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October 2008 - Posts

  • Kent Jones & Michael Letzig Top Leaderboard

    Kent Jones (Photo by Marc Feldman/Getty Images)Kent Jones recovered from a tee shot in the rough to birdie the 18th hole Thursday for a 7-under 65, giving him a share of the lead with rookie Michael Letzig in the first round of the Ginn sur Mer Classic.

    They had a two-shot margin over Ryan Palmer, who birdied three of his first five holes and eased his way to a 67.

    Jones and Letzig played college golf at New Mexico a decade apart, but that’s where the similarities end.

    Letzig, who had never played a PGA Tour event in his life until earning his card last year through the Nationwide Tour, is 109th on the money list and is in good shape to keep his job for next year.

    Jones has spent most of his 10-year career around the 125th spot on the money list—the cutoff for keeping his card—and he arrived at the Ginn Ocean Hammock Resort at No. 179.

    He hacked out of waist-high native grass with a 5-iron into a fairway bunker on the par-5 18th hole, then hit 6-iron into 6 feet for an unlikely birdie that gave him a share of the lead.

    “That was my best round of the year, but that’s not saying much,” Jones said. “I played very solid. For some reason, I seem to play better in the fall. I would like to play better earlier in the year and not put this pressure on myself, but I can’t think about that.”

    Letzig, who has no such worries, made six of his birdies from outside 20 feet and matched Jones with a bogey-free round.

    “It was all putting,” Letzig said. “I pretty much secured my card last week, so there’s no pressure. It’s been a lot of stress all year, with a lot of middle-of-the-field finishes but the pressure is off and I’m kind of keeping relaxed out there.”

    Cameron Beckman, who won in Arizona last week to earn a two-year exemption on tour, kept right on rolling with birdies on two of his last three holes for a 4-under 68 to join a group that included James Driscoll, Tom Scherrer and Robert Allenby, who at No. 30 in the world is the highest-ranked player at the Ginn sur Mer Classic.

    Vaughn Taylor, at No. 129 on the money list, was in a group at 69.

    Jeff Overton, playing only a week after an emergency appendectomy because he has fallen to No. 126 on the money list, got off to a strong start before he settled for a 71.

    Driscoll had his own medical issues, playing the last eight holes with a gash in his thumb after a tee split when he was using it to repair a pitch mark on the 11th green.

    A sliver of the tee impaled itself in his thumb, but he removed it and made a 20-foot birdie putt while still dripping blood. He bandaged the wound and kept going, closing with seven pars while missing only one green and no fairways.

    “These greens are hard,” he said. “It was nasty. But I taped it up, and it was fine.”

    Defending champion Daniel Chopra, who won last year in south Florida, had two double bogeys for an 81. He wasn’t the only one to had a tough day on the Conservatory Course. Davis Love III, coming off eight consecutive rounds in the 60s, had a 75.

    Patrick Sheehan, holding down the 125th spot on the money list, opened with a 74.



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  • Soren Kjeldsen Opens Three Shot Advantage at Volvo Masters

    Soren Kjeldsen of Denmark tees off on the par four 2nd hole during the first round of the Volvo Masters at the Valderrama Golf Club on October 30, 2008 in Sotogrande, Spain. (Photo by Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images)Soren Kjeldsen of Denmark shot a 6-under 65 Thursday for a three-stroke lead after the first round of the Volvo Masters, and Lee Westwood surged ahead in the chase for the Order of Merit title.

    Sergio Garcia finished with a 68 to finish second on a windy day at Valderrama.

    Westwood was one of only six players to finish under par after a 70 put him three strokes ahead of Order of Merit leader Robert Karlsson and longshot Miguel Angel Jimenez.

    Karlsson initially struggled with his putter but rallied for a 73.

    “The greens were so quick that if you just missed a few then you could also lose your confidence,” Karlsson said.

    Three-time major winner Padraig Harrington, Karlsson’s closest competitor for the European Tour’s money title, was three shots behind him.

    Westwood and Harrington could win the Order of Merit with a victory coupled with Karlsson finishing no higher than fourth. Jimenez also needs to win and have his three competitors finish near the bottom to secure the title.

    “I don’t think you can feel comfortable around this golf course, but I have the patience to go out there and work for my shots,” Westwood said. “It’s a grind, but I enjoy grinding. I do feel like it suits me more.”

    Harrington reached only two of the first nine greens in regulations and tough chips at No. 2, 4 and 5 resulted in bogeys as he made the turn at 3 over without a birdie.

    “It’s been proven before that it’s not hard to come back on this golf course,” Harrington said. “We have 54 holes of golf to play, the tide will turn at some point.”



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  • Nick Price & David Eger Lead with Opening 66s

    Nick Price (Photo by Michael Cohen/Getty Images)Nick Price made a 25-foot putt on the 18th hole to pull even with David Eger at 6-under 66 atop the leaderboard Thursday in the opening round of the Charles Schwab Cup Championship.

    Battling intermittent rains that are expected to get a whole lot worse on the weekend, Price and Eger took a one-stroke lead over Mike Goodes in the Champions Tour’s season-ending event. Tom Kite, who played a bogey-free round along with Price, and Andy Bean are two shots back in the $2.5 million tournament, which also decides the tour’s season-long Schwab Cup points competition.

    “Given the forecast, I guess this was the round to get your good score in,” said Eger, who sneaked into the field of the tour’s top 29 players after an inconsistent season.

    Price also is out of contention for the Schwab Cup and its $1 million annuity after playing just a part-time Champions Tour schedule, but the two-time PGA Championship winner enjoyed his first chance to play the rolling course at Sonoma Golf Club in the heart of Northern California’s wine country.

    Price, who has won more than $1 million in 17 events this season, hit a 41-footer for birdie on the 16th before ending his round with another long putt.

    “I had good control with my irons, my distance and my accuracy,” said Price, who has never won in his previous 32 Champions Tour events. “That’s really what set up my round. I missed some very makable putts … but all in all, it always balances out. Those two bombs I made, sometimes that happens. I didn’t play 16 at all well, and walked off there with a birdie. I felt like I’d stolen something.”

    Jay Haas, who leads Fred Funk by a slim 12-point margin in the Schwab Cup competition, got off to a solid start with a 3-under 69. He was five strokes better than Funk, whose 74 was the first round’s worst score.

    Bernhard Langer, the Champions Tour’s money leader by less than $50,000 over Haas, shot a 71. Langer is third in the Schwab Cup standings, while Eduardo Romero and John Cook also have mathematical chances to win it.

    The tournament could signal a change in the hierarchy of the Champions Tour, with several longtime standouts failing to qualify for the Schwab Cup Championship. Hale Irwin, Gil Morgan, Dana Quigley and Jim Thorpe—who won the past two Sonoma tournaments—all missed the field, while 10 first-timers made it to Sonoma.

    “I guess that’s something that happens every year here, but you don’t want it to be your year that you don’t play,” Eger said. “I’ve had a year where I haven’t played, and it was pretty dismal that winter. This is a very nice way to end the year.”



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  • Huge field Sign Up for Barclays Singapore Open Qualifying

    Padraig Harrington (Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images)A 259-strong field of seasoned campaigners, young professionals and starry-eyed amateurs alike will bid for a coveted spot in the Barclays Singapore Open at the qualifying tournament on November 8 and 9.

    The hopefuls from around the world will shoot for 10 places – five on each day of qualifying – in the US$5 million Asian Tour event at Sentosa Golf Club from November 13 to 16.

    They will be looking to join an elite line up including Ireland’s Padraig Harrington, the winner of both the British Open and PGA Championship this year, world number two Phil Mickelson, South Africa’s ‘Big Easy’ Ernie Els and two-time Barclays Singapore Open champion Adam Scott of Australia.

    A total of 48 Singaporeans have signed up for the 18-hole qualifier and they will battle it out against players from 23 other countries over the Tanjong Course at Sentosa Golf Club.

    Thailand are the next best represented country with 47 players searching for a spot in the field and the chance to shoot for one of the biggest purses in Asian golf.

    Among the notable names are American Clay Devers, a two-time winner on the Asian Tour, India’s Harmeet Kahlon, who lifted the 2002 Hero Honda Masters, and veteran Scott Taylor of the United States, who made it through from qualifying last year.

    Australian Brad Kennedy, who placed third behind Scott and Els at the 2006 Barclays Singapore Open but surprisingly lost his card last year, will be looking to turn back the clock by grabbing one of the qualifying places.

    Highly rated young Indonesian Rory Hie, Wisut Artjanawat of Thailand and Filipino Felix Casas, all winners on the Asean region’s Mercedes-Benz Tour this season, will also compete.



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  • Drunk John Daly Spends a Night in Jail

    Two-time major golf champion John Daly spent a night in jail at the weekend after police here found him drunk outside a restaurant.  (Photo by Dave Martin/Getty Images)Two-time major golf champion John Daly spent a night in jail at the weekend after police here found him drunk outside a restaurant, the Winston-Salem Journal reported on Wednesday.

    Police Lieutenant Tyrone Phelps told the newspaper that Daly was held at the Forsyth County Jail early Sunday morning to sober up.

    According to the newspaper, paramedics went to a Hooters restaurant at 1 am after receiving a report that Daly had passed out.

    When police arrived, they found Daly drunk and unwilling to go to hospital. He was arrested on a charge of disorderly conduct.

    The newspaper reported that Daly was traveling on a tour bus and told police that others on the bus didn't want him back on it after the restaurant closed.

    According to North Carolina state law, police can jail a person overnight to sober up.

    Daly, the 1991 PGA Champion and 1995 British Open champion, was later released on an unsecured bond.

    Daly, 42, hasn't held a US PGA Tour card for the past two years. In March, Butch Harmon quit as his swing coach.

    At the time, Harmon said of Daly that "the most important thing in his life is getting drunk."



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  • Anthony Kim Joins European Tour

    Anthony Kim has joined the European Tour (Photo by Streeter Lecka/Getty Images)Anthony Kim has joined the European tour, the latest of a half-dozen U.S. tour players who have decided to take up joint membership in Europe for the 2009 season.

    Kim, a 23-year-old American whose two PGA Tour victories propelled him to No. 8 in the world ranking, paid the $3,280 membership fee that makes him eligible for the season-ending $10 million “Race to Dubai” for the top 60 players and the additional $10 million bonus pool.

    He is scheduled to play the HSBC Champions in Shanghai on Nov. 6-9.

    Camilo Villegas of Colombia, who won the final two playoff events in the FedEx Cup on the PGA Tour, also paid his dues to become a European tour member. Also expected to join is Phil Mickelson, while former U.S. Open champion Geoff Ogilvy previously said he would join.

    “Anytime you get players from the caliber of Camilo and Anthony into the tour, it’s great. It’s an asset, it’s good for golf, it’s good for the European Tour,” Sergio Garcia said.

    Garcia said he expects several other PGA Tour players to seize on opportunities overseas. Appearance money is offered at some European tour events, while the practice is banned on the PGA Tour.

    “Some of the tournaments we play in the Middle East … are bigger than the ones they play in the U.S. You get good players there, so world rankings points increase,” Garcia said. “At the end of the day, that’s what the big players do it for.”

    Over the last six months, Kim has emerged as one of golf’s brightest young prospects with victories in the Wachovia Championship and AT&T National at Congressional, along with a starring role in the American victory at the Ryder Cup.

    Villegas, 26, is No. 7 after his victories in the BMW Championship in St. Louis and the Tour Championship.

    “If you want the tour to grow and get to the level that it deserves, there’s no doubt that you need those big players,” Garcia said from the Volvo Masters.

    If Mickelson decides to join, Europe can claim nine of the top 10 players in the world as members. The exception is Tiger Woods, the No. 1 player in golf, who has said his schedule would not permit him to meet the minimum requirements.

    European members must play 12 times, which includes six tournaments in America—three majors and three World Golf Championships.



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  • Ladies European Tour Makes China Debut

    The field is led by World No.3 Annika Sorenstam. (Photo by Steven Gibbons/Getty Images)Golfers from the east and west have gathered for this week’s inaugural Suzhou Taihu Ladies Open in China – a tri sanctioned event between the Ladies European Tour (LET), Ladies Asian Golf Tour (LAGT) and China Golf Association (GCA) – which begins on Friday.

    Held at Suzhou Taihu International Golf Club in Jiangsu Province, the field is led by World No.3 Annika Sorenstam, who is making her second straight appearance in China following last week’s LPGA event on the island of Hainan, where she tied for 17th place.

    Sorenstam is hoping to add to her 88 career titles, including 10 majors. The 37-year-old Swede is targeting a fourth victory this season and her first since May.

    “China represents the future for golf and I feel I should be there at this time in my career,” said Sorenstam, who will step away from competitive play at the end of the Dubai Ladies Masters in December.

    “I know it's been different since I announced my stepping away plans in June. I haven't really played as well as I wanted, so it would be nice to finish with a few wins and kind of leave it at that.”

    Of the 34 Ladies European Tour members in the 99-player field, Sorenstam’s main challengers are likely to include two-time French Open champion Veronica Zorzi as well as the 1993 British Open champion, Australian Karen Lunn.

    The 32-year-old Thai professional Rusamme Gulyanamitta, who will play with Sorenstam and China’s Yang Hong Mei over the first two days, is also one of the favourites. She hopes to defeat Sorenstam after finishing second to the Swede at the SBS Open in February.

    "This is a championship, emotions and other factors should be put aside if a player wants to retire from competitive golf. There are other ways of saying 'all the best' but not easing up to allow a 'celebrity' to win," said Gulyanamitta, or Russie, as she is affectionately known. "My game's been pretty good and I hope to carry this form to the tournament," she continued.

    This year has been momentous for another Thai professional, 18-year-old Pornanong Phatlum, who won back-to-back titles at the Thailand Ladies Open and Women's India Open in March this year.

    Pornanong was fired up for the tournament. "I'm not thinking of the players here. My aim is to go out there, play to my form and win the tournament. Spoiling the dreams of other players is not my concern. As an athlete, when I'm on battleground, I play to 'kill'," she said.

    Both Gulyanamitta and Pornanong were keen to see Sorenstam play on for another season.

    “I believe she's retiring prematurely. Annika's still a good player, capable of winning tournaments from the current batch of young guns on all the Tours. But this is her decision and I can't interfere,” said Gulyanamitta.

    "She's too good to leave right now. I believe she will consider playing another season instead of leaving after December’s Dubai Ladies Masters. You know, Annika's an idol for many Asian women amateurs and professionals," Pornanong said.



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  • Robert Karlsson on Brink of Winning Order of Merit

    Robert Karlsson of Sweden follows his drive from the 4th tee during the 4th round of the Portugal Masters tournament at Oceano Victoria Golf Course in Vilamoura on October 19, 2008. (Photo FRANCISCO LEONG/AFP/Getty Images)Robert Karlsson goes into this week’s order of merit showdown at the Volvo Masters looking down at his rivals in philosophical mood over his chances of being crowned European number one on Sunday.

    The Swede has a 297,425 euro ($372,100) advantage over his nearest rival Padraig Harrington, the Irish 2008 double major champion, and is 466,606 euros ahead of Briton Lee Westwood who is third on the money list.

    While Harrington has won two majors, Karlsson has had the more consistent season and is on the brink of being the first Swede to claim the Harry Vardon trophy.

    Consistency does not always reap its rewards, though, Karlsson said on Tuesday.

    “Golf is not about justice,” Karlsson told Reuters. “I can’t go into this week thinking that. It only takes a big shift on the leaderboard to change everything.

    “It will be hard to focus because I’m reminded about the order of merit all the time.

    “What I have to remember, though, is that I am only able to control what I’m doing—I can’t control what others are doing.”

    He said the tough Valderrama course will be a big factor in who secures the European number one crown on Sunday.

    “Here it is a precision game. Whoever is more accurate is going to win or get a good result,” Karlsson added.

    With the Volvo Masters, which starts on Thursday, making its final appearance on the European calendar, the stage is set for a thrilling end to the season.

    Harrington, who feels he needs to win the 708,330 euros first prize to be sure of a second Vardon trophy, is ready to pull out all the stops.

    “I know what I need to do this week, I’ve got to go out there and try and win the tournament and get two bonuses,” he told a news conference. “If I win the tournament, I win the order of merit, so that’s what’s in my mind for the week.

    “I’m treating it very much like I would treat any major.”

    The 2008 British Open and U.S. PGA champion said he would be able to raise his game if his money-list chance starts fading.

    “There’s a point in the tournament where you have to stop being patient and have a go at it. Hopefully, that won’t be in the first round but I’ve seen where things have gone like that.”



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  • Phil Mickelson Happy with Golf's Global Expansion

    Phil Mickelson watches his tee shot on the second hole during the final round of THE TOUR Championship presented by Coca-Cola, at East Lake Golf Club on September 28, 2008 in Atlanta, Georgia. This is the final event of the PGA TOUR Playoffs for the FedExCup. (Photo by Scott Halleran/Getty Images)Phil Mickelson has racked up the air miles in pursuit of golf titles and prize money and the American believes the game’s growing globalisation will encourage more players to follow suit.

    Mickelson, set to defend his HSBC Champions title in Shanghai next month before playing in the $5 million Singapore Open, said economic conditions and a lack of U.S. golf growth had made it crucial to play all over the world.

    “Certainly the dollar weakening over the past few years has made foreign currencies much stronger, making the purses much larger,” the world number two said in a conference call on Wednesday.

    “The U.S. golf industry has been stagnant for quite some time, so all of our growth had been occurring on a global basis.

    “As a professional golfer we have to adapt to that, and that means playing more internationally because that’s where the opportunities are and that’s where they’ll continue to grow.”

    Three-times major winner Mickelson said the European Tour’s new lucrative “Race to Dubai” schedule, which culminates in the $10 million Dubai World Championship finale, had been a massive fillip for the game.

    “I think Dubai has taken one of the giant leaps in making the game of golf more global on the quality of events,” he said.

    The lefthander has frequently expressed his desire to play more European events and would need to appear in a minimum of 12 tournaments to qualify as a European Tour player.

    If he competed in the four majors and three World Golf Championship events, Mickelson would only have to play in five more European Tour events to qualify for the Dubai finale, which offers a first prize of $1.6 million.

    With speculation surrounding the Singapore Open possibly being sanctioned by the European Tour, Mickelson said playing in the Southeast Asian city-state would become even more attractive.

    “If it were to become a European Tour event it would be great for me because it would be included as one of the now 12 events that are needed to be a European Tour member, which although I haven’t joined it’s something I’m considering,” he added.

    The 38-year-old will defend his $5 million HSBC Champions title in Shanghai from Nov. 6-9 and said winning in China had been a major boost to his profile in Asia.

    “It was one of my biggest wins internationally and gave me a lot of exposure into China and into many of the Asian markets,” he said.

    “The more opportunities we can have where top players can play throughout the world and expose those parts of the world to the game at the highest level I think will help grow the game.”



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  • Fall Series Producing Surprising Winners

    Cameron Beckman birdies the 15th hole during the fourth and final round of the Fry's.Com Open held at Grayhawk Golf Club on October 26, 2008 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Marc Feldman/Getty Images)Cameron Beckman was surprised to see his name attached to an online poll Tuesday morning, a pleasant reminder how quickly fortunes can change on the PGA Tour this time of the year.

    The tour’s Web site posted this question: Which Fall Series winner was the biggest surprise?

    “Forty percent were voting for me,” Beckman said.

    If only the tour had offered “all of the above” as an option. It might have been unanimous.

    Really, there should be no surprises in the Fall Series because the players who might be expected to win aren’t playing. Of the seven multiple winners on tour this year, none has teed it up in America since the Tour Championship.

    That doesn’t mean the Fall Series is a waste of time—certainly not to those scrambling to keep their jobs.

    Sure, television ratings are abysmal (anywhere between 0.2 and 0.3), which is to be expected during football season. Then again, they weren’t that much better a few years ago when these tournaments were the final stops on the way to the Tour Championship.

    Even so, the Fall Series is serving its purpose. Think of it as seven last chances to avoid Q-school. As for the golf? Two of the five events were decided in a playoff, and the other three were not decided until the 18th hole.

    What’s peculiar about this year are the guys winning.

    The inaugural Fall Series produced winners like Justin Leonard, Mike Weir, Chad Campbell, Stephen Ames and Steve Flesch, all of whom were past champions, if not major champions. Most were looking to build confidence, or to finish the year with a victory so they could start the next year in Hawaii.

    This year smacks more of desperation.

    Among the Fall Series winners, the highest-ranked player on the money list going into his victory was Zach Johnson at No. 125. He is exempt through 2012 because of his Masters victory, but Johnson had a sour taste about how his year had gone until winning the Valero Texas Open.

    The others?

    Will MacKenzie was No. 178 on the money list until he birdied three of his last four holes to get into a playoff at the Viking Classic, where he outlasted Marc Turnesa. Goodbye, Q-school. Hello, Maui.

    Now if Willie Mac can just remember to not give out his hotel room at the Ritz in Kapalua to a television audience.

    Dustin Johnson, a big-hitting rookie, was No. 128 on the money list when he birdied his last two holes to win at Turning Stone.

    Turnesa got his payback in Las Vegas. Losing the playoff at the Viking Classic helped move him up to No. 138 and get within range of a card. His clutch birdie on the 17th hole for a one-shot victory gave him a job for the next two years.

    “That’s what this is supposed to be—a chase for the card,” Beckman said.

    Beckman must have felt as though he were chasing the wind. This year was among the worst of his 10 years on tour. He withdrew from consecutive tournaments with back pain, had an epidural, played nine times in a 10-week stretch trying to find his rhythm, then was forced to sit out for a month during the FedEx Cup playoffs.

    He was 176th on the money list, and No. 447 in the world ranking.

    Beckman already had sent in his application for Q-school. It looked as though he would have to make it through two stages, and he talked to wife, Jennifer, about his plight before heading for Phoenix and the Frys.com Open.

    Beckman at least had to get into the top 150 on the money list to avoid the second stage of Q-school. He felt confident he could do that. That’s when he popped a bigger question to his wife.

    “I said, ‘Do you think I can win?’ And she said, ‘I know you can win.’ We didn’t talk about it anymore,” Beckman said. “I went right to the tournament, and I won.”

    One minute he was gearing up for Q-school, the next minute his wife was on the phone making reservations at Kapalua.

    “Nobody wants to go to tour school,” Beckman said. “It’s horrible.”

    Beckman should know.

    At the turn of the decade, he had the longest active streak on tour by making it through Q-school three years in a row. He failed in 2005, then made it a fourth time a year later.

    It served him well Sunday at Grayhawk as he could feel himself surge into contention with every birdie in his round of 63. At one point in the middle of his back nine, he could feel his hands shaking.

    “I had this putt one year in the second stage of tour school where my hands were shaking so bad,” Beckman said. “I kept telling myself, ‘This isn’t as bad as tour school.’ That relaxed me, and I made the putt. And then the tap-in for the win, I could almost feel my hands shaking off the club. But I was just going for it. And I think that’s why I finished the way I did.”

    Winning might be about the only guarantee of a card during this Fall Series.

    Bob Tway tied for 11th to earn $102,500, and that only moved him up three spots to No. 132. Steve Allan was tied for the lead early in the final round and finished with a double bogey to tie for seventh. He made $150,625 and moved up eight spots to No. 131.

    The top 125 keep their cards.

    The way this Fall Series has gone, both are perfect candidates to win. And no one should be surprised if they do.



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  • Seve Ballesteros "Serious but Stable"

    Seve BallesterosSeveriano Ballesteros is in a "serious but stable" condition in intensive care, three days after undergoing a third operation to ease swelling in his brain and remove the remains of a tumour.

    "Nothing has changed" regarding the condition of the 51-year-old, a spokeswoman for Madrid's La Paz hospital said.

    Ballesteros, who collected 87 titles before knee and back problems forced him to retire last year, announced on October 12 that he had a brain tumour.

    He underwent surgery two days later to remove the tumour. Two days later, he underwent a second operation to ease a build-up of fluid in the brain.

    The hospital said on Thursday that the tumour has been classified as an "oligoastrocytoma (which affects...cells that cover and protect the nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord). It is located in an area that requires a very thorough approach of great complexity."

    Seen as one of golf's all-time greats, Ballesteros won five Majors.

    He won The Open in 1979, 1984 and 1988 and became the first European to win the Masters in 1980, an achievement he repeated in 1983.

    He was an influential figure in the Ryder Cup, winning 20 points from 37 matches and captaining Europe to victory at Valderrama in 1997.

    Back problems though started to trouble him in the late 1990s and his form and confidence gradually ebbed away.

    On July 16, 2007, he announced his retirement, although having turned 50 he was eligible for the Champions Tour and European Seniors Tour.



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  • Retief Goosen Aiming for Victory at the Iskandar Johor Open

    Retief Goosen of South Africa tees off on the par four 8th hole during the first round of the PGA Grand Slam of Golf at the Mid Ocean Club on October 14, 2008 in Tucker's Town, Bermuda. (Photo by Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images)Two-time Major winner Retief Goosen is aiming for victory at the Iskandar Johor Open to salvage what he has labelled as a ‘bad’ season.

    The South African star headlines the US$500,000 Asian Tour event at Royal Johor Country Club starting on Thursday with every intention of snatching the trophy from title holder Artemio Murakami of the Philippines.

    Two-time Asian number one Thongchai Jaidee of Thailand, Malaysia’s rising star Ben Leong, Niclas Fasth of Sweden and last week’s Macau Open champion David Gleeson of Australia are amongst the leading names who will also be competing in the second edition of the Iskandar Johor Open.

    “I’m looking forward to the week. I’ve been working pretty hard over the last five months with my fitness and everything. I feel like it’s starting to come together and hopefully I can get on a roll this week,” said Goosen, winner of the US Open in 2001 and 2004.

    Once a regular fixture in the world’s top-10 rankings, Goosen has slipped out of the top echelon over the past 12 months but is optimistic of turning his fortunes around by the time he hits his 40th birthday next February.

    “It’s been pretty bad,” the 47th-ranked Goosen said of his year. “I had a couple of good tournaments but it’s been very inconsistent. My putting has not been up to standard for the past two years and in this game, if you can make putts you’ll make a score. I’ve been working pretty hard in all parts of my game and hopefully things can improve.

    “I’m still a youngster. Vijay (Singh) started playing his best golf when he was 40 and I can’t wait till I turn 40 next year. Hopefully it’ll kickstart my game. I know I’ve got another five good years of golf left.”

    Murakami is relishing a return to the scene of his maiden Asian Tour victory but knows he must be on top of his game to ward off the combined challenges from Goosen and Asia’s best players.

    The big-hitting Filipino, who triumphed by one shot last year, took last week off to prepare for the Iskandar Johor Open. “It’s exciting to come back to Johor. However, there are so many top players this week, so it will be a real test for me,” said Murakami, who finished tied 21st, equal 10th and tied 19th in his last three events.

    He remembers last year’s victory clearly but the notorious greens at the Royal Johor still bring a shiver to his spine. “The pin positions were very tricky last year. There are many tough pins out there,” said Artemio, currently 44th on the Order of Merit.

    Thongchai, a two-time winner of the Malaysian Open, returns to what he calls his second home and while he will be eyeing a ninth career Asian Tour victory, the former Thai soldier is battling jetlag after flying in from Spain on Monday.

    “I slept for only two hours last night. I’ll need to adjust again to the conditions here as I’m struggling with jetlag,” said Thongchai, who finished second behind Malaysia’s Ben Leong in his last visit to Malaysia at the Worldwide Selangor Masters in August.

    Like Goosen, Thongchai lamented about his putting and knows he needs to hit the right lines at Royal Johor’s tricky putting surfaces. “In my last two events, I’ve hit like 16 and 17 greens consistently but took an average of 34 putts. It’s not been good,” he said.

    Defeating Thongchai for his maiden Asian Tour victory seems like a long time ago for Malaysia’s rising star Leong. The young Malaysia has not finished better than 35th place in six events after his career breakthrough.

    “I always play to win. But this game is so unpredictable. The game has been pretty average since the win. The swing feels a bit weak at the moment and on these small greens, it’s so easy to drop shots and harder to get the stroke back,” said Leong.

    “Par on every hole will be a good score this week,” added the 22-year-old Malaysian, who will play the opening two rounds alongside Thongchai and Goosen.



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  • Sergio Garcia Clinches Three Shot Victory at the Castello Masters

    Sergio Garcia of Spain celebrates winning the Castello Masters Costa Azahar at the Club de Campo del Mediterraneo on October 26, 2008 in Castello, Spain. (Photo by Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)Spain’s Sergio Garcia held off a charging Peter Hedblom of Sweden to win the Castello Masters title on Sunday, his first European Tour success for three years.

    Tournament host Garcia’s closing four-under 67 for a 20-under 264 four-round aggregate left him three shots ahead of Hedblom (66) and hauled the 28-year-old Spaniard to number three in the world rankings.

    Holding a four-stroke overnight lead and opening with a birdie, Garcia saw his advantage whittled down to one when Hedblom picked up shots at the first four holes.

    When a nervous-looking Garcia, watched by relations, friends and neighbours at the Castellon course where he learned the game, bogeyed the short sixth, he was caught by Hedblom.

    However, two immediate birdies to follow the blemish steadied the ship for Garcia, who went on to complete his first European Tour victory since the September 2005 European Masters, this one worth 446,00 dollars.

    It ended a run of seven second places since his win three years ago in Switzerland.

    His seventh European Tour success moved Garcia up two places on the world rankings, leap-frogging Vijay Singh and Padraig Harrington who drop to fourth and fifth place respectively.

    Victory on his home course was particularly sweet for the local favourite, who dedicated his win to his mentor Severiano Ballesteros, who is recovering from a third operation on a brain tumour at La Paz Hospital.

    “This win is for Seve and for all his family,” Garcia told reporters. “I hope this helps him to get a little better.

    “It feels awesome to win here and we are looking forward to years of coming back.

    “Peter played amazingly and it was good to make the putt on the seventh to get it back. Then I felt I was in control on the back nine.”

    Although he has won twice, Hedblom’s 300,000-dollar prize is his biggest and ended any doubts as to whether he would be in next week’s season-ending Volvo Masters.

    The Swede marred his day by bogeying the 17th but proved to be Garcia’s only real threat as he finished two shots ahead of fellow countryman Alex Noren (65).

    Britons Simon Dyson (69) and David Lynn (69) assured themselves of places in the Volvo Masters by finishing a further stroke back on 14 under with Dane Soren Kjeldsen (69).

    Francois Delamontagne retained his playing card by just 333 euro after finishing with a roller-coaster 74 to be four under in 47th place in the final event that counts.

    The Frenchman was that amount above Swede Patrik Sjoland, who missed the cut, and moved into the 118th and final qualifying spot for 2009 cards on the order of merit.

    “It was a terrible day for me,” Delamontagne told reporters. “I wanted to get maximum effort from myself but I was just terrible. I had four top-10s this year and should never have been worrying about tour school.”



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  • Cameron Beckman Wins in a Playoff at the Frys.com Open

    Cameron Beckman holds the winners trophy at the Fry's.Com Open held at Grayhawk Golf Club on October 26, 2008 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Marc Feldman/Getty Images)Cameron Beckman tapped in a par putt on the second playoff hole Sunday to complete a big comeback and beat Kevin Sutherland in the Frys.com Open.

    Beckman, 176th on the money list and 447th in the world ranking entering the tournament, was four shots behind Sutherland at the turn, then made birdies on five of the next seven holes.

    Sutherland missed putts of 13 and 9 feet that would have won it at the end of regulation and on the first playoff hole, also the 18th.

    The second playoff hole was the 464-yard, par-4 17th, and it was a nightmare for Sutherland. His second shot sailed far to the right over a cart path and into the dirt. His third shot went over the green and down a hill.

    Beckman, meanwhile, hit his second shot 6 1/2 feet from the pin.

    He just missed the putt, and the tap-in gave him his second PGA Tour victory. His first was the Southern Farm Bureau Classic seven years ago.

    It was the second playoff loss for Sutherland this year. He and Sergio Garcia were beaten by Vijay Singh at The Barclays on Aug. 24.



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  • Helen Alfredsson Wins with a Closing 65

    Helen Alfredsson. (Photo credit should read STR/AFP/Getty Images)Helen Alfredsson gets a kick out of calling herself “Grandma,” particularly when it suits her.

    It did Sunday.

    The 43-year-old Swede shot a 7-under 65 on Sunday to win the Grand China Air tournament, beating 19-year-old Yani Tseng of Taiwan by three strokes for her second victory of the season.

    Alfredsson joked about her age earlier this season after winning the Evian Masters for the third time. She was at it again after this victory, taking a good-natured jab at Tseng, who won the LPGA Championship this season as a rookie.

    “Today I said to her, ‘You got beat by a grandma. You need to start beating her,”’ she said.

    Alfredsson, Europe’s 2007 Solheim Cup captain, trailed second-round leader Karen Stupples by five strokes entering the final round of the 54-hole event, the first LPGA tournament in China.

    She ran off six birdies on the first 10 holes. The final one in that surge gave her the outright lead, moving her to 11 under for the tournament and a stroke clear of Stupples. She went to 13 under with birdies on 14 and 17. Alfredsson played three groups ahead of the final threesome, and left the door slightly open with a poor chip and a dropped shot at 18.

    “I was certain at that point,” Alfredsson said. “I was 4 up and I didn’t have huge pressure on me for the chip shot. But it was not a great shot. But it’s great to be on 18 and have a four-shot lead.”

    Alfredsson finished at 12-under 204 after opening rounds of 70 and 69. The victory was worth $270,000, pushing her career earnings past $5 million.

    Tseng also started five back. She finished with a 68 to go with rounds of 72 and 67. It was the fifth time this season she’s been the runner-up.

    Laura Diaz of the United States, the first-round leader after a 63, had a round of 72 and was four back. Stupples of England was five off the pace with a 75.

    Young Kim of South Korea had a 71, six back, and China’s Shanshan Feng carded a 68 and finished seven behind. Feng is the only Chinese player on the LPGA Tour.

    Diaz and Stupples were trying to end victory droughts. Stupples hasn’t won in four years, and Diaz in six. They both crashed on the back nine, where Stupples had four bogeys and Diaz had three.

    Alfredsson said she’s likely to play only another year or two, joining fellow Swede Annika Sorenstam, who will step away from golf after this season. But she still gets pleasure beating players who are decades younger, like Tseng.

    “They don’t want to get beat by us because we are so old, and we still want to beat them because they are so young,” Alfredsson said.

    Alfredsson praised American stars like Morgan Pressel and Paula Creamer, and a young group of South Koreans like Seon-hwa Lee, Inbee Park and In-kyung Kim.

    She added Tseng and Feng to the list, suggesting China could become a power in women’s golf. This event is on the LPGA schedule for next season, although the venue has not been announced.

    “I’m so happy I’m not going to be on tour when all the Chinese girls come out,” Alfredsson said. “I’ll be retired. They (Chinese) have a great work ethic, and obviously I think it’s great they’ve seen the Korean girls being very successful. … So it’s just a matter of time.”

    Tseng was the crowd favorite at the West Coast Golf Club, located on China’s tropical island of Hainan. Conditions were sultry Sunday, broken only by a light breeze off the Strait of Qiongzhou, which links the Gulf of Tonkin and the South China Sea.

    Earlier this season, Sorenstam, who finished 10 off the pace with a 72 on Sunday, said Tseng would be the No. 1-ranked player in three seasons.

    “That was very exciting,” Tseng said Sunday. “I can’t believe she would say that because she is my idol. I don’t want her to be disappointed so I will work hard.”



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