Quantcast July 2007 - Posts - Golf International Magazine Online
Tees2Greens Home Page
in

Navigate This Blog

Have You Seen This?

Have You Seen This?

Subscribe To This Blog

Golf International Magazine Online

Follow The World... with Golf International Magazine Subscribe Online

July 2007 - Posts

  • Carnoustie's Reputation Is Restored

    Even during such a gloomy week, Carnoustie shone at the Open.

    For years reputed to be the toughest links course in the world, Carnoustie had become somewhat of an enigma for the younger generation. It had gone 24 years without hosting a British Open, and when it returned to the rotation in 1999, the setup was so outrageous that it became known as "Car-Nasty."

    There was nothing but high praise this time around.

    The Royal & Ancient proved that a golf course can be a strong test without rough up to the knees and fairways cut at the waist. The conditions could have not been more ideal for scoring last week. Rain all summer in Scotland made this a green British Open with lush fairways and soft greens, and the wind rarely got stronger than 10 mph all week.

    The result was the first winning score all year in a major (7-under 277), and by far the most exciting major of the year.

    It allowed for a dynamic charge by Andres Romero, who made 10 birdies in 16 holes before the pressure overcame him. Romero's play over 16 holes rivaled Johnny Miller at Oakmont in 1973. If not for an approach into the gorse bush for double bogey on No. 12, and a bounce off the stone face of Barry Burn that went out-of-bounds for double bogey on No. 17, golf might have had its first 62 in a major.

    Train wrecks were a certainty.

    One only had to watch Padraig Harrington twice hit into the burn on the 18th hole and make a gutsy double bogey, then see Sergio Garcia make bogey by playing an iron off the tee for safety, leaving him a 3-iron to the green. He went into the bunker and missed his par putt from 10 feet to set up the playoff.

    Harrington twice had birdie putts inside 10 feet in the four-hole playoff, far more entertaining than hanging on with pars.

    It should be a lesson that nasty rough might make it a tough test, but not a good one. Ian Poulter and Romero had good rounds evaporate because they were given a chance to advance the ball out of the rough and paid dearly for it. And the wild fluctuation in scores along the back nine, such as Harrington's eagle on the 14th and double bogey on the 18th, made for better golf than seeing who can get to the clubhouse with the fewest bogeys.

    Augusta National will always be the most mystical major because of its history and familiarity. St. Andrews will always have the tradition as the home of golf. And with one week, Carnoustie was such a good show that the British Open can't return soon enough.



    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • No Distractions For Tiger Woods

    Tiger Woods has spent the last month knee-deep in nappies and getting used to sleepless nights.

    But the world number one scoffs at the suggestion that the entry to the world of his baby daughter, Sam Alexis, will distract him from his goal of clinching a third consecutive British Open title at Carnoustie this week.

    Woods, whose wife Elin gave birth to their first child the day after he finished second in last month's US Open, is used to dealing with predictions that developments in his personal life could reduce his appetite for dominance in his sport.

    "First it was getting engaged, then it was getting married," he said with a resigned smile on Tuesday. "Now it is having a child. There is always something."

    Joking that the trip to Scotland would give him the chance of much-needed rest, Woods did acknowledge he would have to deal with the emotions any new parent experiences when separated from their offspring.

    "I miss them, but Elin and Sam are doing fantastic," he said. "We are very excited to have Sam in our life and we're looking forward to the future.

    "I don't see how it can be a negative."

    Woods revealed earlier this month how complications in his Swedish wife's pregnancy had resulted in her being hospitalised on the day of the opening round of the US Open.

    Having decided, on medical advice, that he should play, Woods arrived home in Florida on the Sunday night after finishing in a tie for second place, just hours before the birth.

    Woods said the situation had been tough to deal with but played down suggestions it had affected his game.

    "It was harder than normal to stay focused all day, but you have to do it," he said. "You go out and give it all you've got.

    "The doctors had assured me and she assured me that she was doing fine. They said 'there is nothing can do here, go and win the Open. I didn't quite do it but the day in itself was the greatest day I ever had. Win or lose the Open, in the end seeing Sam being born was the greatest thing ever."

    Those reflections on the joys of fatherhood came at the end of a third practice round on a Carnoustie course that has been shorn of the ferocious rough that terrorised the field when the Open was last played here, in 1999.

    After the revelation that fatherhood had left him as hungry as ever for success, the second bit of bad news for those tasked with preventing him from claiming his 13th major title here, was Woods's enthusiasm for the way the course has been set up.

    "It is extremely fair," he reported. "It is not like it was in 1999 and it is probably a little bit more difficult than in the Scottish Opens I played here, so it is roughly right in between."

    Despite that judgement, the American laughed at a suggestion that the 'Carnasty' of 1999 had been replaced by 'Carneasy'.

    "If you have wind it becomes more difficult than you think. You really do have to hit the ball well, and the greens are extremely subtle, just like all links they're very hard to read, so you have to do your homework.

    "I've never heard anyone say Carnoustie is easy. Even the times I played the Scottish Open here, when the conditions were more benign than this, the scores were not that low."

    Woods famously used his driver only once in 72 holes on his way to victory at Hoylake last year, but he indicated that was a response to particular conditions there rather than a permanent shift in his approach to Open venues.

    "Last year I thought the golf course forced you to do that," he argued. "It was so fast and firm, faster than I've ever seen for a British Open.

    "I hit drivers in the practice rounds and was getting it down there to where I had a nine iron or a wedge in my hand. But if I was just in the wispy stuff I couldn't spin the ball and keep it on the green. I had a better chance spinning the ball with a six iron from the fairway."



    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Another Major Question For Colin Montgomerie

    This is no time for Colin Montgomerie to get excited about Carnoustie.

    He already has suffered enough.

    The sometimes burly, often surly Scot should be positively chuffed with the British Open only a week away. Having gone 18 months without a trophy that belonged only to him, Montgomerie ended one of the longest dry spells of his career when his 6-iron somehow stayed out of the water on the 18th hole and he won the European Open by one shot.

    It was his 31st victory on the European Tour, one more than Nick Faldo, trailing only Seve Ballesteros and Bernhard Langer. It came three weeks after he shot 82 in the U.S. Open to miss the cut, and two weeks after he turned 44.

    "It is just great at 44 to come back and win again, as sometimes that is the end of one's career," Montgomerie said. "And I feel this is a new beginning for me, and I can look forward now."

    Forward, in this case, starts with the Scottish Open this week at Loch Lomond. The grand prize is a silver claret jug at Carnoustie, where Montgomerie believes he still has time to end his 0-for-62 drought in the majors.

    But he might be kidding himself.

    Since the Masters began in 1934, only five players have won their first major championship after turning 40, and none has nearly as much scar tissue as Montgomerie.

    No other player has been runner-up five times in a major without eventually winning one.

    Montgomerie was in a three-man playoff in the U.S. Open at Oakmont in 1994 when he wore dark clothes in 100-degree heat and wilted. He ran off three straight birdies at Riviera in the '95 PGA Championship to get into another playoff, only for Steve Elkington to win with a birdie on the first extra hole. There was Congressional in 1997, when Monty took forever over a 5-foot par putt on the 71st hole and missed, losing again to Ernie Els in the U.S. Open.

    And last year at Winged Foot felt like a root canal without Novocain.

    Standing in the 18th fairway with a 7-iron in hand, Montgomerie chunked his approach and three-putted for double bogey, finishing one shot behind Geoff Ogilvy. It was the worst collapse at Winged Foot, even though Phil Mickelson's double bogey was more spectacular.

    There have been other not-so-memorable moments at the majors.

    Montgomerie was riding enormous support at Royal Lytham & St. Annes in 2001 until splitting his pants trying to hit a bunker shot. No less an authority than Jack Nicklaus proclaimed him the U.S. Open champion at Pebble Beach in 1992 when he finished a wind-blown final round ahead of the leaders, only to see Tom Kite pull through.

    Here he comes again.

    The Scottish flag will wave proudly along the links of Carnoustie as Brave Monty rides again.

    "It will be a battle whether he can use the emotional momentum from being in Scotland and the great support he gets," Nick Faldo said Tuesday. "He's been there enough times, I'm sure there's got to be a couple that scarred him. But you never know with Monty. He's on a bounce-back. Maybe he'll ride the wave all week."

    There is precedence for guys winning their first major after 40, but the list is short.

    Kite was 42 when he won the U.S. Open. He had gone 67 starts as a professional before winning his first major. But he had only three runner-up finishes, and his heartache was rarely his own doing.

    Jerry Barber was the oldest first-time major winner since 1934, winning the 1961 PGA Championship at age 45. Safe to say he didn't carry the same burden as Brave Monty.

    Roberto de Vicenzo was 44 when he captured the 1967 British Open, and that was a year before he couldn't keep score at the Masters.

    Mark O'Meara won the Masters and British Open at age 41 in 1998. Although O'Meara had won 14 times in a solid career, his name was never the first mentioned in any conversation of best to never win a major.

    Mickelson and Montgomerie were the favorite targets.

    Lefty was only 0-for-42 in the majors, minus the train wrecks. He plays golf with flair, winning or losing, but Mickelson never really collapsed in the biggest events. His two close calls before winning the 2004 Masters were the 1999 U.S. Open and the 2001 PGA Championship, and both times he was beaten by a par putt on the final hole. That's no disgrace.

    Even though Monty had more baggage, he did not get as much scrutiny as Mickelson because he had never won in the United States. But his record stands tall, with seven straight Order of Merit titles in Europe, eight overall, and enormous success in the Ryder Cup.

    He's coming off a victory he called "very, very important," but one has to wonder if even Montgomerie truly believes a major championship is in his future.

    The last time the British Open was held at Carnoustie, he won the week before at Loch Lomond.

    "How could I possibly feel any better than I do right now?" he said at the time. "I can only go into the British Open with confidence, and that's what many players can't say."

    He was asked Sunday if he had doubts he would ever win again.

    "Of course," he replied. "There will be a time where I will have my last win somewhere, and I will always remember it. I hope it is not this one, but if it is, I will savor this for the rest of my life."

    Yes, he is looking forward.

    But he has reached a stage in his career where the greater joy might be looking behind.




    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Hale Irwin Still Seeking To Compete

    After making senior golf his personal playground for a decade, this was bound to happen to Hale Irwin.

    Over the past few years, an influx of younger players -- "younger," of course, being a relative term -- have made the jump from the PGA Tour to the Champions Tour, raising the bar for the players who were already there.

    And at age 62, Irwin admits he's looking for more balance in his personal life, and that might have taken the edge off his game.

    "I love playing, I love the competition, I really, really do enjoy that," Irwin said, during a break from practice for this week's U.S. Senior Open at Whistling Straits. "But at the same time, there's a point in time where you just, at least temporarily, want to stop and smell the roses a little bit. I think that takes away just a little bit of that competitive edge."

    Irwin won 44 times on the Champions Tour between 1995 and 2005, making him by far the biggest winner in the tour's history. But after going winless in 2006 and finishing outside of the top 10 in prize money, Irwin rededicated himself to fitness over the winter.

    "I think it's shown this year," Irwin said. "The harder I work, the luckier I get. My wife is going to make me work out this afternoon, so no rest for the weary."

    Irwin rediscovered his winning ways at the MasterCard Championship in January. And he's happy with the way he's playing right now, giving him what he hopes is a realistic shot at his third career U.S. Senior Open title.

    "I don't feel like my game is far off," said Irwin, who won the U.S. Senior Open in 1998 and 2000. "I don't like to say that I'm ever playing as well as I can play, but my game is close to doing what I want it to."

    Irwin knows he'll have tough competition this year, noting the recent arrivals of accomplished PGA Tour players such as Jay Haas and Mark O'Meara on the Champions Tour.

    "Those guys all bring great personalities, they bring great credentials," Irwin said. "It moves the bar up for the rest of us."

    Irwin says he has spent the past decade watching senior golf evolve from an exhibition-style "parade floating down main street" to a "very exacting and competitive arena in which to play golf." At the same time, he knows he's slowing down a little bit.

    "As you get older, things start falling apart," Irwin said. "Whether it be physically, you just can't compete the way you once did because of strength or injury or whatever it may be, or it could just be interest. Most of us have been at this thing for 35, 40 or 45 years. Sometimes, you don't mind a little deep breath."

    Irwin doesn't hide the fact that as he gets older, he is making more space in his life for things that are "more meaningful" than golf.

    "It could be business, it could be family, it could be just 'Hey, I'm tired.' Who knows? I don't know what it is," Irwin said. "But there are just other things that happen.

    "Rather than trying to raise your kids, now you're sort of taking care of grandkids on occasion. It's just the quality of life that you have that you want to take advantage of. Things that lie in front of you aren't necessarily 10 years out -- they may be 10 days out, right there in front of you."

    But despite facing better competition at the same time he's looking to make more time for his personal life, don't think for a second that Irwin is considering retirement.

    "Retire? What is that?" Irwin says with a smile.

    Irwin remembers watching golf icons such as Arnold Palmer, Lee Trevino and Jack Nicklaus struggle to come to terms with the end of their careers, and seems resigned to the fact that the same thing might happen to him.

    "You've had success, and it's had great impact, positive impact on your life," Irwin said. "How do you kind of turn away from that? I think that's the hard part."

    Irwin might not be winning like he was three or four years ago, but he still gets a charge out of competing.

    "And that's hard to turn away from," Irwin said. "So I don't know if retirement really is in my near future at all."




    Add to Technorati Favorites
Privacy Policy | Legal Statement | Advertise
© 2006-2009 Tees2Greens, Inc.