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August 2006 - Posts

  • Short Game Key To Tiger Woods' Success

    Tiger Woods has hit some amazing shots in his career. He drove the green on a 347-yard hole at Doral. He hit 6-iron from 218 yards out of a bunker and over the water in Canada. His most famous shot might be the chip-in at the Masters that made a hairpin turn at the top of the ridge on the 16th green. But he was equally proud of the most boring shot in golf, a special gift for swing coach Hank Haney.

    "He told me, 'Hank, you've never seen me putt good,"' Haney said. "And I told him after this year’s PGA, 'I've seen you putt good now."'

    The one club Woods singled out in his five-shot victory at Medinah was his putter.

    He started his final round with a 10-foot birdie to seize the lead, then pulled away with a pair of 40-foot birdie putts, both of them tumbling into the cup with perfect speed.

    "I just felt like if I got the ball anywhere on the green, I could make it," Woods said. "It's not too often you get days like that, and I happened to have it on the final round of a major championship."

    Oh, he's had that feeling before.

    It lasted an entire summer in 2000, when Woods won three straight majors among his nine PGA Tour victories and shattered the tour record for lowest scoring average with a mark of 68.17.

    That once-in-a-lifetime season has become conversation at water coolers again, especially after Woods won the PGA Championship. It was his third straight victory, two of them majors, by a combined score of 60 under par and margin of 10 strokes.

    Is an encore around the corner?

    Conventional wisdom holds that 2000 was a special year that will never be matched. And as well as Woods has played, three victories over five weeks is hardly enough to draw any conclusions.

    But if he is to repeat his mastery, it starts with the flat stick.

    "Truthfully, he hasn't putted well," Haney said.

    Woods hit the ball so well in 2000 that his favorite shot was a 3-wood that had 2 inches of draw on No. 14 at St. Andrews. What often gets forgotten is that he made just about every putt inside 10 feet.

    Haney has been revamping Woods' swing the last two years, so it might seem self-serving for him to talk about the short game when everyone else is focusing 300 yards away, usually in the trees.

    Then again, Haney gets criticized during hard times and ignored when Woods is winning majors.

    Woods went through the 2004 season with only one PGA Tour victory, and Haney was the guy who messed up his swing. He has won 11 times the last two years, including four of the last eight majors, and now Woods is good enough to win with any swing.

    Remember everyone saying that Woods couldn't win on courses that took the driver out of his hand?

    Now they're saying he can only win on courses where he can leave the driver in his bag.

    "Any time he doesn't have to hit driver, he'll hit it right down the middle," Chris DiMarco said.

    That was either a backhanded compliment or a bad perception, because Woods is capable of missing fairways with anything, as he showed in the second round at Medinah by hitting 3-wood that was headed for trouble until a fan swatted it back into play.

    Haney attributes some of perception to equipment, especially as it relates to driving accuracy.

    Woods used a 43 1/2 -inch driver with a small head and a steel shaft in 2000, and he could hit it about 290 yards in the air. Now his driver is nearly twice as large, with a 45-inch graphite shaft.

    "You could make the argument that his driver is now just a specialty club," Haney said. "It's a club he uses when he can go ahead and bomb it, and there's no reason not to. Let's compare the club he hits 290 yards, which is how far he was hitting his driver in 2000. That's his 3-wood now."

    For all the talk about distance and accuracy, Haney believes the key lies elsewhere.

    It's the short game, stupid.

    And he isn't the only one in Woods' camp who feels that way.

    "I told Tiger at the start of the week, if you don't make a double bogey and you don't three-putt, you'll win this tournament," caddie Steve Williams said Sunday evening.

    He had a three-putt bogey on No. 16 in the third round, and no double bogeys.

    Woods had five three-putts at Pinehurst No. 2 when he finished two shots behind Michael Campbell in the U.S. Open last year, and Haney said he had five more three-putts at Baltusrol when he wound up two shots behind Phil Mickelson in the PGA Championship.

    Haney is a nut with statistics, but two obscure stats he uses to state his case are eye-openers.

    Woods is tied for first in proximity to the hole on the PGA Tour. But he ranks No. 171 in avoiding three-putts, averaging slightly less than three per tournament. Woods is No. 1 in greens hit in regulation, but 159th in average putts per round.

    "If you look at his statistics, it's incredible what he's done this year," Haney said.

    Someone in New Zealand asked Williams earlier this year if he ever thought Woods could repeat a season like 2000, and the answer was somewhere between doubtful and questionable.

    "But with what Hank has taught Tiger, and the way Tiger has taken it in, I don't think we've seen the best of this guy," Williams said. "The best is yet to come, and we're starting to see signs of it. I think Tiger can improve, and you'll see some great results."




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  • Sergio Garcia Returns To Where His Career Was Launched

    By Sunday you will have seen it a thousand times. The jog that turned into a sprint as Sergio Garcia took off down the 16th fairway at Medinah Country Club to follow the flight of a 6-iron gouged from the base of a tree. It was the signature shot of a PGA Championship that held great promise for the future of golf.

    Garcia was 19 years old, a freckled-face kid from Spain in hot pursuit of Tiger Woods.

    That was seven years ago.

    Now turn back the calendar one month to find Garcia dressed head-to-toe in cream yellow at the British Open, still chasing Woods, still trying to win his first major championship.

    The PGA Championship has returned to Medinah for the final major of the year, a reminder for the 26-year-old Garcia of how close he came to taking down Woods, and how far he still has to go.

    "I'm looking forward to seeing my tree," Garcia said with a smile earlier this year. "It's probably halfway down with a big hole in it."

    Indeed, the landscape in golf didn't turn out as most people imagined.

    Woods still rules the game, picking up his 11th major at Royal Liverpool, then his 50th career PGA Tour victory at the Buick Open. But his stiffest challenge comes from guys his age, if not older.

    The youth movement in golf has been idle.

    Only seven players in their 20s are ranked among the top 50 in the world. Even more glaring is that none is a U.S. citizen; the highest-ranked young American is 26-year-old Lucas Glover, who checks in at No. 51. His only PGA Tour victory came last year when he holed out from a bunker on the final hole at Disney.

    The lone major from the kiddie corps among that top 50 was delivered by 29-year-old Geoff Ogilvy of Australia, a U.S. Open title handed to him at Winged Foot when Colin Montgomerie and Phil Mickelson made double-bogey on the last hole.

    Other than Garcia, no one else currently in their 20s has come remotely close to winning a major.

    A few months before Woods won at Medinah, Luke Donald of England captured the NCAA title at Northwestern. Seven years later, he has played on one Ryder Cup team and has two PGA Tour victories, one of those a rain-shortened event held opposite the Tour Championship.

    Three months after Medinah, an 18-year-old amateur named Aaron Baddeley won the Australian Open by holding off Montgomerie and Greg Norman at Royal Sydney. He won his first PGA Tour event earlier this year at Hilton Head.

    The rising star in college in 1999 was Charles Howell III, who won the NCAA title that next summer and broke Woods' scoring record. Howell's goal is to be No. 1, but he still is searching for his second PGA Tour victory.

    Adam Scott is the highest-ranked player in his 20s at No. 6, and he won The Players Championship two years at age 23. But his tie for eighth last month at Hoylake was his best finish in a major.

    About the only thing that hasn't changed is Garcia leading the charge, such as it is.

    Garcia is 0-for-29 in the majors as a pro, although he has 11 finishes in the top 10 and gave himself three good chances at winning. Woods beat him all three times, at Medinah, Bethpage Black ('02 U.S. Open) and last month at Royal Liverpool.

    "Sergio hasn't done it yet, and I'm sure he will soon," Woods said.

    Those words ring hollow to Garcia, who already has retooled his swing and now is struggling with his putter. It is hard to believe seven years have gone by since he sprinted up the 16th fairway at Medinah, doing a scissors kick to leap and glimpse at the elevated green, patting his chest in mock relief.

    Has he lived up to his potential? Or has the excellence of Woods created big expectations of those behind him?

    "I would have loved to do more than I've done," Garcia said. "But it depends who you compare me with. If you compare me with Tiger, that is something out of the ordinary; of course, my career doesn't seem that great. But if you compare me with the other 25-year-old, 26-year-old players, I'm sure pretty much all of them would love to have a career like the one I have."

    Howell, Scott and other young players have used the same gauge. Measure them on their own, and they are doing fine. Stack them up against Woods, and it's not a fair fight.

    Woods remains the only player to qualify for the Tour Championship using only sponsor exemptions. He was the youngest Masters champion (21) and the youngest to complete the career Grand Slam (24). When he won his 50th title at the Buick Open, he was the youngest (30) to reach that milestone by three years.

    Even so, there is a noticeable lack of young major champions.

    Nine players in the 1960s won majors when they were in their 20s, a list that included Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player and Lee Trevino. There were nine major champions in their 20s during the 1970s, 10 during the 1980s and six during the 1990s.

    There have been only four major champions in their 20s more than halfway through this decade -- Woods, Ogilvy, Ben Curtis and David Duval. Curtis was 26 when he won the 2003 British Open, making him the first player younger than Woods to win a major since Woods turned pro in 1996.

    "There's a lot of pressure out here, and Tiger was able to handle it so great," Chris DiMarco said. "There's been a few guys since then, but for the most part, it just takes a while to get your juices going. They used to say your early 30s were the years; now they're saying your early 40s are when the guys are having their best years."

    Woods has been a pied piper at times.

    He played practice rounds with Garcia and Baddeley. He took Howell under his wing at the Presidents Cup in South Africa (they were 2-2 in team matches), and he has been spending more practice time with 24-year-old Sean O'Hair, the rookie of the year in 2005 who has struggled this season.

    "We have young players out here," Woods said. "Right now, we have a Spaniard in Sergio, an Aussie in Adam, a South African in Trevor [Immelman]. It's a global sport more so than any other time."

    More than anything, it's tough to win at any age.

    DiMarco's observation rings true to a point. While guys in their 20s are not challenging in the majors, neither are the older players. Vijay Singh is the only one in his 40s to have won a major this decade.

    "Sometimes people might think it's a lot easier than what it looks," Garcia said. "Everybody can play out there. It doesn't matter how old you are, how good you might be, what you've done in the past. Everybody is trying as hard as they can, and it shows."




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  • Tom Lehman Seeks Ryder Cup Passion

    U.S. Ryder Cup captain Tom Lehman prizes passion above experience in the make-up of his team to take on Europe at the K Club in Ireland next month.

    "I'm not the kind of person that thinks it's everything to have the experience of having played (the Ryder Cup) before," Lehman said during a teleconference on Tuesday.

    "It doesn't take long to get used to that environment. Practice rounds, you're nervous. The first match is always nerve-wracking.

    Lehman said he believed a good player who was mentally strong would be able to handle the pressures of the Ryder Cup, regardless of whether he had played in it or not.

    "There's also an intangible: Just how badly do you want it?" added the 47-year-old American.

    "There are some guys who want it so bad, they would do anything. They would run through a wall.

    "It's tough to weigh that, what it's worth to the team. But when a person is willing to do anything to get on the team, that's worth something."

    While veteran PGA Tour players such as Fred Couples and Davis Love III are likely candidates for his two wildcard picks, Lehman is excited four rookies are in the frame for automatic selection with just three events remaining.

    J.J. Henry, Zach Johnson, Brett Wetterich and John Rollins occupy the final four spots in the Cup standings and would qualify for the team on merit if they retain top-10 positions by the end of the PGA Championship at Medinah on Aug. 20.

    While none of that quartet would have the European team quaking in their boots, Lehman is confident all four would shine in Ireland if given the chance.

    "These guys belong here because they play good golf and I also firmly believe it's a good thing to have a competitive chip on your shoulder," he said.

    "These guys feel they have got something to prove. It's about having pride in what you're doing, believing in what you're doing and taking that as a motivation.

    "I think they are going to come up really big, huge."

    Probably the biggest smile on Lehman's face in recent months was provided by Chris DiMarco, who vaulted to sixth in the Cup standings by finishing second behind Tiger Woods at last month's British Open.

    "Getting Chris back in there is a huge boost to our team, a huge boost," he said. "He's the passionate, outspoken-type guy that you need.

    "He's the guy that's going to be in the locker room chest-bumping and stuff like that. Our team needed that."

    With Woods, Masters champion Phil Mickelson, Jim Furyk, Chad Campbell and David Toms occupying the top five places in the standings, Lehman has every reason to feel satisfied with the likely balance of his team.

    His biggest headache will come on Aug. 21 when he has to name his two captain's picks to complete the 12-man line-up.

    "It's going to be very tough to do that," he said. "It's tough to pick two guys when there's probably six or seven or eight who can probably fit the bill.

    "So I'm not looking forward to that, but that's part of the job. I think our team is looking good, so I'm excited about that."

    The 36th Ryder Cup takes place at the K Club in County Kildare, Ireland from Sept. 22-24.




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  • Big Names Set To Boost Champions Tour

    A new wave of major winners is about to join the senior tours in the United States and Europe, and could dominate over-50s golf for the next decade.

    Nick Faldo, Bernhard Langer, Seve Ballesteros, Nick Price and Mark O'Meara will be able to join the senior ranks next year after turning 50. Sandy Lyle, Ian Woosnam and Hal Sutton are eligible in 2008, and another group of major champions -- Tom Lehman, Bob Tway, Fred Couples, Corey Pavin, Paul Azinger and Mark Calcavecchia -- arrives in 2009.

    "To have these fellows coming along is going to be a great addition, so it's looking very healthy," said Gary Player, the owner of six senior majors at age 70 to go with the nine he won on the regular tour.

    Greg Norman has been playing a few senior events for two years, while Senior British Open champion Loren Roberts and runner-up Eduardo Romero -- who fought out a thrilling final round on Sunday -- are also only in their early 50s.

    Tom Watson, who turns 57 in September, will find it tougher to add to his four senior major wins.

    Faldo, Ballesteros, Price and O'Meara should play in next year's senior majors -- including the Senior British Open at Muirfield, as it follows the British Open at Carnoustie. Langer will have to wait because he doesn't turn 50 until late August.

    Player says the newcomers shouldn't think it will be easy winning senior tournaments.

    "I think [in] the last few years the British Seniors has been an eye-opener for people to realize that the standard of play is not good -- it's phenomenal," the South African said.

    "For a player in this weather, on this links course, shooting 11-under-par, and then Carl Mason and Tom Watson shooting a lower score (17-under) here than I think Watson and Jack Nicklaus did in 1977 (during the British Open,) lower than they did in their prime," he said. "Two weeks ago in America, on a course which was as tough as the Open course, 14-under won it."

    Player believes that the new arrivals have the potential to dominate the tours, but said that they will have to play regularly to make an immediate impact.

    Faldo currently spends much of his time in the United States as a TV commentator, and Ballesteros, whose game has suffered after a series of back problems, has only just returned to competitive golf after a break of almost three years.

    "I think Bernard Langer will do very well," Player said. "He's in great shape. I think Seve will struggle initially and I think Faldo will struggle. The only reason I say that is because they're not putting all their time into golf, whereas Bernhard Langer is putting in a lot of time."

    The involvement of players who were behind Europe's Ryder Cup turnaround in the 1980s has rekindled suggestions that there should be an equivalent competition among the seniors.

    European Seniors Tour Managing Director Alan Stubbs suggested that it would probably be the United States against an international team. That would include Norman of Australia, Argentina's Eduardo Romero and Japan's Joe Ozaki.

    "It's more liable to be a Senior Presidents Cup," Stubbs said. "It brings in more players -- with Romero going well this week and people like Greg. There's a willingness to create this event sooner rather than later."




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