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Vijay Singh Looks to Return to Winning Ways
Written By: Golf International on Jan 02 2008
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Vijay Singh, armed with a revamped swing and a new fitness trainer, is eager to return to winning ways in his title defence at this week's Mercedes-Benz Championship.

The former world number one has not tasted victory on the PGA Tour in nine months and is determined to erase memories of a largely frustrating 2007 campaign.

"Last year I was very disappointed in the way I played," Singh told reporters in the build-up to the 2008 PGA Tour's opening event.

"Although I had two wins, I was really very discouraged in the way I played in the mid-season and during the majors. The two wins happened very early in the season, in the first three months, and the rest of the season was pretty cold for me.

"I did not perform like I thought I would. I had my chances but just never closed the deal. It was very disappointing."

Singh clinched the Mercedes-Benz Championship by two shots in Kapalua last January before winning his 31st PGA Tour title two months later at the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

Despite close calls at the Wachovia Championship in May and the Canadian Open in July, he failed to add to his trophy cabinet.

"I know guys go through their whole career not winning one event," the 44-year-old Fijian said. "My expectations are pretty high. I don't like playing six months of the year and not winning a golf tournament. I felt like I let myself down there."

Although Singh ended the 2007 season third on the PGA Tour money list with earnings of $4,728,376, he has been working hard to revamp his swing and improve his fitness.

"The position on top was very low, very flat and laid off and that's pretty much the worst place I want my golf swing to be," said the Fijian, who ended Tiger Woods's five-year reign as world number one in September 2004.

"Right now it's totally changed. It's so much more upright, so much more down the line and kind of more in sync with my body.

"The change is coming along and there's a lot of good coming out of it," added the world number 10, who began working with a new trainer last July. "The golf shots I'm hitting are so much better and the ball flight is a lot stronger."

Singh faces a strong challenge this week in the event on Kapalua's hilly, par-73 Plantation Course that brings together the title-holders from the previous PGA Tour season.

Although Woods, British Open champion Padraig Harrington and Phil Mickelson have opted not to play, the 31-man field includes world number three Jim Furyk, fifth-ranked Steve Stricker and South Korea's K.J. Choi (ninth).

Also competing are Masters champion Zach Johnson and Argentina's Angel Cabrera, winner of last year's U.S. Open.

An extra motivation for the players is that this week's event will launch the second FedEx Cup, a season-long points competition culminating in a four-event playoff series with $10 million to be won by the overall champion.



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Since its launch in 1997, Golf International has forged a reputation as the standout quality title in golf publishing. The caliber of columnists, writers, players and coaches is unrivalled, while the design and layout of the magazine separates it still further from the competition. In a congested market wrought with mediocrity, Golf International appeals to committed golfers who are as serious about their game as we are about ours.

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