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December 2006 - Posts

  • Ernie Els Sets Up 2007 Comeback

    Ernie Els gave himself an early Christmas present by winning the South African Open. More significantly, he proved he had fully recovered from the knee injury he suffered after the 2005 Open.

    The smooth-swinging South African has not been at his best over the last 12 months and came desperately close to ending a year without a single title for the first time since 1990.

    The professional game has sorely missed a 100-percent fit Els and his three-stroke victory at Humewood Golf Club in Port Elizabeth finally convinced him his recuperating knee can now withstand the rigours of top-level golf.

    By ending a 12-month title drought with his 23rd European Tour success, he is poised to challenge Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and company for top honours in 2007.

    "The SA Open was my last chance to set the record straight," Els said on his official website. "Now I've done that, the relief is immense.

    "I'm not saying this one win changes an entire season, but it changes the way I feel going into the end-of-year break.

    "This was probably the most frustrating season I've had as a pro, but I've put all that behind me. I'm looking forward now to 2007.

    "It's not like I've fallen off the map completely. I haven't been consistent, I know that, but I don't want to read more into it than there is. These problems were caused by my injury.

    "I'm fitter than I ever have been since I came out of the army," added the 37-year-old who is popularly known as the "Big Easy".

    "My knee is strong and the important thing is I trust it, I really trust it. That means I can swing the club the way I want to, without feeling that I have to protect it in any way."

    World number one Woods understood Els's cautious approach as he missed the first five PGA Tour events of 2003 following knee surgery at the end of 2002.

    "His knee surgery was a lot more extensive than mine," Woods said after winning his 11th title of 2006 at the Target World Challenge in Thousand Oaks, California on Sunday.

    "He had to deal with a lot more scar tissue and things than I ever had to deal with.

    "So for him to try and battle through all that as well as get his game back because he took so much time off, it's not easy to do."

    Time is gradually beginning to run out for Els as he aims to build on his career haul of three major titles.

    Despite several close calls, he has not triumphed at the game's highest level since his playoff victory in the 2002 Open.

    Having twice won the U.S. Open, in 1994 and 1997, he covets a career grand slam of the big four events and therefore still needs to win the Masters and the PGA Championship.

    "I see 2007 as the start of a three-year plan, where I totally re-dedicate myself to the game," said Els, who was sidelined for four months at the end of last season after twisting his left knee on a family sailing holiday.

    "I want to win more majors and start giving Tiger a run for his money.

    "If you look at where he is at the top of the world rankings, it's a big lead so no one is going to get near him any time soon.

    "I've got to give myself a three-year stretch to try to approach him and I really believe I can do it. I wouldn't be out here if I didn't."

    Els will take the next few weeks off before returning to tournament golf at the European Tour's Qatar Masters from Jan. 25-28.

    Thereafter, expect him to be a significant factor in all four majors, starting with the April 5-8 Masters at Augusta National.




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  • Tiger Woods Wraps Up Amazing Season

    Tiger Woods loaded his clubs into the trunk of his car and headed off to the mountains for a week of skiing with his family, finally able to put an end to a remarkable year filled with triumph and tragedy.

    As usual, he had to make room for a trophy.

    This one shows a tiger with his paw resting on a globe, fitting in two ways. He is the tournament host of the Target World Challenge that he won Sunday by four shots over U.S. Open champion Geoff Ogilvy. And the world of golf is under his thumb.

    "It's pretty impressive to win half your tournaments," Davis Love III said.

    Woods won 8-of-15 on the PGA Tour, including the last two majors and two World Golf Championships. He was 2-of-2 in the silly season, the 36-hole Grand Slam of Golf and the Target World Challenge. And he won once overseas, his second start of the year in Dubai.

    That adds to 11 wins in 21 starts with a trophy on the line.

    Woods looks at 2006 in two halves. He spent the first six months watching his father's health rapidly deteriorate, standing at his gravesite May 5 two days after Earl Woods died of cancer, then taking nine weeks off to grieve.

    The last half he considers his best golf ever.

    Since missing the cut in the U.S. Open -- his first tournament back and his first weekend off at a major as a pro -- Woods never finished worse than second in stroke play, including six straight victories on the PGA Tour.

    The benchmark always has been 2000, when his nine PGA Tour victories included three straight majors.

    "I think if you compare the two years, I think this year would have to be better because of, obviously, things I've been dealing with off the golf course," Woods said. "In 2000, I didn't have to deal with that. Hey, life is full of mysteries and you've got to deal with things as they come. Who's to know that if Dad didn't struggle and end up passing that I wouldn't have played that well in the summer."

    When he returns to work remains a mystery.

    He skipped the final five PGA Tour events -- including the Tour Championship -- and has not said whether he will start his 2007 season at the winners-only Mercedes-Benz Championship in Hawaii on Jan. 4, or wait until the Buick Invitational three weeks later.

    Whenever he returns, expectations will be as high as ever. And even though this tournament was unofficial, it was another reminder that Woods was on top of his game.

    "To play four rounds against a quality field like this and come out on top, it always gives you a shot of confidence going into next year," Woods said.




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  • Toughest Holes On PGA Tour In 2006

    Poppy Hills is regarded as the easiest of the three courses used at the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, mainly because it has five par 5s. But that's not to say every hole at Poppy is a pushover.

    Here's something for the clubhouse mantle: It had the toughest hole on the PGA Tour this year.

    Even including major venues like Augusta National and Winged Foot, the toughest scoring hole in 2006 was the 426-yard fifth hole at Poppy Hills, which was nearly a half-stroke over par at 4.492.

    The rest of the top 50 is not much of a surprise.

    The U.S. Open was the toughest of the four majors -- Geoff Ogilvy won at 5-over 285 -- and it was reflected in the list. Winged Foot had six of the hardest holes among the top 20, and 10 holes ranked among the top 50. The first and 18th holes at Winged Foot were tied for third at 4.471, ranked one spot behind the 505-yard 11th hole at Augusta National (4.474).

    Oddly enough, the Masters didn't have another hole in the top 50.

    Royal Liverpool had two holes among the top 50 (No. 12 was ranked 33rd and No. 14 was 39th). The PGA Championship was a pushover this year on rain-softened greens, so it was no surprise that Medinah had only one hole in the top 50 -- No. 16 was ranked 40th.

    That fifth major -- The Players Championship -- had only one hole in the top 50. The 18th hole at Sawgrass was ranked No. 5.

    Among regular PGA Tour events, the South Course at Torrey Pines (Buick Invitational) had five holes in the top 50, with the 477-yard 12th hole the highest ranked at No. 9. Torrey Pines has been expanded to 7,568 yards and will host the U.S. Open in 2008. The Country Club at Mirasol (Honda Classic) had four of the hardest holes among the top 50.

    And as an example of how weather dictates everything in golf, consider the Plantation Course at Kapalua. Ernie Els set the PGA Tour record in the '03 Mercedes Championships by winning at 31-under par. This year, with slick greens that were even faster because of the blustery conditions, the Plantation Course had two holes ranked among the top 10 -- the 380-yard third hole was at No. 7 and the 218-yard second hole came in at No. 10.




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  • Tiger Woods' Bittersweet 2006

    Tiger Woods, who has made a habit of achieving the remarkable, was golf's dominant figure in 2006 despite the death of his father in early May.

    The world number one ended the PGA Tour season with an astonishing eight victories in 15 starts, including the British Open at Hoylake and the PGA Championship at Medinah.

    He also won the European Tour's Dubai Desert Classic in February and will launch his 2007 campaign at the Mercedes Championships in Hawaii bidding for a seventh PGA Tour title in a row.

    Although fellow American Phil Mickelson made a storming start to this year en route to a second Masters success and Australia's Geoff Ogilvy broke through at the highest level by winning the U.S. Open at Winged Foot, Woods was in a class of his own.

    After taking a nine-week break to cope with the illness and subsequent death of his father Earl, he triumphed in his last six U.S. events and became the first player to win at least eight times on the world's biggest tour in three different seasons (1999, 2000 and 2006).

    Compatriots Sam Snead, Byron Nelson, Ben Hogan and Arnold Palmer achieved the feat twice.

    Woods finished as the Tour's leading money-winner with $9,941,563 in official earnings while posting the lowest adjusted scoring average of 68.11, the second best of his career.

    Not surprisingly, 2006 will always evoke bitter-sweet memories for him.

    "It has been a long, challenging year, especially off the golf course," Woods said.

    "Nothing could make up for losing my father but I know he would have been proud of the way I rebounded after missing the cut at the U.S. Open by winning six straight PGA Tour tournaments, including two majors.

    "Although it has been difficult at times to concentrate on golf, I have continued to work and fight and good things happened."

    Lifted by his brilliant form on the course, Woods strengthened his hold at the top of the world rankings where his points average is more than double that of second-placed Jim Furyk.

    Less than two years ago, golf was perceived to be dominated by the "Big Five" of Woods, Mickelson, Vijay Singh, Ernie Els and Retief Goosen. No longer.

    Left-hander Mickelson faded over the last six months of 2006 while Fijian Singh and South Africans Els and Goosen fell short of expectation.

    Singh, who missed the cut in the last two majors, and Els, not yet back to his best following a knee injury midway through last year, have both dropped out of the world's top five.

    Mickelson, meticulous in his preparation for the biggest events, established a firm grip on the game over the first four months of the season.

    He romped to victory by 13 strokes at the BellSouth Classic one week before winning his third major title with a consummate performance at the Masters. In both tournaments, he carried two drivers in his bag.

    Going into the final round of the U.S. Open, Mickelson was well placed to claim a third successive major victory but squandered the opportunity with an erratic drive and a double-bogey six at the 72nd hole.

    Briton Colin Montgomerie also blew a golden chance to end his major drought by double-bogeying the last. Ogilvy, benefiting from those twin lapses, was able to celebrate his major breakthrough.

    Woods then took over the script.

    Cleverly using a two-iron off the tee at a sun-scorched Hoylake in July, he completed one of the best ball-striking weeks of his career with a two-shot victory at the British Open.

    The tears flowed as he came to terms with his 11th major title, and the first since the death of his father.

    The following month, he cruised home by five strokes in the PGA Championship, moving past fellow American Walter Hagen into outright second place in the all-time major standings with only Jack Nicklaus, on 18, ahead of him.

    A rare failure for Woods came at the K Club in Ireland in September when he and his Americans team mates fell to a third successive defeat by Europe in the biennial Ryder Cup.

    Although Woods was the leading U.S. performer with three points out of a possible five, the Americans were thumped by a record-equaling margin of 18-1/2 points to 9-1/2.

    Annika Sorenstam, the Tiger of the women's game for the last four years, was unable to maintain her supremacy despite winning her 10th major title at the U.S. Women's Open.

    The world number one surrendered the LPGA Tour money crown to Mexico's Lorena Ochoa, who also clinched player of the year honors with six Tour victories.

    Australia's Karrie Webb, South Korea's Pak Se-ri and American veteran Sherri Steinhauer shared the other major spoils while young guns Paula Creamer, Michelle Wie and Natalie Gulbis ended the LPGA season winless.




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  • Fred Couples Still King of the "Silly Season"

    Fred Couples already has made $450,000 in two events since the PGA Tour season officially ended, representing 58 percent of his earnings this year. And while he finished second to Stephen Ames in the Skins Game, he continues to show why he's the king of the silly season.

    Couples' runner-up finish at Trilogy was worth $385,000, pushing his career earnings in the Skins Game alone to $3.9 million. For those keeping score, that's more money than Arnold Palmer made in his 50 years on the PGA Tour and Champions Tour.

    Is the end near?

    "I've had my run," Couples said. "I got lucky to be in this year. Maybe they'll let me come back next year. I don't know how many years I've been here, but it's been a long, long, long time."

    So long, in fact, that he was able to add some perspective on a silly-season event that has lost its punch.

    The Skins Game began in 1983 with Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player and Tom Watson, who combined to win 198 times on the PGA Tour, including 42 majors.

    "This is a little different group than those guys, to say the least," Couples said.

    Ames, Couples, John Daly and Fred Funk have combined to win 29 times, including three majors.

    But while it was lacking in star quality, and some wish the Skins Game would go away, it still drew a larger television audience than some regular PGA Tour events in the fall. The overnight rating for the first round on Saturday was 2.3, the same as the national rating in 2005 when Tiger Woods and Annika Sorenstam joined Funk and Couples.

    The Sunday overnight was 1.6, compared with a national rating of 2.7 last year.

    Meanwhile, the PGA Tour is putting together the final touches on the "challenge season" for 2007. And while there won't be any significant changes, the tour wants to make sure the silly season is structured like regular tournaments.

    "They had three criteria," said television producer Terry Jastrow, who runs the Wendy's 3-Tour Challenge. "Did it forward the image of the PGA Tour? Did it have a meaningful charity component? Did the players like it?"

    The Target World Challenge, the bonanza of the silly season with a $5.75 million purse, is the only stroke-play event over 72 holes. It's the only one assured of getting Tiger Woods, who is the tournament host (the event benefits the Tiger Woods Learning Center).

    But that doesn't guarantee big ratings.

    Target last year drew a 1.6 on Saturday and Sunday, the same overnight rating as the Skins Game on Sunday.




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