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December 2007 - Posts

  • Lorena Ochoa's Rise Highlights LPGA Year

    About this time last year we asked ourselves: "Is Annika Sorenstam still the best women's golfer in the world?"

    Our answer: "Well, yeah. Of course she is."

    As sure as we were about that statement last December, we are even surer now that it's no longer true. If the 2007 LPGA Tour season taught us anything, it's that an overwhelmingly dominant stretch of golf can turn the tables quickly in terms of a conversation about who's better than whom, washing away the gray areas on either side of the argument.

    Lorena Ochoa is the best women's golfer in the world. We know that without hesitation. Checking back in a year or so, you will probably find that's still the case.

    But you never know. Twelve months is a long time.

    PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Lorena Ochoa

    Ochoa won six times in 2006, but Sorenstam was still the No. 1 player in the rankings at the end of the year and Ochoa had still not yet won a major championship. If the tables were turning then, they've flipped by now.

    Maybe several times over.

    Ochoa snatched the No. 1 ranking from Sorenstam early in the 2007 season, then vindicated it with an eight-win campaign that included her first major at the Ricoh Women's British Open.

    On the way, the Mexican star became the first player in LPGA Tour history to pass the $3 million plateau in single-season earnings. When she won the ADT Championship in November, she broke through another ceiling: the $4 million barrier.

    "It's all about breaking records," Ochoa acknowledged after that win, which netted her a $1 million check and put her at $4.3 million for the year. "It was not only about the money list but also winning eight tournaments this season. It's been amazing from the start to the end."

    Now that she's won 14 times since April 2006 and vaulted herself into any conversation about the most dominant athletes in the world, how could Ochoa not be our Player of the Year?

    TOURNAMENT OF THE YEAR: Women's British Open

    All due respect to the Solheim Cup, but it was a drag to watch. The Americans won for the seventh time, defeating the Europeans during a cold, wet and windy weekend in Sweden.

    On the other hand, watching Ochoa win the Women's British Open was a joy. Not because we have any rooting interest, you understand, but because there isn't much in sports that beats watching a player in their absolute prime take absolute control of their position within their sport.

    And that's what Ochoa did on the first weekend in August when she went wire- to-wire for her first major championship -- doing it, oh by the way, in the first-ever professional women's tournament hosted at St. Andrews.

    "It's really hard to describe and I think it's not going to be easy to realize what just happened," Ochoa said that Sunday. "After I hit [my tee shot at the 18th] and put it in the middle of the fairway ... I was walking with my caddie just saying that, you know, we did it and it was a great feeling."

    And a long time coming.

    ROOKIE OF THE YEAR: Angela Park

    We defer to the LPGA Tour on this one, honoring the same player it did for her impressive debut. We do so because the LPGA Tour's system absolutely got it right. Not that it was tough.

    Angela Park is a 19-year-old Brazilian who played in nearly every tournament she was eligible for in 2007, collecting an impressive eight top-10 finishes to place eighth on the money list with nearly $1 million in earnings.

    She was a factor in three of the four major championships, tying for second place at the U.S. Women's Open and placing fifth at the McDonald's LPGA Championship while also tying for 26th at the Kraft Nabisco Championship.

    Her only missed cut came at the Women's British Open, where she went 78-74 in the first two rounds. At the time, she was just 18 years old.

    GOOD YEAR

    Suzann Pettersen: If not for Ochoa's stunning season, Pettersen would be your Player of the Year. Her dubious loss to Morgan Pressel at the first major of the season, the Kraft Nabisco Championship, was followed by her first five wins on the LPGA Tour. They included a victory at the second major of the season, the McDonald's LPGA Championship, and back-to-back titles in Asia near the end of the year. She finished a distant second to Ochoa on the money list.

    Cristie Kerr: Kerr won only once in 2007, but that victory came at the U.S. Women's Open and marked her long-overdue first career major championship. She finished sixth on the money list with nearly $1.1 million in earnings.

    Morgan Pressel: She finished ninth on the money list, a spot behind the rookie Park, but Pressel made her first career win a memorable one when she backed into the Kraft Nabisco title after Pettersen folded late in the final round on Sunday.

    Natalie Gulbis: While Pettersen, Kerr and Pressel won their first majors, Gulbis claimed her first win of any kind. And it came at one of the top non- majors: the Evian Masters. She finished 12th on the money list, missing five cuts in 22 starts, but had five top 10s along the way. They included a runner-up to Ochoa at the season-ending ADT Championship.

    Paula Creamer: Creamer won twice and finished third on the money list with almost $1.4 million. Her victories marked the first time she collected trophies since her rookie season in 2005.

    Mi Hyun Kim: She had a season that was lost in the mix: fourth on the money list, 10 top-10s, seven top-fives, two runner-ups and a win at the SemGroup Championship. Along with Ochoa, Pettersen and Seon-Hwa Lee (fifth on the money list), Kim helped represent an international dominance on the LPGA Tour in 2007.

    BAD YEAR

    Annika Sorenstam: Personally, any year somebody becomes engaged to be married can't be considered a bad year. But Sorenstam, until recently the high watermark of women's athletics, had a bad year professionally. She finished an eye-rubbing 25th on the money list this season despite making the cut in 12 of her 13 starts. Battling back and neck problems along the way, she posted only two top-three finishes.

    Pat Hurst: Last year, Hurst took Sorenstam to a Monday finish at the U.S. Women's Open. This year, she missed five cuts in 22 starts and never finished better than third. She tumbled to 35th in the world rankings after beginning the season ranked 11th.



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  • Tiger Woods Still Not Sure If He Is At His Peak

    Four victories in his last five official starts of the 2007 PGA Tour season is proof enough that Tiger Woods is more dominant than ever, especially considering he won those four tournaments by a combined 20 shots and shattered tournament scoring records in consecutive weeks.

    More evidence came from his caddie as he waited for Woods to arrive for the final round of The Tour Championship.

    "He hasn't hit a practice ball since the British Open," Steve Williams said. "I've been with him nearly 10 years now, and this is the best I've ever seen him hit the ball."

    No practice? Not quite.

    What he meant was that Woods has such command over his game that he stopped going to the practice range after his rounds since returning home from Carnoustie.

    Woods confirmed as much when he left East Lake with his two trophies -- one for The Tour Championship, one for the FedExCup.

    "Hey, there was no need to go," he said with a shrug and a smile.

    Whether this is the best he has ever played is up for debate, but don't expect Woods to participate. He is always looking forward, always trying to figure out a way to get better. That's what makes it so daunting for the guys trying to reach his level. They know they have to get better, and that's assuming Woods doesn't continue to improve himself.

    So far, that hasn't happened.

    Since his latest round of swing changes took root at the end of 2004, Woods has won 21 times on the PGA Tour. That's more than Phil Mickelson, Vijay Singh and Jim Furyk combined over the last three years.

    And the truly scary part is that Woods, who turns 32 on Dec. 30, might still be years away from his prime.

    "I don't know when it's going to be," Woods said. "The whole idea is to try and keep improving. When all is said and done, when you rack the cue and go home and retire, you can honestly say, 'These were my best years, when I was at my peak.' But when you're in it, you're always trying to improve that a little bit to get to the next level."

    As the trophies keep piling up, the numbers are simply staggering.

    Woods now has won 61 times in just more than 11 full years on the PGA Tour. Jack Nicklaus was 36 when he captured his 61st Tour victory. He has won 28 percent of the time since turning pro, and that if that number is hard to fathom alone, consider than Mickelson has won 9 percent of his tournaments, Singh is at 8 percent and Ernie Els at 6 percent.

    Woods' final putt for par at East Lake put him at 23-under 257 for the lowest 72-hole score of his career, and six shots better than the previous record at The Tour Championship. A week earlier at Cog Hill, he broke the tournament record by five shots at 22-under 262, winning by two over Aaron Baddeley.

    With his 2007 season in the books, Woods finished with a 67.79 adjusted scoring average, equaling his record from the 2000 season. And while the $10,867,052 was short by $38,114 of the record Singh set in 2004, the big Fijian played 29 times that year. Woods played in only 16 tournaments. That's an average of $172,493 per round.

    Woods said the latest adjustment since the British Open, where he tied for 12th, was simply shifting the weight more toward the balls of his feet for better balance. That made it appear he was standing closer to the ball.

    Swing coach Hank Haney hasn't seen much change the last two years, with one exception. What he watched with regularity on the range at Woods' home course in Isleworth, he now sees more often inside the ropes on the PGA Tour.

    "I've seen him play like this and hit the ball like this the last couple of years -- for sure the last year -- but most of times I've seen that, it's been at Isleworth," Haney said. "It's only been bits and pieces in tournaments."

    It's still not perfect.

    Woods lunged at one tee shot on the 16th hole at East Lake in the opening round, scolding himself when it sailed to the right.

    "Tiger Woods!" he said through clenched teeth. "Trust your swing."

    Haney believes that trust was evident at Oakmont in the third round of the U.S. Open, when Woods hammered a driver down the middle of the fairway on his way to perhaps his best ball-striking round of the year. He hit 17 greens in regulation that day.

    "I know what that hole feels like to him. It's really tight," Haney said. "On the practice tee, he said, 'I'm driving the ball in the fairway.' And he piped it right down the middle, then did the same thing on Sunday. I felt that was big turning point in his confidence."

    Woods didn't see it that way.

    In his eyes, the turning point came at the Western Open in July of 2006. He had just missed the cut in a major for the first time, opened with a 72 at Cog Hill, then spent hours that Thursday afternoon on the practice range. It was hard work, but enjoyable.

    For the first time since his father died, it was fun.

    "I got over all the things that happened earlier, and I finally got back to just playing golf again," he said. "That mourning period ... I felt I was done with it. Once I got back to playing golf, I felt I was back in my rhythm again. And from then, if you look at my results since then, it's been pretty good."

    No one thought that 2000 season could ever be topped, and it probably remains the benchmark. Woods won nine times in 20 starts, including three straight majors, and three victories of at least eight shots. But his highest winning percentage was last year (8-of-15), and his adjusted scoring average is the same as it was in 2000.

    Instead of looking back, consider the future.

    What if he still hasn't hit his prime?



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  • Vijay Singh Focusing On New Swing

    For a player of Vijay Singh's standards, the 2007 season has not been a particularly consistent one.

    The Fijian started well, with wins at the Mercedes-Benz Championship and the Arnold Palmer Invitational, but struggled through a mediocre middle of the season, which was punctuated with cuts at the PGA Championship and The Barclays.

    Singh puts his lackluster performance down to swing difficulties.

    "I was disappointed in the way I played. Although I had two wins, I was really very discouraged," he said. "Hence I checked my golf swing, and the golf swing went from a very good position in the top to a not-so-good position so I had to change my takeaway to fix that.

    "That took a long time to fix. Any time you change something so drastic like that it takes longer than you think, and to grow comfortable with it, too. In the meantime I've worked hard on it."

    According to Singh, the trouble started during the new FedEx Playoffs.

    "The real major change started at Barclays in New York, and I said, I'm not going to be off it. If I keep doing that, by the end of three or four events, I should be okay. By Atlanta I was playing a lot better, but I still felt very uncomfortable."

    Since then Singh has been working on his swing, and attributes the success of the changes to a new trainer, Jeffrey Frank, and a focus on fitness. He says he's feeling fitter and stronger than he was three or four years ago.

    I feel a lot stronger now than I did then. The trainer I have now is 41, and his body looks like he's 21. There's no reason why I shouldn't feel the way I see it and the way he sees it, there's no reason why I shouldn't feel as strong as he is or as he feels. We're not even worrying about the age. We're just worrying about how the body tone is, how the body is feeling. Age does not matter at the moment it's absolutely just a number.

    "Right now, I mean, the golf shots I'm hitting are so much better. The ball flight is a lot stronger and it's crispier than what I was doing in the middle of the season. Everything is looking pretty good so far."

    Singh say his new focus will also reshape his next season's fixtures.



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  • Masters Field Taking Shape

    Boo Weekley has been so busy building a house he hasn't bothered checking the mail. He might want to keep alert the next few weeks for a white envelope with a return address of Augusta, Ga.

    With the final world ranking published Monday, Masters invitations will be in the mail soon.

    "I've got to have that to get in?" Weekley asked.

    He was pleased to hear the invitation was a mere formality, not to mention a souvenir like no other.

    Weekley is among 14 players who will be playing the Masters for the first time, and the invitation traditionally comes the final two weeks of the year, a sweet reminder of what the new season holds.

    The Masters takes the top 50 from the world ranking at the end of 2007, and because there are no golf tournaments the rest of the year, 11 players who were not previously eligible were added to the field Monday.

    Leading the way was Henrik Stenson at No. 16, followed by 10 others from abroad: Trevor Immelman, Lee Westwood, Toru Taniguchi, Nick O'Hern, Miguel Angel Jimenez, Shingo Katayama, Robert Karlsson, Richard Sterne, Soren Hansen and Anders Hansen.

    There are sure to be some complaints about some of the international players getting into the Masters, especially Anders Hansen.

    He took up PGA TOUR membership this year, and in 17 starts, he made only 10 cuts and failed to record a top 10. But he finished the year at No. 50 from his victory in the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth, where Hansen beat the likes of Angel Cabrera and Justin Rose, and two other top 5s in the biggest non-major on the European Tour.

    Rod Pampling, the Australian who plays primarily on the PGA TOUR, needed no worse than fifth in the Australian Open last week to get into the top 50, but he tied for seventh and slipped one spot to No. 52.

    Not to worry -- yet.

    Augusta National will take the top 50 from the world ranking published March 31, one week before the Masters. That gives extra time for players like Pampling, Colin Montgomerie (No. 57) and Davis Love III (No. 67). The Masters also will take winners from every PGA TOUR event, except for the two in Mexico and Puerto Rico held opposite World Golf Championships.

    With 82 players already qualified (and expected to compete), the field likely will be around 90 to 95, just the size the Masters likes.

    One thing that will be missing is a full crop of amateurs. Colt Knost won the U.S. Amateur Public Links and the U.S. Amateur, but gave up his spot in the Masters when he turned pro. Knost then failed to secure even a Nationwide Tour card at Q-School.

    That leaves three amateurs at the Masters, the fewest since there were three in 1942, the year before the Masters took a three-year break because of World War II.

    There will be two Watsons -- past champion Tom Watson and big-hitting Bubba Watson. There will be two Hansens -- Soren and Anders, both from Denmark, no relation.

    But there will be only one Boo.

    Weekley has become a kind of cult hero the past year with his homespun humor, simple pleasures and solid game. He was among the first to qualify by winning the Verizon Heritage a week after the Masters, and that was the start of a big year. Weekley finished 23rd on the money list, joining high school buddy Heath Slocum at the World Cup in China.

    But this is no time to rest or reflect, much less hunt and fish.

    "Between my wife and little boy and all of us trying to build this house, I might not have time to check the mail," Weekley said Monday.

    But he is excited about returning to Augusta National. Turns out Weekley was invited to play some years ago through an elderly gentleman who knew a member.

    "We got six holes in and it started raining," he said.

    He'll be in good company when the 72nd Masters is held April 10-13. The defending champion is Zach Johnson, with Tiger Woods again the favorite to capture his fifth green jacket.

    Right now, Weekley just wants to finish building his house.



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  • Tiger Woods Seeks Legacy Bigger Than Golf

    Tiger Woods has already established himself as arguably the greatest golfer in history, but he fervently hopes his legacy will focus instead on his contributions to society.

    He created the Tiger Woods Foundation with his father Earl shortly after turning professional in 1996, paving the way for the first Tiger Woods Learning Centre where children can develop life skills.

    Around 16,000 students have gone through the Centre since it opened in Anaheim, California in February 2006 and Woods plans to open a second one in the Washington D.C. area within the next five years.

    "Golf is something I do selfishly for myself," the American world number one told Reuters in an interview.

    "I have a competitive side and that's how I express it.

    "But, as far as my tombstone is concerned, hopefully it will read something more of what I am trying to do for kids. That would be so much more ultimate than winning any golf tournament.

    "The joy I get from winning a major championship doesn't even compare to the feeling I get when a kid writes a letter saying: 'Thank you so much. You have changed my life.

    "Or: 'I have turned my life around because of you. I was in a gang and now I'm not in a gang and now I'm going to college. No one in my family has ever gone to a college and now I'm the first one to do it.' That, to me, is what it's all about."

    Woods, who won his eighth title of the year at the Target World Challenge on Sunday, said he would have jumped at the chance of going to a learning Centre as a youngster had the opportunity arisen.

    "It would have been incredible," the 31-year-old American added with his trademark flashing smile. "I didn't even know how to turn a computer on at that age.

    "It's amazing to have these kids at the leaning Centre write programmes and teach you things. I had a sixth-grader teach me about forensic science, and I had never heard of forensic science until (television programme) CSI came out.

    "To see these kids and the enthusiasm they have for school, you don't normally see that until you get to college. But these kids create their own curriculum and it's pretty cool to see them that excited and that enthused about learning and developing their own future."

    Woods, who became a father for the first time after the U.S. Open in June, has already earmarked a spot at one of his learning centres for his daughter, Sam Alexis.

    "We certainly foresee that happening," he said, referring also to his Swedish wife Elin. "It will be fun to see Sam develop and our kids in the future, how they develop with the opportunities that Elin and I didn't have."

    Having benefited from a loving, tightly knit home environment with his mother Kultida and father Earl, Woods has tried to replicate some of that experience at his Anaheim learning Centre.

    "As a child, the family that I had and the love I had from my two parents allowed me to go ahead and be more aggressive, to search and to take risks knowing that, if I failed, I could always come home to a family of love and support," he said.

    "And that allowed me to take more risks on the golf course, with studies or whatever else it may be. I always felt like it was okay and that encouragement helped a lot."

    A winner of 13 major titles who trails only Jack Nicklaus (18) in the all-time listings, Woods has often said he craves the anonymity now denied him.

    Asked what he most missed about being a child, the 31-year-old replied: "That is probably it, anonymity."



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  • Rested Tiger Woods Seeking Eighth Win Of Season

    Holder and tournament host Tiger Woods, refreshed after a two-month break, will hunt his eighth title of the year at this week's Target World Challenge.

    The world number one has not played competitive golf since the Presidents Cup in late September and is eager to return after working hard on his fitness.

    "I enjoy being mentally fresh and that's one of the reasons I don't play as much as a lot of the guys do," Woods told reporters ahead of his final tournament of 2007.

    "This time I got a chance to work on my body and get it stronger than I've ever had it, which is fun, and I haven't put on any weight, which has been great. I've leaned up a little bit."

    The 31-year-old American heads a strong 16-man field that includes world number three Jim Furyk, U.S. Masters champion Zach Johnson and British Open winner Padraig Harrington.

    Ten of the world's top 20 will compete for a first prize of $1.35 million at Sherwood Country Club. The overall purse is $5.75 million.

    Three-times winner Woods will tee off at the invitational tournament on Thursday as the odds-on favorite after dominating the 2007 PGA Tour with seven victories.

    He clinched his 13th major title in the U.S. PGA Championship at Southern Hills in August before ending the season with record earnings of $10,867,052.

    "Any time you win a major championship in the year it's always going to be a great year and this certainly is," said Woods, who also became a father for the first time in June.

    "I would describe it as a polar opposite of last year, not necessarily because of what I did on the golf course but what happened off it," he added, referring to the death of his father Earl in May 2006.

    "The most incredible thing is everything I did on the golf course, it gets put into perspective real quick when something happens like last year and then with (daughter) Sam this year. This is the coolest ride ever."

    Woods, champion in 2001 and 2004, completed a hat-trick of titles with a four-shot victory at Sherwood last year.

    Proceeds from the event go to Tiger Woods Foundation projects and the Tiger Woods Learning Centre in Anaheim.

    This week's field is: Woods, Furyk, Steve Stricker, Harrington, Vijay Singh, Johnson, Luke Donald, Rory Sabbatini, Henrik Stenson, Niclas Fasth, Paul Casey, Lee Westwood, Brett Wetterich, Mark Calcavecchia, Colin Montgomerie and Fred Couples.



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  • Trevor Immelman Wins Sun City Title

    Trevor Immelman shot an even-par 72 and won the Nedbank Challenge by one stroke Sunday despite three straight bogeys over the closing holes and a late challenge from Justin Rose.

    Immelman, who won the $1.2 million first prize, finished at 16-under 272. Rose shot 73 after a double-bogey on the 18th at the Gary Player Country Club.

    Ernie Els (72) was third at 11 under in the tournament he won three times. His round included five birdies, three bogeys and a double-bogey on the 17th.

    The tournament came down to the last hole after Immelman's late stumble, starting with the 16th. The South African had a two-stroke lead going into the par-3 hole but he hit his tee shot over the green, left his chip short and two-putted.

    Rose chipped his wayward tee shot close and got an easy par. He hit a poor drive on the 17th, but Immelman overshot the green, and ended up with yet another bogey while Rose scrambled a par to tie it.

    On the 18th, Rose pulled his tee shot while Immelman set himself up perfectly in the middle of the fairway. Immelman's approach went long, and he needed two tough chips to get out of the rough around the green before putted for the title.

    But Rose had already lost it, shooting a double-bogey 6 to leave himself one shot back.

    "It's an event every South African golfer dreams of winning," Immelman said. "After the majors, it's the best tournament in the world for us."

    Immelman said the pressure got to him. "When I duffed that chip on the 18th, I felt like throwing myself into the lake back there," he said, joking.



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