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January 2009 - Posts

  • 16th at TPC Scottsdale to be Even More of a Test

    TPC ScottsdaleGolfers speak in reverent tones about Augusta National’s Amen Corner or the Road Hole at St. Andrews.

    They use different terms to describe TPC Scottsdale’s signature 16th Hole.

    Crazy. Obnoxious. Nerve-racking.

    “There’s only one place on earth, one hole on earth like that,” Camilo Villegas said.

    The 16th Hole could be even rowdier this year at the FBR Open. The par-3, 162-yard hole has been fully enclosed with grandstands seating between 15,000 and 20,000 spectators.

    “It looks unbelievable, but it’s going to be a circus,” said Pat Perez, coming off his first PGA Tour victory in last week’s Bob Hope Classic. “But it looks cool. It looks really cool, full-stadium effect. It’s going to be loud.”

    For Thursday’s opening round, the crowd at the 16th may be larger—and noisier—than the 17,000-plus expected to attend that night’s NBA game between the Phoenix Suns and the San Antonio Spurs at U.S. Airways Center in downtown Phoenix.

    “The 16th Hole, which gets a lot of attention, is unique to golf,” former local resident Phil Mickelson said. “We just don’t have anything like that. To have that type of environment that NBA players or football players experience, for us as golfers to be able to experience it is pretty cool.”

    Mickelson, who won this event in 1996 and 2005 and lost to J.B. Holmes in a playoff last year, is among the favorites. This is Mickelson’s 2009 debut, and he said he’s confident after working with coach Butch Harmon over the winter.

    “I’ve been working hard on my game, and because of that I’m fresh and physically and mentally ready to start playing,” Mickelson said.

    Mickelson will be among the darlings at the 16th Hole, but he knows the crowd can be fickle. Fans let him have it when he bogeyed the hole on Saturday a year ago.

    Enfolded by an erector-set grandstand rising from the desert floor, the 16th Hole looks like nothing else on the PGA Tour.

    Players enter through a long, dark tunnel, blinking as they step into a sun-splashed arena. Two-story corporate boxes—there are 146 skyboxes in all— wrap around the tee box.

    A grandstand banks away from the right side of the green, with more skyboxes squeezing in on the left. A 969-square-foot video board rises above the seats, partially obscuring the McDowell Mountains.

    “It’s nerve-racking, that hole,” Perez said. “Everyone keeps saying it’s the loudest hole in golf, and everyone is crazy and everyone does this, so everyone continues to do more every year to make it as loud and obnoxious as possible.”

    The crowd is almost literally on top of the golfers. The venue was half-filled for Wednesday’s pro-am, but many fans were warming up for the tournament, hooting when tee shots went awry.

    “The fans are crazy,” Villegas said. “I know there’s a lot of alcohol being served there. You’re going to get people yelling great stuff and then people yelling some stuff that is maybe not appropriate.

    “Hopefully I can hit it in the middle of the green four days and don’t get booed,” Villegas said.

    Holmes scored three pars and a birdie on the 16th last year on his way to his second FBR Open title. He’s clearly comfortable playing in front of the throngs.

    “With that many people around, it’s not going to be dead silent,” Holmes said.

    The FBR Open has a well-deserved reputation for attracting throngs of partyers who know or care little about golf etiquette. It routinely draws the biggest crowds on the PGA Tour, and a record 538,356 spectators turned out last year with the Super Bowl in town.

    Attendance typically plummets on Sunday, as the reveling masses run out of steam and others stay home to watch the Super Bowl. This year, with the hometown Arizona Cardinals in the Super Bowl, organizers are offering free Sunday admission to anyone in Cardinals gear. They’re also hoping to stage a large-scale viewing party but first must iron out details with the NFL.

    Woe be unto the golfer who professes a love for the Pittsburgh Steelers this week.

    Golfers realize they need to bring more than their clubs and spikes to the FBR Open. They also need patience and a sense of humor—and a set of earplugs probably wouldn’t hurt.

    It’s not for everybody.

    “There’s obviously a couple of (golfers) who probably don’t like the noise,” Anthony Kim said. “But look, if you can’t play in that atmosphere, don’t come to this tournament. It’s a one-time-a-year deal, and I enjoy it so much.”



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  • Colin Montgomerie Named Ryder Cup Captain

    Colin MontgomerieEurope, stung by defeat four months ago, have turned to Ryder Cup giant Colin Montgomerie in a bid to wrest back the trophy from the U.S. in the next edition of the biennial match in 2010.

    The big, burly Scot had for some time been expected to take over as captain on home soil at Gleneagles in 2014.

    Only in recent weeks has Montgomerie been touted as a candidate to skipper the team at Celtic Manor in Wales next year and his appointment was made official in Dubai on Wednesday.

    Irked by the 16 1/2-11 1/2 defeat at Valhalla, Kentucky in September, the 15-man tournament committee are desperate to bounce back with a victory.

    With the future marketability of the tour, prize funds and sponsorships at stake, who better to act as Ryder Cup spearhead than Montgomerie?

    The eight-times European number one served as the team’s talismanic leader when the Americans were vanquished in 1995, 1997, 2002, 2004 and 2006.

    With the matches often finely poised going into the last day, it was Monty who invariably led the charge in the decisive singles encounters.

    Victory over David Toms at the K Club in Ireland in 2006 meant Montgomerie remained unbeaten in eight Ryder Cup singles stretching back to his debut 15 years earlier.

    To some, though, Montgomerie may appear an unlikely choice as a man to bring harmony and a winning mentality back to Europe.

    The Scot, who did not play in the 2008 match, is highly strung and not slow to voice the strongest opinion but he has repeatedly shown he is in his element in a team environment.

    Montgomerie has been at the centre of countless on-course controversies, with spectators, cameramen and reporters taking turns in his line of fire.

    “He is their leader on the course,” said 2002 U.S. captain Curtis Strange. “Certainly Seve (Ballesteros) was their leader for a long, long time and now, with Colin, it’s the same.

    “Every team needs a leader, not only by their play but by the way they handle themselves, by the respect of their team mates and peers.”

    Dubbed “Mrs Doubtfire” by American galleries because of his grumpy demeanour, Montgomerie’s fellow players on the tournament committee probably held the view the Scot would be better suited to captaining the side at home rather than in the U.S.

    The 45-year-old Glaswegian’s sparkling Ryder Cup record is likely to give him a psychological advantage over U.S. captain Corey Pavin next year.

    Montgomerie has amassed 23 1/2 points from his eight appearances, third in the all-time points list behind Bernhard Langer (24) and Nick Faldo (25), his predecessor as captain.

    Paul Casey, who has featured in winning Seve Trophy sides captained by Montgomerie, said the Scot provided a galvanising influence in the team room.

    “He was very attentive,” said Casey. “He showed good attention to detail and spoke well at meetings.

    “He got the guys nicely motivated, there was lots of consultation with us and we felt very much a team.”

    With 31 titles making him the most prolific British winner on the European Tour, the one blot on Montgomerie’s career is his failure to land a major championship.

    He has had a succession of near misses, the most recent at the 2006 U.S. Open.

    Playing the 72nd and last hole with a one-shot lead, Montgomerie switched from a six-iron to a seven-iron thinking his adrenaline would send his approach shot safely on to the putting surface.

    But agonisingly he missed the green, leaving the way clear for Australia’s Geoff Ogilvy to capture the trophy.

    Montgomerie’s appointment as captain appears to have ended his hopes of surpassing Faldo’s Ryder Cup points tally, especially as his playing fortunes seem to be on the wane.

    The veteran, once as high as number two in the world, has slumped to 135th in the rankings.

    Despite partnering Marc Warren to World Cup glory in China in November 2007, he has claimed only one individual victory in the past three years, in the 2007 European Open.

    Regaining the famous trophy at Celtic Manor, though, would put the seal on Montgomerie’s remarkable Ryder Cup adventure.



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  • Ginn Pulls Golf Sponsorships

    Ginn ResortsGinn Resorts is ending all golf sponsorships immediately, sending two tournaments into an uncertain future.

    The real estate company said Wednesday it no longer will host or produce its two remaining events—the LPGA’s Ginn Open and the Champions Tour Ginn Championship. It also will drop its sponsorship of Cristie Kerr, the last player wearing the company’s apparel after Annika Sorenstam’s retirement.

    “This wasn’t something that was done lightly,” Robert Gidel, Ginn Development’s president and CEO, told The Associated Press. “We got to a point where we had to give up on hope as a strategy. We just now have to figure out what’s in the best interest of our people, and I think that’s where a lot of companies are these days.”

    Ginn said late last year that it was dropping the PGA Tour’s sur Mer Classic because of the ailing real estate market. But the LPGA event in Reunion, Fla., and the Champions Tour stop in Palm Coast, Fla., were both to be played on Ginn courses.

    Last week, though, Ginn ended its real estate sales and marketing operations “due to the loss of revenue” that was the primary source of funding the purses and buying television coverage for the LPGA and Champions Tour events.

    “We did the best we could, but the economy got the best of us,” Gidel said.

    Losing the Ginn Open would figure to be a major hit to the LPGA. The event’s $2.5 million purse was the third-largest on that tour in 2008, behind only the U.S. Women’s Open and the Evian Masters.

    If the Ginn Open is not replaced or restructured quickly, that would mean the LPGA Tour will offer only 30 events this year, with nearly $7.5 million less in prize money than players vied for last season.

    Ginn still had three years remaining on its title sponsorship contract with the Champions Tour. PGA Tour spokesman Ty Votaw, who learned of the decision from a press release, said the tour had been willing to work with Ginn during the economic crisis.

    “We were surprised to read this announcement and disappointed in it given the fact we have an existing agreement with Ginn, and we were in discussions with them on possible modifications to that agreement,” Votaw said. “We received no indication than an announcement like this was in the works.”

    Votaw declined to elaborate on what modifications the tour had in mind, or whether Ginn owed the tour money for leaving the contract before it expired in 2011. The Ginn Championship also planned a $2.5 million purse for 2009.

    “The way things are going in the economy, things are tight for everybody, including Ginn and all the other huge companies,” Mark Calcavecchia said from the FBR Open. “I think we’re lucky to have the sponsors we have out here. My concern now, being 48 1/2 , is how many tournaments are going to be left on the senior tour in a couple of years. It seems like they’re losing two or three a year.”

    Ginn’s departure means the Champions Tour now has 25 tournaments, down from 29 last year and the fewest for the 50-and-older set since there were 24 events in 1985.

    LPGA spokeswoman Connie Wilson said that because of schedules and travel of top officials, the tour would have no immediate comment.

    Ginn broke into the golf scene quickly. The Ginn Open in 2006 made across-the-globe news, in large part because tournament officials gave then-13-year-old Dakoda Dowd, whose mother was dying of cancer, a sponsor’s exemption into the event.

    The teen golf standout only played in the event that year, but the family has maintained a relationship with Ginn: The Ginn Open’s champion trophy was renamed last year in Kelly Jo Dowd’s memory.

    “It would have been phenomenal to have Kelly Jo’s name on that trophy for years to come,” said Dowd’s father, Mike Dowd. “We got one year. It just shows you how bad things are. It’s scary. In that tumultuous time, that was one great week for us, and it’s going to be really sad that it’s gone.”

    Ginn’s involvement with Sorenstam’s academy at the Reunion resort will remain unchanged, and the company said it would be open to another organization hosting pro events on its courses. And if the real estate market rebounds, Ginn has not ruled out a return to sponsoring events and players.

    “Honestly, doing as many tournaments as we accumulated is probably not something we would do again, but we’d certainly come back one-at-a-time if they’ll have us back,” Gidel said. “We would certainly want to do that. We’re not leaving with a bad taste in our mouth, by any means. We’re very disappointed.”

    In all, Ginn hosted nine tournaments, starting with that 2006 LPGA event— and the company even made a brief foray into NASCAR sponsorship, before eventually seeing those operations taken over by Dale Earnhardt Inc.

    “There’s going to be a lot of sad folks over this,” Mike Dowd said.



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  • Players Pushed for Colin Montgomerie

    Colin MontgomerieColin Montgomerie’s appointment as Ryder Cup captain looks likely to end an era when former European greats could be confident of getting their “turn” at the job, long after their days as leading players were over.

    Europe’s players made it clear they wanted the 2010 Ryder Cup captain to be on the same wavelength as the team and Montgomerie fitted the bill perfectly, tour supremo George O’Grady said after the announcement on Wednesday.

    “I think they have taken a view they want a captain in tune with the players,” European Tour chief executive O’Grady said at a news conference.

    “I think they do, generally speaking, want a captain more of the same age as some of the players still playing.”

    That unequivocal message from the players’ tournament committee put paid to the candidacies of former major winners Ian Woosnam and Sandy Lyle who are now in their 50s and generally ply their trade in the senior rather than main tour.

    Montgomerie, in contrast, may have slipped to 135th in the world rankings and not even previously planned to run as skipper for 2010 but is still a regular on the circuit and his name often appears on tournament leaderboards.

    Lyle, the only member of the big five from the 1980s and ’90s who had dominated European and world golf not to have captained the team, now looks destined never to lead his continent’s challenge in golf’s biggest team event.

    Seve Ballesteros, Nick Faldo, Bernhard Langer and Ian Woosnam had all taken a turn in charge, and apart from Faldo, were winning captains.

    Faldo, Montgomerie’s predecessor as captain, was 51 and had been out of top-flight golf for several years when his European team were beaten 16 1/2-11 1/2 by the United States at Valhalla, Kentucky last year.

    Denmark’s Thomas Bjorn, chairman of the 15-man tournament committee which appointed Montgomerie, did not say whether that defeat had been a major factor in the decision but stressed that the 45-year-old Scot had been a unanimous choice.

    “There was no vote involved,” said Bjorn. “We went around the table and everyone seemed to back Monty … it was a unanimous decision. “A very hard and difficult meeting turned out in the end to be a fairly easy one.”

    Europe’s two previous captains were also former Major winners of the same generation in Woosnam (2006) and Bernhard Langer (2004).

    The other leading candidates for 2010 were Woosnam again, plus Jose Maria Olazabal and Sandy Lyle.

    “I spoke to Jose, to Woosie and to Sandy, all three in person,” said Bjorn.

    “I had a discussion with Jose and all he said was that … he thinks Monty will be a great captain. Olly is a great man, he is a very popular figure on this tour.

    “I think for future Ryder Cup captaincies he (Olazabal) is something that should be considered. There’s a long way to go … but I’m quite sure he will be a consideration for 2012 (in Illinois).”



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  • Phil Mickelson Makes Season Debut at FBR Open

    Phil MickelsonTwice champion Phil Mickelson will return to very familiar surrounds when he makes his debut on the 2009 PGA Tour in this week’s Phoenix Open at the TPC Scottsdale.

    The American world number four attended the nearby Arizona State University and has been a regular competitor at the event since appearing for the first time as an amateur in 1989.

    “It’s always good to be back in the Valley,” Mickelson, 38, told Reuters during preparation for Thursday’s opening round.

    “And it’s really cool this year with the (Arizona) Cardinals in the Super Bowl. We’ve had this kind of buzz in San Diego and what it does for the community is wonderful.”

    Mickelson, who will be making his 18th consecutive Phoenix Open appearance, won the tournament in 1996 and 2005 and was edged out by compatriot JB Holmes in a playoff for last year’s title.

    Hugely popular with the fans, the left-hander has always relished the closing stretch on Scottsdale’s Stadium Course, which features the infamous par-three 16th, the noisiest hole in golf.

    “The last few holes here always provide a feeling we don’t get at other tour events but it’s really going to be special now with 16 essentially surrounded by seating,” Mickelson said.

    “It’s obviously good for the Thunderbirds and I think the fans are going to love it,” he added, referring initially to the local civic group that runs the tournament.

    The Phoenix Open is known for delivering the biggest party on the circuit and its focal point starts and ends on the raucous 16th.

    Thousands of spectators cram into the bleachers and sky boxes surrounding the 162-yard hole, many more swarming across the grassed hill that faces the green.

    “It’s a phenomenal experience and a lot of fun,” said Holmes, who also won the tournament in 2006. “But it’s hard for club selection because you’ve got adrenalin pumping and the wind, and you do have 20,000 or 30,000 people yelling at you.”

    American Chris DiMarco, champion in 2002, accepts the pluses and minuses of the 16th with its grandstand setting.

    “It has an unbelievable atmosphere,” he said. “You walk on that hole and you don’t feel like you’re at a golf tournament, you feel like you’re at a football game.

    “The hardest thing is calming yourself down because you get pumped walking through that tunnel. It’s an eight-iron (off the tee) and if you miss the green you deserve to get booed.

    “It doesn’t matter what hole you’re on, you can hear it. It doesn’t matter if you’re on number three, number six, you can hear it.”

    Although Mickelson is likely to start Thursday’s opening round as the tournament favourite, he faces a strong challenge on the Stadium Course where seven of the world’s top 20 will be in action.

    Sixth-ranked Australian Geoff Ogilvy, Korean-American Anthony Kim (ninth), Colombian Camilo Villegas (10th) and U.S. players Kenny Perry (15th), Steve Stricker (16th) and Stewart Cink (17th) are also competing this week.



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  • Michelle Wie to Make 2009 Debut in Hawaii

    Michelle WieMichelle Wie is headed back home to Hawaii, this time as a full-fledged LPGA Tour member.

    The 19-year-old Stanford sophomore will kick off the season at the LPGA’s first full-field event, the SBS Open from Feb. 12-14.

    “It feels like a clean slate, a new beginning, and I finally feel like I really earned it,” Wie said in a statement Tuesday.

    Turtle Bay has provided Wie with a couple of high points in her tumultuous young career.

    She played the first SBS in 2005 as a 15-year-old amateur and finished tied for second with Cristie Kerr, two strokes behind winner Jennifer Rosales. Wie was lone amateur in the field and the only player to shoot under par for three rounds in difficult conditions on Oahu’s North Shore that frustrated veterans twice her age.

    It was also at Turtle Bay in 2006 that she became the first female to win a local qualifying tournament for the U.S. Open. She earned the first of three spots into the sectionals. Another fresh-faced teen from Hawaii named Tadd Fujikawa got the last one, snaking in a 65-foot putt on the last hole of a three-way playoff. Fujikawa would eventually earn a spot at Winged Foot and become the youngest player to participate in an Open at age 15.

    Wie has struggled since injuring her wrists a couple of years ago, and it took a toll on her confidence. She had a difficult 2008 but ended the year at Q-school where she earned her LPGA card.

    In an article Monday in The Honolulu Advertiser, Wie said she was planning to play a “full schedule,” on the LPGA Tour and will try other tours while continuing her education at Stanford.

    Whatever she does, the golf world will be watching to see if Wie can regain the confidence, ability and limitless promise she showed when she first played at Turtle Bay.

    “I’ve matured a lot,” she told the newspaper. “I can handle bad shots better. I can handle stuff not going as well as planned. Surprises and all that, they come with the game. I’ve had such a rough time, I know now how to handle stuff when it’s not going my way.”

    Wie will make her first LPGA start since July 2008 when she was disqualified from the State Farm Classic, one shot behind going into the final round, when it was determined she had left the scoring area without signing her card after the second round.

    She also opened 2008 in Hawaii at the Fields Open, where she closed with a 6-over 78 to finish tied for last among the 74 players who made the cut.



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  • Too Much Choice for Ryder Cup Captaincy

    Colin Montgomerie and Jose Maria OlazabalEurope will decide Wednesday whether Colin Montgomerie or Jose Maria Olazabal will be its Ryder Cup captain in 2010, a choice the Americans didn’t have this year.

    Two months ago, before appointing Corey Pavin to lead the U.S. team in Wales, PGA of America chief executive Joe Steranka was cool to the idea of Paul Azinger returning as Captain America because he said there were not enough Ryder Cups for all the candidates.

    But if the PGA didn’t want Azinger again, Pavin was the only serious candidate.

    Davis Love III took himself out of the running because he wants to play on the next team. David Toms and Jim Furyk are too young. Larry Nelson is too old. Given the U.S. model for selecting captains—a former major champion in his late 40s with Ryder Cup passion and experience—try to find anyone else other than Pavin even remotely qualified.

    Mark Calcavecchia? Lee Janzen?

    Picking a captain used to be quite simple for Europe, which had only two captains from 1983 to 1995—Tony Jacklin and Bernard Gallacher—while seizing control of the biennial exhibition.

    Now, the players who helped Europe capture the Ryder Cup eight times in 11 matches are lining up to be captain. And that has created the kind of dilemma America used to have—more captains than there were cups.

    No one was a greater victim than Nelson, a Vietnam veteran who won three majors, nearly 75 percent of his Ryder Cup matches and is the only player to go 5-0 in a single Ryder Cup. Also left out was Mark O’Meara, although his assertion that the Ryder Cup was all about revenue hurt his chances more than anything.

    Sandy Lyle appears headed to a similar fate. The two-time major champion from Scotland officially is under consideration for 2010 captain, but Europe is leaning toward younger captains, and Lyle turns 51 next month.

    Montgomerie lobbied for Lyle, a fellow Scot, until it became clear that the selection committee was more interested in him. Then, what looked like a logical choice suddenly turned cloudy last week when two-time Masters champion Jose Maria Olazabal—among the most respected figures among European players— changed his mind and said he would like to be captain.

    Europe cannot go wrong either way.

    Monty can’t win a major, but he plays like a major champion when the Ryder Cup rolls around. He played on eight teams and compiled a 20-9-7 record, earning the second-most points in European history behind Nick Faldo. Olazabal, who actually has won majors, played on seven teams and forged an 18-8-5 record, a slightly better winning percentage.

    Europe has been known to pick two captains at once, and it could be that Montgomerie is selected for Wales in 2010 and Olazabal for Chicago in 2012, since Olazabal is better equipped to handle an American crowd.

    Just because the PGA of America didn’t have two such candidates doesn’t mean Pavin was the wrong choice. His captaincy, like so many others before him, will be judged largely on who goes home with the gold chalice.

    And once the PGA of America gets through 2010, it will have plenty of options that Europe now enjoys.

    Love is virtually a lock for 2012 (he will be 48), and other players sure to follow as candidates are Toms, Furyk, Phil Mickelson, Justin Leonard, Stewart Cink (if he wins a major) and eventually—maybe—Tiger Woods.

    But by then, it could be that the burden of choice falls as much on the players as the PGA officials who choose them.

    What made the PGA’s selection so simple was that Fred Couples had already agreed to be captain of the Presidents Cup this year. What would have happened had Couples turned it down?

    “The general public, I think, would have a hard time with Fred not being Ryder Cup captain,” Love said.

    Couples, wildly popular with the golf public, might have rubbed the PGA of America the wrong way by making fun of the gala dinners and suggesting Michael Jordan and Robin Williams as his assistant captains (not that there’s anything wrong with that).

    Noteworthy about the PGA Tour’s selection of Couples is that it was the first time since the inaugural Presidents Cup in 1994 that the U.S. captain was under 50 (Hale Irwin was 49). If the tour continues that trend, players might be forced to choose.

    The Ryder Cup, which prides itself on history and tradition, is likely to view a former Presidents Cup captain as damaged goods.

    Love was asked a few weeks ago what he would do if the PGA Tour asked him in November to be the next Presidents Cup captain.

    “I would talk to the PGA of America first to make sure what their schedule was,” he said. “If they said, ‘Look, you might as well go ahead and be Presidents Cup captain because we are not going to pick you, it will make it easy.”

    Someone like Toms or Leonard might find themselves in a position of accepting an offer to be Presidents Cup captain and ending their hopes of leading the Ryder Cup, or holding out for the Ryder Cup and being passed over entirely.

    If that’s the case, it won’t be a matter of there being more candidates than cups to go around.

    It’s the candidates who will have too many cups.



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  • Ryder Cup Rivals to Learn Their Fate

    Colin MontgomerieIt is likely that that Colin Montgomerie will captain the Europe team at the 2010 Ryder Cup at Celtic Manor and Jose-Maria Olazabal will be handed the role at Medinah in 2012.

    Most associated with the European Tour are satisfied this is the best compromise. But that’s just what it is — a compromise.

    Both men had expressed their desire to play next time and, if they had stuck to their guns on that, it was almost a given that Olazabal would be in charge in Chicago in 2012, Montgomerie would lead Europe on home soil at Gleneagles in 2014 and 2010 might have gone to either Sandy Lyle or Ian Woosnam.

    When the players' committee got down to the business of deciding who takes over from Nick Faldo they were the two who emerged as the favourites.

    Montgomerie's age is what has brought him to this point. He would be 51 in five years' time and the mood appears to be to go for a younger man at the helm.

    The strategy is similar to what happened in 2004 when Ian Woosnam was appointed for the K-Club in 2006, a move that left Nick Faldo out in the cold. But he was then handed the captaincy for 2008 and that seemed to keep everybody happy.



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  • Sergio Garcia Closing in on Tiger Woods

    Sergio GarciaSergio Garcia has closed the gap to Tiger Woods at the top of the world rankings from 11 points last June to less than three.

    World number one Woods is still out of action as he continues his recovery for reconstructive knee surgery, but during his time on the sidelines Garcia has made a determined bid to take over his top ranking.

    The Spaniard overtook Phil Mickelson to become number two at the start of the season and his continued fine form now has him training his sights on Woods.

    After claiming a share of seventh in Qatar on Sunday, Garcia has not now finished outside the top eight in his last seven tournaments.



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  • Japan Tour Pulls Out of "Super Series"

    Kyi Hla HanThe Japan Golf Tour on Tuesday pulled out of this year's controversial PGA of Australia-led "super series" of Asia-Pacific tournaments, saying there was too many unresolved issues.

    It followed the PGA of Australia announcing the new series last Friday, saying it had agreements in place with the China Golf Association, the Japan Golf Tour, the Korea Golf Association and the Korea PGA.

    But it met with a furious response from the Asian Tour which was not consulted, with executive chairman Kyi Hla Han saying the move violated the protocols which govern the International Federation of PGA Tours.

    The Japan Golf Tour Organization (JGTO), the official organizing body of professional golf tournaments in Japan, said it could not take part in the series this year without the Asian Tour being involved.

    Rather, it wants to use 2009 to "create the conditions and environment which are conducive to JGTO's full involvement beginning with the 2010 season".

    "JGTO feels there are many unsolved questions regarding other member tours' status, conditions of JGTO players' playing conditions, marketing and broadcasting arrangement and contractual obligations each tour has with its sponsors, organizers, TV networks and promoters, just to name a few," it said.

    "However, the most significant problem JGTO considers in relation to this series is the lack of involvement on the part of the Asian Tour, whose involvement is absolutely imperative and necessary ..."

    The Asian Tour has for years organized professional golf in the region and the JGTO said it was still "the most vital entity for the promotion of this sport in this emerging region."

    "JGTO looks forward to an unified cooperative relationship between all the parties concerned and will continue to play a major role toward achieving this goal," it said.

    The super series is due to begin this year with six elite tournaments.

    It is scheduled to start with the China Open from April 16-19 and wind up with the Australian PGA Championship on December 10-13.

    On Sunday, Kyi Hla said dates for three of the events announced -- the Volvo China Open, Midea China Classic and Pine Valley Beijing Open -- have agreements in place with the Asian Tour.

    "The PGA of Australia has violated the protocols which govern the International Federation of PGA Tours, of which the Asian Tour, PGA of Australia and the Japan Golf Tour Organisation (JGTO) are members," he said.



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  • Pat Perez Claims Maiden PGA Tour Victory

    Pat PerezRemaining calm despite the swirling wind and a tense duel for the lead, Pat Perez finally got his first PGA Tour victory—with a lot of help from Steve Stricker.

    Perez won the Bob Hope Classic on Sunday, taking advantage of Stricker’s collapse and holding off John Merrick by three strokes. The winner shot a 3-under 69 for a 33-under 327 total in the five-day event.

    “I just tried to stay pretty even-keeled,” Perez said. “I figured if I could just play solid and hit some good shots and kind of stay calm and think about what I’m doing out there, I was going to be fine.”

    In the past, “calm” wasn’t necessarily a word used about Perez and his play. He seemed quick to anger and grow frustrated when he wasn’t playing well.

    “I just got tired of getting upset all the time,” the 32-year-old Perez said. “It’s a lot of energy. I learned how the best guys do it.”

    Mentioning Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Vijay Singh and Ernie Els, among others, Perez said, “All these guys are pretty even-keeled. They don’t let things bother them. They put stuff behind them. Before, if I made a double on five, the tournament was over. I look at that as a speed bump now.”

    After hitting into the water and dropping to 29 under on the fifth hole, Perez steadied and still made the turn at 35.

    Merrick, who began the day eight shots behind Stricker but moved in front briefly on the back nine, shot a 67.

    Stricker, 33 under at the start of play after rounds of 61 and 62, had a 77 to tie for third with Mike Weir (67) at 28 under. Stricker had a triple bogey on No. 7 and a quadruple bogey on No. 10, hitting into the water on both holes.

    Perez, playing in the final group, locked up the victory by knocking his approach shot over the water from 200 yards on No. 18 to 3 feet to set up an eagle. Merrick, winless on the tour, already had finished his round with a par on 18.

    Perez didn’t consider playing it safe on the final hole.

    “I don’t lay up,” Perez said. “I hit a 6-iron. I mean, how hard is it? I’m not going to lay up with a wedge over here and hit a wedge over there. It’s a 6-iron. I was going to hit it.”

    He beamed and doffed his cap after the ball rolled onto the green and the fans in the grandstands erupted in cheers. He stopped grinning only briefly, while he was bending over his final putt.

    Merrick’s second-place finish was the highest for the 26-year-old former UCLA star, who is beginning his third full season on the tour. His round included an extraordinarily lucky bounce on No. 16, when his shot from the fairway seemed headed for a small canal next to the green. The ball hit the concrete lining the waterway, bounced across the water and rolled within 10 feet of the hole. He two-putted for par.

    “That’s probably one of the luckiest breaks I’ve ever seen,” Merrick said.

    Perez, who led the first three days of the 90-hole event before falling three shots off Stricker’s pace, had said the ideal conditions made the early rounds “like playing in a dome.”

    Not so for closing over the Palmer Course at PGA West.

    Club selection, figuring distance and direction, all became a challenge. The wind would quiet one moment, then gust and swirl the next. Flagsticks on the greens rocked back and forth with the flags flapping, go still, then just as suddenly begin shuddering again.

    Perez considered that a positive for him.

    “If the weather was perfect, someone could have shot 61 or 61,” Perez said. “So I actually didn’t mind the wind blowing all the way around. But it was definitely tough.”

    The gusts took their toll on Stricker.

    “We would feel it in our face on one hole, and the same hole it would feel downwind. So it was all over the place and difficult to pick a correct club,” Stricker said. “It was hard for me to feel comfortable with anything, and it showed for me a couple of times today.”

    After hitting into the water and taking a triple bogey to lose the lead on the seventh hole, he found water again on No. 10, but only after hitting out of bounds. His quadruple bogey there dropped him back into the pack.

    Stricker, who had the PGA Tour-record stretch of 61-62 the previous two days, had birdied No. 6 to go to 34 under and open a three-stroke lead over Perez.

    Joe Durant’s tour record for 90 holes, 36-under 324 in the 2001 Hope, seemed in peril as records fell in the early rounds. Then the wind, often a factor in the Hope over the years, finally kicked up on the final day.

    Perez earned $918,000, while Stricker took home $295,800.

    Stricker was 33 under after four rounds, bettering the tour’s 72-hole record of 31 under set by Ernie Els in his victory at the 2003 Mercedes Championships. Stricker’s 61-62 was a low for consecutive rounds; Mark Calcavecchia set the record by shooting 60-64 in the 2001 Phoenix Open, and Perez tied it with his 61-63 start in the Hope.



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  • Alvaro Quiros Clinches Three Shot Victory

    Alvaro QuirosSpain’s Alvaro Quiros won the European PGA Tour’s Qatar Masters by three shots ahead of Sweden’s Henrik Stenson and South Africa’s Louis Oosthuizen on Sunday.

    Quiros fired a three-under 69 in the final round for an aggregate score of 19-under 269.

    Stenson and Oosthuizen shared second place on 272. Stenson hit a final-round 68 while Oosthuizen had a 71.

    “It wasn’t a perfect day. I took time to get going. It is a surprise to win here,” said Quiros, who earned 314,400 euros for the victory.

    “I think it is easy to smile when you are winning but I will keep smiling wherever I go and play. Now I will be, maybe, in the top 30. That is important for me. It is important for me to play big tournaments.”

    Quiros, who won the Portugal Masters last year, dropped shots on the second, sixth and eighth holes, but birdies on the fifth and ninth helped him to score an outward 37.

    More birdies on the 10th, 12th, 16th and 17th helped him to regain the lead from Stenson, who had eagled the 548-yard, par-five tenth to hit the front.

    “Last year was pretty bad for me. I had some injuries but now everything is okay,” added Quiros.

    Stenson, joint third overnight four shots adrift of Quiros, picked up birdies on the third and sixth, then added his eagle to put pressure on Quiros.

    Oosthuizen dropped shots on the first and 12th but three birdies gave him a one-under 71.

    Ireland’s Damien McGrane, who also eagled the tenth, played a solid round to return a card of five-under 67 for an aggregate of 13-under 275 and finish fourth, one ahead of Miguel Angel Jimenez and Dutchman Maarten Lafeber.

    Scotland’s Andrew Coltart, winner of the inaugural title in 1998, was on 277, tied with four others for the seventh spot.

    Lat year’s winner Adam Scott of Australia finished on eight-under 280, sharing 21st place with five others.



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  • Bernard Langer Clinches Season Opener

    Bernard LangerLanger overcame a one-stroke deficit entering Sunday’s final round to win the Tour’s season-opening Mitsubishi Electric Championship.

    The Player of the Year last season, Langer fired a 4-under-par 68 en route an 18-under 198 for the $1.8 million event. He held off Andy Bean, who finished one shot back after recording a 66 in each of the last two rounds.

    “Really good way to start the year, really pleased with my putting this week, speed was good all week,” said Langer, who earned the $315,000 first prize in claiming his fifth career victory on the Tour.

    Bean, despite admiring most of his play, believed he fell short because of his folly on the green.

    “One (stroke) short of what we wanted, but all in all, a good week,” Bean said. “Played well. Could have made a couple more putts, but I was pleased.”

    Brad Bryant, who was the leader entering the final 18 holes, plummeted to eighth after posting a 3-over 75 en route to a 204. He tied with Loren Roberts, who carded a 68 in the final round.

    Bryant’s major downfall was at the par-3 fifth hole, where he posted a quadruple-bogey.

    “Just didn’t want Brad to get too far ahead of me, and then he had a problem at No. 5,” Langer said. “At that point, I knew I might have been in the lead or close to the lead. Brad didn’t play too poorly. He just missed a couple of putts.”

    Bryant was not the only one to struggle at No. 5, as none of the players in the 34-man field made a birdie at the hole for the second straight day.

    Jay Haas finished third with a 15-under 201.

    A two-time Masters champion, Langer built some momentum at the conclusion of Saturday’s round by carding birdies on four of his last six holes.

    He sank three more on the front nine Sunday before beginning the back side with a flourish, recording three birdies on his first five holes. He notched pars the rest of the way to preserve his slim lead.

    “Saw Andy was tied with me at No. 14 and knew I had to make a couple more (birdies) coming in,” Langer said.

    Former champion Hale Irwin tied for 11th after firing a final-round 74. The 63-year-old Irwin, who won this tournament in 1997 and 2007, finished even with Tom Kite and Mark Wiebe at 206.

    Fred Funk did not compete in the event this year, as the defending champion was sidelined with a right knee injury that plagued him for much of the 2008 season.

    Funk may have been glad he was sidelined, as gusting winds became a hazard for some players. Bean, however, looked at the weather as a positive.

    “I’ve won a number of events in windy areas,” he said. “I seem to play best in it. It makes you concentrate more.”



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  • Paul Casey Clinches Narrow Victory

    Paul CaseyPaul Casey survived a momentary lapse of concentration coming down the stretch to win the Abu Dhabi Championship by one shot on Sunday.

    The Englishman, leading by six shots at the turn, parred the closing hole to beat his playing partner Martin Kaymer of Germany and South Africa’s Louis Oosthuizen.

    Casey, who also won the event in 2007, closed with a two-under-par 70 to go 21 under par for the tournament, a record which beat the previous best of 20 under par posted by American Chris DiMarco, the winner of the inauguration edition in 2006.

    Defending champion Kaymer raised the prospect of a thrilling finish when he eagled the 72nd hole to match Oosthuizen’s tournament total of 20 under par but Casey held his nerve and comfortably two-putted for a par from 15 yards to seal the title.

    Casey reeled off successive birdies in the opening two holes and extended his overnight lead of four shots to six when he picked up three more shots before dropping a bogey on the par-four 11th.

    Back-to-back bogeys on the 13th and 14th further narrowed the gap to one shot as Oosthuizen, playing two groups behind, piled the pressure on the leader with a superb 64 which featured four birdies in each half.

    Kaymer, who carded a final-round 67, kept alive his hopes of making it two in a row by making the turn at three-under-par 33 but the 24-year-old German failed to pick up any more shots before his stunning eagle on the closing hole.

    “It feels great to win the title here after two years,” said Casey.

    “It feels like a payoff for all of the worrying I’ve put in the past couple of months. It shows that marriage is clearly good for me,” added the 31-year-old Englishman who married American Jocelyn Hefner in December.

    “After dropping a couple of shots on 13 and 14, the goal was to shoot a three under. I knew where Martin was but I didn’t know what anybody else was scorewise. So I just played my own game,” said Casey who was annoyed by a camera going off on 13.

    “It was very frustrating. That was a good tee shot and an excellent second shot. It was a difficult putt but I knew the line and the camera went off right at the backswing, and I flinched,” he said.

    “I left myself a long one coming back and compounded it on the 14th with another bogey. After that, I really just played for pars,” he said.

    Triple major winner Padraig Harrington shot a tidy 66 to finish tied for fifth with teenager Rory McIlroy on 17 under par, one shot ahead of world number two Sergio Garica of Spain, who produced a scintillating birdie-birdie-eagle finish in his final-round 64.

    Briton Colin Montgomerie closed with a 71 to share 37th place with four others on eight-under-par 280.



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  • Zach Johnson Seals Win with Closing 65

    Zach JohnsonZach Johnson closed with a 5-under 65 on Sunday for a two-shot victory in the Sony Open, ending his two-week stay in Hawaii by playing his final six rounds in 30-under par.

    Johnson, whose 64-67 last weekend at Kapalua gave him a tie for sixth, outlasted David Toms in a well-played duel along the back nine of Waialae to build a two-shot lead, then eliminated any drama with a two-putt birdie on the 18th for the second victory in his last six starts.

    Tadd Fujikawa, the 18-year-old from Honolulu trying to become the youngest winner in the PGA Tour history, started the final round two shots out of the lead, but never got any closer as he struggled to a 73 and tied for 32nd.

    “I just couldn’t get anything going,” said Fujikawa, who resumes his senior year in high school on Monday.

    Johnson finished at 15-under 265 to earn his fifth career victory.

    Toms, who won the Sony Open three years ago, had to settle for a strong start to his season. He finished out of the top 125 on the money list last year and is trying to qualify for the big events that for years were a regular part of his schedule.

    He kept the pressure on Johnson over the final holes, making a 4-foot birdie on the 15th to pull within one shot and saving par from the bunker on the 17th with a 12-foot putt to stay one shot behind going to the last hole.

    But he tried to take too much off the corner of the dogleg and left it in the bunker. Then came an aggressive play with a hybrid that went only about 80 yards into the rough, and had too difficult a lie to get the ball close for birdie.

    Johnson reached the green in two and lagged his putt within 18 inches.

    Toms closed with a 66 and tied for second with Adam Scott, who gave himself a late chance with a 64. Scott left a 10-foot birdie putt short on the 17th, and he knew his birdie on the 18th to finish at 13-under 267 would not be enough.

    “It was nice to get on the back nine and have a chance, and get the competitive nerves going again,” Scott said. “I really enjoyed that, and I enjoyed the challenge. I wish I could have made the putt on 17 to have a bit of a chance on the last, but all in all, I’m pretty happy with how my game is shaping up.”

    Charles Howell III also had a chance, with three straight birdies around the turn and back-to-back birdies late in his round, a chip-in on the 16th and an 18-foot birdie on the 17th. But he missed the 18th green well to the left, chipped to 15 feet and three-putted for bogey to finish alone in fourth.

    Fujikawa was feted at every turn, but his hopes faded quickly.

    Fans lined the length of the 486-yard opening hole, and a handmade sign hanging from a palm tree behind the green said, “Go Tadd. Bring it Home.” It was signed by the grounds crew at Waialae, who stood and cheered.

    But after opening with three pars, he began a steady descent down the leaderboard—along with one embarrassing moment.

    Standing on the par-3 seventh tee, Fujikawa realized he only had 13 clubs. His caddie left a 6-iron back in the bunker on sixth fairway, and had to run back to retrieve it. Shakil Ahmed got an ovation when he returned to the tee, Fujikawa laughed, but then the kid put his shot into a bunker for another bogey.

    He was only three behind when he made birdie at the turn, but each bogey dropped him 10 spots on a crowded leaderboard, ending his chance to win, finishing in the top 10 to earn a spot in the FBR Open outside Phoenix, and it ultimately affected the size of his check.

    Fujikawa’s first PGA Tour paycheck was $29,237, more than doubling his career earnings.

    “It was a great week. I learned a lot from it,” Fujikawa said. “I qualified, I made the cut, I put myself in contention. If I can keep doing that, everything will work out.”

    Two groups behind the big crowd, Johnson and Toms were staging a quiet duel.

    They traded birdies and bogeys with only about one-fourth the size of the gallery following Fujikawa, and when Toms two-putted for birdie on the ninth, they went to back nine at 11 under. Both made birdie on the 10th, but Johnson pulled ahead with a 6-foot birdie on the 11th and an 8-footer on the 14th, and Toms never caught up.

    A couple of groups ahead of the Fujikawa throng, Scott and Howell began making a move.

    Howell, the runner-up to Paul Goydos two years ago, ran off three birdies around the turn to briefly take the lead at 11 under, but he settled into a pars and appeared to be running out of putts until his late flurry. The three-putt only cost him money, for he had to birdie the 18th to have any hope of a playoff.

    “I take from it that I gave myself a chance,” Howell said. “This is the first week of school. It was nice to get the nerves back and get in a position to win.”



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