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April 2008 - Posts

  • Adam Scott, Best Player Not to Contend?

    One of the most vexing labels in golf is “best to have never won a major,” which is now affixed to Sergio Garcia with little debate. But there is another description that is even more burdensome, and it belongs to Adam Scott.

    Best to never even contend in a major.

    “That’s the last thing he needs to do to get to the next level,” swing coach Butch Harmon said Monday night. “You forget that he’s won a lot of tournaments. But he’s got to step up to the plate in the majors, and stop putting so much pressure on himself.”

    It is no disgrace that the 27-year-old Scott has not won a major. Those are hard to come by in the era of Tiger Woods, and it has become even more difficult in recent years now that Phil Mickelson has figured them out.

    Only five players in theirs 20s, including Woods, have won majors this decade.

    Perhaps even more startling is that in the last five years, only 15 players in their 20s have finished in the top five at majors. Garcia is the leader in the clubhouse with six top fives since 2003, which includes a playoff loss at Carnoustie last summer, and playing in the final group with Woods at Royal Liverpool the year before.

    That’s why the “best to have never won a major” tag fits Garcia better than anyone else. Along with his six PGA Tour victories and 10 victories around the world, he has eight top fives in the majors since he turned pro in 1999.

    Scott turned pro a year later, and his record stacks up favorably to Garcia except in one major department.

    The Australian’s only top five in a Grand Slam event came two years ago at Medinah, where he tied for third in the PGA Championship, albeit six shots behind Woods. His closest call came at Whistling Straits in the 2004 PGA Championship, when he tied for eighth, three shots out of a playoff won by Vijay Singh

    That he has not seriously contended is a mystery, and it only deepened with his victory Sunday in Dallas.

    Scott didn’t earn any style points at the EDS Byron Nelson Championship, but he showed plenty of heart. He took a three-shot lead into the final round, let it slip away with a tee shot into the water, rallied with a do-or-die birdie putt on the 18th, then atoned for two 10-foot misses by holing a 50-foot birdie putt on the third playoff hole.

    “I needed to walk out of here with a trophy,” Scott said. “I needed to go and close this thing out, and it was tough, but I managed to do it. I feel pretty good about myself. It would have been a tough defeat. Even in tough conditions, to let go of a three-shot lead doesn’t sit too well with many people, and that goes for me, as well.”

    Forget the majors for a moment and consider Scott’s consistency.

    His victory at the Byron Nelson put him in some elite company—with an asterisk—by winning at least one PGA Tour event each of the last six seasons. Only Woods, with victories in 13 straight seasons, has a longer active streak on tour. Scott’s streak includes 2005 at Riviera, where he won in a playoff over Chad Campbell after rain limited the tournament to 36 holes, making it unofficial.

    And while Scott hasn’t won a major, he has won big events against strong fields.

    The Aussie won the next best thing to a major in 2004 at The Players Championship, becoming the youngest champion at age 23. He ended the 2006 season with a victory in the Tour Championship by three shots over Jim Furyk. His first PGA Tour victory came at the Deutsche Bank Championship outside Boston.

    But it all comes back to the majors, one glaring gap for a guy who seems to have everything.

    His swing is so sound, so efficient, that he often was compared with Woods until the world’s No. 1 player revamped his swing. He is blessed with movie star looks, and no scene was more startling than at Oak Hill at the 2003 PGA Championship when women were handing their hotel room keys to security guards to give to Scott.

    His manners are simply impeccable. He treats everyone with equal consideration.

    Maybe he’s too nice, more lamb than tiger. His demeanor is in stark contrast to that of Garcia, whose temperament can hurt him as much as it helps. You won’t see Scott spit into a cup, nor will you hear him complain about his endless run of bad luck.

    But there was something that caught Harmon’s attention late Sunday afternoon. With a chance to take a one-shot lead as he stood over an 8-foot eagle putt on the 16th hole, Scott left it short. He stood alone on the back of the green, lips pursed, anger visible.

    “He was chewing himself out,” Harmon said.

    Ryan Moore made a 12-foot birdie ahead of him on the 17th hole to take a one-shot lead. Scott responded with a two-putt par from some 80 feet across the 17th, then two perfect shots and a clutch birdie to force the playoff.

    To lose would have stirred memories of Memphis last year, when he blew a three-shot lead in the final round with a 75. Or at the Accenture Match Play Championship, where he missed three putts inside 10 feet on the final four holes to lose to Woody Austin.

    “This is a big step for him,” Harmon said. “It’s big for his confidence.”

    It was his second victory this year, having won the Qatar Masters with a 61 in the final round, and it sends Scott to the Wachovia Championship and The Players Championship the next two weeks on a high.

    He can only hope it’s not another tease.

    The real test comes six weeks from now at Torrey Pines for the U.S. Open.



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  • Padriag Harrington Focusing on US Open

    Open champion Padraig Harrington said he was skipping next month’s PGA Championship at Wentworth, the European Tour’s flagship event, because it would disrupt his preparation for the U.S. Open.

    The 36-year-old Irishman, who won his first major at Carnoustie last year, said he peaked during the third week in a run of tournaments and wanted to time his best form for the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines in California, which starts on June 12.

    “I feel that I am at my best during the third week of a tournament run, as evidenced by playing two events before last year’s Open Championship,” Harrington told Reuters on Tuesday.

    “Therefore, for the same reason I missed the WGC-CA Championship at Doral ahead of the Masters, I have decided not to play in the PGA Championship ahead of the U.S. Open.”

    The Tour’s showpiece event, won last year by Denmark’s Anders Hansen, is at Wentworth’s West Course from May 22-25.

    Harrington will play the Wales Open over the revamped 2010 Ryder Cup course at Celtic Manor from May 29 and will then play the Stanford St Jude Championship in Memphis in the week before the year’s second major.



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  • Lorena Ochoa's Rise to the Top of the Game

    The house where Lorena Ochoa grew up overlooks the swimming pool at Guadalajara Country Club, a playground paradise for a tiny, wiry girl with big dreams.

    She would scamper to the tops of magnolia and ceiba trees that crowd the golf course. She would swim and play tennis and hold putting contests for a peso until it was too dark to see the hole.

    “Lorena liked to play fantasy games—hit it over the tree, between the branches, over the rocks,” said Shanti Granada, who began playing golf with Ochoa at age 7. “She always stayed to hit practice shots, always with an extra imagination to make practice fun.”

    From these beginnings rose the best female golfer in the world.

    Ochoa, 26, already has met the performance criteria for the Hall of Fame. She has won five times in six LPGA Tour events this year, crushing the competition by a combined 37 shots, and this week in Oklahoma she will try to win her fifth straight tournament and tie a record held by Annika Sorenstam and Nancy Lopez.

    A month later, she will be a heavy favorite to capture her third straight major.

    Heady stuff for a kid from a soccer-loving country where there are fewer than 300 golf courses. Rafael Alarcon, though, might have seen this coming.

    Ochoa was drawn to Alarcon, a local PGA golfer, when she was about 8. She would stand behind him as he hit balls, peppering him with questions and following him around the course, until he one day invited her to play.

    As the trophies piled up—Ochoa won her age division at the Junior World Championships five years in a row—Alarcon asked her once on the practice green why she wanted to know so much about the game.

    “I want to learn to beat you,” he recalls her telling him. “I know if I beat you, I can be the best player in the world.”

    The day before she left Mexico for the University of Arizona, she did just that, by two strokes on the back nine.

    Now in her sixth full season on the LPGA Tour, there appears to be no stopping her.

    “Lorena is an amazing golfer and an even more impressive person,” said Lopez, whom Ochoa considers a role model. “She has become a true superstar … so well liked on the tour and so successful at the same time.”

    This is the essence of Ochoa. She has risen to the top of a sport still dominated by the wealthy in her native Mexico, where green fees often cost five times the average daily wage. Yet she is loyal to the working class who care for the golf course and to impoverished children who have never seen the game played.

    “She has always been sincere and friendly,” said Francisco Javier Lopez, who has worked on the Guadalajara golf course for 18 years. “Now that she’s winning and winning, she’s just the same as before, very humble.”

    Hometown papers call her “La Reina”—the queen—and praise her as much for her humility as her 280-yard tee shots.

    She already has her own charity, sponsoring a school for needy children in the Guadalajara area. On the road, she often takes time to meet with Latino groundskeepers, even helping them cook breakfast just before this season’s first major championship.

    And she has vowed to quit the LPGA Tour after 10 years to start a family, always the most important part of her life.

    “My family is the one that keeps me happy. It’s my motivation,” she said in March. “They make me feel normal, and I love that.”

    Ochoa’s parents—her father is a real estate developer, her mother an artist—raised their four kids in a small house overlooking the country club, just 15 minutes from the cathedral and colonial plazas of Mexico’s second-largest, sprawling city.

    She was 5 when her father put a golf club in her hand, and success soon followed—a state championship at age 6, a national title at age 7, and the first of five straight world championships a year later.

    None of that was an accident.

    Granada recalls how she and Ochoa were the only girls in a weekly golf class with 15 boys. The two played together everyday after school for the next 10 years, following a detailed practice schedule that Ochoa sketched on notebook paper and carried with her clubs.

    “Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday: Putt, 4:00-5:00; Approach, 5:00-6:00; Driving range, 6:00-7:00,” Granada recalls, diagramming a replica of the schedule on the country club’s ferny terrace. “Everything was perfectly structured.”

    From a young age, Ochoa learned to seek challenges and conquer her fears. She climbed Mexico’s highest volcano at age 12 and completed a three-day mountain “ecothon” of biking, kayaking and swimming at 14.

    Ochoa’s father hated his kids to sit around, so she dabbled in everything, including swimming, tennis and basketball. But when he told her to pick one sport, she chose her clubs.

    Most days after early mornings on the golf course, her father would pop her on the back of his moped and speed her to the Torre Blanca Catholic girls’ school, dressed in a blue plaid jumper and motorcycle helmet.

    Cameras showed up there in the fifth grade, as Ochoa continued winning Junior World Championships. Yet despite the attention, teachers remember a steady, dynamic and fun-loving perfectionist who never sought special treatment and was good at every sport she tried.

    Ochoa’s only teen rebellion was to sneak in to play basketball and volleyball—discouraged by her father, who asked gym teachers to keep her concentrated on golf.

    “One time she jammed a finger, and it swelled up fat and black and blue. We said, ‘Quick! Ice! Quick! Before her father gets here!”’ Ochoa’s high school gym teacher, Abigail Faviola Vasquez, recalls. “She was always a really positive, natural leader, and when she’d come to play, her enthusiasm was contagious. You could tell she was meant for great things.”

    Before leaving for Arizona, Ochoa asked Alarcon if he would one day be her coach. But first, she worked her way through college alone.

    She sometimes struggled to understand professors or write papers in English, but found her stride on the golf course, winning 12 of 20 tournaments in two years and twice earning NCAA Player of the Year honors.

    “I just remember seeing this little bitty thing and wondering how in the world she can hit the ball so far,” college coach Greg Allen said of the 5-foot-6 Ochoa. “She had a quiet confidence about her. The belief she has in who she is just sets her apart.”

    Ochoa, who lived with a Mexican family off-campus as a freshman, was good enough to turn pro after one year but stayed on a second season to mature, winning eight of 10 tournaments. She then clinched the Futures Tour money title to earn a ticket to the LPGA Tour in 2003.

    Alarcon and Ochoa then got to work, outlining a five-year plan that included becoming No. 1 in the world.

    Along the way, she has hit some bumps, squandering a chance to win the U.S. Women’s Open in 2005 by hooking her tee shot into the water on the 18th hole and making a quadruple bogey. That same year, she blew a three-shot lead to Sorenstam in Phoenix, a devastating loss.

    But she saw the mistakes as a chance to get better.

    “She’s so good at learning from experiences and adversity and turning it into a positive,” Allen said. “She’s such an emotional person—she laughs, cries—but she has really learned to control those things, and that has helped her finish down the stretch.”

    A Catholic, Ochoa prays daily and crosses herself before every round, often on the first tee. Friends say that faith feeds her confidence, keeping her calm and balancing her other interests in life.

    “The best thing about Lorena isn’t what she does on the golf course,” Allen says. “The way she cares about people and wants to make their lives better, that’s who Lorena really is.”

    At La Barranca, the Guadalajara elementary school she sponsors, low-income students race to hug her when she visits.

    Interest in Ochoa is exploding across Mexico, as thousands of kids and adults crowd courses in ribbons and baseball hats, chanting “Lo-re!” and running from hole to hole alongside her. This fall, she will become the youngest player to host her own LPGA event there, the Lorena Ochoa Invitational.

    Ochoa and her brother already have opened two academies to train instructors and hope to help build public courses, an effort to make golf more accessible.

    “The country looks to Lorena because they’ve identified with her career and what’s important to her,” Alejandro Ochoa says. “She’s an inspiration to keep going, never quit and, despite the circumstances, stay humble and tied to your goals.”



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  • Scott Up to 5th - Clarke Closes on Top 100

    Australian Adam Scott made a 9-foot birdie putt on the 18th to force a playoff, then made a 48-footer playing it again on the third playoff hole to beat Ryan Moore in the EDS Byron Nelson Championship. On a cool and blustery final day Moore had shot a fine round of 68 to eliminate Scott's three stroke overnight advantage. With the win Scott moves up to world number 5, a jump of 5 positions, while Moore improves his world ranking by 37 positions to 72nd.

    Darren Clarke won his first European Tour Tournament since 2003 as he claimed the BMW Asian Open, co-sanctioned with the Asian Tour, on his first competitive visit to China. Clarke and final day playing partner Robert-Jan Derksen tussled for the title throughout the final round, Clarke winning by a stroke with a thirty foot birdie putt on the 72nd hole. Clarke climbs 124 places up the Official World Golf Ranking to 112th.

    Hur Suk-ho from Korea won the Tsuruya Open on the Japan Golf Tour by a single stroke from compatriot Kim Kyung-Tae and climbs 93 places to world number 206.

    This week's other winners were Greg Chalmers at the Henrico County Open on the Nationwide Tour, Joakim Haeggman at the AGF-Allianz Open Côtes d'Armour Bretagne on the European Challenge Tour and John Ellis at the Corona Mazatlan Mexican PGA Championship on the Canadian Tour.



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  • Adam Scott Beats Ryan Moore in a Playoff

    Adam Scott felt he needed to make a statement by winning Sunday. He did, though, not quite the way he wanted to do it.

    After blowing the three-stroke lead he carried into the final round, Scott made a 9-foot birdie putt on No. 18 to force a playoff, then made a 48-footer playing it again on the third playoff hole to beat Ryan Moore in the EDS Byron Nelson Championship.

    “In the end, I think (the statement) was to myself, I could actually win it when things weren’t going my way,” Scott said. “But it wasn’t quite the statement I had in mind. I would have liked to have gone out there and have played like Ryan played and won by a few.”

    Still, Scott made the clutch shots when he needed them for his sixth PGA Tour victory after cutting short his post-Masters trip home to Australia so not to waste his good play there.

    Playing the 18th hole for the third time in less than an hour, the second time in the playoff, Scott hit his tee shot into a fairway bunker to the right. But he got his approach to the front of the green, then rolled the putt over two ridges and into the cup.

    “I got away with one today,” said Scott, at No. 10 in the world the highest-ranked player in the Nelson field. “A bit lucky.”

    Moore still had a chance to force another hole, but his pin-high putt from the fringe skimmed just past the cup.

    “I’m just a little frustrated I didn’t make mine,” said Moore, who closed with a 2-under 68 to match Scott (71) at 7-under 273.

    The playoff was a fitting end after a back-and-forth Sunday duel between Scott and Moore, who finished four shots ahead of Bart Bryant (72). Nicholas Thompson (67), Mark Hensby (69) and Carl Pettersson (69) tied for fourth at 2 under.

    It was the fourth career runner-up finish for Moore, the first player since Tiger Woods to skip Q-school and go straight from college to the PGA Tour. Woods got his first victory in his seventh start as a pro, while Moore is still looking for his first after 70 tournaments since 2005, after he was a four-time All-American at UNLV.

    “A loss is a loss, but I tied for first at the end of the day,” said Moore, who had never been in a playoff. “I was just proud of myself for battling around on a tough day in tough conditions.”’

    Playing conditions at the redesigned TPC Four Seasons changed drastically again after rain overnight combined with blustery conditions Sunday. It was an unseasonable cool day with temperatures barely reaching 60 degrees, with wind gusting to 30 mph making it feel cooler—and making club selection harder.

    The winning score was the highest since the Nelson moved to the Las Colinas venue in 1983. Only three other times had a winner failed to finish at least 10-under par, and two of those were in rain-shortened tournaments.

    The playoff started with both players making pars, first at No. 18 and then at the TPC Four Seasons’ signature par 3, the 198-yard 17th hole, where Moore had taken a one-stroke lead in regulation by curling in a 12-foot birdie putt.

    Scott, who earned $1,152,000, missed opportunities to win on each of the first two playoff holes, leaving makable birdie putts short both times.

    Moore’s tee shot to start the playoff went way right into the gallery, but he made a great save to the green and was able to two-putt for par.

    When they were back to 17, Scott went for the flag tucked in the right front of the green beyond the lake, and landed the ball about 10 feet from the cup. Moore was well left off the fringe, near the same area where Scott was in regulation, but both two-putted, sending them to 18 again.

    Moore played for only the third time in 10 weeks, having taken some extra time off this spring instead of continuing to play through the pain of a sore shoulder and surgically repaired left hand still bothering him two years later. He opened with a 67 for a share of the lead.

    “After this week, I’m looking forward to the rest of the season,” Moore said.

    It was the 16th playoff at the Nelson since 1968, more than any other tournament on the PGA Tour. The last was in 2004, when Sergio Garcia beat Robert Damron and Dudley Hart on the first extra hole.

    At the start of the day, Scott stuffed both hands in his pockets walking down the No. 1 fairway after pushing his opening tee shot way right into trampled grass, but he managed to salvage a bogey after a nice approach short of the green. He was steady until he got to the 174-yard fifth hole, where he hit his tee shot fat and into the water. That double bogey shrunk his lead over Moore from three shots to one.

    After Scott and Moore both birdied the par-5 seventh, Moore got even at 6 under with a 6-foot birdie putt on the 461-yard eighth.

    Moore went ahead with a 7-foot birdie at the 10th hole, and maintained that lead until consecutive bogeys. His tee shot at the 180-yard 13th went into a greenside bunker and he couldn’t make the 10-foot par putt, then his approach at No. 14 went into another bunker behind the green that put Scott up by one.

    But Scott, who had a 7-foot birdie attempt at No. 11 stop one roll short of dropping into the cup, hit his first two shots at No. 15 into the rough and wound up with bogey.

    “I will probably take away more from gutting it out than winning by five,” Scott said. “I needed to go and close this thing out, and it was tough. … It would have been a tough defeat.”



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  • Annika Sorenstam Beats Paula Creamer in a Playoff

    On the green at the first playoff hole, Paula Creamer and Annika Sorenstam couldn’t have had more varying emotions.

    A first-time playoff participant, Creamer said her hands shook grasping her putter.

    Sorenstam was the polar opposite, exuding nothing but cool confidence. And it showed.

    Sorenstam’s par on the lone extra hole Sunday was good enough to beat Creamer and win the Stanford International Pro-Am, the Swede’s 71st career victory on the LPGA Tour and one where she rallied from a one-shot deficit in the final two holes of regulation.

    “That’s what I love. That’s why I do this,” Sorenstam said. “Not to say I want to have playoffs every week, but it’s a lot of drama and you have to hit that certain shot when it counts.”

    Alas, that was Creamer’s downfall.

    After a wayward 9-iron off the tee—“a careless shot,” she said— followed by a poor pitch, Creamer made bogey at the par-3 17th to lose the outright lead with a hole left in regulation. At the par-5 18th, Creamer pulled her chip from just inside of 100 yards and was left with a 25-foot birdie putt, which stayed out and forced her to settle for par.

    Both laid up at the 18th in the playoff, with Creamer facing a tricky downhill birdie putt from just off the fringe, and Sorenstam leaving herself a birdie try from almost the same spot where she missed a potential winner in regulation.

    Sorenstam missed, but Creamer’s 6-foot comebacker for par stopped short and gave the Swede the victory—her 16th in 22 career playoff appearances.

    “It’s very disappointing,” Creamer said. “But at the same time, I’m going against one of the best players in the world ever to play golf. There’s a lot to learn from that.”

    Creamer closed with a 69, and Sorenstam shot a 70. They finished at 8 under.

    It was the first time in five weeks someone other than Lorena Ochoa won on the LPGA Tour. The top-ranked Ochoa skipped this event.

    Young Kim (69) and Karrie Webb, who turned in the round of the week with a 7-under 64, tied for third, one shot behind Sorenstam and Creamer. Momeko Ueda (71) finished alone in fifth at 5 under.

    It was Webb’s best finish since placing second at last year’s LPGA Championship, 17 events ago.

    “It’s a good finish for me,” Webb said. “I would have liked to made the one on the last, but I feel great about things. As much as I’ve been down on myself, I knew that if I could get my putter going, it just sort of goes to the rest of your game. I know my swing’s been close, but when you feel like you can’t make putts, you can’t go at pins. It’s a good start. Hopefully there’s more to come.”

    Webb’s charge started early, with five consecutive birdies on holes 2-6 vaulting her into serious contention. Lindsey Wright was 6 under for the day through 12, but that wasn’t enough nearly enough to close the gap. Young Kim had consecutive double-bogeys late on her front side, which proved quite costly.

    By late afternoon, it was a two-woman race.

    “I made more mistakes than she did,” Creamer said. “Obviously, I made more birdies than her and I knew going into it that I could make a lot of birdies out there. It was just the mistakes. She always plots herself around the golf course and that’s why she’s as good as she is. She doesn’t make those bogeys. I just made too many.”

    Creamer made two birdies in her first three holes to take the lead by one, until Sorenstam answered with a birdie at the sixth—ending a run of 26 pars in a stretch of 29 holes. Creamer blinked on the next hole, hitting one into a hazard and needing to remove her right shoe before splashing the ball out on the way to a bogey.

    One hole later, Creamer rebounded with a birdie, tying Sorenstam again at 8 under.

    They were both 9 under when Sorenstam pushed a 4-foot par try wide at the 13th, the mistake putting Creamer again alone in front. She stayed there until the bogey at 17 and that set up the nailbiter of a finish.

    “Even though I was trailing by one for the last four or five holes, I knew anything could happen,” Sorenstam said.



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  • Tom Watson and Andy North Hold on to Claim Wire to Wire Win

    Tom Watson and Andy North got what they wanted, but had to work for it, edging Greg Stadler and Jeff Sluman by a stroke Sunday in the Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf.

    Watson and North teamed for a better-ball 64 at The Club at Savannah Harbor for a 31-under 185 total. Stadler and Sluman shot a 61 on the island course in the middle of the Savannah River. Sandy Lyle and Ian Woosnam (60) finished two strokes back.

    “To hit quality shots when it counts, that’s what makes me tingle,” said Watson, who won the Outback Steakhouse Pro-Am last week in Florida.

    They started the day with a four-stroke lead, but in a format that produces tons of birdies, it wasn’t surprising that others finally made a run at Watson and North.

    “I birdied No. 11,” Sluman said. “But, I had eagled it the previous two days, so Craig was a little disappointed there.”

    Stadler and Sluman, playing one hole ahead of Watson and North, had consecutive birdies on Nos. 11-14. During that run, Sluman’s chip within 4 feet on the 13th pulled them into a tie with the leaders at 28 under.

    But North broke the tie with a 15-footer a few minutes later on the 13th. Stadler got his team to 29 under with a chip to 2 feet at No. 14, but Watson matched it from 6 feet when he got to the 14th, regaining the lead.

    Stadler birdied No. 16, but Watson, after first backing off to let a bug crawl out of his line to the cup, sealed it with a birdie on No. 17.

    “I hit a chip to about 18 feet on 17 and rattled that one right in there,” Watson said.

    Watson and North, who have played 162 consecutive holes together without a bogey, had campaigned loud and long for the Legends to return to a team format. They paired up to win the Raphael Division the last three years, but it was always unofficial money. Only the Legends Division was official money, and it was individual play.

    “We worked so hard to get this format,” said North, who earned $225,000 for his share of this win. “We felt it was really important to play well.”

    This was North’s first win—or share of a win—since the 1985 U.S. Open at Oakland Hills.

    To get into the Legends Division, North was one of four who needed a sponsor exemption. North, who has had 11 operations for various injuries, spends most of his time doing television work for ABC and ESPN. Being part of the winning team now makes North exempt, but he doesn’t expect to use his new playing privileges.

    “My schedule,” North said. “I’m solid. The events I’d really like to play, I’m working. The Senior Open, Senior British Open, I work.”

    Woosnam, Wayne Grady and Bill Rogers also needed sponsor exemptions to get into the tournament, a move that was popular with most Champions Tour players. But not all. Hale Irwin, for one, stayed away this week.

    “That’s his decision,” Sluman said.

    “Oh, well,” Stadler said. “Hope he enjoyed his time off.”

    The Legends was first played in 1978 in Austin, Texas, and is considered the event that launched the 50-and-over tour. It was all team play until 2002, but always unofficial money. The tournament was played in four cities and on eight courses before coming to Savannah in 2003.



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  • Masters Win Still Not Sunk in for Trevor Immelman

    South African Trevor Immelman discovered the hazards of becoming U.S. Masters Champion on Wednesday when he made his first golfing appearance since being fitted with the green jacket at Augusta National.

    “You see all the Sharpie (pen) marks on this hand,” he said raising his black ink-stained left hand. “That’s from all the Masters flags I signed today. It must have been over 100. That’s not something that usually happens to me.”

    Immelman, who captured his first major championship on April 13 by three strokes over Tiger Woods, was the centre of attention from fans and media before his first official tee shot on Thursday in the Byron Nelson Championship PGA Tour event.

    “It definitely has not sunk in yet,” he said. “It’s going to take a long time to sink in. This is all new to me.”

    Immelman said he had exchanged text messages with his idol and biggest fan, three times Masters champion and compatriot Gary Player, but had yet to speak to him in person.

    Immelman added that he was already thinking about the opportunity of joining Player at the Augusta Golf Club next year as a fellow Masters Champion.

    “Maybe I can sit next to him in the champion’s locker room next year. Do you think they will let me do that?,” he asked.

    The low-key Immelman said he had been overwhelmed with the trappings of celebrity status since winning the Masters.

    His rewards included reading a comedy Top 10 list on a national late night TV show to getting prime seats in New York to watch a professional basketball game.

    “My least favorite was reading the (Top 10) one about President Bush. I still need to continue to get visas here. I knew Tiger would think the line about him was really funny.”

    Immelman said he had received a call from Woods just last week congratulating him on the Masters victory.



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  • LPGA Moves on to Miami Without Lorena Ochoa

    Lorena Ochoa won’t win on the LPGA Tour this week. James Blake, however, has a chance.

    Having decided that four wins in successive weeks—a feat not seen in 45 years—was enough, Ochoa is skipping the inaugural Stanford International Pro-Am, which begins Thursday just north of Miami.

    Even without the tour’s overwhelmingly dominant player, there’s no shortage of star power. Annika Sorenstam, Suzann Pettersen, Paula Creamer and South Florida natives Morgan Pressel and Cristie Kerr are in the field, along with an array of celebrities, including Blake and fellow tennis star Ivan Lendl, baseball Hall of Famer Mike Schmidt and actor James Caan.

    The pros will play 72 holes; the celebs, 54, which will surely provide enough time for some embarrassing moments.

    “It’s going to be different,” Sorenstam said.

    And she wasn’t even talking about the fact that someone other than Ochoa will hoist a winner’s trophy on Sunday afternoon.

    Ochoa has won 10 of her last 15 starts, including the last four by a combined 26 strokes. Sorenstam won four straight starts, albeit not in consecutive weeks, in 2001, so she can certainly understand why, even in Ochoa’s absence, why the Mexican remains the talk of the tour this week.

    “I wish you would ask me how it would feel to try to go to five in a row,” Sorenstam said. “I miss those times and hopefully I get that later this year. It’s obviously a great time for Lorena. I hope she’s enjoying it. There’s pressure, but then by the end of the day, it’s fun.”

    There’s pressure and fun awaiting the amateurs this week as well.

    Take Caan, for example. He was an Academy Award nominee for his role in “The Godfather,” and still gets plenty of questions about his work in “Misery” and “Brian’s Song.”

    Yet when he gets to the tee box with partner Christina Kim on Thursday morning, he might not be quite ready for action.

    “I’ll be more nervous than I was in any of those former things that you mentioned,” said Caan, who quipped that he plans to take shots of valium “every two or three holes.”

    Mingling with low-handicappers—and, yes, even high-handicappers—is a regular happening on the men’s and women’s tours, where deep-pocketed amateurs shell out big cash for the chance to spend a day playing alongside a pro on the Wednesday before a tournament begins.

    Those are usually low-stress events.

    But the pros are vying this week for a $300,000 winner’s check, so they’ll have their own games to worry about.

    “Normally in the pro-ams, I try and help,” Kerr said. “I give tips and try and teach, ‘Hey, you should grip it more like this or try this with your technique or stay still with your putting.’ But this is going to be different. It’s going to be, I think, a little awkward for the amateurs, because they’re going to want to feel like they don’t want to mess us up. And we’re going to try and stay out of their way as well.”

    Blake, the No. 8 men’s tennis player in the world, could be contending for top honors this week on the clay in Monte Carlo. Instead, he’s playing on grass at Turnberry, teaming with Creamer, currently fourth in the women’s world rankings.

    He feels more than a little outside his comfort zone.

    “I’m a little scared because it’s the first time I’ll be playing with a gallery,” said Blake, who carries around a 13 handicap and plays two or three times a week when he’s not entered in a tennis tournament. “And I don’t think the gallery will be ready for the slice like mine.”

    Creamer asked Blake to be her teammate during a chance meeting in a mall where they bumped into one another. They’ve paired up once before, at a member-guest event on a course where Blake is a member.

    “It’s going to be fun. I’m going to have a great time, I know that,” Blake said. “She’s one of the best golfers in the world. I’ve played with her a couple of times before and it’s fun just to see how good those guys are. Suck up my pride a little and lose badly to a girl.”



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  • Lorena Ochoa Dominating Like Tiger Woods

    Of all the trophies Lorena Ochoa has collected since her magical hands first touched a golf club, one of her favorite mementos is a photograph taken when she was 12, standing beside a teenager who even then looked like a giant in the game.

    Her head doesn’t quite reach the shoulders of 17-year-old Tiger Woods.

    They posed in 1993 after Ochoa won her age division for the fourth straight year at the Junior World Golf Championship. They did not see each other again until last year at the Golf Writers Association of America dinner in Augusta, Ga., where Ochoa and Woods were honored as players of the year.

    Woods’ eyes lit up when he saw the Mexican phenom, and he wrote an extensive message on the photo before signing it.

    Now they are linked by more than just a snapshot.

    As Woods continues to rule his sport, Ochoa has emerged as a force in women’s golf. She has won five of her six tournaments this year, including a major, by a combined 37 shots, raising questions about who is the more dominant player.

    “That’s something that’s out of my hands,” Ochoa said. “That’s more the fans and the media point of view. But to be able to put my name next to him is always an honor, and I’m happy with that.”

    Each seemed destined for greatness at an early age.

    Woods learned the game before he could walk, mesmerized by his father swinging a golf club as Woods sat in a high chair. Ochoa was climbing trees at Guadalajara Country Club when she was 5 and broke both wrists after falling some 15 feet. She was in a cast from her shoulders to her fingers for three months.

    “They said the doctor gave me magical wrists, some magic in my hand,” Ochoa once said.

    Since setting an NCAA record at Arizona by winning eight straight tournaments as a sophomore, the 26-year-old Mexican has hit her stride and is running side-by-side with Woods.

    Both are No. 1 in the world rankings, with more than double the points of the next-best player.

    Woods skipped the PGA Tour’s first two events in Hawaii, then began his season with an eight-shot victory at Torrey Pines. Ochoa skipped the LPGA Tour’s first two events in Hawaii, then made her 2008 debut in Singapore and won by 11 strokes.

    Woods won four straight times to start the season, extending a streak that began in September. Ochoa won her fourth straight start last week in Orlando, Fla., the first woman in 45 years to win four consecutive events on the schedule. Next week in Tulsa, Okla., she can tie the LPGA record for consecutive victories held by Annika Sorenstam and Nancy Lopez.

    Ochoa has won 19 times since the start of the 2006 season, including the last two majors. Woods has won 18 times on the PGA Tour since 2006 with three majors, although he has played 20 fewer events.

    The biggest difference between them—at least this year—is their quest for a Grand Slam.

    Woods was the runner-up, three strokes back, at the Masters, ending his bid before it could get started. A week earlier, Ochoa ran off three straight birdies around the turn to pull away and win the Kraft Nabisco Championship by five shots.

    It was her second straight major, having won the Women’s British Open last summer at St. Andrews.

    “I guess right now I’m a little bit ahead because I won the last two,” Ochoa said.

    Perhaps more parallels await.

    Ochoa will be going for her third straight major at the LPGA Championship the first week of June. Pat Bradley in 1986 was the last woman to win three straight majors, while Woods is the only professional—male or female—to capture four in a row.

    What can stop her?

    “I’d like to believe nothing and nobody,” Ochoa said after winning the Nabisco. “I know this is just the beginning of the year. I know I put some high goals this year, but I want to try to keep going.”

    It was only three years ago that similar comparisons were made between Woods and Sorenstam, who dominated women’s golf for five years. Sorenstam won six of her first eight tournaments in 2005, including the first two majors, by wearing down the field with her consistent, precise, robotic play.

    Ochoa brings far more sizzle, not to mention power, and it shows in how badly she is crushing her competition. Ochoa twice has won tournaments by 11 shots this year.

    At the Safeway International outside Phoenix, the strongest field in women’s golf, she won by seven strokes.

    “Everything that she’s done this year has been phenomenal,” Brittany Lincicome said.

    Even more remarkable is a graciousness rarely found in an athlete so ruthless.

    Ochoa is proud of her heritage and her people, and often goes to the maintenance barn at golf tournaments to visit with the grounds crew, most of whom are Latino. She spent a half-hour with them at the Kraft Nabisco in Palm Desert, Calif., helping them cook breakfast, talking soccer and thanking them for their work.

    When she closed out last season with a $1 million payday, Ochoa pledged $100,000 for flood victims in Mexico and set aside a large amount to help build schools for needy children in her town.

    LPGA officials still rave about last year at the Ginn Tribute, which honored the women who founded the LPGA Tour in 1950. Some of the founders asked for Ochoa’s autograph, and only after signing did she go back and ask for theirs. She also had her picture taken with them.

    “To keep for memories,” Ochoa said.

    No doubt, she will treasure it along with the photo with Woods, both in their own way reminding her of an amazing journey.



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  • Trevor Immelman Returns for first Time as Masters Champion

    South Africa’s Trevor Immelman puts his credentials as U.S. Masters champion to their first test in the Byron Nelson Championship from Thursday.

    Immelman will be looking to wrest the title from Texan Scott Verplank, who had an emotional victory at his hometown event last year shortly after his mentor Nelson had passed away.

    World number one and former Nelson champion Tiger Woods, second behind Immelman at Augusta, is missing the tournament after having knee surgery early last week.

    Also missing are ex-champions Phil Mickelson, Vijay Singh and Ernie Els but former winner Sergio Garcia is taking part.

    The highest-ranked player in the tournament is world number 10 Adam Scott of Australia. Sickness forced Scott to withdraw after an early lead in the Houston Open three weeks ago and he had a disappointing performance in the Masters.

    The absences are mainly due to top players still resting after the season’s first major and a wait-and-see attitude on the new Las Colinas course which replaced an older and much distained layout.

    The players and their caddies only had their first look at the renovated course this week, although early impressions have been positive.

    “The holes that were good on this golf course, he didn’t mess with, and the holes that needed improvement, like the first hole, are much better,” former Nelson champion Ted Purdy said, referring to designer and long time pro D.A. Weibring.

    Verplank said: “I think the changes to the course are really good and Byron would be proud.”



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  • Scott Verplank Faces New Challenges at Byron Nelson Championship

    Scott Verplank will defend his only PGA title since 2001 starting Thursday at the Byron Nelson Championship, but the 43-year-old American will notice some major changes from last year.

    The 6.4 million-dollar event at the renovated TPC Four Seasons Las Colinas course is named for the late five-time major champion who won 11 tournaments in a row in 1945, still the record win streak in tour history.

    Alterations at the par-70 layout include lengthening the first two holes as well as the 15th, 16th and 17th holes. In addition to 200 extra yards, every green has been reshaped.

    Past events have also been played over two courses but this year's quest for a 1.15 million-dollar top prize will be contained entirely on the TPC layout.

    Verplank won the first Nelson event played after the death of its namesake, sinking birdies on three of the last five holes to capture his fifth career PGA victory, made sweeter by coming in the suburbs of his Dallas hometown.

    Verplank, who edged England's Luke Donald by a stroke to claim the crown, had met nelson as a child and even played several rounds of golf with him before the legend's passing.

    South African Trevor Immelman will play his first tournament as a major champion, making his first start since capturing the Masters title two weeks ago. Immelman finished second to Brett Wetterich in the 2006 Nelson tournament.

    Donald will also try to improve upon a runner-up showing. His past 12 rounds in the event have all been below the par-70 mark.



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  • Greg Norman "Earth" Course to Host Dubai World Championship

    The Greg Norman-designed Earth course is to host next year’s inaugural Dubai World Championship, the world’s richest golf tournament with a prize fund of $10 million.

    Earth is one of four courses being developed at Jumeirah Golf Estates and one of two layouts being designed at the complex by former world number one Norman.

    “As a golf course architect it is rewarding and challenging to know this course (Earth) will be hosting the Dubai World Championship,” said the twice former British Open champion in a statement on Monday.

    “I’m proud to be part of such a significant event. “

    Australian Norman, who is now based in Florida, said the final four holes of Earth would provide a spectacular finish.

    “The entire course has a great balance but the finish will really stand out,” he said. “The last four holes will measure exactly a mile, 1,760 yards.

    “I expect it will be considered one of the most challenging and exciting miles of golf. The ‘final four’ will comprise a short par-four, a long par-four, a great par-three and a medium to long par-five so a lot of things can happen on the home stretch.”

    The inaugural Dubai World Championship, to be held in November 2009, will climax the new Race to Dubai, a season-long competition replacing the European Tour’s order of merit.



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  • Torrey Pines Being Tweaked for US Open

    We all know how U.S. Open courses are set up . . . fairways so narrow you get claustrophobia. Readjust your thinking. At Torrey Pines, the U.S. Golf Assn. has tweaked six fairways for the Open in June and actually widened four of them.

    What's next, dumping the rough?

    "Everybody thought we'd come in and narrow the place up," said Mike Davis, the USGA's senior director of rules and competitions. "We fooled them."

    Of course, Torrey Pines is still brutally long, all 7,643 yards of it, and that's the longest U.S. Open course in history. And there's still a 614-yard hole lurking out there, if the back tees are used.

    But for anyone already looking ahead to the Open (hello, Tiger Woods), the fact that the USGA is actually trying to make things even a little bit easier is one for the record books.

    Davis said the alterations are actually minor. Here are the changes.

    No. 4, 488-yard par four: The hole that runs along the ocean, the fairways have been widened out to the right, up near the green.

    No. 5, 453-yard par four: The fairway has been widened in the drive zone, which should bring bunkers into play.

    No. 13, 614-yard par five: If the shortest teeing area is used at 5390 yards, the fairway to the left, up against the canyon, is widened.

    No. 18, 573-yard par five: A risk-reward hole, the fairway is widened out near the pond and wraps left around the pond.

    Of course, the USGA did narrow a couple of fairways, the 612-yard 9th where three yards were taken off the left of the fairway in the third shot area and the 435-yard 14th where the fairway was narrowed up beyond the drive zone.

    The Open is still seven weeks away, and that's plenty of time to start getting ready for the chatter about the brutal, 614-yard par five - if it's played from the farthest tee, which would require a 250-yard carry over a canyon.

    Davis said the 539-yard tee at the 13th will be used at least once over the weekend and that all three teeing areas (the other is 599 yards) will be used at least once.

    But the 614-yard tee?

    "If we get normal weather conditions, it'll play straight downwind," Davis said. "But if we get any kind of precipitation or any cool weather and a crosswind or even a Santa Ana, I guarantee you won't see the tee marker all the way back there."



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  • Boo Weekley Defends Harbour Town Title

    Boo Weekley’s first Verizon Heritage victory was a surprising relief. His latest? A joyful celebration that was a year overdue.

    Weekley successfully defended his title Sunday at Harbour Town, closing with an even-par 71 for a three-stroke victory over Anthony Kim (71) and Aaron Baddeley (71).

    Last year, Weekley needed chips-ins on the 71st and 72nd holes to beat Ernie Els by a stroke on a Monday morning for his first PGA Tour victory.

    On Sunday, Weekley strode up the 18th fairway with the win very much in hand and the gallery chanting, “Boooo! Boooo!”

    “I thought that you really won is when you stand there and pull the ball out of the hole and turn around to the crowd and say, ‘You know, hey, I am the champ,”’ Weekley said. “I chipped it in back to back last year, and I didn’t get to stand there and turn to the crowd and do the fist pump.”

    And Weekley was ready to oblige. He gave the gallery a thumb’s up as they loudly cheered, “Boooo!” He bowed to the fans and threw up his hands in triumph.

    “I wanted to do the moonwalk, the belly-roll,” Weekley said.

    Weekley took a three-shot lead into the final round and watched it grow by mostly staying trouble free, and seeing competitors struggle to try and catch up.


    “It was a lot easier than last year, wasn’t it?” a smiling Weekley said to his group on the 17th hole after his routine par.

    Kim trailed by three at the start and, paired with Weekley, was in the best spot to pressure the leader. But Kim’s chance at a first PGA Tour title disappeared with a double bogey on the par-4 ninth.

    Jim Furyk, ranked ninth in the world, was the hardest charger early, cutting a six-stroke deficit in half with three birdies in the first five holes. Furyk, though, fell back with a bogey on the 11th.

    He shot a 69 to finish fourth, his third top-five finish in the past four Verizon Heritages.

    No one else, including former Verizon Heritage champs Baddeley and Stewart Cink, could make a run at Weekley.

    “I just struggled,” Weekley said. “I reckon everybody struggled.”

    Not that Weekley didn’t add his own pizazz to the round. He made bogey on No. 8 after botching a chip, then looked in trouble on the 10th with a difficult pitch over a bunker. And Weekley killed it—right into the cup for a birdie that put him up by five.

    Weekley grinned as the gallery chanted his name over and over.

    He did it again four holes later, slam dunking a 30-footer for birdie from the fringe that if it didn’t hit the cup might have rolled into the water off the edge of the peninsula green.

    “Well, it didn’t,” Kim said.

    Weekley earned $990,000, and a second straight invitation to the Masters. He tied for 20th at Augusta National to miss qualifying for 2009.

    The even-par finishing round ended Weekley’s string of seven rounds here in the 60s.

    Weekley’s the first with consecutive victories here since five-time winner Davis Love III in 1991 and 1992. The late Payne Stewart (1989, 1990) was the only other to go back-to-back in Harbour Town’s history.

    Both those stars had played this tournament several times before that success. Weekley just teed it up here for the first time last year.

    Perhaps more important for him, Weekley can revel in his Harbour Town title for another year.

    He’s charmed the galleries with his “Hee Haw” demeanor in a country club world full of starched collars and hushed tones.

    He proudly calls himself a redneck. He chews tobacco at times during his round. “It’s just a habit,” he says. “It’s a bad one, but it’s a habit.”

    He says the winner’s trophy will probably sit in the barn for a few weeks until his new house is built. He’s thrilled to get a second plaid champion’s jacket. “I can wear one on Saturday, one on Sunday,” he said.

    Weekley’s just as likely to rake a bunker or give a ball to a young fan—as he did to one adorable blonde pre-schooler during Saturday’s round—as to shoo away autograph seekers.

    What would you expect from some one who got his nickname from Yogi Bear’s cartoon sidekick, Boo Boo.

    It’s clear that Weekley knows Harbour Town better than your aa-ver-age golfer.

    Although, how long he keeps going at it is anyone’s guess. The 34-year-old says the game’s too stressful. “This golf is a crazy game. That’s why I only want to do it for so long and then get out of it,” he said.

    What would Boo do? “Where you been?” he asked. “Huntin’ and fishin.”



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