Quantcast February 2008 - 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

February 2008 - Posts

  • Luke Donald Takes Opening Honors with Round of 64

    Luke Donald’s opening round in The Honda Classic was far from perfect. He missed five greens and seven fairways, including five straight on the back nine.

    And conditions at windy, cool PGA National were hardly optimal for scoring. Yet somehow, Donald found a way to post the Honda’s best score in three years.

    A bogey-free 64 Thursday gave Donald a one-shot lead over Brian Davis and a two-shot edge on Matt Jones after the first round of the Honda—an event Donald won two years ago when it was at nearby Mirasol, a considerably easier track.

    “I did a lot of good things around the greens and when I had my chances I took them,” Donald said. “I didn’t drive it particularly well. I need to improve that. I probably hit only half the fairways, which is not quite good enough. Apart from that, everything was very good.”

    Donald posted the lowest round at a Honda since Padraig Harrington shot a final-round 63 to win in 2005 at Mirasol, and the 64 was the best in 571 tournament rounds since the event moved to PGA National—where Mark Wilson’s winning score a year ago was 5 under. Wilson shot a 73 on Thursday.

    “Golf is just a tough game sometimes,” Donald said. “It sometimes gets you down, and we’ve all been there before, but luckily right now I feel pretty confident about my game. I feel confident about where I’m heading, and I’m definitely going the right direction.”

    He wasn’t alone in feeling that way.

    Matt Jones (66) was alone in third, two shots off the pace, with a slew of others—including Ernie Els, the world’s No. 4 player—three shots back. Els was one of only 10 players to make birdie at the arduous, 508-yard, par-4 10th, which was his first hole of the day.

    “This is really my first full event, so to speak, of the year over here, so I needed to get off to a good start,” said Els, whose PGA Tour campaign for 2008 began with a first-round exit last week in the Accenture Match Play. “I was a little nervy this morning to force myself to get off to a good start, and I’ve had that now, so I can start building on that.”

    Jose Coceres, who lost to Wilson in a four-man playoff last year, and Jesper Parnevik were in a group within four shots of Donald at 68.

    “You’ve almost got to have a major mentality here,” Parnevik said.

    He already overcame a major problem here this week.

    Parnevik fell ill playing in Mexico last weekend; a dirty drinking glass, he said, was the culprit that left him unable to eat any solid food since Saturday and took 11 pounds off his already-slim frame.

    His preparation on Wednesday consisted primarily of getting intravenous fluids in the tour’s medical trailer. But even with a 6:50 a.m. tee time, Parnevik—who, like Donald and a bunch of other South Florida residents, only lives a few minutes from the course—battled his way to a 68.

    “Everybody that lives here knows that this can happen,” Parnevik said. “But how it goes from almost 90 (degrees) to 43 here in a couple days is hard for a lot of people to understand.”

    Much like the Florida temperatures the last few days, Jimmy Walker’s game went from hot to cold in a real hurry.

    Walker was ninth alternate at the start of the week and only got in the field because another alternate—Michael Sim, who replaced Ryder Cup captain Paul Azinger—withdrew.

    For a while, Walker took full advantage of the chance. He was within one stroke of Donald as he went to the par-4 15th, but double-bogey there derailed his run at the lead and he finished with a 67.

    Donald gets introduced as a former Honda champion, but he doesn’t really feel like one, since being at a different venue gives the tournament a decidedly different feel. After winning in ‘06 at Mirasol, Donald’s debut at the Honda’s new home last year was forgettable—a first-round 77 doomed his repeat chances.

    This time, he’s back in the ideal position.

    “If you get a strong wind, constant wind, it’s still not an easy golf course,” Donald said. “Anything under par is a good score.”



    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Daniel Vancsik & Shamim Khan Share Lead

    Argentine Daniel Vancsik and India’s Shamim Khan shot superb five-under-par 67s to emerge as unlikely first round leaders on the opening day of the Johnnie Walker Classic on Thursday.

    Vancsik, 31, who recorded his maiden European Tour win last year, sank an eagle on the par-five ninth before rolling in three birdies on the back nine.

    Khan took advantage of a familiar course as he sank five birdies in a bogey-free round to join Vancsik one shot ahead of the field at the event sanctioned by the European, Asian and Australasian Tours.

    World number five Adam Scott was among 11 players who shot 68s for tied third at the par-72 DLF Golf and Country Club in ideal conditions.

    “I’m very pleased how I’m playing,” the 27-year-old Scott told reporters. “There was one bad shot, I’m happy.”

    That slip-up led to a double-bogey five on the 16th to drop him off the joint lead before Scott birdied the penultimate hole.

    Unheralded Khan gave Indian golf a further boost following compatriot Shivshankar Chowrasia’s victory at this month’s inaugural Indian Masters.

    “The lines aren’t too difficult to read,” the 29-year-old said. “You have to adjust to it. I took only 24 putts today.”

    Vancsik credited his sound approach shots.

    “The course is really tough and I was perfect with my tee shots,” he said. “I had so many chances for birdies and made a few of them which was nice.”

    India’s Jeev Milkha Singh, the 2006 Asia number one, led by one shot with three holes left but bogeyed the next two after finding water on the 16th before saving par from the greenside bunker on the final 18th hole for 68.

    Fiji’s three-times major winner Vijay Singh was unhappy with his two-under 70 while eight-times European number one Colin Montgomerie of Britain struggled to post a two-over 74.

    “It’s very disappointing,” Singh told reporters. “I hit the ball really well but didn’t putt well. There were too many loose shots, I must say, five or six.”

    World number 24 Ian Poulter had three double-bogeys in four holes for a four-over 76, his game sharply contrasting with the dazzling golden shirt and shiny trousers he was wearing.

    “Maybe he should dress more soberly,” joked Vijay Singh, his playing partner.



    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Lorena Ochoa Grabs Early Lead

    Top-ranked Lorena Ochoa got off to a fast start in her first round of the season, shooting a bogey-free 6-under 66 on Thursday at Tanah Merah to take a one-stroke lead in the HSBC Women’s Champions.

    “It was one of those days that I was getting the ball and making good contact especially, had a lot of birdie chances,” said Ochoa, an eight-time winner last season. “It was a great start.”

    The Mexican star skipped the LPGA Tour’s opening two events in Hawaii.

    “I am 100 percent ready to go,” she said. “It’s why I took a few more weeks to practice and why I am here.”

    Paula Creamer, coming off a victory Sunday in the Fields Open in Hawaii, and Japan’s Ai Miyazato opened with 67s in the inaugural 78-player event that features 18 of the top 20 players in the world.

    “I missed a lot of putts … but the ones that I holed were fairly big breakers,” Creamer said. “There’s not many straight putts that you have out there.”

    Miyazato also noted that the Garden course was challenging.

    “It’s pretty tough,” Miyazato said. “The fairways are narrow and the greens are sloppy, but the good thing is I can concentrate on hitting my shots. The shots felt really nice.”

    Sweden’s Linda Wessberg was two strokes back at 68 along with South Koreans Kim In-kyung and Lee Jee-young, while Australia’s Karrie Webb shot a 69 in her first LPGA Tour start of the year.

    Annika Sorenstam opened with a 71. She won her 70th LPGA Tour title at the SBS Open in Hawaii, ending a 17-month victory drought and vaulting her two spots to No. 2 in the world.

    Norway’s Suzann Pettersen, a five-time winner last year, had a 72.

    Ochoa birdied her opening hole, hitting a wedge to 5 feet. She made a 15-foot birdie putt on No. 3, a 6-footer off a 7-iron approach on No. 7 and two-putted from 40 feet for another birdie on the par-5 ninth.

    She hit a 9-iron to 3 feet to reach 5 under on No. 10, and blasted to 2 feet from a bunker for her final birdie on the 269-yard, par-4 16th.

    Ochoa played in a group with Sorenstam and Webb.

    “I love to play with them. It’s something that really motivates me to play better, and it was a great group today,” Ochoa said. “I really enjoyed it. I tried not to concentrate on what they were doing. I tried only to focus on my game.”



    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Mark Wilson Returns After Infamous Rules Incident

    At the Honda Classic, it’ll forever be known as the Mark Wilson Rule.

    Wilson was struggling just to make the cut at PGA National a year ago, and needed three routine shots to finish the par-3 fifth hole during his second round. Problem was, caddie Chris Jones told Camilo Villegas, who was playing alongside Wilson, what his boss hit on that hole.

    That’s where Rule 8-1 came into play.

    Giving other players advice during competition is prohibited, so Wilson paid dearly for the caddie’s mistake. He called a rules official on the sixth tee and docked himself two strokes, putting his chances of staying for the weekend in serious danger.

    “I thought we were done,” Jones said.

    By now, everyone knows Wilson wasn’t done.

    In a stirring turnaround, Wilson was 8 under over the next 49 holes, got into a four-man playoff and ultimately wound up getting his first tour victory, along with a $990,000 check. He’s back at PGA National this week, aiming to become the first back-to-back Honda champion since Jack Nicklaus, who won three straight from 1976-78.

    “I guess it shows that there’s more to the game than just hitting the ball in the hole,” Wilson said Wednesday. “You know, I think that’s maybe why it snowballed.”

    Wilson still hears about the penalty just about everywhere he goes.

    It’s part of Honda lore now, but this week, Wilson is looking ahead to the challenge PGA National’s Champion Course presents. His winning score here last year, 5 under, was the highest on tour in any 2007 event other than the U.S. Open (won by Angel Cabrera at 5 over) and the Masters (won by Zach Johnson at 1 over).

    PGA National is a demanding par-70, with some extremely tricky short holes, long carries on many driving holes and, if the wind blows right, can force some players to hit as much as 3-iron into some par-4 tests.

    “It becomes more of a mental challenge,” said world No. 7 Justin Rose, the second-highest ranked player in this year’s field after No. 4 Ernie Els. “The words you hear all the time—patience, grinding characteristics—come through. … So when you do get a low score at a regular tour event with similar characteristics, it’s an attraction.”

    Indeed, the Honda has become an attraction.

    Johnson and Cabrera—two of last year’s four major winners—are in the field, along with Sergio Garcia and all three of the players Wilson beat in the 2007 playoff: Villegas, Boo Weekley and Jose Coceres.

    “A lot of people should come play in it,” Weekley said. “It’s still to a lot of the guys’ advantage that it doesn’t take that much to win. I mean, there’s not a whole lot of birdies out here.”

    There are some three-putts, however.

    Weekley could have won the Honda on the 72nd hole last year before a stunning collapse. He three-putted on the final hole of regulation, missing a three-foot par try as darkness fell on PGA National, then came back Monday morning and lost to Wilson in the playoff.

    In true Boo style, he doesn’t seem to be too bothered by it now.

    “Ain’t nobody who wants to three-putt,” Weekley said. “But it’s just part of how I play golf. It just happens.”

    Somewhat surprisingly, cold weather will usher in the start of the tour’s Florida Swing.

    Temperatures fell into the high 50s on Wednesday, which is well below normal, and forecasters said wind chills—a phrase not often uttered in South Florida—could be in the high 30s by the time players begin teeing off Thursday morning.

    “I’ve got a 7:44 tee time,” Woody Austin said. “So that’s not a good spot to be in.”

    Wilson tees off a little after noon, when the sun—and the spotlight—will both likely be shining.

    He saved most of the money from last year’s win, blowing a bit on a party for about 40 friends and a new car. He’s exempt for the next two seasons by being a tournament champion, so he can finally relax a little bit.

    There’s a bit of added pressure, being a defending champion on tour for the first time, but Wilson said he doesn’t see any reason to change his approach now.

    “I was always looking to the next day, trying to make the cut, and lo and behold there I was in contention on Sunday,” Wilson said. “I guess I’ve figured out that with tournament golf, it can happen that easily. You just have to keep plugging along.”



    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Adam Scott Believes He Can Challenge Tiger

    Australia’s Adam Scott is convinced he can challenge world number one Tiger Woods although he believes nobody can push the American on a regular basis.

    The 27-year-old world number five has been tipped by swing coach Butch Harmon as the player most likely to challenge Woods, who romped to his eighth title in nine tournaments by winning the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship on Sunday.

    “No pressure, right?,” Scott joked with reporters on Wednesday ahead of the Johnnie Walker Classic, adding: “Yes, I certainly have a desire to do that (challenge Woods).”

    “I feel like I’ve developed a lot as a golfer over the last few years, and I feel like I’ve got the right attitude and the right mind set in place to give myself the best opportunity.”

    “Realistically, though, I don’t see anybody challenging him week in, week out,” he added. “I see the opportunity for a few players to have their moments when they can challenge him.”

    The winner of six titles each on the U.S. PGA and European Tours is favorite to win the Classic at the DLF Golf and Country Club course, near New Delhi, which tees off on Thursday.

    Scott said he puts the U.S. Masters ahead of the other three majors because he enjoyed playing at Augusta National, where the year’s first major takes place in April.

    “I really feel like I’ve got the game that can suit most places,” he said. “I feel like I can adapt to conditions and, certainly, my game has developed a lot on links golf courses, so I don’t mind playing The Open.

    “But Augusta, maybe it suits my game a little better.”

    The Australian won his first European Tour event of the 2008 season when be blazed to a course record final round of 61 at the Qatar Masters in January.

    He said it was tough to expect such a low score this week on a course whose undulating greens demand accurate approach shots.



    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Ryder Cup the Focus for Woody Austin

    President Cup winner Woody Austin’s main aim this season is to make the U.S. Ryder Cup squad for the first time.

    “That’s my number one goal this year. I’d rather get on that team than win a regular event,” he told reporters ahead of Thursday’s first round in the Honda Classic.

    “Like I said, that (team competition) to me is my personality. That is me. I enjoy that atmosphere.”

    Austin had an eventful team debut for the U.S. against the Internationals in the President’s Cup in September as he produced an impressive 1-1-3 record in a display which included a fall into the water on the 14th.

    The Tampa-born 44-year-old was dubbed ‘Aquaman’ after the incident but, aside from the hilarity prompted, it showed his character as he regained his composure to birdie the final three holes and earn a vital halve.

    While he was able to laugh at the incident, Austin wishes more recognition would be given to his actual performance following the splash.

    “I was there to play golf, and I was there for our team to win. And it would just be nice that people would recognize that I did birdie three of the last three holes in a row to halve the match, as opposed to always just falling in the water,” he said.

    Having enjoyed the close-up team company of the world’s top two players—Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson, Austin said that while he was keen for a major, he would love another team appearance.

    “Obviously I’d love to win Augusta or something like that, but as far as winning a regular event, I’ve won three now, so I’d rather get on my first Ryder Cup team than to win another and be in that element,” he said, adding that the U.S.’s defeats in the last three Cups gave him additional motivation.

    “Let’s face it, we’ve got our butts kicked for a while, I’d like to be on the team that brings it back,” he added.

    Austin believes new Ryder Cup captain Paul Azinger is just the man to help turn things around.

    “He’s going to be a perfect captain for what we need. We need somebody who is real fiery. He’s pretty fiery guy.

    “He’s already shook it up pretty good with his change in the way he’s approaching things. So you know, he’s at least taking a nice, aggressive approach to everything, and I think that’s important,” said Austin.

    This year’s Cup, a biennial event, will be held at Valhalla Golf Club, Louisville, Kentucky in September and there has been a change in the qualifying criteria for the U.S team with Azinger now able to choose four, rather than two, of the eight players himself. The other four slots are determined according to performances over the season.

    Azinger’s squad will be announced after the PGA Championship concludes on August 10.



    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Players Back LPGA Global Expansion

    The world's top players Wednesday supported an expansion of the US LPGA Tour overseas with more tournaments played globally, particularly in Asia where the sport is booming.

    Annika Sorenstam, one of the most successful golfers ever, said it was clear that interest in the game had spread worldwide.

    "If we look at the last 15 years, which is how long I've been playing, we have seen huge growth in the game in Asia," said the Swedish superstar, who is gunning to reclaim her world number one ranking this year.

    "There are more members joining the LPGA and more tournaments in the region.

    "Golf is definitely becoming a global game and the stage is set for us. I welcome that. It is good to make it more global, for the fans, for companies.

    "I welcome tournaments all around the world. I think it is good for all of us."

    Of 35 LPGA events this year, 25 are in the United States. Mexico gets three and Canada, France, England, Japan, Singapore, South Africa, and South Korea have one each.

    Current world number one Lorena Ochoa said the fact that such a big event as the HSBC Women's Champions tournament was in Singapore this week rather than the United States showed the tour's powerbrokers were taking notice.

    "We are doing it right, we have more international tournaments coming to Asia now. It's happening and it's right," said the Mexican.

    "I support the LPGA very much in what they do. It is great to see how much golf is growing. I'm happy to play in the United States and I'm happy to play in Asia."

    The men's European Tour is a striking example of how the game has developed over the years as it seeks new markets and a new fan base.

    Of 43 events this year, almost half are in either the emerging markets of Asia, the Gulf, or South Africa.

    Former world number one Karrie Webb said it was important to get sponsors on board who had the vision to take the game to the world, such as HSBC which touts itself as the global bank.

    "I think HSBC has displayed their interest in golf by also taking golf to parts of the world where they don't get premium tournaments all the time. So I think it's very important," said the Australian.

    "When you look at our tour, not only do we have a lot of Koreans on tour, but there's a good percentage of Asian players that make up our weekly fields in the States.

    "I think it's important to build the fan base of the LPGA for us to play around the world, considering there's more foreign players on tour by far now than there is US players on the LPGA."

    While she supports taking the game around the world more, Webb believes the majority of tournaments should always remain in the United States.

    "I think the LPGA is the United States' Ladies' Professional Golf Association, so my feeling is that the predominant amount of tournaments that we play are played in the United States," she said.

    "But we could get to a point where women's golf is healthy enough where we have world golf events like the men do where we can play several tournaments outside of the United States."



    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Ranking Not Affecting Justin Rose

    Britain’s Justin Rose heads into Thursday’s Honda Classic ranked seventh in the world.

    He will not let his status go to his head, though, said Rose, who last season won the European Tour’s Order of Merit and made his best earnings on the PGA Tour including seven top-10 finishes.

    “It doesn’t really change my job out on the golf course and obviously although sometimes, you recognise it or you feel it, the important thing is not to really believe it,” said Rose.

    “The job is still to go out there and play the golf course, and that’s what worked so well for me last year and that’s what I need to keep doing,” the 28-year-old said.

    Rose has suffered some hard times on his climb up the sport’s ladder—missing 21 successive cuts after bursting onto the scene with his fourth place finish, as an amateur, in the 1998 British Open.

    But he believes he learnt a lot from that lean spell.

    “I just feel like sometimes I perform my best when my back’s against the wall…and I think that’s what I felt I got out of that experience—the fighting,” said Rose.

    “I had to really dig myself out from a pretty big hole that I made for myself, so I guess that’s where that comes from and that’s where I feel like I’ve gained from that whole thing.”

    Birdies are at a premium at the PGA National course where Rose will be in action from Thursday and the South-African born golfer says he prefers the challenge of tough courses.

    “I think it’s a great golf course. That’s one of the large reasons why I put it on my schedule. I looked at the scoring last year and obviously 5-under par winning the tournament meant to me it was a tough challenge and a good test. That’s the kind of golf that I enjoy,” he said.

    “It becomes more of a mental challenge. The words you hear all the time, patience, grinding characteristics and qualities come through.”



    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Greg Norman & Fred Couples Named Presidents Cup Captains

    Greg Norman put aside his differences with the PGA Tour and agreed to be captain of the International team at the Presidents Cup, joining Fred Couples of the United States as the first captains who have competed in the matches.

    It will be held in October 2009 at Harding Park, a public course in San Francisco.

    The announcement Tuesday shifts the Presidents Cup into a modern era of captaincy. Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player were captains at the last three competitions, and previous captains included Arnold Palmer, Ken Venturi, Hale Irwin, Peter Thomson and David Graham.

    Couples was a natural fit as the face of these matches, which were patterned after the Ryder Cup and began in 1994.

    He clinched victory for the Americans in the inaugural year with a spectacular 9-iron from the bunker to 2 feet, and two years later, his 35-foot birdie putt on the 17th hole in the last match secured another win.

    In his fourth and final Presidents Cup, he made a 20-foot birdie on the last hole to beat Vijay Singh.

    The surprise was Norman, who has been battling with PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem for more than a decade over the World Golf Championships and more recently, the tour’s finances.

    Norman’s proposed world tour in 1994 never took root, and Finchem introduced the WGCs a few years later.

    “I think what’s happened in the past is in the past,” Norman said. “If you sit on a board of any company, you don’t want to have a friendly board. You need to have some bit of contentious, open discussion because not everybody is going to think exactly the same way. Tim and I have an open discussion about certain situations with the game of golf, whether it’s personal, whether it’s business.

    “The issues are always going to be there. Those issues have got nothing to do with The Presidents Cup.”

    Norman said Finchem asked him to be International captain at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, and he consulted Ernie Els, Vijay Singh and Adam Scott.

    His biggest issue will be finding a way to win.

    The United States leads the series, 5-1-1, with the only International victory coming in 1998 in Australia. The tie came in South Africa in 2003, the first year Nicklaus and Player were captains together.

    Tour officials then were looking at Couples and Norman as the next captains, but decided on Nicklaus and Player again in 2005 as a way to settle the tie. The Americans won the next year, then won again in 2007 at Royal Montreal.

    Couples is one of the most popular players in golf and figures to be the quintessential players’ captain.

    He has expressed interest in being the Ryder Cup captain, although any hope probably ended in December when he said, “I can promise you, there’s 12 guys who don’t want to do 75 percent of the stuff there. If you’re a great captain, you should tell everyone you’re not going to do 75 percent of the stuff.”

    The Presidents Cup is far more relaxed, and Couples jokingly suggested he would pick Michael Jordan and Robin Williams as assistants, one to tell stories of greatness, the other to tell jokes.

    “The Presidents Cup is a treat to play in, and it will be doubly to captain this thing,” Couples said. “As close as I am to these guys, I feel like I’ll have fun with all of them, whether they’re 50th in the rankings or first.”

    Norman has played two of the last three weeks on the PGA Tour, but is too consumed with his business and his engagement to tennis star Chris Evert to play much tournament golf.

    Couples said he planned to play a full schedule each of the next two years, and noted he would be eligible for the Champions Tour right after the Presidents Cup ends.

    “Not in my wildest dreams did I think this would happen,” Couples said.

    Many thought Norman would be captain in 2011, when the Presidents Cup goes to Australia. Norman said he would like to be considered for that, too.

    “But under the circumstances, I thought the priority for me right now was to get into the captain’s seat, do the best job I could possibly do for the next less than two years now, and basically pull the team through for 2009,” he said.



    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Ernie Els Eager to Bounce Back in Florida

    Ernie Els is eager to bounce back to form at this week’s Honda Classic in Palm Beach Gardens after suffering a nightmare first-round exit at the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship six days ago.

    The South African world number four was crushed 6&5 by Jonathan Byrd at Dove Mountain’s Gallery Golf Club, the fifth time he has lost in the event’s opening round in eight appearances.

    “My record’s not been great in that tournament, but I don’t regret making the trip,” Els, 38, said on his official website.

    “It is a big event and I like the golf course. I’ve been striking the ball quite nicely so I felt like I could have had a bit of a run this year.

    “Obviously, it didn’t work out that way. I had a bit of a nightmare. Basically, it was a combination of me playing poorly and Jonathan playing well. It was a disappointing day.”

    Els, who contributed to his premature exit at Dove Mountain by making four bogeys in the first nine holes, is looking forward to his first appearance at the Honda Classic since 1999.

    “I like the course here,” the three-times major champion said. “It’s a Tom Fazio design, updated by Jack Nicklaus in 1990, and it has lots of room off the tee and big greens.

    “I think it’s a golf course that I can do well on. I feel like I’m striking it quite nicely and I just want to play some solid golf now.”

    The smooth-swinging South African, one of the game’s leading players for more than a decade, is hungry to return to the winner’s circle on American soil for the first time in four years.

    “Some people can easily get on your case a little bit when things aren’t going so well,” said Els, whose last victory in the U.S. was the 2004 Memorial tournament. “But I don’t ever take any notice of that. I’ve just got to keep fighting and keep working hard on my game.

    “I’m now settled in for a long stretch of tournaments on the PGA Tour. I’ll be playing my way from here all the way into the (April 10-13) Masters. I really want to get back into the mix over here in the States.”

    Els heads a strong field at the PGA National in Palm Beach Gardens where six of the world’s top 20 will be playing.

    Also competing are seventh-ranked Briton Justin Rose, Spaniard Sergio Garcia (13th), U.S. Open champion Angel Cabrera of Argentina (14th), Britain’s Luke Donald(16th) and 19th-ranked American Zach Johnson, the 2007 Masters winner.

    American Mark Wilson defends the title he won 12 months ago in a four-way playoff.



    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Lorena Ochoa & Annika Sorenstam Clash for the First Time in 2008

    Lorena Ochoa will tee up against Annika Sorenstam for the first time this season.

    Ochoa said she’s geared up to keep the top ranking, which she took from Sorenstam last year, when she opens play Thursday in the inaugural HSBC Women’s Champions.

    Sorenstam already has a title under her belt, while Ochoa will make her season debut in Singapore. Sorenstam won her 70th LPGA Tour title at the SBS Open this month in Hawaii, ending a 17-month title drought.

    “I was at the beach while Annika was winning,” Ochoa said Tuesday. “I didn’t play the first two tournaments because I needed to spend a little more time at home and get prepared.

    “I feel ready. I think this is going to be a great year for all of us. We all want to finish at the first place, so let’s start,” she said.

    With a $2 million purse and $300,000 top prize, the HSBC Women’s Champions will be the richest women’s golf event in Asia.

    Ochoa will have plenty of competition at the Tanah Merah Country Club, most notably Sorenstam, whose recent victory vaulted her two spots to No. 2 in the world.

    Sorenstam is pleased with her start so far. She came off an injury-shortened season in 2007, where the Swedish star was winless on the LPGA Tour for the first time since her rookie season in 1994.

    “There’s definitely a spring in (my) step,” Sorenstam said. “I feel good again, I’m working out hard and I’m playing and practicing as hard as I can, so I feel healthy and I’m excited about the year.”

    Sorenstam acknowledged that it would not be easy surpassing Ochoa, who had an impressive eight wins in 2007. Sorenstam was limited to 13 events last year because of neck and back injuries.

    She wouldn’t mind regaining the top ranking.

    “Of course I would love to do that,” Sorenstam said. “I do think it’s going to take a lot for me this year to do that … I have a lot of catching up to do, so I’m just going to take one step at a time.”

    Paula Creamer of the United States, the winner of the Fields Open last weekend, is among a field that features 18 of the top 20 players in the world. Others include Cristie Kerr, Morgan Pressel and Karrie Webb.

    Third-ranked Suzann Pettersen had a breakout season last year with five wins, including the LPGA Championship.

    “Last year it was my first healthy year back from being injured a couple of times, and that was a big part of kind of having a consistency and being able to play every week without any aches and pains,” Pettersen said.

    “Golf is a funny game. You just have to try to make it as easy as possible — I mean it’s from the beginning a very difficult game, so the easiest you can do it, the better.”



    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Anton Haig Aiming to Enjoy Title Defence

    South Africa’s Anton Haig will focus on his swing rather than worry about his title defence at this week’s Johnnie Walker Classic.

    The 21-year-old produced an upset play-off win at the European Tour event in Phuket, Thailand last year to replace Tiger Woods as the youngest winner of the tournament.

    “I’m not going to put too much pressure on myself this week and want to enjoy it,” Haig said. “It is always tough to come back and defend with the pressure.

    Haig will be happy to ease into the background in the presence of big names such as Australian world number five Adam Scott, Fijian Vijay Singh, Scotland’s eight-time European number one Colin Montgomerie and Spain’s Miguel Angel Jimenez.

    “I’ve a bit of work to do here on my game this year,” he said. “I’ve my coach Jaime Gough here with me and I’m trying to get more width in the golf swing. I’ve got to keep it in play as it is a tight golf course.

    “The greens are running fast so you need to look for uphill putts,” said Haig at the Arnold Palmer-designed DLF Golf and Country Club just outside New Delhi.

    The event, co-sanctioned by the European, Asian and Australasia Tours, comes barely three weeks after the European Tour launched the Indian Masters in New Delhi.

    Scott, 27, six-time winner on the PGA Tour, won his sixth European Tour title when he blazed a course record final round 61 for a three-shot win at the Qatar Masters in January.

    Singh reached the quarter-final of last week’s WGC Accenture Match Play Championship where Montgomerie ran into eventual runner-up Stewart Cink in the third round.

    China’s 2007 Asian Tour money list winner Liang Wen-chong and India’s Jeev Milkha Singh, Arjun Atwal and Jyoti Randhawa lead the Asian challenge.



    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Zoeller & Jacobsen Win Champions Skins Game

    Fuzzy Zoeller and Peter Jacobsen rallied to win the Champions Skins Game on Sunday, winning six skins and $320,000 in alternate-shot play to beat defending champions Jack Nicklaus and Tom Watson.

    Zoeller and Jacobsen were each making their second appearances at the tournament and their first as a team.

    “These guys in this thing are Hall of Famers. These are legends,” Jacobsen said. “Once we got past the resumes on the first nine holes, we kind of settled in.”

    Nicklaus and Watson won eight skins and a record $270,000 in the first nine holes Saturday, but were shut out Sunday. Gary Player and Loren Roberts finished third with $180,000 and Arnold Palmer and Jay Haas were shut out.

    “It was Jack’s and Tom Watson’s day yesterday. But today, it’s another day. It’s golf. It’s a crazy game and things were just falling our way,” Zoeller said. “Guys were missing putts and we had an opportunity to make a couple to get us into the positive category and it just blossomed from there.”

    After Zoeller-Jacobsen and Nicklaus-Watson halved the final in regulation, Zoeller tapped in for par on the first extra hole to take the final $100,000.



    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Henrik Stenson Taking Break Before Masters

    World number 12 Henrik Stenson, buoyed by a brilliant start to the year, is taking a three-week break to recharge his batteries before turning his attentions to the U.S. Masters.

    "It has been a great start with two second places in Abu Dhabi and Qatar, a sixth in Dubai and a third (at the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship in Arizona)," he told the European Tour's official Web site.

    "Now I have time to have some rest, work on my game and be fresh for Augusta."

    The big-hitting Swede, who defeated American Justin Leonard 3 & 2 in Sunday's third place playoff in Arizona, is set to return to action at the WGC-CA Championship at the Doral Resort in Florida from March 20-23.

    Stenson's consistent form has taken him to the top of the European order of merit and into second place on the world points list for the European Ryder Cup team.

    "I have a great record in match play and I hope I can keep on playing well throughout the season, get my points up and be part of that (Ryder Cup) team again," said the 31-year-old. "That would be great.

    "I wanted to get some points on the board and I've managed to do that," added Stenson, who was beaten by world number one Tiger Woods in the semi-finals in Arizona.

    Stenson's run to the semis was the highlight of a good week for Europe as Paul Casey and Colin Montgomerie also reached the third round of the first WGC (World Golf Championships) event of the season.

    Eight-times European number one Montgomerie gave a timely reminder to Ryder Cup captain Nick Faldo ahead of the biennial clash with the United States at Valhalla, Kentucky in September.

    But the 44-year-old Scot still has work to do to qualify for the U.S. Masters which begins on April 10.

    The players occupying the top 50 positions in the world rankings the week before Augusta are automatically invited to the first major championship of the season and Montgomerie's efforts in Arizona have only lifted him from 62nd to 54th.



    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Already Talk of a Perfect Tiger Season

    The closest anyone came to a perfect season on the PGA Tour was Ben Hogan.

    He won every major championship he played in 1953, and every official tournament he entered except for the Seminole Pro-Am Invitational, where he tied for second. Then again, Hogan only played six times that year because of battered legs from a bus accident.

    Tiger Woods will play no more than 17 events on the PGA Tour this year, so a 2-0 start might be a little early for anyone to get excited.

    Even so, expectations were as high as the desert sun at noon when Woods left Arizona with yet another victory. It was his fourth in a row on tour since early September, all done in record fashion.

    He set a 72-hole scoring record at Cog Hill outside Chicago and won by eight shots at the Tour Championship and theBuick Invitational, both record margins. On Sunday, he smoked Stewart Cink 8 and 7 in the Accenture Match Play Championship, the biggest blowout in the finals in 10 years of a tournament that Woods considers the toughest to win this side of a major.

    “I think this certainly is the best stretch I’ve ever played,” Woods said.

    Strong words—downright scary—considering that Woods won nine times, including three straight majors, in 2000 and that he won six consecutive PGA Tour events at the end of 2006, a streak that reached seven until losing in the Match Play the following year.

    Woods, who also won in Dubai earlier this month, has never before started a season with three straight victories, and it is hard not to speculate how long he can keep winning given his history at some of the tournaments coming up.

    Next is the Arnold Palmer Invitational March 13-16 at Bay Hill, where Woods won four straight times from 2000 to 2003. The week after that is the CA Championship at Doral, where he has won the last three years.

    Then the Masters April 10-13.

    “He just morphs his game into the courses,” Cink said. “So I don’t think there’s a course that’s going to present him with a real obstacle as far as him not being a favorite.”

    Woods did little to squash the notion of a perfect season when someone asked him if winning them all was within reason.

    “That’s my intent. That’s why you play,” Woods said after collecting his 63rd career tour victory and his 15th title in the World Golf Championships. “If you don’t believe you can win an event, don’t show up.”

    But it also is his intent to make every putt and hit every shot just how he wants. No one does that, of course. No one wins every tournament. Byron Nelson holds the record with 11 straight victories during a year in which he won 18 times in 30 events. That means he lost 12 times that year.

    A perfect season in golf?

    “I do find that laughable,” Hal Sutton said Monday. “Anybody who knows golf knows that ain’t going to happen. You can only own this game for a certain period of time. Even if your name is Tiger Woods, you don’t own it forever.”

    Sutton was among those who beat Woods during a time when the world’s No. 1 player looked unbeatable, going head-to-head with him at The Players Championship in 2000 and winning by one shot.

    He watched part of the championship match Sunday “until I got bored.”

    “Tiger is definitely more dominating,” Sutton said.

    Curtis Strange is among those who played in the prime years of Woods and Jack Nicklaus, and he said it is pointless to compare generations. But he also found speculation of a perfect season to be “a little over the top.”

    “He is by far and away the best player,” Strange said. “We’ve never had a player this much better than the second-best player. He’s unbelievable, really. But he’s not unbeatable. Let’s not get ahead of ourselves just because he beat Stewart Cink 8 and 7.”

    As usual, the best comparisons are to Woods himself.

    Most consider his best golf to be from late 1999 through the 2001 Masters, when he won 16 of 32 times on the PGA Tour and four consecutive majors. Dating to the 2006 British Open, Woods has won 15 of his last 24 events, a 63 percent clip.

    “He just has this strong sense of belief in himself that he’s just never out of it,” Cink said. “He’s never going to mess up. He’s just always in control. He never loses his composure.”

    The more he talked, the more Cink made Woods out to be a machine.

    “I think maybe we ought to slice him open to see what’s inside there,” Cink said. “Maybe nuts and bolts.”

    Not many thought Woods could ever produce better results than 2000, the benchmark of greatness in his era. Woods, however, has been saying all along that his plan was to get better. And with each victory, what seemed impossible is not unthinkable.

    Woods knows he was fortunate to win the Match Play. In the first round, he rallied from 3 down with five holes to play against J.B. Holmes by winning four straight holes with three birdies and a 35-foot eagle. In the third round, Aaron Baddeley twice stood over putts inside 12 feet to win the match before Woods prevailed on the 20th hole.

    “I played 117 holes this week,” Woods said. “I could have easily played 16 and then been home. That’s the fickleness of match play.”

    And such is the fickle nature of golf.

    Odds are, Woods won’t win them all.

    But if he were to even win three of his next six on the PGA Tour, that would give him 18 wins in his last 30 starts, essentially matching Nelson’s golden year in 1945.

    And even that might not be enough to satisfy him.

    “You can always get better,” Woods said. “You can always keep improving.”



    Add to Technorati Favorites
More Posts Next page »
Privacy Policy | Legal Statement | Advertise
© 2006-2009 Tees2Greens, Inc.