Friday, August 30, 2013

Scott and Furyk share first-round lead at 65


Scott and Furyk share first-round lead at 65

PGA.COM August 8, 2013







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Adam Scott shot a 5-under 30 on the front nine en route to his first-round 65. (Getty Images)


By Doug Frguson, Associated Press

ROCHESTER, N.Y. -- With every major, Adam Scott is making a convincing case that he isn't satisfied with just a green jacket.

Scott ran off five straight birdies early in his round at soft and vulnerable Oak Hill, and finished with a 15-foot par for a 5-under 65 that gave him a share of the lead Thursday with Jim Furyk in the PGA Championship.

Scott finally became a major champion at Augusta National in April when he won a playoff at the Masters. Just three weeks ago, he had the lead on the back nine at Muirfield in the British Open until he made four bogeys to fall back. In the last major of the year, Scott at times looked unstoppable.

His five straight birdies quickly put him atop the leaderboard with Furyk, and after a 71-minute delay when storms moved into the area, Scott added a sixth birdie on the par-3 15th to reach 6 under. He was on pace to tie the major championship record at Oak Hill until a three-putt bogey on the 16th.

"Just got on a bit of a roll and hit a few shots close," Scott said. "I didn't have too much putting to do. You've got to take advantage when it happens, because it doesn't happen too much in the majors. Nothing to complain about in 65."

There were hardly any complaints on Oak Hill, a course that has yielded only 10 72-hole scores under par in five previous majors. It's only Thursday, and the players felt as if they got off easy. Rain overnight and humid conditions kept the course soft, and birdies were dropping at an alarming pace.

Except for Tiger Woods.

The world's No. 1 player made only two birdies despite playing in the still of the morning, and he watched his round fall apart with a bogey on par-5 fourth and a double bogey on his final hole when his flop shot out of a deep rough floated into a bunker. Woods had a 71, not a bad start at Oak Hill, except on this day.

There were 35 rounds under par, compared with only a dozen rounds in the 60s when the PGA Championship was here 10 years ago.

"The round realistically could have been under par easily," Woods said.


Furyk, who won his lone major at the U.S. Open in 2003 at Olympia Fields, has gone nearly three years since his last win at the Tour Championship to capture the FedExCup and win PGA Tour player of the year. Still fresh are the four close calls from a year ago, including the U.S. Open.

He was as steady as Scott, rarely putting himself in trouble until the end of the round. Furyk missed the fairway to the right and had to pitch out because of thick rough and trees blocking his way to the green. That led to his only bogey, but still his lowest first-round score in 19 appearances at the PGA Championship.

"Usually disappointed with ending the day on a bogey," Furyk said. "But you know, 65, PGA, is not so bad."

David Hearn of Canada, an alternate until a week ago, had a 66 in the morning. Also at 66 was Lee Westwood, who had his best score ever in the PGA Championship and offered evidence that there was no hangover from losing a 54-hole lead in the British Open last month.

There were no record scores at Oak Hill despite the soft conditions, just a lot of low rounds.

"If you don't hit it in the fairways, then you won't score well," Westwood said. "These guys are good. There are a lot of good players playing in the tournament. Somebody is going to hit it straight, and somebody is going to shoot a good score."

Even Rory McIlroy got in on the act. The defending champion, at the end of a major season that has been a major disappointment, came out firing with three birdies on the opening four holes and made the turn in 32 until back-to-back bogeys. He wound up with a 69.

A resurgent Paul Casey was in the group at 67, while U.S. Open champion Justin Rose, British Open runner-up Henrik Stenson and the ageless Miguel Angel Jimenez were among 11 players at 68.

British Open champion Phil Mickelson wound up with the same score as Woods, only they arrived at 71 on vastly different roads. Woods had only two birdies. Mickelson shot 71 despite two double bogeys. On the par-5 fourth hole, he hooked his tee shot out-of-bounds and nearly lost the next tee shot in the same place. And on the closing hole, Mickelson looked as if he was back at Winged Foot -- wild left off the tees, a reckless attempt into the trees and another double bogey.

He headed straight to the practice range, even summoning coach Butch Harmon down from the Sky Sports television booth.

Scott hasn't won since the Masters, though he has shown full control of his swing. He looks at these next 10 years as a chance to win more majors and establish himself as a major force in his generation.

"I put a lot into my game the last two years with a focus on the big tournaments," Scott said. "Everyone around me has had the same focus, as well. We come here to do business."

Scott, Furyk tied for lead at Oak Hill


Scott, Furyk tied for lead at Oak Hill


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DOUG FERGUSON (AP Golf Writer) August 8, 2013AP - Sports








PITTSFORD, N.Y. (AP) -- Adam Scott began the final major of the year with a tee shot deep into the trees. He ended the opening round of the PGA Championship by having to gouge out of deep rough. It was the golf in between that was some of the best he has ever played, even for an Australian with a green jacket.

Showing that he's not satisfied as only being a Masters champion, Scott ran off five straight birdies early in his round Thursday on soft and vulnerable Oak Hill, and a 15-foot par putt at the end gave him a 5-under 65 and a share of the lead with Jim Furyk.

''Probably the best run I've ever had,'' Scott said of his five straight birdies. ''I just hit really nice shots and didn't leave myself too much work. You have to take advantage of that if you're feeling that. It was a dream start after kind of a nervous first couple of holes.''

It felt like an easy start to so many others.

Oak Hill has such a strong reputation that it has yielded only 10 scores under par over 72 holes in five previous major championships. The last time the PGA Championship was held on this Donald Ross design in 2003, there were only 12 rounds under par on the first day.


But with overnight rain, humid conditions and a 71-minute delay for storms in the afternoon, Thursday might be as easy as it gets. Scott and Furyk had plenty of company, two of 35 players who broke par.

Tiger Woods was not among them.

The world's No. 1 player made only two birdies despite playing in the still of the morning, and he watched his round fall apart with a bogey on par-5 fourth and a double bogey on his final hole when his flop shot out of a deep rough floated into a bunker. Woods had a 71, not a bad start at Oak Hill, except on this day.

''The round realistically could have been under par easily,'' Woods said.

Furyk, who won his lone major at the U.S. Open in 2003 at Olympia Fields, has gone nearly three years since his last win at the Tour Championship to capture the FedEx Cup and win PGA Tour player of the year. Still fresh are the four close calls from a year ago, including the U.S. Open.
View gallery."
Tiger Woods waves after a par on the 17th hole during the first round of the PGA Championship golf t …


He was as steady as Scott, rarely putting himself in trouble until the end of the round. Furyk missed the fairway to the right and had to pitch out because of thick rough and trees blocking his way to the green. That led to his only bogey, but still his lowest first-round score in 19 appearances at the PGA Championship.

''Usually disappointed with ending the day on a bogey,'' Furyk said. ''But you know, 65, PGA, is not so bad.''

David Hearn of Canada, an alternate until a week ago, had a 66 in the morning. Also at 66 was Lee Westwood, who had his best score ever in the PGA and offered evidence that there was no hangover from losing a 54-hole lead in theBritish Open last month.

There were no record scores at Oak Hill despite the soft conditions, just a lot of low rounds.

''If you don't hit it in the fairways, then you won't score well,'' Westwood said. ''These guys are good. There are a lot of good players playing in the tournament. Somebody is going to hit it straight, and somebody is going to shoot a good score.''
View gallery."
Tiger Woods reacts to his tee shot on the 17th hole during the first round of the PGA Championship g …


Scott certainly didn't start out that way. He had to pitch out from the trees on No. 1, but managed to get up-and-down from about 85 yards in front of the green, and after two more pars, he began his big run of birdies.

''Just got on a bit of a roll and hit a few shots close,'' Scottsaid. ''I didn't have too much putting to do. You've got to take advantage when it happens, because it doesn't happen too much in the majors. Nothing to complain about in 65.''

He felt similar to the opening round at Royal Lytham & St. Annes last year in the British Open, when he flirted with a 63 and had to settle for a course record-tying 64. Scott was on pace to tie the Oak Hill record for majors when he birdied the 14th, but he three-putted two holes later for bogey and was pleased to walk away with par on the 18th.

''I felt good out there today,'' he said. ''I felt like I could swing freely and I was hitting all the shots that I wanted to hit. When you get something going for you in a major, sometimes you have got to be not afraid to get out of your own way and let go. I did that at Lytham, and I did that here for 10 or 11 holes.''

Just last month at Muirfield, the 31-year-old Australian had the outright lead on the back nine in the British Open until he made four straight bogeys and couldn't keep up with Phil Mickelson and his great finish. Even so, it was evident that Scott was serious about adding more majors to that green jacket he won at Augusta National in April.
View gallery."
Tiger Woods watches his tee shot on the 16th hole during the first round of the PGA Championship gol …


''I put a lot into my game the last two years with a focus on the big tournaments,'' Scott said. ''Everyone around me has had the same focus, as well. We come here to do business.''

Even Rory McIlroy got in on the act. The defending champion, at the end of a major season that has been a major disappointment, came out firing with three birdies on the opening four holes and made the turn in 32 until back-to-back bogeys. He wound up with a 69.

A resurgent Paul Casey was in the group at 67, while U.S. Open champion Justin Rose, British Open runner-up Henrik Stenson and the ageless Miguel Angel Jimenez were among 11 players at 68.

Mickelson wound up with the same score as Woods, only they arrived at 71 much differently. Woods had only two birdies. Mickelson shot 71 despite two double bogeys, including one on the 18th hole. On the par-5 fourth hole, he hooked his tee shot out-of-bounds and nearly lost the next tee shot in the same place.

''The first four holes was like a shock to my system,'' Mickelson said. ''Hitting it out-of-bounds on 4 ... out-of-bounds is not even in play. So I got off to a terrible start. I was actually under par for a little while, but that took a lot of fight. And unfortunately, I'm in a position where if I hit a low round tomorrow, I can get back in it.''
View gallery."
Robert Garrigus watches his tee shot on the fourth hole during the first round of the PGA Championsh …


He headed straight to the practice range, even summoning coach Butch Harmon down from the Sky Sports television booth.

Asked when he finished his work if he was worried about his game, Mickelson replied, ''Not now. I was.''

Phil Mickelson plays into the night to iron out flaws


Phil Mickelson plays into the night to iron out flaws

Eric Adelson August 8, 2013Yahoo! Sports











Phil Mickelson reacts to his putt on the 17th green during Round 1 of the PGA Championship. (USAT Sports)ROCHESTER, N.Y. – This was a Phil Mickelson you almost never see.



The happy swashbuckler who greets everyone with a grin after every round wordlessly hurried through a throng of reporters and well-wishers and sprinted up the stairs of a bridge. He lifted up his cap and pushed his hand through his hair as he went, nervously walking toward a nearly vacant driving range. The press would have to wait. The autographs would have to wait.

Lefty was in shock.

For more than 30 minutes he stayed out there on the range at Oak Hill, ironing out the flaws of a 1-over 71 that left him six strokes back after Round 1 of the PGA Championship. Daylight vanished, a light rain came, course attendants pulled the placards lined up behind him, swing coach Butch Harmon came and loosened his tie, and still Mickelson fired shot after shot into the darkness.

The rain got heavier, his shirt clinging to him, and still he blasted those iron shots and watched to make sure each one landed where he wanted. He hunched over, he put a hand on his left hip, he twisted and stretched, he lined up two wedges to train his stance. But most of all he stared straight into the ground.

What happened out there?




Phil Mickelson practices on the range after shooting a 1-over 71. (Yahoo! Sports)Mickelson would seem to be the least troubled golfer on the planet. He nearly won the U.S. Open with four days of beautiful play. He shot one of the best final rounds in history in Scotland,winning the Open Championship and his first Claret Jug. He's said again and again how he's playing the best golf of his life, at age 43.



And yet on this first-round Thursday at the PGA Championship, Mickelson was fighting with a game he did not recognize.

He fell to 3-over after four holes, including an unsightly 7 on a birdie hole, and all the ease of the summer had somehow evaporated. He also lost a shot out of bounds.

"The first four holes," he said, "was like a shock to my system."

Play was suspended due to weather, and Mickelson summoned Harmon to the range. That was about as rare as the post-round practice session.

He fought to bring his score back to even par, and then to 1-under, and to the rest of the world it looked like more Mickelson magic. To him, though, well, he couldn't quite understand why something felt off.

[Related: Phil Mickelson goes casual before first round of PGA]

And it was way off on the final hole. He yanked his last drive way left of the 18th fairway, all but guaranteeing himself a bogey or worse.

Mickelson strode quickly to the rope line and ducked under. He was greeted by fans who swarmed him like family. "Big trees here in Rochester, Phil!" one yelled. People laughed and sipped their Genesee beer.

He had a narrow path to the pin, under a long ceiling of low-slung branches. The rational play was to chip out, but he looked that direction and shook his head no. He was going for it. He took out a nine-iron, glanced up at a tiny gap in the trees, and the crowd went silent. Was he really doing this?

His shot screamed into the brush, but too high. THWACK. The ball dropped straight down. A 12-year-old boy from Massachusetts smiled as all this happened right in front of him, but Mickelson was quickly addressing the ball again.

"Yardage, please!" he yelled.

Silence.

"Never mind, I don't need the yardage."

He chipped out into the fairway, and fans wondered aloud why he didn't do that the first time. He would later reason that he'd have to go backwards out of the forest to go forward to the green. He ended up going backwards on the scorecard.

Mickelson finished the hole with a double bogey to fall to 1-over on the day – six shots back of leaders Adam Scott and Jim Furyk. After he putted out, he stood off the green and looked down at the ground while his partners readied to finish.

[Related: Adam Scott, Jim Furyk take early lead at Oak Hill | Photos]

And then he was off to the range, needing some answers. He emptied one bucket and started on another. Finally he told Harmon, "I see it now." He would explain that he was "working on the exact opposite of what I needed to do." He replaced his iron in his bag and got out his driver, which he had hardly used on Thursday and would hardly need for the rest of the tournament. This didn't seem to be about the PGA Championship at all. This was about making sure something dramatic hadn't changed.

It was raining hard now, and still Mickelson worked, replacing his driver and bringing out a fairway wood. Still not done. Still not sure.

It was 8:15 when Mickelson put the last club away, took a deep breath, and said, "OK." He faced the press as he always does. Then he signed autographs as he always does.

"Even when I was making birdies," he said, "it still didn't feel great." Asked if he was worried about his game, he quipped: "Not now, but I was."

Yet there was still a sense of hurry. Mickelson seemed to want to get to Friday, if only to make sure everything was OK. "Tomorrow will be the big day for me," he said.

It's hard to say a second round that may mean nothing on the leaderboard could mean so much in a man's career, but yes, it feels that way now.

Phil Mickelson spent the summer finding his best game. On Thursday, for a few hours, he stared headlong into the fear that he'd lost it again.

‘Pretty good" prep helps Scott tie for Day 1 lead


‘Pretty good" prep helps Scott tie for Day 1 lead

PGA.COM August 8, 2013







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Adam Scott has finished in the top 10 in six of his last 11 majors, and got off to another strong start …


By T.J. Auclair, PGA.com Interactive Producer

ROCHESTER, N.Y. - On Tuesday morning, two days before the start of the 95th PGA Championship, Adam Scott said that he felt his best golf was ahead of him.

Just in case anyone doubted the Masters champion's words, Scott went out and fired a 5-under 65 at Oak Hill Country Club on Thursday to take a share of the first-round lead with Jim Furyk.

"That's probably the best run I've ever had and I just hit really nice shots and didn't leave myself too much work," Scott said. "You have to take advantage of that if you are feeling that and I was through the turn there. It was a dream start after kind of a nervous first couple of holes."

After a shaky first hole where he made an incredible par after chipping out of the trees because of an errant tee shot, Scott rolled off five consecutive birdies beginning on the fourth hole, en route to an outward nine of 5-under 30.

"There were a couple of highlights of the day for me," he said. "Obviously a poor tee shot on one and in trouble right from the start to make a bit of a curler on the first to settle down is very nice."

A rain delay that lasted 1 hour and 10 minutes seemed to be the only thing that could slow Scott down on Thursday - and even that didn't do much. Scott and playing partners Phil Mickelson and Justin Rose were through 10 holes when play was halted. When play restarted, the trio faced the 226-yard, par-4 11th hole.

Scott misfired his tee shot with a 4-iron, but converted a magnificent up-and-down from the greenside rough to keep his flawless card intact.


"I don't think it cost me any shots," Scott said. "I managed to have a good up and down on that 11th hole from left. You know, that settled me down again and got me back in rhythm."

Scott picked up one more birdie at the short, 326-yard, par-4 14th hole, but gave the shot back at No. 16 with a three-putt bogey.

"It was disappointing to drop one, especially on 16, but that can happen on these tough courses," he said. "It's hard to go bogey free."

For good measure, Scott saved his best par of the day for the long finishing hole. After missing the fairway with his tee shot, Scott was forced to punch out back into the fairway and managed to get up and down to join Furyk at 5 under.

"After playing so well, I was starting to feel it slip coming in on the last three holes," Scott said. "And then to make one on 18 and get something out of the round that I felt could have been special was a nice feeling. I did play very well today and it's always nice to have 65 to show for that."

Prior to this week, Scott has finished in the top 10 in six of the last 11 majors played. Along with the Masters win in April, Scott has also had two runner-up finishes (the 2011 Masters and 2012 Open Championship) and a third-place showing a few weeks ago at the Open.

Based on results alone, one would have to think Scott is better prepared for major than ever before.

"I think I did a pretty good job of it," Scott said. "I think the results are showing that I have got something figured out. I don't know if you ever have it all figured out. I like what I'm doing, so I am just going to keep doing it."

It will be a quick turnaround after a long day for Scott. He tees off in the second round with Rose and Mickelson at 8:35 a.m. Friday.

Mickelson shoots 71 in roller-coaster first round


Mickelson shoots 71 in roller-coaster first round

PGA.COM August 8, 2013







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“Even when I was making birdies, it didn"t feel good," said Phil Mickelson of his first trip around …


By Stan Awtrey, PGA.com Contributor

ROCHESTER, N.Y. - For the first hour of his 95th PGA Championship, it looked like the Oak Hill was about to witness the next installment of Phil Mickelson's Excellent Adventure. Then at the end of the day, there was just enough time for the craziness to return.

Mickelson, fresh from his victory at the Open Championship, was 3 over par after only two holes and his round could have easily gone askew. He ended up saving it, only to see it go awry at the end.

Lefty settled down after the bad start, tightened up his swing and made four straight birdies. That gave him some momentum, which led to four birdies over the next six holes to overcome the poor start, and he scratched his way back to 1 under.

"I fought hard," Mickelson said. "Even when I was making birdies, it didn't feel good. I was just trying to fight and keep it in play."

He succeeded - all the way to the 18th hole. Mickelson sprayed his tee shot way left, leaving him 224 yards from the hole. Rather than take the safe play, he tried a hero shot through a narrow opening of oak trees. He wound up blocked again, and this time punched to safety. The result was his second double bogey of the day, which dropped him to 1-over 71.

"I would have to go backwards to get to the fairway," Mickelson said. "I couldn't go straight outside. I couldn't go forward. So I had to pitch out backwards, which would have left me on a downhill lie with a 4-iron."

He tried to shoot the gap, which would have left him 100 yards. Instead, it hit a tree, which led to the double.


"I was fighting for 5 from the start and ended up making a 6, so it's not like I lost too much," he said.

It was the first time Mickelson had lost his footing since the front nine, when it appeared he might play himself out of the picture early.

"The first four holes was like a shock to my system," Mickelson said.

His bogey at the par-3 third hole stemmed from a long tee shot that rolled down the hill and settled into the rough. Mickelson chipped it to 25 feet, but didn't make the putt.

His woes continued on the next hole. He snapped his tee shot to the right, and it hit hard against the road and careened over a fence and out of bounds. Mickelson reloaded and wound up with a double bogey.

"Out of bounds is not even in play, hit that far right," Mickelson said. "And to make double on a par 5, that's the only one we can get to that's a birdie hole ... that's awful."

After the round, he was so frustrated that he went straight to the range to hit balls and try to get things straightened out for Friday.

"I've got to come out hot tomorrow and get a little more aggressive and attack and try to shoot something in the mid-to-low 60s to get back in it for the weekend," he said.

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Glance at the PGA Championship

Glance at the PGA Championship

AP - Sports
PITTSFORD, N.Y. (AP) -- A glance at Sunday's final round of the PGA Championship at 7,163-yard, par-70 Oak Hill Country Club (East Course):
Leading: Jason Dufner, who shot 68 for a 10-under 270 total.
Runner-up: Jim Furyk, who started the round as the leader at 9 under and shot 71, finishing at 272.
Tiger watch: Tiger Woods shot an even-par 70 and finished at 4 over, tied for 40th.
Key statistic: Twenty-one players finished under par. In five previous majors at Oak Hill, only nine players have finished in the red (Jack Nicklaus twice).
Noteable: The win should mean Dufner will be remembered for more than that memorable picture of him slumped against the wall of an elementary school during a charity appearance - arms stiffly at his side, eyes glazed over - which led to the craze known as ''Dufnering.''
Quotable: ''I put together four good rounds last week. Unfortunately, it wasn't this week.'' Woods, who won the PGA Tour event at Bridgestone leading up to the PGA.

Emma Talley wins US Women's Amateur

Emma Talley wins US Women's Amateur

AP - Sports
Emma Talley wins US Women's Amateur
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Alabama's Emma Talley holds the Robert Cox Trophy after winning the U.S. Women's Amateur Championship …
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) -- Emma Talley gave the Southeastern Conference something else to shout about.
The rising Alabama sophomore won the U.S. Women's Amateur on Sunday, beat Yueer Cindy Feng 2 and 1 at the Country Club of Charleston.
''Thanks everybody. You were all awesome and 'Roll Tide,''' she told the crowd after closing out Feng on the next-to-last hole in the 36-hole final.
The 19-year-old Talley, from Princeton, Ky., had a ''Big Al'' mascot headcover, the Crimson Tide's script ''A'' logo on her shoes and coach Mic Potter and teammate Stephanie Meadows in the gallery cheering her on throughout the match. Meadow carried a sign, ''Go Emma. Roll Tide,'' throughout the 36 holes.
And Talley needed all the support she could get, squandering a three-up lead early in the afternoon round. But Talley took the lead for good with a birdie on the 10th hole, the 28th of the match, and didn't let Feng back in front.
Talley finished the match when the 17-year-old Feng conceded par on the par-3 17th, then missed a 6-footer for a par that would've sent the match to the 36th hole. She'll bring the winner's medal and her new title back to campus this fall and hopefully make an impact on the school's fanbase, which has its sights set on a third national football crown.
''Football at Alabama is pretty much the biggest thing there is,'' Talley said. ''I do know that I have friends who are Alabama athletes who've been following me and watching on TV.''
Feng was vying to become the first Chinese-born player to win a USGA title.
Talley looked as if she had gained control of the match at the end of the morning 18 after birdies on the 17th and 18th holes left her 1 up at the lunch break. She extended that lead when play resumed with a birdie on the second hole and moved to 3 up on Feng's bogey on the par-4 fourth.
Just as quickly as Talley moved in front, Feng caught up and tied things with birdies on the fifth and sixth holes and Talley's botched chip on No. 7 that led to a bogey.
''The good thing about that was she was making shots,'' Talley said. ''I hardly did anything wrong. I just had to keep playing my game because I knew it wasn't over at all.''
Talley struggled with the putter early on. She three-putted four of her first 10 holes, yet only trailed by a hole.
Talley got things going on perhaps the club's trickiest hole, the par-3 11th reverse redan where Sam Snead once made a 13 in a 1937 tournament. Talley put her tee shot in a bunker right of the green, then deftly chipped to about 10 feet and made the putt to square the match. Feng landed in a bunker on the par 3's other side and needed two shots to make the green.
Feng regained the lead a hole later when her approach to the par-4, 12th finished about 2 feet from the flag for a birdie.
Another stellar bunker shot by Talley to about 6 feet past - she had her the blade of her wedge almost total parallel to the sand - led to another birdie on the 14th hole to again tie the match.
Talley closed the morning round with two straight birdies on the 17th and 18th shots for a 1 up lead at the break. She got inside of Feng's 12-footer on the par-3 17th for a birdie that tied the match.
Talley struck a final time on the 18th, her approaching finishing about 5 feet past for a birdie.
Both Talley and Feng have spots in next year's U.S. Women's Open at Pinehurst, N.C., as long as they don't turn pro. Feng, though, has signed up for LPGA Tour qualifying school with the hope of joining the tour.
Feng was disappointed in losing the match, but satisfied with her play this week. ''I didn't think I would get this far,'' she said. ''This is the biggest tournament in amateur golf. So to get into the finals, it's really a big accomplishment.''
Talley hopes to play professionally one, too. Right now, she can't wait to get back to school. ''I do want to go pro,'' she said. ''But right now, I just love college too much.''

Jim Furyk: Close but no cigar again at the PGA

Jim Furyk: Close but no cigar again at the PGA

AP - Sports
PITTSFORD, N.Y. (AP) -- The pose was a familiar one for Jim Furyk - buckled over as if he'd taken a punch in the gut, barely able to watch the flight of the ball.
The ending felt achingly similar, too.
Denied in another major championship.
Furyk came up two shots shy of Jason Dufner in the PGA Championship, unable to mount any sort of charge coming down the stretch on a warm, sunny Sunday at Oak Hill.
Dufner seized control just before the turn. His playing partner in the final group never punched back, the agony apparent in his mannerisms as all hope slipped away on the last two holes.
''I wish I could've put some heat on him,'' Furyk said. ''I wish I had made him work harder those last two holes.''
Even with a bogey-bogey finish, Dufner redeemed himself for throwing away a four-stroke lead at the 2011 PGA in Atlanta, where he lost to Keegan Bradley in a playoff.
Furyk felt the sting of another close call on the Grand Slam stage.
This was the second time in a little over a year that he has had a second major title in his grasp. Last summer at the Olympic Club in San Francisco, he bogeyed two of the last three holes and finished two strokes behind Webb Simpson.
''I've had some chances to close it out, and I wasn't able to get it done,'' Furyk said. ''But I guess it's days like this that will make the next one sweeter.''
At least he's got a major championship on his resume, though it's been 10 long years since his victory in the U.S. Open at Olympia Fields.
At 43, Furyk still feels as if he has the game to win another.
''I don't look at it as if I lost the golf tournament,'' he said. ''I look at it as I got beat by somebody who played better than me.''
Certainly, Furyk has plenty of experience dealing with disappointment.
There was the 1998 Masters, where he dumped one in the water on the 15th hole and lost to Mark O'Meara by two strokes. That same year at Royal Birkdale, it was the same result in the British Open - O'Meara the winner, Furyk two shots behind. While the 2006 U.S. Open is remembered for Phil Mickelson's epic meltdown on the 72nd hole, Furyk also wound up a shot behind winner Geoff Ogilvy after missing a 5-footer to save par on No. 18. The next year at Oakmont, Furyk was one shot shy again to Angel Cabrera, needing a birdie on the final hole to force a playoff but only managing par.
Now, another runner-up finish.
''On one hand, yeah, I'm disappointed,'' Furyk said. ''But I'm kind of re-energized right now. I'm playing well and enjoy playing golf.''
Certainly, this one was easier to take than what happened at Olympic.
''I felt like I lost that tournament,'' Furyk said. ''I felt like it was my tournament to win, and I wasn't able to do it.
''Today,'' he went on, ''I feel like I got beat. I didn't beat myself, I don't think.''
That said, there were some shots Furyk would like to have back.
Down a stroke heading to the ninth hole, he knocked his drive in the middle of the fairway but got caught between clubs, didn't make a good swing with the 6-iron, and left his ball short and right of the green, in a patch of thick rough. Dufner deftly got up-and-down for a par. Furyk, who thought he might pick up a shot, would up with a bogey and instead lost more ground.
He never got any closer.
While Dufner struggled with his putter, which kept him from extending his lead, Furyk wasted birdie chances at the 13th and 14th. He had wedges to the green but couldn't get it close enough to make the putts. Then, when he absolutely had to have a birdie in the last two holes, he wound up with a pair of bogeys, his chances essentially snuffed out when he needed two swings to escape the rough alongside the 17th green.
Furyk wound up shooting 1-over 71 - his worst round of the week after three straight in the 60s. He finished at 8-under 272, remaining two shots behind Dufner all the way to the end.
''I could have put some serious heat on him,'' Furyk said. ''I wasn't able to do so. I could never close that two-shot gap.''
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Follow Paul Newberry on Twitter at www.twitter.com/pnewberry1963

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Medalists advance to round of 16 at US Amateur

Medalists advance to round of 16 at US Amateur

AP - Sports
BROOKLINE, Mass. (AP) -- Qualifying medalists Neil Raymond and Brady Watt advanced to the round of 16 at the U.S. Amateur Championship at The Country Club.
The pair tied for the lead in stroke play and moved on to play the next round Thursday afternoon. The semifinals are Saturday and 36-hole championship Sunday.
Raymond is bidding to become the first Englishman to win the Amateur since 1911. He defeated Zachary Olsen of Cordova, Tenn., 2 and 1.
Watt, trying to become the second Australian winner, beat Seth Reeves of Duluth, Ga., 3 and 2.
Raymond moves on to face Australian Nathan Holman. Watt faces Canadian Charlie Hughes.
Also advancing was Stanford's Patrick Rodgers of Avon, Ind. He recently was selected to the U.S. Walker Cup team.

Stroud, Fisher share Wyndham lead at 64

Stroud, Fisher share Wyndham lead at 64

PGA: Wyndham Championship-First Round
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AP - Sports
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) -- Chris Stroud doesn't want any rust in his game for the PGA Tour's playoffs. Ross Fisher just wants to make it that far.
Stroud and Fisher each shot 6-under 64 on Thursday to share the first-round lead in the Wyndham Championship.
Eight players - defending champion Sergio Garcia, Matt Jones, Robert Garrigus, Jordan Spieth, Trevor Immelman, Morgan Hoffman, Patrick Reed and Andrew Svoboda - shot 65.
John Senden and Stuart Appleby were among the five players at 66 at the final tournament before golf's postseason begins next week.
It was the highest score for an opening-round leader since the tournament returned to Sedgefield Country Club in 2008.
Stroud had eight birdies during his best round of the year, which came at the Donald Ross-designed course that had vexed him through the previous five years.
''I've even told people I love this golf course,'' Stroud said. ''I have no idea why I don't play well here.''
Stroud could've easily skipped this week and rested up for the playoffs. He arrived at No. 48 on the points list and - unlike so many other players here this week - is assured of a spot in the playoff field.
He has played this tournament every year since the crosstown move but made it to the weekend only once - tying for 73rd last year.
After missing the cut at PGA Championship by a stroke, he said he ''told my caddie, 'I got to play next week.'
''I'm playing too well to go home and just sit and get rusty,'' Stroud said. ''I said I want to get sharp for The Barclays. Let's go to Greensboro, low expectations since I haven't played that great here.''
Those expectations might have been raised after a strong first round in which he made a quick charge up the leaderboard with three straight birdies.
The 31-year-old Texan, who started on the back nine, stuck his tee shot roughly 2 feet from the flagstick on the par-3 seventh and sank that putt to briefly move to 7 under.
He bogeyed the next hole after sending his tee shot into a water hazard, then pushed a 5-foot birdie putt wide on the par-4 ninth and settled for a par. That capped a round that was two strokes better than his six 66s this year, most recently last month at the Sanderson Farms Championship.
Fisher, a four-time winner on the European Tour who's a rookie on the PGA Tour and at No. 162 on the points list, was in the day's final threesome to start on the back nine, and he made his climb late.
''My manager said, 'You've got nothing to lose. Just go out there all guns blazing and see what happens,''' Fisher said. ''I know what I've got to do, and I've just got to go enjoy it, and if it's meant to be, it'll happen. ... I don't want it to end here.''
He eagled the par-5 fifth when he landed his approach shot about 7 feet from the flagstick and sank the ensuing putt, then joined Stroud at 6 under two holes later with a 30-foot birdie putt. He could have overtaken him, but missed a 12-foot birdie putt on No. 8 before pushing a 40-foot birdie putt a few inches wide on No. 9.
Garcia, who claimed a two-stroke victory here last year, hit 17 greens during his bogey-free round. He is trying to become the first player since Sam Snead in the 1950s to win this tournament in consecutive years.
''It was a great round today, but it's only Thursday,'' Garcia said.
The greens were a hot topic of conversation among the players. The putting surfaces are a year more mature after a 2012 conversion from bent grass to Bermuda grass in an attempt to keep them firm and true to Ross' intent.
Stroud said the greens ''roll like pool tables,'' Garrigus compared their speed to those found in major tournaments and Svoboda called them the fastest Bermuda greens he's ever played.
''It's unbelievable, the difference from where they used to be,'' Garrigus said. ''It's very refreshing.''
Some bubble players are trying to play their way into the top 125 on the points list, which would earn them spots at The Barclays next week in New Jersey.
Peter Hanson, who at No. 126 was the consummate player on the bubble, gave himself a good push with a 68. Appleby, at No. 123, is in good shape with his strong round.
But No. 129 Padraig Harrington shot a 73 to put his playoff fate in jeopardy. Immelman, at No. 148, needs a win to make it.
Jones, who is safe this year at No. 51 on the points list, can relate. He finished 126th in 2009 and 127th two years ago after rough weeks at this tournament.
''I've definitely been there before,'' Jones said. ''I know what they're going through. It's not a comfortable feeling.''
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Follow Joedy McCreary on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/joedyap
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