープンゴルフ選手権」の最終日。単独首位でスタートしたチョ・ミンギュ(韓国)が、スコアを2つ伸ばしトータル14アンダーでツアー初優勝を飾った。

 2位は白佳和、3位タイにはネベン・ベーシック(オーストラリア)と吉永智一が入った。池田勇太はこの日スコアを5つ伸ばし、トータル4アンダー12位タイに終わった。

【最終順位】
優勝:チョ・ミンギュ(-14)
2位:白佳和(-10)
3位T:ネベン・ベーシック(-9)
3位T:吉永智一(-9)
5位:ドンファン(-7)
6位T:近藤共弘(-5)
6位T:上平栄道(-5)
6位T:星野英正(-5)
6位T:ハン・リー(-5)
6位T:田保龍一(-5)
6位T:宮里聖志(-5)
12位T:池田勇太(-4)他3名

Friday, October 11, 2013

Why Can't Justin Rose Win the Big One?


Why Can't Justin Rose Win the Big One?











Travis Mewhirter March 26, 2013 12:00 PM




COMMENTARY | Unless you currently reside under a sporting rock, you are well aware that the greatest holiday of the year, March Madness, is in full swing.




And as paper shredders feast on broken bracket upon broken bracket -- thank you, Florida Gulf Coast, Harvard, and Wichita State -- there was still golf being played, while the second greatest holiday of the year, the Masters, looms just around the corner.

Tiger Woods gobbled up all the scraps of attention left over from the NCAA tournament with his 77th PGA Tour victory at the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill, his second in a row and third this year, and resumed his all too comfortable position as the No. 1 player in the world and in the FedEx Cup standings.

So, naturally, everybody is talking Tiger. But another name should have turned a few heads this weekend:Justin Rose.

Rose finished in second -- his third top 10 finish this season -- alone behind Woods to ascend to No. 3 in the world, the best ranking of his career. And with this success comes the nagging question: Why can't Rose win the big one?

Ardent golf supporters may remember Rose when he was 17 and made history as the youngest player to ever compete in a Walker Cup. Others might remember him from his first major start in the Open Championship in 1998 where he finished tied for fourth.

Now, however, Rose may be known as the newest president of the club that Phil Mickelson served several terms for: Greatest Player Never to Have Won a Major.

It's baffling to think that Rose, now 32 and in his ninth year on tour, hasn't won a major yet. He was still a teenager when he stormed Royal Birkdale back in 1998 to finish in the top five. He was barely allowed to legally drink for his next top five in the 2003 U.S. Open at Olympia Fields. And, in 2007, his worst finish in a major -- his first year making the cut in all four of them -- was 12th.

It seemed only a matter of time before the gates were opened and major championships came by the pair.

But they haven't.

All in all, Rose has 35 career major starts dating back to 1998, making the cut in 22 of them. In that 22, he has posted 16 top 25 finishes, seven top 10s and four top fives.

But, again, he hasn't won.

Whether it's fair or not, winning the big ones is the barometer used in judging a golfer's career success. If that wasn't the case, and we used regular-season tournaments as our measuring stick, Sam Snead, who won seven majors, would be the only possible candidate for the best golfer in history.

But that's not the case. So we look to Palmer, to Woods, to Jack Nicklaus, and to Gary Player as golf's Mount Rushmore.

Many might say that Bubba Watson has had a better career than Rose because of his awe-inspiring win at Augusta National last year, when he bent a pitching wedge so sharply out of the woods that it's a wonder how his grooves weren't inspected for spin-inducing technology. But this is flawed logic.

Watson, as genial and affable a character as there is on tour, has had a career that can't even hold a candle to Rose's. Same goes for other major one-timers such as Louis Oosthuizen, Charl Schwartzel, Graeme McDowell, even tour brawler Jim Furyk -- all great players, but all slightly overrated because of their one shining moment.

The good news for Rose: He is absolutely dynamite at Augusta. In seven starts, his worst finish is T39 (2003), and he has graced the top 20 in four of the last five, although he didn't play in 2010.

The better news for Rose: The Masters is just three weeks away, and the timing ostensibly couldn't be better as he is rapidly approaching the zenith of his career. With his second-place finish at Bay Hill this weekend, he moved up to the No. 3 ranking in the world, his highest ever, sitting behind just Nike posterboys Woods and Rory McIlroy. Not bad company to be in.

But, for now, without a major win under his belt, he resides with different company: his Greatest Player Never to Have Won a Major club.

And lord knows he wants to get kicked out.

Travis Mewhirter has been working in the golf industry since 2007, when he was a bag room manager at Piney Branch Golf Club in Carroll County, Maryland, and has been involved, as a player, since 2004. Since then, he has worked at Hayfields Country Club, where the Constellation Energy Classic was formerly held, and has covered golf at the high school, college, and professional levels.

Five golfers who could claim first major at Masters


Five golfers who could claim first major at Masters












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Could Matt Kuchar claim his first major title at the Masters?(Getty Images)

PGA.COM March 26, 2013 12:48 PM


By T.J. Auclair PGA.com Rod Crowley, a contributor for BleacherReport.com, offers up a list of five golfers who could claim their first major title in two weeks at the Masters.


Writes Crowley:

Tiger Woods has hit his form at the perfect time as he aims to secure his fifth Masters win in a couple of weeks.

His win at the Arnold Palmer Invitational on Monday and a subsequent return to the number one spot in the World Rankings have been enough for bookmakers to expect him to finish atop the leaderboard in the opening major of the year.

Woods odds to win his 15th major are just plus-350 (7/2), giving him an 18 percent chance to be on top when the final round concludes on April 14 at Augusta National.

However, a strong field will assemble in Georgia, with the likes of Rory McIlroy and Phil Mickelson among the favorites to add to their trophy cases. There is also the usual multitude of top players who will be looking to make a name for themselves on golf's biggest stage.

Here are five PGA challengers ready to make their presence felt on the Augusta leaderboard as they look to end their wait for glory in a major.

Check out Crowley's list here.

For reference, four of the last six Masters champions (Zach Johnson, 2007; Trevor Immelman, 2008; Charl Schwartzel, 2011; and Bubba Watson, 2012) claimed their first major title at Augusta National.

Follow T.J. Auclair on Twitter, @tj_auclair.

Course Source: TPC Scottsdale, The Stadium Course


Course Source: TPC Scottsdale, The Stadium Course










Derek Harper, The Sports Xchange March 26, 2013 3:21 PMThe SportsXchange


COURSE SOURCE


THE RESORT: TPC Scottsdale - The Stadium Course, in Scottsdale, Ariz.

THE LAYOUT: Watching Phil Mickelson shred The Stadium Course over Super Bowl weekend in 2013 - tying the tournament record at 28-under and lipping out on 18 to narrowly miss carding a 59 in the opening round - it's easy for the amateur to daydream about going low at a PGA Tour facility.

The Stadium Course indeed offers a nice blend of playability and significant challenge to go along with a great history. Designed by Tom Weiskopf and Jay Morrish, the course was built in 1986 and played host to its first PGA Tour event - the Phoenix Open - the following year.

One of the advantages of playing at a PGA Tour facility is no expense is spared in maintaining pristine course conditions. While most course superintendents in the area are working with stricter budgets and balancing seeding and water schedules, The Stadium Course - and to a slightly lesser degree the accompanying Champions Course - are in nearly immaculate shape year-round.

The Par 71 Stadium Course can be stretched out to 7,216 yards (74.6/138) from the black tees. However, unless you're a bomber off the tee and enjoy long irons to the green, the 6,525 yards (71.1/129) from the blues is more than enough test for most golfers. The whites play 6,049/68.7/125, shortening many of the challenging par-4s.

For the ladies, the 5,455 yards includes several drives that require moderate carries over - or through - the desert, but nothing too daunting.

There's no denying The Stadium Course is a treat. If you're planning a visit during the peak-season rates that hover around $300, do yourself a favor and play in the morning or early afternoon, when very knowledgeable forecaddies who travel the Arizona/Wisconsin in-seasons are included with your green fee (minus tip) and really help make the experience.

The Stadium Course is littered with PGA Tour history - from the boulder fans moved to help Tiger Woods recover from a wayward tee shot in 1999, leading to a change in the rules of golf, to the famous Par-3 16th, where 25,000 raucous fans annually congregate in golf's loudest venue. Every hole seems to have a signature moment - "The Chez Reavie hole," "The B.J. Holmes hole" - and your forecaddie can add to your outing by narrating the most memorable shots from the Waste Management Open.

GENERAL MANAGER: Bill Grove

LOCAL KNOWLEDGE: The direction of the grain on the greens is critical playing anywhere in the Phoenix area. It typically grows away from Pinnacle Peak in north Scottsdale and toward the valley. Get to the course early enough to spend some time on the greens and let your forecaddie drop a little knowledge that will help sink a few extra putts.

While the front nine is solid a features a few memorable holes - including the Par-3 fourth with a big, sloping green, the character of the course really begins to come out as you approach the turn. Keep an eye out on No. 9. Push your drive far enough to the right and you might take out a Tour or Web.com player minding his own business on the facility reserved for professionals.

The 10th hole is where the fun really begins. A 376-yard Par-4 from the blue tees, it requires a well-placed drive for a lengthy uphill approach shot. If you struck the drive well enough to have a look at the green, you're likely to also get your first good look at the famous grandstands surrounding the 16th hole as you approach your ball.

It takes four-and-a-half months to erect and a month-and-a-half to bring down the grandstands at a hefty price tag of around $1 million in both directions.

The first glimpse of one of the most famous holes on the PGA Tour puts a real charge into the round, but focus on that approach shot. There is a pot bunker just off the right side of the 10th green and two bunkers protecting the front left. All things being equal, miss to the left - anything right, especially to a right pin placement - is in jail trying to get back to the green that slopes back to front.

Survive that test and you're greeted with the No. 1 handicap on The Stadium Course. It's a bear of a Par-4 at 439 yards from the blues with water all down the left side. It's easy to bail toward the less intimidating right side, but there are trees and small bushes likely to prevent a clear look. There is a big premium on hitting the fairway on No. 11, and a mid- to long iron that hits the front half of the massive green will get plenty of roll.

The Par-3 12th provides a mental breather before one of the most interesting holes on the course. The Par-5 13th presents the option of going left or right around a big swatch of sand and trees. At 552 yards from the blues and 528 from the whites, the shorter route is to the right. If you don't have the distance to get there in two, play it safe to the left side and there is a big landing area for your second shot.

The smallish green is protected by a deep bunker on the front right, but you don't want to over-club with your approach shot because the hole typically plays downwind.

The 419-yard 14th hole plays back into the wind and finally brought someone in our group to whimsically ask the forecaddie, "Let me guess, it's another long Par-4 and 'get all I can get' on the drive!"

With the 16th grandstands back in view and starting to get the heart pumping, a good drive off the tee at the Par-5 15th can present the best risk-reward opportunity on the course. At 468 yards from the blue tees, the hole is definitely reachable in two. There's only one problem.

Well, 360 of them, depending on your point of view.

With a long iron or hybrid in hand, you're also looking at an island green. It's another huge putting surface that slopes back to front and there are bunkers on the left and front right, but the reality is anything off-target is likely to splash down.

But you didn't come this far to lay up, so grip it and rip it.

If you play TPC during one of the six months the 16th grandstands are being worked on, you'll come off the 15th green, walk under the stands and pop out on the tee box for a bit of that Tour feeling. From a golf perspective, it's the second-easiest hole on the course and plays only 143 yards downhill from the blues to a decent-sized green. After snapping a few pictures, hit a decent short iron and you'll have a good opportunity to tell your friends you birdied the 16th at The Stadium Course.

The Par-4 17th is another risk/reward. Big, accurate hitters will be tempted at only 292 yards downhill from the blues, but the green is protected by water to the left and in back. Another option is a layup to a comfortable distance and a very manageable approach.

The Par-4 18th is pretty finishing hole. A fairway plaque commemorates J.B. Holmes' 359-yard drive in 2008 that led to his playoff victory over Phil Mickelson. Most mortals will face around 150-160 yards into a big green with a false front on the left side. No galleries are greeting you, but a well-struck approach might draw a small applause from those overlooking the green from the outside seating area at the restaurant and bar.

OTHER COURSES IN THE AREA: It's hard to go wrong in the Phoenix area, and there are more courses than even the locals have time to get tired of.

Many of the top facilities feature two courses worthy of lining up a 36-hole day for, including Troon (Pinnacle, Monument) and Grayhawk (Raptor, Talon) in Scottsdale, We-Ko-Pa (Cholla and Saguaro) in Fort McDowell and the Boulders (North, South) in Carefree.

Talking Stick, owned by the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community, is another Troon establishment with a pair of consistently top-ranked tracks.

WHERE TO STAY: The Fairmont Scottsdale Princess provides an all-in-one experience for the family or business traveler. The course even skirts along the hotel on the front nine, where your family or jealous co-workers can watch you sink a birdie putt on the Par-3 fourth and then rip a drive off the tee box on No. 5.

The TPC website offers stay-and-play packages at the Fairmont or nearby locations including the Hilton Garden Inn and Zona Resort Suites. The Sheraton Desert Oasis is also about a five iron away down the block.

On the web: www.tpc.com/tpc-scottsdale.

Monday, October 7, 2013

Phil Mickelson Rebounds From Rocky Start to Salvage First Round


Phil Mickelson Rebounds From Rocky Start to Salvage First Round
Lefty Optimistic About Building on Strong Back Nine, Hopes to Go Low Friday











Mark McLaughlin April 12, 2013 11:12 AM




COMMENTARY | Give Phil Mickelson credit, he knows what to expect from his game.


p>

On the eve of the Masters, Lefty said he was worried about the rust of not playing in a tournament the week before as has been his custom. He usually plays in Atlanta or Houston ahead of Augusta but a calendar quirk had the Valero Texas Open as the run-up tournament, a course setup that Mickelson says wouldn't have prepared him well for the year's first major.

Sure enough, Mickelson got off to a poor start in Thursday's first round. A three-putt bogey on the short, par-4 third was the first of three front-nine bogeys that caused him to make the turn in an ugly 2-over-par 38.

All it took for the Mickelson roller coaster to get back on track was a laser wedge shot to four feet on the par-3 12th hole for birdie. He went on to birdie both par-5s (13 and 15) and added a bonus birdie after a pretty 9-iron approach to the par-3 16th hole.

In a little over an hour, Mickelson jumped from 2-over to 2-under and smack in the middle of the contention for his fourth green jacket.

But never one to grind conservatively to the finish, he went on to bogey 17 then lipped out for birdie on the final hole to finish with a 1-under-par 71.



He's tied for 23rd on a day that saw nine players shoot 68 or better. Mickelson described Thursday's playing conditions as a "birdiefest" to ESPN and added that Augusta National was set up too soft and forgiving.

Phil's opening round may also have been a bit soft, but it couldn't have been much worse. He hit more greens than anyone in the field (15 of 18) but struggled once he got there, taking an atrocious 34 putts. Only four players took more putts Thursday.

"I feel like I'm rolling every one on line. I feel really good with the putter," Mickelson said afterward.

That confidence leads me to believe that if he can get the flat stick straightened out overnight - anyone know if putting guru Dave Stockton is around for quick lesson? - Mickelson will be right in the mix for the weekend.

"I can't wait to get back on the course tomorrow," Mickelson said. "I think I can really light it up."



To do so, Lefty must improve on Augusta's par-4s. He was fine on most of the brutes, parring holes 1, 10, and 11, but bogeyed the 350-yard third then failed to get up and down on the 455-yard fifth, the 450-yard seventh, and the 440-yard 17th.

Dustin Johnson Finally a Factor

With his length and talent, it's a wonder it took Dustin Johnson this long to post a good score at the Masters.

On the strength of the only eagle of the day on the par-5 13th hole, DJ fired an opening round 5-under-par 67, his best score in 13 rounds at Augusta National, to sit solo third. Johnson bested playing partner Fred Couples by a shot as Freddy's Masters mojo rubbed off on the game's best 20-something this side of Rory McIlroy.

Johnson's rare combination of power and touch will come in handy if he's in contention over the weekend. He led the field in driving distance Thursday with an average blow of 317 yards and needed only 24 putts around Augusta's softened greens.

Mark McLaughlin has reported on the PGA Tour for the New York Post, FoxSports.com, Greensboro News & Record, and Burlington (N.C.) Times-News. He is a past member of the Metropolitan Golf Writers Association. Follow him on Twitter@markmacduke.

Top Five Winners From the Opening Round at the Masters


Top Five Winners From the Opening Round at the Masters











Travis Mewhirter April 12, 2013 11:24 AM


COMMENTARY | The Masters is here, and everybody is really a winner over the next four days.


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The players win by simply getting another chance to play Heaven on Earth or, as it is formally known, Augusta National. Everybody else wins because it's the Masters, golf's unofficial opening day, the first truly meaningful tournament of the year.



But, while the Masters will be a sublime experience for all, I will narrow down Thursday's opening round to the five biggest winners of the day.



1. Tianlang Guan



What were you doing when you were 14 years old? Maybe you were in eighth grade, like our youngest competitor in Masters history, Tianlang Guan, is. Maybe you were at the top of your middle school's food chain. It was probably a phenomenal year. Maybe you were in high school, a hot-shot freshman who made a varsity team. You probably felt pretty slick at the time.



That's great and all, but here's what you did not do when you were 14 years old: You did not play Augusta National. You did not play in the Masters. You did not receive a personal invitation from Tiger Woods to play in a practice round. You did not finish your first ever major championship round at 1-over-par, one-upping a U.S. Open champ (Lucas Glover) and Open Championship winner (Louis Oosthuizen) while taking a two-shot lead on the most recent player to don a green jacket (Bubba Watson).



Even if the kid shot in triple-digits, he still would have been the day's winner. Because he's 14. And he's playing in the Masters.



2. Marc Leishman



This one shouldn't come as too much of a surprise. His opening-round 66 has him at the top of the leaderboard tied with Sergio Garcia and four up on the No. 1 player in the world, Tiger Woods. Every major championship seems to have its dark horse these days. Leishman, if he holds up throughout day two, appears to be the most recent addition to our ever-expanding list.



His best finish at the Masters is a missed cut in 2010 in which he shot 79 to follow up an even-par opening round, so a strong showing Friday would be a 180-degree turnaround from his previous appearance. Along with seeking his first major championship, Leishman could also become the first Australian to win the Masters. Imagine that: Marc Leishman, not Adam Scott or Jason Day, as our first Australian-born Masters winner. Something to think about as this one plays out.



3. Tiger Woods



Why not Garcia, Dustin Johnson or Rickie Fowler in this spot? Because this is where Tiger wants to be. He has posted a 2-under 70 opening round four times and gone on to win three of those (his other win came off a 74 in 2005 when he went on to beat Chris DiMarco). Sure, his opener was a little disappointing, considering the torrid rate he has been playing lately, but four shots back after the first day is quintessential Tiger territory.



4. Sergio Garcia



It's always with a little hesitation that I put Garcia at the top of many lists, no matter how well he plays in a four-hour span, simply because, by tour standards, the guy can't putt. There aren't many out there who can strike a golf ball like he does, as shown by his bogey-free 66, and he managed 18 holes without a single yip. If he can put together four straight rounds without fighting his putter, he could very well end his 14 years of major disappointment. But it's still day one. More proof will be needed on the greens to see if Garcia can hang around until Sunday evening.



5. Rickie Fowler



This one was a tossup between Fowler, Johnson, Leishman's dark-horse pal David Lynn, and Fred Couples. Why Fowler? He's been one of the tour's brightest young stars out of this new generation that has stormed the World Golf Ranking over the past two years.



But our 2010 Rookie of the Year -- an award he beat out Rory McIlroy for -- is still waiting for that breakthrough moment that some of his peers have been able to enjoy. McIlroy is the clear frontrunner of the up-and-coming generation, what with his decimation of Congressional to win the 2011 U.S. Open and his comfortable 8-shot triumph at last year's PGA Championship.



A green jacket could very well be the impetus Fowler needs to put his career in the same zip code as McIlroy's.





Travis Mewhirter has been working in the golf industry since 2007, when he was a bag room manager at Piney Branch Golf Club in Carroll County, Maryland, and has been involved, as a player, since 2004. Since then, he has worked at Hayfields Country Club, where the Constellation Energy Classic was formerly held, and has covered golf at the high school, college, and professional levels.

McIlroy's mistakes negate overall good play


McIlroy's mistakes negate overall good play











PGA.COM April 12, 2013 1:38 PM

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Rory McIlroy wasn't too pleased with his 72 on a day when 32 players broke par.(Getty Images)


By Tim Dahlberg, Associated Press


AUGUSTA, Ga. -- The 18-footer for birdie on the final hole slid by on the left, another chance lost on a day filled with missed opportunities. Rory McIlroy walked off the green and gave his putter a gentle spank, as if to punish it for letting him down when he needed it most.

His even-par 72 wasn't awful by any means and might have been a score he would have settled for in another Masters. But on a day when 32 players broke par, the No. 2 player in the world wasn't exactly pleased.

He got a kiss and hug from girlfriend Caroline Wozniackiafter signing his scorecard, but any overtime work on the putting green would have to wait. It was getting dark and, just as McIlroy was beginning to talk about what went wrong, the weather sirens sounded and he was hustled inside the Augusta National clubhouse.

All year long the worry about McIlroy was the way he was hitting the ball with his new Nike clubs. But in the opening round of the Masters, it was the putter that let him down.

"I felt like I played well," McIlroy said. "Just silly mistakes and a couple of 3-putts on the back nine."

A day that started with promise for McIlroy -- he was 2-under after making birdie on No. 6 -- turned bad on the final nine as he made four bogeys coming in. McIlroy played like he was rusty, the very thing he played two weeks in a row coming into the Masters to avoid.

He was six shots back of co-leaders Sergio Garcia and Marc Leishman, a margin that's certainly not insurmountable with three rounds left on Augusta National. But McIlroy will have to find a way to make the short putts he missed if he wants to be in contention going into Sunday.

The Northern Irishman came to the first major of 2013, hoping to jumpstart a year that so far has been a disappointment. He played well to get in contention at the Texas Open last week, finishing second with a final round 66, and expected to be in contention here.

But bad strokes on greens putting slower than usual made for one frustrating days.

"I'm hitting the ball well," he said. "It's just a matter of taking advantage of the opportunities and eliminating mistakes.

McIlroy looked to have gotten the worst of the draw with a pairing in the penultimate group as thunderstorms threatened. But the wind didn't gust as much as expected and the rain held off until just after McIlroy came out of the clubhouse after signing his card.

McIlroy started the day like he couldn't wait to get in contention. He barely missed holing a 50-yard pitch for eagle on the second hole and came close to making a second straight birdie on No. 3.

But after holing a putt for birdie on No. 6 he gave it right back with a poor second shot on the next hole, the first of a series of miscues that he was never able to recover from.

McIlroy conceded earlier in the week that the adjustment to his new clubs -- which came as part of a huge endorsement deal with Nike -- had taken some time. But he said his driving had improved greatly and he was gaining confidence with every round he played.

But McIlroy's problem in the first round came from his flat stick, not his driver. He hit 9 of 14 fairways but had 32 putts, including the two 3-putts.

If there was a positive for McIlroy it is that he seems to be beginning to feel very much at home on Augusta National, where he famously imploded in 2011 after taking a four-shot lead into the final round. A year ago, he was one off the lead going into the weekend, only to close with 77-76 and tie for 40th.

"Everything felt good but every time I did something good I gave it back," McIlroy said. "And around this course you can't do that."

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Rory McIlroy Tops List of Best Golfers Under 25


Rory McIlroy Tops List of Best Golfers Under 25
Rickie Fowler and Emerging Crop of Talented Young Players Could Challenge McIlroy for Years to Come











Mark McLaughlin April 24, 2013 9:20 PM






COMMENTARY


b> | Tianlung Guan, the 14-year-old Chinese phenom, parlayed a historic Masters performance into an invite to this week's Zurich Classic of New Orleans. Guan's showing at Augusta National, where he made no worse than bogey on any hole and went the full four rounds without a three-putt, could arguably propel him near the top of rankings of the world's best young golfers.



But one tournament does not make for a reasonable assessment so I'll hold off on including Guan on my list of Best Golfers Under 25 until he at least obtains a driver's license.

Such an exercise gets tricky when you're evaluating players so early in their careers. It's a good bet that several golfers now toiling under the radar on the Web.com, European or other low profile professional tour will emerge to challenge this list of early arrivals. With that caveat, here goes.

1. Rory McIlroy

No surprise that the Ulsterman stands atop the under-25 set. McIlroy is so dominant among golfers of all ages that being on this list almost belittles his achievements. To put his early career into perspective, Rory won his second major (2012 PGA Championship) five months earlier than Tiger Woods won his second (1999 PGA Championship).

McIlroy, who turns 24 next month, has more PGA Tour wins (six) than every other player under 30 except Dustin Johnson. When you count European Tour victories, he has won 10 times since turning pro at age 18.

While Rory does not have a win since last September, that's hardly cause for panic. Sure, the equipment change to Nike hasn't exactly gone swimmingly but McIlroy has shown signs of form in recent weeks. Don't forget that a young Woods suffered through a similar slump when undergoing his first swing change, winning just once in nearly two years from 1997 to 1999.

The next few years will tell us if McIlroy can win more majors and stay on the rarefied career trajectory of Woods or if he will settle into a more normal rhythm of winning once or twice per year. I'm hoping for the former, if only to keep talk of the Tiger-Rory rivalry alive.



2. Rickie Fowler



Many of you took me to task for my column last month criticizing Fowler's poor game management and lack of wins. There's no debate that he's made a bigger impact on golf than just about anyone since turning pro. The problem is that he started on such a high note - losing a playoff in his second pro start and sinking clutch putt after clutch putt as a captain's pick at the 2010 Ryder Cup - much more was expected than one PGA Tour win in the ensuing two and a half years.



I believe the 24-year-old Fowler will start winning more as he continues to mature. He's still young and having the time of his life riding dirt bikes, hanging with "The Golf Boys" and making fashion statements every week with his pastel Puma wardrobe. I think the fun factor will prevent burnout and allow Fowler to stay in his prime longer than most pros.

Short of a victory, Fowler is having a consistently strong season. He's missed only one cut and has three top 10 finishes in eight starts. His putting is the best it's ever been. Fowler just needs to find a few more greens to let the flat stick make a difference.

3. Matteo Manassero

Manassero, who turned 20 last week, was almost an afterthought playing in the same group as Guan at the Masters. It didn't help that he missed the cut while the 14-year-old squeaked into the weekend.

The young Italian has made his own history, though, becoming the youngest-ever winner on the European Tour when he captured the 2010 Castello Masters as a 17-year-old. Manassero has added another Euro victory in each of the last two seasons and improved his chances of making it four straight years with a win by committing full-time to playing in Europe for the rest of 2013.

For Manassero to elevate his stature, however, he will need to play more here. In 17 U.S. starts since 2010, he's recorded just a single top 10 finish. But as the second youngest member of this list, he's got plenty of time to acquaint himself with the PGA Tour.

4. Russell Henley

Winning has come quickly for the 24-year-old Henley. He first won on the Web.com Tour as an amateur in 2011, added two more Web.com wins last year after turning pro and kicked off his PGA Tour career by winning in his first rookie start at the 2013 Sony Open in Hawaii.

Henley has posted two top 25 finishes since breaking through in Hawaii and is solid in all facets of the game, as shown by his top 5 ranking in the Tour's All-Around category. With his accuracy off the tee, he could be a factor at some of the tougher venues on tap including Quail Hollow, the U.S. Open at Merion and Congressional.

Henley's early success is no fluke. He was a three-time All-America and 2010 College Player of the Year at the University of Georgia as well as low amateur at the 2010 U.S. Open.

5. Jordan Spieth

Select few players have made it onto the PGA Tour without grinding through Q-School or apprenticing on the Web.com or mini-tour circuit. Spieth is poised to join Woods, Phil Mickelson and most recently Bud Cauley in playing their way to Tour membership.

Spieth, 19, has recorded three top 10 finishes in his first seven pro starts, earning enough prize money ($662,398) to gain special temporary Tour membership for the rest of 2013. This status enables him to accept an unlimited number of sponsor's exemptions into tournaments and should allow him to earn enough to gain full-time status by year's end. Spieth, who finished ninth last week at the RBC Heritage, is in this week's field in New Orleans.

Spieth first made headlines by finishing tied for 16th at the HP Byron Nelson Championship as a 16-year-old. The only golfer besides Woods to win multiple U.S. Junior Amateur titles, he led the University of Texas to the 2012 national championship as a freshman before turning pro at the end of the year.

6. Ryo Ishikawa

Ishikawa has built his reputation on tremendous success in his native Japan. The 21-year-old has 12 professional wins on the Japanese Tour, including a maiden victory while only 15.

He has yet to make his mark in the U.S. but it's not for lack of trying. Ishikawa played a full PGA Tour schedule in 2012 -- earning a second place in Puerto Rico and four top 25s -- and plans to do the same this year. He's missed the cut in half of the 54 Tour appearances since 2009 so consistency is an issue that will need to be addressed.

Ishikawa has struggled in 2013 as a typically strong putter has failed to cooperate. On the bright side, he was in contention at last week's RBC Heritage before closing with a wind-blown final round 80.



Mark McLaughlin has reported on the PGA Tour for the New York Post, FoxSports.com, Greensboro News & Record, and Burlington (N.C.) Times-News. He is a past member of the Metropolitan Golf Writers Association. Follow him onTwitter @markmacduke.

Merion Calling All Tin Cups for the U.S. Open


Merion Calling All Tin Cups for the U.S. Open











Travis Mewhirter April 24, 2013 9:33 PM




COMMENTARY | So, you want to be the next Tin Cup, you say? The old guys at the club convinced you to try to slug it out through local and sectional qualifying, beating out thousands for a coveted U.S. Open spot, stand toe to toe with the pros, become the darling of the golfing world, and make one of the most spectacular finishes in major championship history? Well, at 5 p.m. on April 24, all
of the potential Tin Cups were in -- U.S. Open entries were closed.



And this is why we love the Open: anybody can get in. Or, rather, anybody who can consistently put together a 75 and probably fire the occasional 60-something or other can get in. It's the most democratic event on the planet, in any sport, on any professional level. You don't see -- well, aside from the '76 Philadelphia Eagles, who actually did hold open tryouts -- NFL teams opening up roster spots to anybody who can run a sub-five second 40 or throw around weights like dolls. NBA front offices don't just invite any kid who can rain 3-pointers on the blacktop.

The U.S. Open does -- the golf version of that at least.

Last year, when the Open traveled to The Olympic Club in San Francisco, the USGA had to wade through 9,006 entries. It was just the fourth time in the event's history that entries surpassed the 9,000-entry threshold and was only 80 shy of the all-time record, set in 2009 when it was held at Bethpage Black.

For all you hopefuls and reverse-sandbaggers (yes, everybody knows that when you go out there and hack a 96 at your local qualifier, you're not actually a 1.4 handicap or below. Rick Reilly did a fantastic piece on you lot), here's how the Road to Merion, this year's venue, shakes out.

A little more than 94 percent of you will begin your Open quest with local qualifying, an 18-hole test hosted at courses all over the map. Eighteen holes, as everybody knows, is not a lot of holes. You snipe one out of bounds on the third tee and scrape together a triple-bogey and that's probably the end of the road. Hey, there's always next year. But there are always a few scratches or plus-handicappers that invariably play well -- really, really, well -- and it's on to sectionals.

We started with more than 9,000 of you in the local qualifiers. Now at sectionals, that number is already deflated to around 500 (last year's was 550). The good news -- or bad, depending on how you look at it -- with sectionals, is that this stage is 36 holes, meaning there is more time to make up for a bad hole, but also more time to have one.

At sectionals, the local qualifying champs are lumped into a field with those who received exemptions from stage one. This group includes pros from various tours around the globe and "elite amateurs who meet certain performance criteria," as described by the U.S. Open website.

This is where most of our Tin Cups will find themselves in well over their heads. Just take a look at a few of the names from the 16 who qualified from just one sectional qualifying site last year: Davis Love III, Blake Adams, Charlie Wi, D.A. Points, Steve Marino, Scott Piercy. There is a monumental difference from winning the club championship and winning a qualifying spot in the U.S. Open. Here, have a glance at some of the guys who were cut from that same qualifier: J.B. Holmes, Kevin Stadler, Jhonattan Vegas, Jimmy Walker, Ryan Moore, Ben Curtis… you get the idea.

There are always, of course, our U.S. Open darlings, wrought from the local and sectional qualifiers. Beau Hossler showed us that a kid with braces can take on the most elite field in the world after brawling through the qualifiers. Had it not been for a final-round 76, he would have hovered around the top 10 (he finished T29, 6-over).

This is what makes the Open fun. Are we likely to see another Hossler, some anonymous high school teen who climbed the leaderboard after squeaking through qualifiers? Realistically, no. But that's the beauty of the U.S. Open: we won't know. It's the mysterious element it provides, that "who in the world is this guy?" moment on Saturday when the field should have been trimmed down to former major champs and world leaders, that we love.

By June 4 we will have our field. And maybe, just maybe, we'll have a Tin Cup in it.

Travis Mewhirter has been working in the golf industry since 2007, when he was a bag room manager at Piney Branch Golf Club in Carroll County, Maryland, and has been involved, as a player, since 2004. Since then, he has worked at Hayfields Country Club, where the Constellation Energy Classic was formerly held, and has covered golf at the high school, college, and professional levels.

Local Knowledge: 2013 Zurich Classic in New Orleans


Local Knowledge: 2013 Zurich Classic in New Orleans











T.J. Auclair, Interactive Producer April 25, 2013 9:54 AM


Based strictly on location, some PGA Tour stops are just a whole lot more fun than others.

That applies this week, as the PGA Tour visits New Orleans for the Zurich Classic at TPC Louisiana. Jason Dufner returns to the Big Easy (New Orleans) as the defending champion after taking down the Big Easy (Ernie Els) in a playoff a year ago.

The golf will be great to be sure, but there's always a lot going on in NOLA, as TPC Louisiana PGA General Manager Luke Farabaugh explained to us in this week's Local Knowledge.

PGA.com: Luke, thank you for joining us. Let's talk for a minute about your defending champion, Jason Dufner. His victory last year at the Zurich Classic was his first on the PGA Tour. People knew with his talent it was only a matter of time before he broke through. What was it like to have Dufner break through at your event and what was it like to watch him soar after that victory?

Farabaugh:Jason was knocking on the door for a while and to see him break through for his first win here was great. As an Auburn grad myself, I take a lot of pride in Jason's first win happening at my facility. He made a huge 40-foot par putt on the 70th hole and battled Hall of Fame golfer Ernie Els in a playoff. His win here was a huge springboard for the rest of his year as he won the HP Byron Nelson Championship and posted a stout 3-1 record at his first Ryder Cup.


PGA.com: I can't ask you about Dufner without also asking you about "Dufnering." Has there ever been a funnier photo of a golfer?

Farabaugh:It's hard to top any of the Golf Boy stuff but Jason may have done it. Pretty amazing how it went viral with all the other players posting pictures of themselves Dufnering. Bubba Dufnering with the General Lee is a classic.

PGA.com: Certain PGA Tour events are known for certain things. At the Phoenix Open, it's the party atmosphere at the par-3 16th. At the Players Championship, it's the island green on No. 17 at TPC Sawgrass. At the Zurich Classic, hands down, it's the great food. How difficult is it to live in New Orleans and not just eat all day long?!

Farabaugh:I guess there are worse challenges than avoiding the amazing food this town is known for. It's just a part of our culture and way of life in New Orleans that sometimes we take for granted. But there's nothing quite like a dozen chargrilled oysters, boiled crawfish and a cold beer.

PGA.com: Describe for me, if you would, the perfect day in New Orleans. What are we doing (after breakfast at Ralph's at the Park, of course. We remember that's your favorite from last year)? Where are we going?

Farabaugh:Depends on the time of year, but we always have something going on in this town. More than likely I'm jumping on my motorcycle and headed to a local festival. We currently have Jazz Fest for the next two weekends. The French Quarter Fest was a couple of weeks ago and another favorite is the Greek Fest during Memorial Day weekend. Aside from providing another opportunity to eat, these festivals have some great music and provide for some great people watching.

PGA.com: Here's our last question for you, Luke. Which stretch of holes at TPC Louisiana are your favorite and why?

Farabaugh:My favorite stretch is Nos. 4, 5 and 6. It's the toughest part of the course and it requires each players' full attention. No. 4 and No. 6 are extremely long, requiring big drives and long approaches. The main reason why I like these holes is that they require all the shots in the bag. I like to play No. 4 with a fade off the tee and a draw approach, No. 5 with a draw off the tee and a fade approach and a draw off the tee and a fade approach on the sixth. Anytime I go through those holes even par is a great day. Water hazards line the fourth and sixth hole, so we may see an occasional double or triple during the Zurich Classic this year.

Saturday, September 28, 2013

This Is Not Your Grandfather's PGA Tour


This Is Not Your Grandfather's PGA Tour











Adam Fonseca May 16, 2013 4:03 PM




COMMENTARY | Drug suspensions. Cheating accusations. On-course name-calling. Lawsuits. Armchair rule officials.

Since January, the PGA Tour has been anything other than boring. With headlines more often seen on tabloid covers than in country clubs, some might say the gentlemanly elements and old-fashioned integrity upon which profession
al golf was founded have been compromised over the past few months. At the very least, lines are being crossed and tempers are being tested.



Professional golf has traditionally been a type of secret society that fans observed from the outside looking in. While it is a spectator sport that allows the general public closer to the action than any of the Big Four, most golfers go about their business with their heads down, arms to their sides and mouths shut. There was never any confusion as to where the lines were drawn between players on the fairway and fans in the gallery.

However, thanks to a series of societal and technological advancements not entirely reserved to observing a sporting event, that line has become blurred.

Most notably is the advent of high-definition television and super-sensitive microphones. Introduced to the world of professional golf coverage to enhance the viewing experience of fans seated comfortably on their sofas and recliners, these devices are seeing and hearing things that have never been witnessed on a golf course. At least, not in the public eye.

Take for example the Tiger Woods and Sergio Garcia verbal tussle from the 2013 Players Championship. Regardless of your opinion on whether Woods showcased a subtle form of gamesmanship when pulling a 5-wood from his bag milliseconds before Garcia blocked his approach into the right trees, the real drama did not begin until after the third round. Garcia's comments to reporters swirled quickly among TV broadcasts, Twitter and Facebook within seconds of their utterance. Then, thanks to the modern marvel of television graphics and real-time editing, fans everywhere were shown a side-by-side video comparison of the entire incident that would rival any view from Abraham Zapruder.

The second round of the 2013 Masters tournament provided another example of how this generation's PGA Tour is so unique. Literally minutes after Woods -- who is obviously the subject of many golf fans' focus --took his required drop after finding the water on hole No. 15 at Augusta National, a TV viewer was already contacting tournament officials by telephone (or text message, depending on whom you ask) as to the legality of the drop. By the time Woods arrived to his hotel room that evening, conversations among Augusta's powers-that-be on how to handle the situation had already begun.

Finally, we have the laughable and downright confusing case of Vijay Singh vs. the PGA Tour. Twenty years ago the notion of a professional golfer using an illegal substance to enhance his performance on the course would have been as alien as an adjustable driver. When Doug Barron was suspended in 2009 for violating the PGA Tour's substance abuse policy, most fans believed it would be an isolated incident. Then Vijay Singh indirectly taught everyone about the benefits of deer antler spray earlier this year. Shortly thereafter, a very public lawsuit was filed against the Tour by Singh. I'll go out on a limb and assume players like Bobby Jones, Jack Nicklaus or Arnold Palmer would have settled the matter in the Men's Grill.

Such is the state of the game in present day. Social media has become the main competition to journalistic reporting; television cameras, the all-seeing watchful eye over golfers playing well enough to see their lenses. In an age where public opinion is able to be viewed and shared more often than ever before, we continue to shape the image of professional sport with every new keystroke. "Viral" may be the most fitting term ever assigned.



No, folks, this is not the same PGA Tour you enjoyed with your father or grandfather years ago. We have made it a different animal altogether.



Adam Fonseca has been writing and blogging about golf since 2005. His work has been featured on numerous digital outlets including the Back9Network and SB Nation. He currently resides in Chicago with his wife.

Dustin Johnson: Withdraws With Sore Back


Dustin Johnson: Withdraws With Sore Back











RotoWire.com Staff May 16, 2013 7:01 PM

Update: Johnson withdrew from the HP Byron Nelson Championship due to a bad back, PGATour.com reports. "Tried to go but have inflammation in my facet joints. Some rest and daily therapy with my physical therapist, then I should be good!!" he told his official Twitter account.

Recommendation: Johnson has been out two of the last three weeks due to an injury to his wrist and back. It's not clear if all the ailments are related, but fantasy owners should watch his health closely in upcoming weeks.

Thompson, Ji share first-round Mobile Bay LPGA lead


Thompson, Ji share first-round Mobile Bay LPGA lead










The Sports Xchange May 16, 2013 8:20 PMThe SportsXchange



MOBILE, Ala. -- Lexi Thompson picked up where she left off in the Mobile Bay LPGA Classic.

The 18-year-old Floridian shot a 7-under-par 65 in the tournament's first round on Thursday to match her final round in the 2012 event at Magnolia Grove and was tied for the lead with Eun-Hee Ji of South Korea.

Last year's closing 65 left Thompson one stroke short ofStacy Lewis' winning tournament total of 17 under par.

"I definitely had it in mind," Thompson said of 2012. "But, you know, it's a whole different year and a new day. I was just going to try to go out and make some birdies. I knew my game was good, so I was just going to try to keep that going.

"It's very important to get off to a good start. I haven't had the best of first days, so to get this one under my belt at 7 under is really important. So I'm just going to try to do what I did today for the next three days and, hopefully, see where it goes."

Thompson teed off in the morning and posted a round that included eight birdies and one bogey. Ji, a former U.S. Women's Open champion, had a bogey-free round with seven birdies in the afternoon.

Jessica Korda was alone at 6-under 66 after a bogey-free round that included four birdies on par-4 and two on par-5 holes.

In a group of seven players at 5-under 67 was Jennifer Johnson, who holed out her fairway shot on the par-4 ninth for a round-ending eagle. Johnson played her last seven holes in 5 under.

Also at 5 under were Nicole Castrale, Mina Harigae, Dewi Claire Schreefel, Thidapa Suwannapura, Hee Young Park and Chella Choi.

Lewis opened with a 2-under 70 that included two bogeys and a double bogey on her final hole, when she had to re-hit her tee shot.

"I didn't really have anything go right today," the world's second-ranked player said. "I had one ball hit the sprinkler and go in the trees and one hit the cart path and go into the trees.

"Just kind of got some bad breaks with lies and really just didn't have any bounces go my way. So I guess to shoot what I did was pretty good."

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Haas and Waldorf share lead after first round


Haas and Waldorf share lead after first round











PGA.COM May 24, 2013 5:08 PM

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Jay Haas and Duffy Waldorf matched 66s on Thursday at Bellerive.(Getty Images)


ST. LOUIS -- Jay Haas is familiar with Bellerive Country Club -- and it showed in the first round of the Senior PGA Championship.

Haas, who grew up in nearby Belleville, Ill., and Duffy Waldorf shared the lead Thursday, shooting 5-under 66 in breezy, cool conditions.

The 59-year-old Haas, the winner of the senior golf's most prestigious major championship in 2006 and 2008, had a bogey-free round. The 50-year-old Waldorf had six birdies and one bogey.

"I didn't expect it going out," Haas said about shooting a low round. "I wasn't very sharp today, but managed to ... my misses were in the correct spots and I took advantage of a few good iron shots and just kind of kept it between the ditches, I guess you would say. But I'm very, very pleased."

Haas has 16 Champions Tour victories after winning nine times on the PGA Tour.

Waldorf is winless in 11 career starts on the 50-and-over tour after winning four times on the PGA Tour.

"Tee to green, it was a very good day," Waldorf said. "All in all, I hit the ball really well. I really liked my iron play. I had quite a few birdie putts. I didn't make them all so I feel like I still had some more out there."

Sonny Skinner, the PGA head professional at River Pointe Golf Club in Albany, Ga., was a stroke back along with Japan's Kiyoshi Murota.

"I'm not going to adjust my goals because I did have a good day today," Skinner said. "My main goal coming into this tournament was to just try to stay within each shot and each moment. A lot of times when you're on the outside looking into a big stage like the Champions Tour, it's real easy to get excited and your eyes wandering all over the place at how wonderful it is.

"You lose sight of the fact that, `Hey, I got to play golf.'"


Australia's Peter Senior and Taiwan's Chien-Soon Lu shot 68, and Tom Watson, a two-time Senior PGA champion, was another stroke back in a 12-player group that included Kenny Perry, Fred Funk, Rocco Mediate, Russ Cochran, Dan Forsman, Gil Morgan and Bill Glasson.

Defending champion Roger Chapman opened with a 72. Peter Jacobsen, the 2004 U.S. Senior Open winner at Bellerive, had a 75.

The temperature hovered in the low to mid-60s under overcast conditions. A light but steady rain fell three times in the afternoon, with each shower lasting less than 30 minutes.

Haas finished third in the 2004 U.S. Senior Open at Bellerive. He said he has played about 30 rounds at the country club.

"I'm certainly very excited about shooting 5 under here," Haas said. "Probably my lowest score ever at Bellerive, no matter what age I was."

His uncle, Bob Goalby, the 1968 Masters winner who stills lives in Belleville, followed him on the back nine holes.

"I think he was happy for me," said Haas, who was going to have dinner with Goalby and other family members. "He'll try and get over when he can. The last time he walked nine holes, I don't know when that was."

Haas made his way around the course with a balky back that he said left him in "a little bit" of pain.

Waldorf finished ninth in the 1992 PGA Championship at Bellerive.

Murota had six birdies and a double bogey. Skinner, a two-time winner on what is now the Web.com Tour, had six birdies and two bogeys and hit all 14 fairways in regulation.

DIVOTS: Brian Fogt, the PGA director of instruction at Bellerive Country Club, led off the tournament by hitting the first tee shot. ... The field includes 34 international players representing an event-record 18 countries. France's Marc Farry, who earned a berth when David Frost withdrew, pushed the country total to the record. England leads with seven entrants, followed by Japan (4) and Australia (3). ... The PGA Championship will be held at Bellerive in 2018.

Senior PGA Championship: Thursday notebook


Senior PGA Championship: Thursday notebook












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Paul Trittler is among the eight-player St. Louis contingent this week.(Montana Pritchard/The PGA of America)

PGA.COM May 24, 2013 6:46 PM


ST. LOUIS -- Sonny Skinner drove 12 hours from his home in Sylvester, Ga., to Bellerive Country Club, just outside St. Louis, a journey that he said allowed him time to "clear the mind" while preparing for the 74th Senior PGA Championship presented by KitchenAid.

"You listen to a lot of good music, and it allows you to refocus when you drive those 12 hours," said Skinner, who attended his daughter's high school graduation last Sunday and passed on a late search for a flight. "My game wasn't very good coming in here. I didn't play for seven straight days. That was on purpose, because my game felt sour and flat, and I was not confident."

The truth is Skinner's game was mostly sweet in Thursday's opening round of the most historic and prestigious event in senior golf. The 52-year-old PGA head professional at River Pointe Golf Club in Albany, Ga., posted a 4-under-par 67, featuring six birdies and a pair of bogeys.

It was the best first-round score by a PGA club professional in the Championship since 2003, when Mike San Filippo of Hobe Sound, Fla., turned in a 68. Skinner's performance, coming in his third appearance in the Championship, led a delegation of 42 PGA club professionals on a cool, overcast day that featured periodic drizzle in the afternoon.

It also left Skinner one shot out of the lead, shared by two-time Senior PGA Champion Jay Haas and Duffy Waldorf, who is making his Championship debut.

Mark Mielke, PGA head professional at Mill River Club in Oyster Bay, N.Y., had a 69 in his Championship debut. PGA Life Member San Filippo, playing in his 10th Championship; Jeff Coston of Blaine, Wash.; and Bob Gaus of St. Louis, a PGA teaching professional at Tower Tee Golf Center, each were at 71.

"It's a golf course that rewards you for hitting it in the fairway," said Skinner, the reigning Senior PGA Professional Player of the Year, who hit all 14 fairways Thursday. "That's always been part of my game. Round to round, I've relied upon being able to put it in play."

Skinner salvaged his round with a spectacular par-saving pitch on the 195-yard, par-3 sixth hole. Ranked the second-most difficult hole in the opening round, Skinner hit a 4-iron up into a plugged lie in the left greenside bunker and blasted from there across the green and down a bank.

He then chipped in from 40 yards out.

"I was just trying to make bogey and then I rolled it into the hole for a 3," Skinner said.

Beginning his round on the back nine, Skinner birdied 15, 17, 18, 1, 3 and 4, offsetting bogeys on the 11th and 16th holes.

Skinner's Championship trip was enhanced when his longtime caddie, Paul Yates, put him in touch with PGA Professional Craig Bollman of Edwardsville, Ill., who not only caddied but also has allowed Skinner to stay the week at his home some 50 minutes from Bellerive's gates.

"Paul called me a month ago and said Sonny is coming to St. Louis, and needs help, and asked if I would help him out? I said, 'Sure,' " said Bollman, a PGA teaching professional at GolfTEC-Des Peres in St. Louis, who is making his debut caddying in a tournament. "So, my family welcomed him in and he's an awesome guy."

Bollman said that he and Skinner exchanged several text messages before Skinner arrived Monday night.

"Sonny got in around 7:30, and I had to go to my son's baseball game," said Bollman. "I walked him into the kitchen, said, 'There's dinner, and see you tomorrow.' It's very easy to caddie for Sonny and it was a really great day for me today, too."

Bellerive reminded Mielke, 50, of several New York courses within the Metropolitan PGA Section, which added to his comfort level.

"The golf course set-up is almost exactly like what we play," said Mielke. "There are six tough holes here. I said going in, if I could just par those six holes and maybe make some birdies on some of the other ones, it might be all right."

Mielke had only two pars over his first 10 holes, a string that went birdie-bogey-par-birdie-par-bogey-birdie-birdie-bogey-bogey. He finished with birdies on Nos. 14 and 17.

A FEW TIDBITS ABOUT HAAS'S ROUND: Two-time Senior PGA Champion Jay Haas, who leads after the first round of the 74th Senior PGA Championship presented by KitchenAid, was one of only two players in the field not to make a bogey today at Bellerive Country Club. He had five birdies and shot 66. (Mark Wiebe also did not make a bogey en route to a 1-under-par 70.)

Other highlights of Haas's opening round: • He hit 10 of 14 Fairways • He hit 14 of 18 Greens in Regulation • Haas's uncle, 1968 Masters Champion Bob Goalby, followed Haas on the back nine today. Goalby, 84, played in the 1965 U.S. Open at Bellerive Country Club.

Haas, who was born in St. Louis and grew up in nearby Belleville, Ill., estimates that he has played Bellerive about 30 times. He tied for 62nd in the 1992 PGA Championship at Bellerive and tied for third here in the 2004 U.S. Senior Open.

AND A FEW NOTES ABOUT WALDORF'S DAY: Duffy Waldorf made a strong first impression, shooting 66 today and tying for the lead in his inaugural appearance in the Senior PGA Championship presented by KitchenAid. Starting his round on the 10th hole, Waldorf made three birdies on the back nine, and closed with consecutive birdies on Nos. 7 and 8.

Other highlights of Waldorf's opening round: • He hit 10 of 14 Fairways • He hit 16 of 18 Greens in Regulation • He holed out of a greenside bunker for birdie on the par-3 16th hole

SENIOR NO STRANGER: Peter Senior of Australia, who shot 3-under-par 68 today, is certainly familiar with being near the top of the leaderboard at the Senior PGA Championship presented by Kitchen Aid. In his three previous appearances in the Championship, Senior finished tied for 11th (in 2010), tied for fifth (2011) and tied for fourth (2012).

DÉJÀ VU FOR MUROTA?: Kiyoshi Murota of Japan, tied for third after shooting 67 today, also knows what it's like to come close to capturing the Alfred S. Bourne Trophy. In the 2011 Championship at Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, Ky., Murota led after each of the first two rounds, was tied for the lead after the third round, and finished third alone, one shot behind Tom Watson and David Eger (Watson won the Championship in a playoff).

Murato was at 4-under par today, even though he made double-bogey 5 on the par-3 sixth hole.


SKINNER'S HOT STREAK: Sonny Skinner hit all 14 Fairways today and parlayed that consistency into a string of good scores. Skinner, a PGA Club Professional from Sylvester, Ga., made six birdies over a span of eight holes (from No. 15 through No. 4), then parred in for 67, one stroke back of Jay Haas and Duffy Waldorf.

Skinner was the low PGA Club Professional in the 2011 Senior PGA Championship presented by KitchenAid, at Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, Ky.

ST. LOUIS CONNECTIONS: Eight players in the field this week have ties to the St. Louis area. Jay Haas, born in St. Louis and raised in Belleville, Ill., leads the Championship after a 66. St. Louis natives Jay Delsing and Bob Gaus, each making their Championship debuts, came in with a 70 and 71, respectively.

PGA Club Professional JC Anderson, born in Springfield, Ill., and a resident of O'Fallon, Mo., had 76. Former Senior PGA Champion Tom Wargo of Centralia, Ill., the oldest member of the field at age 70, shot 77.

Paul Trittler, a native of St. Louis and PGA director of instruction at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Ariz., had 73. Former Bellerive Country Club PGA Head Professional Jerry Tucker of Stuart, Fla., a native of Carbondale, Ill., had 76, while Bellerive PGA Director of Instruction Brian Fogt, who had the honor of hitting the first tee shot of the Championship, struggled to an 81.

UNDER PAR, AT PAR: There were 29 players who broke par today and 45 who finished at even-par 71 or better.

NO. 6 WAS A BEAST: A total of 15 double-bogeys (and three other worse scores) were recorded today at the par-3 sixth hole. There were just seven birdies on the 195-yard hole.

BUT 10 WAS TOUGHER: The 10th hole at Bellerive, a 459-yard par-4, was the most difficult hole in the opening round of the Championship. The 10th played to a stroke average of 4.555, and yielded just two birdies. There were 68 bogeys and 10 double bogeys on the hole.

The top-3 toughest holes today: • No. 10, Par 4, 4.555 stroke average • No. 6, Par 3, 3.513 stroke average • No. 5, Par 4, 4.372 stroke average (only four birdies on this hole)

NO. 4 PLAYED THE EASIEST: The par-5 fourth at Bellerive ranked as the easiest hole today, with 72 birdies and just five bogeys. (There were no double bogeys or worse on the hole.) In fact, there were almost as many birdies as pars (79) on the fourth hole.

BACK WAS MUCH TOUGHER: With a stroke average of 36.57 on the par-35 back nine, it played much harder today than the par-36 front nine, which had a 36.72 stroke average.

HAAS PACES SENIOR PGA CHAMPIONS: Tied for the Championship lead, Jay Haas is also out in front of the other Senior PGA Champions in the field. Here are the first-round scores of the other Senior PGA Champions in the field:

Tom Watson (69) Hale Irwin (70) Mike Reid (72) Roger Chapman (72) Michael Allen (73) John Jacobs (73) Tom Wargo (77)

TOUGH START FOR JAKE: Peter Jacobsen, who captured the 2004 U.S. Senior Open here at Bellerive, struggled today with four bogeys on his second nine and shot 75 (4-over par).

LANGER'S TRAVAILS: Bernhard Langer came into the Championship as the only player with multiple victories (two) on the Champions Tour this year and a 68.86 stroke average on that Tour. But instead of a good start in pursuit of his first Championship title, Langer had consecutive triple-bogeys on Nos. 5 and 6, and had to birdie his final hole just to break 80. Langer's 8-over-par 79 today is three shots worse than his previous high score in this Championship.

MIELKE'S ROLLER COASTER: PGA Club Professional Mark Mielke of East Norwich, N.Y., had only two pars over his first 10 holes. Starting on No. 1, he went birdie-bogey-par-birdie-par-bogey-birdie-birdie-bogey-bogey. Mielke then birdied Nos. 14 and 17 to shoot 2-under-par 69.

SAME FOR FORSMAN: Over his first six holes today, Dan Forsman also found par to be elusive. He bogeyed the first hole, then had three straight birdies, followed by two consecutive bogeys. Forsman ended the round hitting 13 of 14 Fairways and shooting 2-under-par 69.

FAMILIAR FINISH FOR FORSMAN AND COCHRAN: Dan Forsman and Russ Cochran played in the same grouping today and shot the same score (69). They also finished tied for seventh place in the 1992 PGA Championship at Bellerive Country Club.

CHAPMAN BEGINS DEFENSE: Defending Senior PGA Champion Roger Chapman of England, made just one birdie in the opening round (at the par-5 eighth hole) and shot 1-over-par 72.

ELKINGTON WITHDRAWS BEFORE ROUND: Steve Elkington, the 1995 PGA Champion, was forced to withdraw before the start of the round today, due to a migraine headache.

HUSTON WITHDRAWS MID-ROUND: John Huston, a seven-time winner on the PGA Tour, withdrew today because of back problems. Huston played the front in 7-over-par 43 before having to stop.

MARATHON MEN: Bobby Wadkins and Bob Gilder are celebrating their own endurance marks this week. Wadkins, a four-time winner on the Champions Tour, is competing in the 1,000th combined start of his career between the PGA Tour and the Champions Tour.

Wadkins shot 2-over-par 73 today.

Gilder, a 10-time Champions Tour winner, is competing in his 59th consecutive major championship on the Champions Tour. He shot 77 today.

KITCHENAID KORNER FOR FRIDAY: On Friday at 1 p.m., KitchenAid will welcome Chef Cat Cora to the KitchenAid Fairway Club (adjacent to No. 10 fairway). Cora is a co-host of the Bravo series Around the World in 80 Plates and is also known for her role as an "Iron Chef" on the Food Network series.

At 2:30 p.m., KitchenAid welcomes local St. Louis Chef Kevin Storm of Bellerive Country Club, for a demonstration at the KitchenAid Fairway Club.
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